Course Description
Course Number: K10.0043
Meeting days & times: TR 2:00-3:15
Instructor: Steve Hutkins
Course Description: The American novelist John Gardner once said there were only two plots to all of the stories ever told: a stranger comes to town, and someone goes on a journey. There may be other plots, but the encounter between those who are settled and those who are on the move is one of the most intriguing and compelling of literary themes. This course focuses on novels and short stories and asks what happens when travelers and tourists come into contact with the locals and native-born. It examines the way travelers preconceive and apprehend foreign places, the problematic search for the "authentic" and "essential," and the view of tourism as a form of neo-colonialism, involving issues of power and possession, race and class, exoticism and Otherness. Supplemental readings explore the history, sociology, politics, and economics of travel and tourism.
Readings:
James, Henry. Daisy Miller (1878). Penguin
Conrad, Joseph. Heart of Darkness (1902).Modern Library
Mann, Thomas. Death in Venice (1912). Harper Collins
Hemingway, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises (1926). Simon & Schuster
Bowles, Paul. The Sheltering Sky (1949). Harper Collins
Kerouac, Jack. On the Road (1957). Penguin
Hazzard, Shirley. Evening of the Holiday (1966). VHPS
McEwan, Ian. The Comfort of Strangers (1981). Random House
Theroux, Paul. Mosquito Coast (1982). Mariner
Guo, Xiaolu. A Concise Chinese English Dictionary (2007). Anchor

