This biannual learning unit is being organized in 2017-2018
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 | - Students will be expected to show their ability to relate the themes that have been selected to the historical and literary contexts explored in the course. - They will have to produce an analysis that demonstrates their familiarity with the issues raised in the course, and with the poetics through which those issues are articulated. - The course is also indirectly meant to increase the students' lexical skills. Their analyses will therefore have to reflect a command of the English language that corresponds to their level (Masters), as well as a good grasp of the various cultural concepts discussed in the course. |
The contribution of this Teaching Unit to the development and command of the skills and learning outcomes of the programme(s) can be accessed at the end of this sheet, in the section entitled “Programmes/courses offering this Teaching Unit”.
This course addresses the characteristics and development of the road trope via the analysis of several (excerpts from) novels (Salinger, Nabokov, Kerouac, among others), poems, songs and short stories written by American creative writers.
What do protagonists ultimately discover at the end of the road or within the American wild landscape? How have contemporary fiction and film challenged the white male tradition of the road narrative? How have ethnic groups experienced the road?
This course focuses on the road narrative as a genre (mixing travelogue, journey, Bildungsroman, and picaresque literature) offering insights into the national, historical and cultural American identity, which relies on dislocation, movement and landscape, and oscillates between the vision of a New Jerusalem and an apocalyptic struggle with natural powers. More specifically, the class starts with earlier road narratives and culminates with an examination of McCarthy's Pulitzer-prize winning novel The Road (2007) as an anti-road narrative in which the road has become, not a place of escape and freedom but an imprisoning body that is haunted by traumatic and apocalyptic visions of the future. While it highlights the spatialization that characterizes the American imagination as well as the postmodern anxieties reflected in the road trope, the course stresses important changes, from road to anti-road narrative, from road to highway and street narrative between conquest and celebration of the wilderness.
- Bluefarb, Sam. The Escape Motif in the American Novel: Mark Twain to Richard Wright. Ohio State UP, 1972.
- Dickstein, Morris. "On and Off the Road: The Outsider as Young Rebel." Prose Writing 1940-1990. The Cambridge History of American Literature Vol. 8. Ed. Sacvan Bercovitch. Cambridge University Press, 1996.
- Talbot, Jill Lynn. This is Not an Exit. The Road narrative in Contemporary American Literature and Film. PhD, 1999.