The Human Stain by Philip Roth - Identity, Race, and Secrecy in Modern America
Offered By: Yale University via YouTube
Course Description
Overview
Explore a 49-minute lecture from Yale University's "The American Novel Since 1945" course, focusing on Philip Roth's "The Human Stain." Delve into Roth's unique approach to the Identity Plot genre, examining how race is portrayed as category, mark, biology, and performance. Discover how the novel ultimately defines its protagonist's racial identity through concealment, with secrecy serving as the core of identity and the driving force behind desire and narrative. Analyze the historical context of the 1990s, the performance of self, classification as definition, the body as a sign of otherness, and the relationship between speech, secrecy, and identity. Gain insights into Roth's exploration of desire and difference in this comprehensive examination of a modern American literary work.
Syllabus
- Chapter 1. Roth's Mundane Modern Context: Historical Markers of the 1990s
.
- Chapter 2. Roth's Identity Plot: The Performance of the Self
.
- Chapter 3. Classification as Definition
.
- Chapter 4. The Body as Sign: Moments of Irreducible Otherness
.
- Chapter 5. Speech and Secrecy: Locating Identity in the Interval
.
- Chapter 6. Desire and Difference
.
Taught by
YaleCourses
Tags
Related Courses
Poetry in America: WhitmanHarvard University via edX Poetry in America: Nature and Nation, 1700-1850
Harvard University via edX "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Twain: BerkeleyX Book Club
University of California, Berkeley via edX The American Renaissance: Classic Literature of the 19th Century
Dartmouth College via edX Poetry in America: Modernism
Harvard University via edX