
This is a "hands on" course that presupposes the constant active participation of students, who, guided the professor and tutor, will engage in a comparative analysis of a great, classic novel in American Literature and two of its contemporary rewritings, namely, Nancy Rawles's "My Jim" (2005) and Percival Everett's "James" (2024).
After exploring the social, racial, and historical context in which Twain’s great classic is set, we will engage as a class in the analysis of what was at stake in the characterization of an adolescent, poor, white boy in 1884, paying particular attention to the unsaid, common knowledge (prejudices, rules of behavior, ideologies, power structure, etc.) readers had to share to understand the novel’s deep structure of meaning.
- Trainer/in: Cristina Iuli