Cassander L. Smith

University of Alabama
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Race in early America and The Last of the Mohicans

Race in early America and The Last of the Mohicans

This course asks students to reconsider their understanding of early American culture by taking seriously Black Africans and Natives as intellectuals and as cultural doers during the early modern period.

Olaudah Equiano and the mirage of respectability politics

Olaudah Equiano and the mirage of respectability politics

Cassander L. Smith explores the enduring myth of respectability politics by tracing its roots from the 18th century to the present day.

Teaching against assumptions about the Black experience in America

Teaching against assumptions about the Black experience in America

Comparing and contrasting the writing of Phillis Wheatly and Briton Hammon with the racial rhetorics of the 21st century.

Poetic voices across time

Poetic voices across time

Students explore not only the potential sound and form of an early American poem but also the factors that contribute to its perceived literary or cultural value. 

Black protest tradition in early African American literature

Black protest tradition in early African American literature 

Respectability politics has long circumscribed the Black American experience and the literature produced by Black communities. This course examines some of the earliest examples of that literature to understand where, how, and why protest emerged in African American literature as a strategy to combat American racism and state-sanctioned violence.

Writing race, acting race in the Anglo-Atlantic world

Writing race, acting race in the Anglo-Atlantic world 

A syllabus exploring early modern literature to trace racial discourse development across transatlantic encounters and Black intellectual history.

Provocation questions

Provocation questions

Students write discussion questions and craft prompts to build a deeper relationship with their assigned texts.