Universität Wien

123422 SE Literary & Cultural Studies Seminar / BA Paper / MA British/Irish/New English (2023W)

Caribbean Londoners (with excursion)

11.00 ECTS (2.00 SWS), SPL 12 - Anglistik
Continuous assessment of course work

Registration/Deregistration

Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).

Details

max. 20 participants
Language: English

Lecturers

Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N

  • Thursday 05.10. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 12.10. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 19.10. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 09.11. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 16.11. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 23.11. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 30.11. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 07.12. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 14.12. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 11.01. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 18.01. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A
  • Thursday 25.01. 14:15 - 15:45 Seminarraum 6 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-O1-22.A

Information

Aims, contents and method of the course

In June 1948, the ship Empire Windrush landed at Tilbury Docks in Essex, carrying 492 British subjects from the Caribbean to London. They had followed the UK government's implicit invitation, which was looking to enhance its work force. British Nationality Act, passed the same year, established one nationality for all the members of the Empire, namely that of "Citizens of the United Kingdom and its Colonies". It also guaranteed right of abode in the UK. People of Caribbean origin, who booked passage to the motherland between 1948 and the early 1960s, when a lot of the so-called 'West Indies' became independent, are referred to as 'the Windrush-generation'. In 2018, the so-called Windrush-scandal broke, when Amelia Gentleman and other journalists revealed how appallingly the Cameron-government was treating the Windrush-generation: denying their citizenship status, disregarding the official invitation issued 70 years before, and deporting commonwealth subjects as illegal immigrants. Keeping in mind the relevant intersections of race, class, gender, sexuality and age, we are going to discuss texts published by Black British writers of fiction between 1956 and 2023, which shed light on the Windrush generation's life in London, its contributions to UK culture, the colonial legacies of their history and the political implications in post-Brexit Britain.

Specialist model:
There will be no monological student presentations in this class. Instead, you are expected to act as a specialist for one lesson of the term, either alone or as a member of a team, depending on the number of participants. How exactly this works in terms of timing, what will be expected of you and what a 'prep mail', a 'double-feedback-loop' and a 'gold nugget' is, I shall explain in detail in the first lesson. You'll be expected to provide a powerpoint presentation as an accompaniment to your specialist task.

Quizzes:
There will be a text knowledge quiz for the play by Henry, the TV mini-series Small Island, and the novels by Evaristo and Hare. The quizzes will be due before the lesson in which we first discuss the respective text. You will be able to fill in each quiz at home. Please send each filled-in quiz as a pdf-file or a doc-file attachment via email to sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at. NB: Any quiz sent in after the relevant class has started, will remain unmarked, which means you won't be able to collect points on it.

NB This course comes with an excursion to London, organized by Prof. Mieszkowski and her team (Dr. Potter and Ms. Doğrul). Twelve places are available to students, but joining in the excursion is not compulsory to pass the course. Students who join the excursion are expected to book their own flights and accommodation for the duration of the trip, and meet the organizing team in London on late afternoon/early evening of 27th Oct in London (exact time and place tba). Attendance of all organised events is compulsory; the schedule will be shared in the first lesson of the course on 5th October. This is also when you need to commit to joining the excursion. If more than 12 students wish to come to London, we'll draw lots. The Black History Walks (Elephant & Castle, Black Theatre History and Notting Hill), the museum visits (presumably to London Museum Docklands, London Transport Museum and Tate Britain) and (possibly) a visit to the theatre will be paid for by Prof. Mieszkowski. The excursion ends on the evening of 30th Oct, and everybody will make their own way back to Vienna according to individual obligations, plans and preferences. Dr. Potter and Ms. Doğrul will write an event report about our excursion. If you attend the excursion, you will be expected to donate ONE photo and ONE quote about any of the activities to this report.

Assessment and permitted materials

Regular attendance; regular preparation of assigned reading material; active participation in class; active in specialist team for one lesson per term; active in peer-feedback loop; final paper.

Minimum requirements and assessment criteria

Attendance:
No more than two lessons may be missed without certified medical reason. If a doctor's note is produced, a third lesson may be missed but is to be compensated for at the teacher's discretion. If more than three lessons are missed, this results in failing the course.

Quiz 1: 2,5%
Quiz 2: 2,5%
Quiz 3: 2,5%
Quiz 4: 2,5%
Active participation in discussion: 10%
Specialist task: 30%
Term paper: 50%

Points must be collected in all of these areas to pass. The benchmark for passing this course is at 60%.

Deadlines
The quizzes (to be sent to sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at) are due by 2pm on the following dates:

Q1: 19th Oct
Q2: 9th Nov
Q3: 7th Dec
Q4: 11th Jan

Marks in %:
1 (very good): 90-100%
2 (good): 81-89%
3 (satisfactory): 71-80%
4 (pass): 60-70%
5 (fail): 0-59%

The written work (6,500-8,000 words for a term paper; 8,500-10,000 words for a BA thesis) will be marked according to the following categories: form; content; methodology; quality of thesis; language; style.

There will be 3 opportunities to hand in your written work:
1st batch: 20th Feb
2nd batch: 1st March
3rd batch: 15th March

You must hand in an anti-plagiarism statement with your written work (without it, your paper/thesis will not be accepted) and upload the paper onto Moodle, so that the University's anti-plagiarism software can run over it. Only after your paper has been cleared by it, can marking commence. As well as uploading it, you must also send your term paper as a .pdf or .doc-file to sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at.

You are only allowed to use AI-support (Chat GPT; Research Rabbit etc.) in the research phase of your paper. If you choose to draw on it, you must disclose how and for what exactly you used it in your anti-plagiarism statement. If you opt against using any AI-tool, please declare this as well in your anti-plagiarism statement, so there cannot be any misunderstandings.

Late-entry policy
- Late entry after deadline re-negotiation: 2 points off
- Late entry without deadline re-negotiation: 4 points off
- Term papers (as .pdf) are to uploaded on Moodle AND to be sent as email attachments to: sylvia.mieszkowski@univie.ac.at

Examination topics

There will be no written exam. Participants are expected to study set materials and additional secondary/theory sources, take active part in the discussions, perform their specialist task, and hand in all assignments and the term paper on time.

Reading list

Books to buy
- Sam Selvon, The Lonely Londoners ISBN: 978-0141188416
- Lenny Henry, August in England ISBN: 978-0571386437
- Andrew Salkey, Escape to an Autumn Pavement ISBN: 978-1845230982
- Bernardine Evaristo, Mr. Loverman ISBN: 978-0241145784
- Louise Hare, This Lovely City ISBN: 978-0008332600

All of these texts have been ordered for you at our Facultas bookshop on Campus (Hof 1). Please help support this shop and buy your copy there rather than online: https://www.facultas.at/buchhandlungen/facultas_fachbuch/universitaetsbuchhandlung_am_campus.

Mini-series to Watch
- John Alexander, Small Island (BBC 2009) - after Andrea Levy's eponymous novel

For those of you who still have this old tech, a DVD-version of this two-part series is available, which you may borrow.

Short Story to read
Jackie Kay, "Out of Hand" (1998) will be available on Moodle.

Poems to Read
James Berry, "Windrush Voices 1"; "Windrush Voices 2" (2007), "Beginning in a City 1948" (2011) will be available on Moodle

Texts to Read online
Please read the following reviews of Henry's play (lesson 3), Haze's novel (lesson 10) and the online walking tour for those who cannot make the excursion (lesson 11):
https://www.thefloormag.com/post/lenny-henry-s-august-in-england-reminds-us-that-black-british-history-is-british-history
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/theatre/what-to-see/august-in-england-lenny-henry-with-charisma-debut-play/
https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2023/may/05/august-in-england-review-bush-theatre-london-lenny-henry#:~:text=Review-,August%20in%20England%20review%20%E2%80%93%20Lenny%20Henry's%20remarkable%20one%2Dman%20show,humour%20and%20outrage%20at%20injustice
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/mar/01/this-lovely-city-louise-hare-review
https://louisehare.com/this-lovely-city-walking-tour/

Academic articles to read
All articles (Hall, Lowe, BBC, Gentleman, Newton Dunn, Olusoga, Carroll, Thomas, Msiska, Karschay/Rostek, Koegler, Ellis) and reviews (Alma, Benson, Wiegand, Anderson) will be made available as pdf-files on this course's Moodle-website.

Background reading (for lesson 1)
The British Library has a wonderful website dedicated to the Windrush-generation's cultural contribution to Britain. Please feel free to browse to your hearts' content: https://www.bl.uk/windrush/themes/the-arrivants. Please also take a look at chpt. 7 from Stuart Hall's Familiar Stranger and Hannah Lowe's "'Remember the ship': Narrating the Empire Windrush", both of which will be on Moodle for lesson 1 alongside a few journalistic articles. Uni course or no uni course...even if you end up opting against taking this class, you might find yourself profiting from reading Amelia Gentleman's The Windrush Betrayal (2019.)

Association in the course directory

Studium: BA 612, MA 844(2)
Code/Modul: BA09.2, 10.2, MA 4.1, 4.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-0373

Last modified: Fr 08.09.2023 19:27