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Lehrveranstaltung im WS 11/12
Ena Jansen: Key Concepts of Postcolonial Theory and Writing: Domestic Workers and Their Representation in South African Art and Literature

 
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  • Workshop: GGK/GCSC/IPP | GCSC-Post Graduates | Gemeinsame Veranstaltungen/Conjoint Courses | Master Classes
  • Workshop: GGK/GCSC/IPP | GGK-Post Graduates | Gemeinsame Veranstaltungen/Conjoint Courses | Master Classes
  • Workshop: GGK/GCSC/IPP | IPP-Post Graduates | Gemeinsame Veranstaltungen/Conjoint Courses | Master Classes
Semester: WS 11/12
Dozent/-in:
Zeit und Ort:
  • Do, 10.11.2011, 10:00-14:00, Raum 29 / Room 29 (Phil. I, Haus B / Phil. I, Building B)
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Erste Veranstaltung: 10.11.2011
Teilnahme-
voraussetzung:
  • Anmeldung
Hinweise: The workshop will focus in particular on the relations between domestic workers and their employers in South African art and literature. This specific case will be embedded in the more general context of postcolonial writing and theory and the master/slave, employer/employee relations in (post)colonial as well as Western societies. The specific case of domestic servants in South African literature can be broadened by participants to include other postcolonial literatures and labour relations with the focus on and the intersections of gender and class. Participants are invited to contribute by presenting their research projects as well as searching for relevant articles and literature and by shortly introducing and discussing this during the workshop.


Reading:

Robbins, Bruce. “Introduction.” The Servant’s Hand: English Fiction Form Below. Durham and London: Duke Univ. Press, 1993.

McClintock, Ann. “The Scandal of Hybridity: Black Women’s Resistance and Narrative Ambiguity.” Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Colonial Context. New York and London: Routledge, 1995.