After the Unimaginable: Five American Works Shaped by Catastrophe
After the Unimaginable: Five American Works Shaped by Catastrophe
Osher (50+). In this course, we discuss the ideal of civic engagement and practice the principles of civil discourse.
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About This Course
In this course, we explore how American writers confront experiences that strain the limits of language and understanding. Moving from intimate forms of personal loss to the large-scale ruptures of the twentieth century—the end of World War II and the height of the AIDS crisis—we examine how literature responds to moments when ordinary narratives no longer suffice. The selected works trace how individuals and communities endure, remember, and attempt to rebuild after catastrophe. Readings include short fiction by Willa Cather, John Hersey’s Hiroshima, Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five, and Paula Vogel’s The Baltimore Waltz. Together, these works reveal why we turn to literature in difficult times—to understand what has happened, to find comfort in shared humanity, to bear witness, and to search for meaning in a changed world.
Spring 2026 Schedule
Plus members pay only $40 for this course. Visitors not permitted. Please download a free version of zoom at https://zoom.us/ to participate in this course.
You must be at least 50 years old and a current member of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) at UCLA to enroll in this course. If your membership has expired or if you wish to become a new member, please proceed with enrolling in courses and you will be automatically prompted to add a membership during checkout.
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119A
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119A
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119A
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119A
UCLA Extension Gayley Center 119A