HSPST-283 Understanding the Contemporary Hispanic Caribbean World

In each of the three Hispano-Caribbean islands toward the 1950s, different political fall-outs produced a corpus of texts distinct from that of their predecessors. The Cuban Revolution, the death of the Dominican dictator Trujillo, and Puerto Rico’s new political status as a U.S Commonwealth all spurred a reconsideration of literature and other media as a socio-political space in which to articulate new notions of cultural identity. This course, through poetry, film, music and narrative, examines the cultural shifts and their aesthetic correlates arising from these fracturing events.

Maximum Enrollment

Proseminar (16)

(Proseminar.)

Credits

1

Prerequisite

HSPST 200

Offered

Spring

Notes

Taught in Spanish.