Stuart Hall, a Jamaican-British academic, writer, and
cultural theorist, is a significant figure in understanding
contemporary literature’s function in shaping society. His pioneering
work in the field of cultural studies examines how culture, including
literature, is utilized to construct and fortify power relations, as
well as how individuals and groups navigate and resist the social
structures supporting the power play. We will discuss how Hall’s
theories, such as the incorporation of socio-political contexts in
literary analysis, and circulation of meanings through literary
representations, enhance the processes of social
negotiations. Therefore, the course will evaluate the following concepts
introduced by Hall: Cultural Studies and the Rise of Literature;
Representation and Meaning; Negotiating Meaning and Identity; Race,
Class, and Diaspora; and Hall’s Continuing Influence. In order to do so,
we will apply these ideas to the writings of contemporary British and
American writers like Zadie Smith, Andrea Levy, Amitav Ghosh, Jhumpa
Lahiri, and Yaa Gyasi.
Since
these writers are connected to more than one culture, the course will
elaborate how their writings show that culture works not by infinitely
reproducing itself, but precisely by ‘translating between’ spheres. By
applying Hall’s diasporic perspectives to their works, the course will
open up avenues for further explorations regarding various meanings of
cultural belonging. We will focus on Hall’s emphasis that
representations are possibilities, since they portray not the real, but
images of the real world. This will lead us to comprehend that Hall
grappled with the neo-liberal world we inhabit through his theoretical
concepts, which created a political legacy that enables us to grapple
with that world ourselves. We will particularly study Hall’s
observations regarding race, gender, and class oppressions, which can be
experienced by different individuals at different historical moments
and often in culturally dissimilar ways. Last but not least, we will
discover how globalization has impacted the British and American
societies in diverse ways.
Texts: Stuart Hall, Essential Essays, vols. 1and 2 (Durham: Duke University Press Books, 2019); Stuart Hall, Cultural Studies 1983: A Theoretical History (Durham: Duke University Press Books, 2016); Stuart Hall, Selected Writings on Race and Difference (Durham: Duke University Press Books, 2021); Helen Davis, Understanding Stuart Hall (London: Sage Publications, 2004); Zadie Smith (White Teeth, London: Penguin, 2001, and NW, London: Penguin, 2013); Andrea Levy (Fruit of the Lemon, London: Tinder Press, 2000, and The Long Song, London: Headline Review, 2010); Amitav Ghosh (The Glass Palace, London: The Borough Press, 2001, and The Shadow Lines, London: John Murray Publishers, 2011);
Jhumpa Lahiri (Interpreter of Maladies, London: Flamingo, 2000, and Roman Stories, London: Picador, 2024); and Yaa Gyasi (Homegoing, London: Penguin, 2017, and Transcendent Kingdom, London: Penguin, 2022).
Requirements: active participation, presentation, term paper (M.A.: 15 pages, B.A./Lehramt: 10-12 pages)