Catalogue 2018-2019 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Africana Studies Program
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Director: Quincy T. Mills;
Steering Committee: Tagreed Al-Haddad (Africana Studies), Patricia-Pia Célérier (French and Francophone Studies), Diane Harrifordab (Sociology), Jonathon Kahn (Religion), Candice M. Lowe Swift (Anthropology), Zachariah Cherian Mampilly (Political Science), Mia Mask (Film), Taneisha Meansb (Political Science), Mootacem Mhiri (Africana Studies), Quincy T. Mills (History), Samson Okoth Opondo (Political Science), Tyrone Simpson, II (English), Jasmine Syedullah (Sociology), Kirsten Wesselhoeftb (Religion);
Participating Faculty: Carlos Alamo (Sociology), Lisa Gail Collins (Art), Eve Dunbar (English), Luke C. Harris (Political Science), Eileen Leonard (Sociology), Erin McCloskey (Education), Lisa Paravisini-Gebert (Hispanic Studies), Hiram Perez (English), Eva Woods Peiró (Hispanic Studies).
b On leave 2018/19, second semester
ab On leave 2018/19
Founded in 1969 out of student protest and political upheaval, the Africana Studies Program continues its commitment to social change and the examination and creation of new knowledge. The Africana Studies Program brings together scholars and scholarship from many fields of study and draws on a range of theoretical and methodological approaches to explore the cultures, histories, institutions, and societies of African and African-descended people. Program strengths include: education and activism; literature; feminism; political thought; Arabic language and culture; critical race theory; queer studies; prison studies; visual culture; creative writing; social, cultural, and political movements; and popular culture.
Advisers: Program director and program faculty.
Major
Correlate Sequences in Africana Studies
The Africana Studies Program offers three correlate sequences.
Africana Studies: I. Introductory
Africana Studies: II. Intermediate
- • AFRS 202 - Black Music
- • AFRS 205 - Arab Women Writers
- • AFRS 207 - Intermediate Arabic
- • AFRS 208 - Intermediate Arabic
- • AFRS 211 - Islam in Europe and the Americas
- • AFRS 212 - Arabic Literature and Culture
- • AFRS 217 - Prisons, Community Reentry, and Critical issues in the Criminal Justice System
- • AFRS 227 - The Harlem Renaissance and its Precursors
- • AFRS 228 - African American Literature
- • AFRS 229 - Black Intellectual History
- • AFRS 231 - Algeria/France:Race, Religion & Citizenship
- • AFRS 232 - African American Cinema
- • AFRS 234 - Creole Religions of the Caribbean
- • AFRS 235 - The Civil Rights Movement in the United States
- • AFRS 236 - Imprisonment and the Prisoner
- • AFRS 242 - Brazil in Crisis: Continuity and Change in Portuguese America
- • AFRS 244 - Indian Ocean
- • AFRS 245 - Making Waves: Topics in Feminist Activism
- • AFRS 246 - French Speaking Cultures and Literatures of Africa and the Caribbean
- • AFRS 247 - The Politics of Difference
- • AFRS 248 - Racial and Ethnic Group Politics in Popular Culture
- • AFRS 249 - Latino/a Formations
- • AFRS 250 - Across Religious Boundaries: Understanding Differences
- • AFRS 251 - Topics in Black Literatures
- • AFRS 252 - Writing the Diaspora: Verses/Versus
- • AFRS 253 - Topics in American Literature
- • AFRS 254 - The Arts of Eastern, Southern, Central and Western Africa
- • AFRS 255 - Race, Representation, and Resistance in U.S. Schools
- • AFRS 256 - Race, Ethnicity and Nationalism
- • AFRS 257 - Genre and the Postcolonial City
- • AFRS 258 - Environment and Culture in the Caribbean
- • AFRS 259 - Settler Colonialism in a Comparative Perspective
- • AFRS 260 - International Relations of the Third World: Bandung to 9/11
- • AFRS 264 - African American Women’s History
- • AFRS 265 - Slavery and Freedom in the U.S.
- • AFRS 266 - Art, Urgency, and Everyday Life in the United States
- • AFRS 270 - The Black Power Movement
- • AFRS 271 - Perspectives on the African Past: Africa Before 1800
- • AFRS 272 - Modern African History
- • AFRS 275 - Caribbean Discourse
- • AFRS 277 - Crossings: Literature without Borders
- • AFRS 279 - Spaces of Exception
- • AFRS 283 - Gender, Sexuality and Abolitionist Activism
- • AFRS 286 - Black Geographies
- • AFRS 290 - Field Work
- • AFRS 298 - Independent Work
- • AFRS 299 - Research Methods
Africana Studies: III. Advanced
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