AFR 285(S) Religion in Black Film, Media, and Literature (Same as English 285 and Religion 229)*
Debates regarding religious beliefs and practices recur throughout the history of
African-American film, media, and literature. In this course, we will analyze the
complicated role of religion, particularly Christianity, in black communities. Our
texts were created during or about slavery, the Great Migration, the U.S. Civil
Rights Movement, and the Post Civil Rights Era. We will consider such issues as
ways in which religion is shown to empower and/or oppress black people; ways
in which the politics of class, gender, and sexuality inflect black religious practices; and strategies by which transcendent, spiritual experiences are represented. Films to be analyzed may include: Spencer Williams' Go Down, Death and
The Blood of Jesus; Stan Lathan's Go Tell it on the Mountain; Spike Lee's Four
Little Girls; Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust; Clark Johnson's Boycott; and
Tyler Perry's Diary of a Mad Black Woman. Some class time will also be spent
in the Williams College Museum of Art to critique visual works in terms of their
religious themes. We will discuss images of black church life in the media, and
texts by James Weldon Johnson, Gwendolyn Brooks, Howard Thurman, Ernest
Gaines, Lorraine Hansberry, and Alice Walker.
Format: seminar/discussion. Requirements: active participation in class discussions, brief written responses to texts, and four 5- to 7-page essays.
No prerequisites, but prior 100- or 200-level Africana Studies and English
courses will help. Enrollment limit: 20 (expected: 15). Preference given to (potential) concentrators in Africana Studies or (potential) English majors.
Hour: WINGARD