LATA 4940

LATA 4940

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2017-2018.

As Cuba and the United States move forward toward normalizing diplomatic relations, this course seizes the opportunity to contextualize and analyze Cuba and cubanidad as sites and trajectories of repression and contestation.  Through literature, visual culture, music, and blogs, we interrogate and problematize prevalent dichotomous representations of the island as a space of fragmentation/uniformity, monotony/contingency, and persecution/liberation.  Divided into four sections, this course deconstructs the transition from 'Pseudo' Republic to Revolution (Carpentier, Castro, Che Fernández Retamar), sexual alterity as a mechanism of revolt (Pinera, Sarduy, Arenas), the genre of 'dirty realism' during the so-caled 'Special Period' of the 1990's (Gutiérrez, Ponte), and contemporary dissidence in post-Fidel 'New Cuba' (blogs, performance art, rap and punk music).  Theoretical readings (Benitzer Rojo) accompany primary texts and frame key ideas with respect to political subjectivity, biopolitics, and space.

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Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: ASRC 4940SPAN 4940

  • 4 Credits Stdnt Opt

  • 18377 LATA 4940   SEM 101