Pacific Literatures

Harvard Summer School

ENGL S-281

Section 1

CRN 36063

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This course examines literatures of the Pacific. We begin with the ancestral connections between Pacific Islands, travel through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as we interrogate the entanglements of European imperialism and native Pacific sovereignty, through to the role of the Pacific in World War II and the Cold War before landing in the twenty-first century and the modern Indigenous Oceanic connections of environmental movements. Inspired by Banaban scholar, activist, and poet Teresia Teaiwa's notion of the polygenesis of Pacific literatures, course texts are drawn from oral histories, navigational charts, paintings, photographs, poetry, fiction, personal narratives, film, carvings, tattoo, and regalia. Considering all of these waves of artistic movements in the region, we ask how does navigation, as metaphor and material practice, inform our understandings of historical and contemporary ecological relationships, like climate change and the protection of sacred sites?

Instructor Info

Rebecca H. Hogue, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of English, University of Toronto


Meeting Info

MW 12:00pm - 3:00pm (6/22 - 8/7)

Participation Option: Online Synchronous

Deadlines

Last day to register:

Notes

This course meets via web conference. Students must attend and participate at the scheduled meeting time. See minimum technology requirements. Harvard College students: This course is eligible for degree credit, but see important policy information.

All Sections of this Course

CRN Section # Participation Option(s) Instructor Section Status Meets Term Dates
36063 1 Online Synchronous Rebecca Hogue Open MW 12:00pm - 3:00pm
Jun 21 to Aug 6