WRLIT-103-08: Writing 1:Writing Loss
Fall 2018
- Subject: Writing and Literature
- Type: Lecture
- Delivery Mode: In-Person
- Level: Undergraduate
- Course Dates: September 05, 2018 — December 12, 2018
- Meetings: None listed
- Instructor: Julie Thi Underhill
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 19/18 Closed
Julie Thi Underhill
Senior Adjunct, Writing and Literature Program
Description:
Sooner or later, loss is our inheritance, as public and private catastrophes shape our lives. In Writing Loss, we consider the productive possibilities in the workings of witness, mourning, absence, memory, and melancholy. This course approaches the condition of loss specifically through an engagement with a broad range of Asian American cultural productions, including essay, fiction, memoir, poetry, film, spoken word, and performance. Considering the experience and aftermath of loss, we'll consider how loss ruptures the 'known world' and engenders processes of grief, reckoning, and transformation. Course materials will be presented and discussed with interdisciplinary attention to historical, political, social, and gendered contexts. Students will produce two 3-4 page analytical essays, two oral presentations, short exploratory writings, and occasional memoir. In Writing 1, students engage with diverse perspectives, histories, values, and cultures while evaluating systems of power and privilege. Writing expressively and analytically, they strengthen their skills of drafting, revision, and basic academic research. Students read, see, listen, discuss, and think critically about their own writing, the writing of their peers, and the assigned curriculum.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
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