
Toni Morrison, author of books like The Bluest Eyes and Jazz, winner of the Pulitzer and Nobel Prizes, and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, speaks at an event honoring Chinua Achebe and the 50th anniversary of Things Fall Apart. (Photo courtest of Angela Radulescu on Flickr. CC-BY-NC-SA.)
Instructor(s)
Dr. Sarah E. King
MIT Course Number
21W.742
As Taught In
Spring 2013
Level
Undergraduate
Course Description
Course Features
Course Description
Does race still matter, as Cornel West proclaimed in his 1994 book of that title, or do we now live, as others maintain, in a post-racial society? The very notion of what constitutes race remains a complex and evolving question in cultural terms. In this course we will engage this question head-on, reading and writing about issues involving the construction of race and racial identity as reflected from a number of vantage points and via a rich array of voices and genres. Readings will include literary works by such writers as Toni Morrison, Junot Diaz, and Sherman Alexie, as well as perspectives on film and popular culture from figures such as Malcolm Gladwell and Touré.