Skip to main content
Princeton Mobile homeCourses home
Detail

The Poetics and Politics of Pronouns

COM 396/GER 396/ENG 396/GSS 337

1252
Info tab content
Why do non-binary pronouns make (some) people so angry? How do pronouns regulate our relation to the world, to one another, and to gender? This seminar investigates the history of theoretical reflection on and literary experimentation with pronouns. How does the constitution of the "I" grant access to the symbolic order? How does second-person address produce ethical relationality? How can the enunciation of the "we" avoid coercion and instead model flourishing, robustly multiplicitous community? Can the singular "they" circumvent the traps of gendered language? Readings in poetry, gender theory, linguistics, philosophy, political thought.
Sections tab content

Section S01