Lit Law Race & Culture | William S. Richardson School of Law
570
LAW

Lit Law Race & Culture

Law School Description

Law and Literature both inhabit the realm of interpretation, rhetoric, form, ethics and epistemology. They mediate our relationship to society and share how we imagine the world, each other and ourselves. In this course, we will read and analyze literary texts to explore issues that have been central to the scholarship and teaching of Critical Race Theory. How does the law inform how we talk about or imagine race? What is the social/political/legal/aesthetic construction of whiteness and how are black, brown, Asian, and native peoples constructed by these regimes? How does racism pervade civil institutions? What are the complex intersections of race, gender, class and sexuality? In what ways do subordinated and colonized communities internalize and reproduce racist idelogies, constructions and narratives? How do these communities resist racism and create counter narratives, oppositional texts, culture, morals, epistemology and law? 

UH Mānoa Catalog Description

Law and Literature both inhabit the realm of intrepreation, rhetcoric, ethics and epistemology. In this course, we will read and analyze literary texts to explore law, race, and power. 

Typical Course Credit

1-3

Credit Limit

3

Repeat Limit

Not Repeatable

Instructor Approval

No

Competition

No

Assigned Sections

No

Bar Course

No

Clinical Requirement

No

Semesters Offered

Class Instructor(s) Term Yearsort ascending
View class page Charles R. Lawrence, III
Fall
2017

Tentative Course Rotation

Full Time
Annually
Fall & Spring
Part Time
Annually
Fall & Spring

Effective Since

Fall
2016

Offering

Regular

Schedule Type

Lecture (LEC)

Major Restrictions

Law
Account
Pages