Seminar: Afropolitan writers

  • Teaching

    Details

    Faculty Faculty of Humanities
    Domain English
    Code UE-L06.01624
    Languages English
    Type of lesson Seminar
    Level Master
    Semester SS-2026

    Schedules and rooms

    Summary schedule Monday 17:15 - 19:00, Hebdomadaire, MIS 04, Room 4122 (Spring semester)

    Teaching

    Responsibles
    • Straub Julia
    Teachers
    • Straub Julia
    Description

    Anglophone African literature has experienced a remarkable boom over the last 15 years, with authors such as Teju Cole, Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie, Taiye Selasi, and NoViolet Bulawayo representing a new and highly successful generation of African writers writing in English. The term “Afropolitans” refers to the mostly well-educated, professionally successful characters featured in many of their writings, whose career paths and family histories often spread across various continents, very much like the authors’ biographies. 

    “Afropolitanism,” a term made prominent by Taiye Selasi in 2005, seeks to counteract what she perceives as a somewhat blighted vision of Africa that obscures the vibrancy and productivity of its artists, writers, and intellectuals. It is difficult not to connect a discussion of Afropolitan writing to Paul Gilroy’s notion of “the Black Atlantic.” In his eponymous study from 1993, Gilroy looks at the Atlantic world as a site of cultural production defined by movements of circulation, where routes, ever since the colonial slave trade, have mattered more than roots. For this reason alone, the Black Atlantic remains a rather relevant framework for a discussion of these 21st-century authors. Novels such as Adichie’s Americanah (2013), NoViolet Bulawayo’s We Need New Names (2013), Teju Cole’s Open City (2011), and Taiye Selasi’s Ghana Must Go (2013) provide compelling accounts of an African diaspora, a with Europe and the US being distant sites of projection, oftentimes taking the shape of refracted images and idealizations.

    The impact of digital media, the globalized dimension of African writing that these authors confidently display, as well as distinct performative and material practices depicted in these novels call for a re-assessment of Gilroy’s concept. In We Need New Names, for example, the performative streak borders on the ludic. The child narrator depicts a global geography enacted by her and her little friends, playing what is termed a “Country-Game,” where each child picks a country they would like to ‘be.’ This represents a playful take on the complications arising in these novels (How to live up to role models that come from tradition but are increasingly also media products? How to thrive as a black artist producing ‘global’ art?). As we will see in the seminar, these performances often follow (or deviate from) authoritative narratives to cope with the confusion that characters experience caused by their very Afropolitanism, namely the fact that they can easily get, as Selasi herself put it, “lost in transnation.”

    Training objectives

    Students can give persuasive account, orally and in writing, of some of the key issues of contemporary Anglophone world literature.

    Students can connect contemporary literary works to older critical discourses and literary traditions.

    Students can apply relevant theoretical terminology to their analysis of literary texts.

    Softskills No
    Off field No
    BeNeFri No
    Mobility No
    UniPop No

    Documents

    Bibliography

    Material:

    We will read and discuss the following novels, copies of which have been ordered at Librophoros (editions were still subject to change in December 25):

    Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Americanah. Harper Collins, 2023. ISBN: 978-0-00-861051-7

    NoViolet Bulawayo. We Need New Names. Vermilion, 2014. ISBN: 978-0-09-958188-8

    Teju Cole. Open City. Random House, 2012. ISBN: 978-0-8129-8009-7

    Taiye Selasi. Ghana Must Go. Penguin, 2014. ISBN: 978-0-670-91988-8

  • Dates and rooms
    Date Hour Type of lesson Place
    16.02.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    23.02.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    02.03.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    09.03.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    16.03.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    23.03.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    30.03.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    13.04.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    20.04.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    27.04.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    04.05.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    11.05.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
    18.05.2026 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4122
  • Assessments methods

    Seminar - SS-2026, Session d'été 2026

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Seminar - SS-2026, Autumn Session 2026

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Seminar - AS-2026, Session d'hiver 2027

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure

    Seminar - SS-2027, Session d'été 2027

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure
  • Assignment
    Valid for the following curricula:
    Comparative Literature 30 [MA]
    Version: SA10_MA_P2_fr_de_V01
    Module optionnel > Module F - Elargissement historique

    Comparative Literature 90 [MA]
    Version: SA10_MA_PA_fr_de_bil_V02
    Module D - Interculturalité

    English Language and Literature 30 [MA]
    Version: SA15_MA_P2_ang_V01
    Module 4minor: English Literature II (1780-present)

    English Language and Literature 90 [MA]
    Version: SA17_MA_PA_ang_V01
    Modules 5 branches > Module 4: English Literature II (1780-present)