FRLN 330: Topics in World Literature

FRLN 330-001: Global Magical Realism: The Legacy of Gabriel García Márquez in Fiction and Film
(Spring 2017)

03:00 PM to 04:15 PM TR

Thompson Hall 1017

Section Information for Spring 2017

FRLN 330 - 001: Global Magical Realism: The Legacy of Gabriel García Márquez in Fiction and Film

Instead of causing horror, magical realist narratives create an attitude toward reality that sees magical elements as a more or less intrinsic part of everyday life. Monstrous characters—winged men, alchemists who return to life and die a second time, women who fly into the sky, specters who talk to the living, and so on—live in exuberant worlds that are presented as real, but are governed by premonitions and superstition. Magical realism is about “the mystery found in people, nature and objects, a mystery that eludes the understanding of the observer.” With this broad definition in mind, Latin American writers launched a paradigmatic shift in how we understand fiction since the postmodern era. This course will engage students in a comparative, interdisciplinary analysis of magical realist fiction as a global postmodern and postcolonial phenomenon across the arts. We will analyze the relationship between magical realism and identity discourses in fiction and films from the five continents, focusing on the legacy of One Hundred Years of Solitude by Nobel Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez 50 years after its publication. FRLN 330 satisfies the general education requirement in literature.

 

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Course Information from the University Catalog

Credits: 3

Major works of world literature with varying perspectives and topics, such as specific cultures, histories, myths, or music and the arts, as represented in literature. Notes: May be repeated when topic differs with permission of department. May be repeated within the term for a maximum 9 credits.
Mason Core: Literature
Specialized Designation: Topic Varies
Recommended Prerequisite: ENGH 101 and 45 credits or permission of instructor.
Schedule Type: Lec/Sem #1, Lec/Sem #2, Lec/Sem #3, Lec/Sem #4, Lec/Sem #5, Lec/Sem #6, Lec/Sem #7, Lec/Sem #8, Lec/Sem #9, Lecture, Sem/Lec #10, Sem/Lec #11, Sem/Lec #12, Sem/Lec #13, Sem/Lec #14, Sem/Lec #15, Sem/Lec #16, Sem/Lec #17, Sem/Lec #18
Grading:
This course is graded on the Undergraduate Regular scale.

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