This seminar focuses on theoretical perspectives that are central for the analysis of power relations, hegemonies, and inequalities. Postcolonial theory, decolonial thinking and an intersectional perspective serve as sensitizations or correctives for one-dimensional views and can be applied transdisciplinarily. Postcolonial theory is based on the notion that the historical impact of colonial rule and expansion in a decisive manner affects current scholarship, culture, philosophy, literature as well as the economy, politics, law and society in both the global North and the global South. Postcolonial Studies aim to explore the legacies and consequences of European colonialism in its various aspects – literal, artistic, spatial, historical, political and economic, while usually avoiding a specific focus on particular countries, regions or disciplines. “Classical” postcolonial theory has developed mainly in the U.S. academy and focused predominantly on the former British colonies, the English language and processes of colonization and decolonization of the 19th and 20th century in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East (and partly the Caribbean). In addition to this well-established line of research, the seminar includes perspectives from Spanish language Latin American and Caribbean contexts according to which colonialism in the Americas originates in the 15th century with the Spanish/Portuguese conquest and see Eurocentric modernity is closely intertwined with colonial rule. Such so-called decolonial approaches (see Quijano, Coronil, Mignolo) shift the perspective towards colonial processes and legacies in other world regions like the Americas into account and also towards an inclusion of the political and economic entanglements cultural expressions and texts are embedded in. An intersectional perspective takes the interdependencies of different axes of inequality into focus and thus offers a useful corrective and sensitization. In the seminar, we will discuss central representatives of the concepts with respect to their genealogies, their merits, and their shortcomings.
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Module | Course | Requirements | |
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23-ANG-AngVM2 Vertiefungsmodul 2: The Americas/ Interamerican Studies | VM 2.4 The Americas: InterAmerican Studies / Spanish Language Acquisition | Study requirement
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- | Graded examination | Student information | |
23-ANG-M-AngGM1 Grundmodul 1: Theories of Language, Literature and Culture | GM 1.3 Cultural Theory | Study requirement
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23-ANG-M-HM2 Hauptmodul 2: British Literature and the Processes of Culture | HM 2.2 Research Paradigms and Research Projects in British Studies | Study requirement
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- | Graded examination | Student information | |
23-IAS-M-IAS4 North American Literature and the Processes of Culture | "Literary Theory" oder "Cultural Theory" | Study requirement
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- | Graded examination | Student information | |
30-MGS-4 Hauptmodul 3: Arbeit und gesellschaftliche Transformationen | Seminar 1 | Study requirement
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Seminar 2 | Study requirement
Graded examination |
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The binding module descriptions contain further information, including specifications on the "types of assignments" students need to complete. In cases where a module description mentions more than one kind of assignment, the respective member of the teaching staff will decide which task(s) they assign the students.
Students are expected to attend regularly, read and prepare theoretical texts, and engage actively in the in-class discussions of the concepts.