Jump to content

Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Rutgers University Newark/Reading Latine Literature (Fall 2024)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This Course Wikipedia Resources Connect
Questions? Ask us:

contact@wikiedu.org

Course name
Reading Latine Literature
Institution
Rutgers University Newark
Instructor
Laura Lomas
Wikipedia Expert
Brianda (Wiki Ed)
Subject
Literature
Course dates
2024-10-02 00:00:00 UTC – 2024-12-10 23:59:59 UTC
Approximate number of student editors
45


"Reading Latina/o/x/e Literature" a version of a course I began to teach at RUN in 2005, traces a Latinx imagination in literary texts from the present back to the late 19th century. During the past decade and a half, the field of Latino Studies has emerged, with a 2014 founding conference, building on movements and institution-creation in the 1960s-1990s. If this literary field first gains visibility with the post-Civil Rights “boom” of writing within community and student activist movements that demanded access to universities and sought to change the white-dominated and Eurocentric curriculum and university culture, the field of Latinx literature has also expanded backward and forward in time. Through the recovering of the U.S. Hispanic literary heritage project and a burgeoning field of writing that has gained increasing recognition in the 21st century, in 2024 it is not possible to understand "American" literature without knowing Latinx literature. By often remaking dominant aesthetic forms and even the dominant language (English), this body of literature shifts the definition of "America" itself. Since Rutgers became an Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) in 2016, we might ask what role Latinx literature and culture play in the University as a whole, now that at least 25% of the student body identifies as "Hispanic" or Spanish/Latin American descent? This course interrogates the central, and constantly changing category of its inquiry— “Latino/a/x/é”--which refers to simultaneously visible and yet marginalized cultural forms of the largest “minority” group of the United States. Valorizing Amerindian and African inheritances, pushing against linguistic borders by including Brazilian Latiné writers and theory, and centering work by femme and LGBTQUIA+ writers, we will grapple with persistent legacies of anti-black, anti indigenous racism, machismo and cis-heteronormativity. In keeping with the history of annexations and migrations especially to New York and New Jersey, we end with some of the Cuban, Puerto Rican and Chicanx or Mexican-American founding figures. Because of a massive displacement and relocation happening now due to climate change and economic inequities, we begin with Puerto Rican, South and Central American Latiné writers, including Afro-Mexican poet Ariana Brown and the Argentine transwoman(qepd), Cecilia Gentili. We will examine themes related to (im)migration, assimilation and dislocation; sexual and gendered violence; working conditions; addiction; the relationship of Latinidad to Latin America; the violence of the immigration system and representations of undocumented Latinx migration; problems and possibilities of cultural self-representation including translation, language loss and code-switching; mestizaje, and in-between-ness. Through reading and listening in a variety of genres--including fiction, teatro, poetry, oratory, memoir, and music--we consider Latino/a/x/é aesthetic forms, influences and media. In addition to reading, writing and class discussion, students are encouraged (you get extra credit) if you participate in the intellectual life of the NY metro area off-campus. Students will conduct research and disseminate knowledge through creating wikipedia pages. This course fulfills requirements for the Minor in Latino Studies (administered in the Spanish Department) and counts toward the English Major or Minor. It fulfills a Gen ED course requirement.

Student Assigned Reviewing
AgR049 Javier Zamora
Ysgomes53 Brazilian Americans, Brazilian diaspora
DavidReadingLatinLiterature Living Undocumented, Undocupoets
Cutegeckos La Llorona
Lunarscorpion Nepantla, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Caló (Chicano), Machismo, Ariana Brown
Scr124 Jaquira Díaz, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Ariana Brown La Llorona
Misolangeles
Ilovemusic888 Jaquira Díaz, Living Undocumented, Brazilian diaspora, La Llorona
Nawrites Jaquira Díaz, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Javier Zamora
Student Account 2027 Black Hispanic and Latino Americans, La Llorona, Nuyorican
Salvatore1418 Ariana Brown
Ypcdh
Julyannacastroo Undocumented youth in the United States, Living Undocumented, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, La Llorona
Itz.bryannn La Llorona
Virgosign Muxe, Bamby Salcedo Jaquira Díaz
Latinolit Undocumented youth in the United States, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
Solar2002 Jaquira Díaz
SynchroAnonymous Javier Zamora, Black Hispanic and Latino Americans
Ericaje Javier Zamora
Pinno516
Hayley Romero La Llorona, Undocumented youth in the United States, Ecuadorian Americans
Alex246787898 Ariana Brown, Cecilia Gentili, Dolores Prida
DimacsDre La Llorona, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Transgender rights movement
Naheda.alb
ToysitoJV
Jordana03 Jaquira Díaz, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Cecilia Gentili, Ariana Brown
Flordelis Torres
BubbleBlitz Jaquira Díaz, Javier Zamora, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio, Undocumented youth in the United States
Wvs46
Jlazo643 Black Hispanic and Latino Americans, Javier Zamora
908twin Black Hispanic and Latino Americans, Ariana Brown, Karla Cornejo Villavicencio
BusyShe1222 Dolores Prida La Llorona
Jazzxkaur