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Aktuelles Semester: WiSe 2025/26

Seminar: Pocahontas as Cultural Narrative

Funktionen
  • Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
  • https://moodle.uni-greifswald.de/course/view.php?id=26379
Informationen

Grunddaten

Veranstaltungsnummer: 4002018
Semester: WiSe 2025/26
SWS: 2
Sprache: Englisch
Max. Teilnehmer/-innen: 25
Belegungszeitraum: IfAA Kursanmeldung    01.09.2025 08:00:00 - 31.10.2025   

Termine

Gruppe: - iCalendar Export für Outlook

Dieser Termin ist ausschließlich für Lehramtsstudenten.

  Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Raum-
plan
Lehrperson Bemerkung fällt aus am Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
iCalendar Export für Outlook Do. 14:00 bis 16:00 c.t. woech 16.10.2025 bis
29.01.2026
Ernst-Lohmeyer-Platz 3 - Raum 2.05 Horn     25
Einzeltermine
16.10.2025 | 23.10.2025 | 30.10.2025 | 06.11.2025 | 13.11.2025 | 20.11.2025 | 27.11.2025 | 04.12.2025 | 11.12.2025 | 18.12.2025 | 08.01.2026 | 15.01.2026 | 22.01.2026 | 29.01.2026 |

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Inhalt

Kommentar

From 17th-century engravings to 21st-century blockbusters, the Powhatan woman who became known as Pocahontas has been a central component of US American cultural imaginary. At once understood as settler colonialism’s Other and the mythical mother of the new nation, Pocahontas offers a rich and contradictory source for studying the contact zone of colonial encounters and the mythic function of US American history more broadly: what is the relation between story and history? How are stories used to establish and contest national identities? Who gets to tell such stories in the first place? And how do they become part of a nation’s collective memory?

To answer such questions, students will trace the development of Pocahontas from historical figure to national symbol by engaging with historical primary material, recent scholarly revisions of historical events, and various retellings of Pocahontas’ story from the 18th to the 21st century in literature, arts, and film.

Students will furthermore engage with core American Studies scholarship on the relevance of myths and symbols, train their ability to work with primary material, and hone their skills in cultural analysis.

This seminar will be of value in particular to future teachers who anticipate encountering “popular” stories about US American history in the classroom and who want to be prepared to guide their critical reflection and contextualization.

Bemerkung

This seminar will combine classroom meetings with asynchronous digital assignments.

Moodle https://moodle.uni-greifswald.de/course/view.php?id=26379

Zugeordnete Person

Zugeordnete Person Zuständigkeit
Horn, Katrin, Prof. Dr. phil. verantwortlich

Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen

Einrichtung Gender Studies
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