
‘America’ was founded on promises of freedom and refuge from European conflicts, religious persecution, and class struggle. Yet its rise depended on the dispossession and extermination of Indigenous peoples, the enslavement of Africans, and a long history of military conquest. Alongside these legacies of violence stand powerful traditions of anti-war thought and non-violence activism: from Thoreau’s refusal to support the Mexican-American War to Martin Luther King Jr.’s critique of Vietnam, from draft resisters to anti-imperialist feminism.
After an initial historical and cultural overview, we will focus on literary texts to analyze how race, class, gender, and ethnicity shape American identities in relation to war and conflict, and how writers and artists have questioned dominant myths of patriotic violence. Through literature, film, music, historical documents, visual art, and popular culture, we will explore counter-stories of nonviolence, solidarity, and resistance.
Categoria A.A. 2025 - 2026 / Corsi di laurea / LINGUE, LETTERATURE E MEDIAZIONE CULTURALE
- Docente: Renata Morresi
