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Professors Turlish (English), Branham (Rhetoric), Taylor
(English), and Kessler (Political Science); Associate Professors
Creighton (History)(on leave, fall semester), Bruce (Religion),
Fra-Molinero (Spanish), Eames (Anthropology)(on leave, winter
semester and Short Term), Kane (Sociology), Nero (Rhetoric), and
Carnegie (Anthropology), Chair; Assistant Professors Chin
(English), Hill (Political Science), Jensen (History), Williams
(Music and African American Studies), and Rivers (Political
Science); Mr. Pope.L (Theater)
African American studies is an interdisciplinary program designed
to enrich knowledge of the experience of African Americans from
the past to the present, both within and beyond the United
States. Attention is given to race as a critical tool of analysis
for explaining the allocation of economic resources, the
formation of personal and group identity, and the changing nature
of political behavior. Study of African American experiences
provides insight into secular cultural practices, intellectual
traditions, religious doctrines and practices, and social
institutions with attention to issues of class, gender,
ethnicity, and sexual orientation.
Major requirements: Students must complete eleven courses
and a thesis. Students must complete either African American
Studies 457 or African American Studies 458 (senior thesis). In
addition students should fulfill the following requirements from
the courses approved for the major: one course must have an
experiential component; one course must be a junior-senior
seminar.
The chair of African American studies provides a list of courses
offered each year. Because of the interdisciplinary nature of the
program, students should 1) consult regularly with the chair or a
faculty advisor in African American studies to ensure that their
programs have both breadth and depth, and 2) devise a program of
study approved by the chair or a faculty advisor by the fall
semester of the junior year.
Thesis advisors should be chosen by each student, in consultation
with the chair, according to the subject matter of the thesis.
Courses
140A. Introduction to African American Studies. This
course examines African American history and culture through four
themes: fragmentation, exclusion, resistance, and community.
Particular attention is given to the diversity of cultures in the
African diaspora in the Americas. Enrollment limited to 40. L.
Williams.
160. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African
American History. Since its origins in the early twentieth
century, film has debated how to represent black suffering. This
course examines one aspect of that debate: the persistent themes
of white goodness, innocence, and blamelessness in films that are
allegedly about black history and culture. Historical and
cultural topics examined in film include the enslavement of
Africans, Reconstruction, and the civil rights movement. Some of
the films include the mini-series Roots, Mississippi Burning, the
four versions of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Glory, Birth of a Nation, and
Rosewood. Particular attention is given to films in the
interracial male buddy genre, such as The Defiant Ones, In the
Heat of the Night, 48 Hours, and Lethal Weapon. C. Nero.
239. Black Women in Music. Angela Davis states, "Black
people were able to create with their music an aesthetic
community of resistance, which in turn encouraged and nurtured a
political community of active struggle for freedom." This course
examines the role of black women as critics, composers, and
performers who challenge externally defined controlling images.
Topics include: black women in the music industry; black women in
music of the African diaspora; and black women as rappers, jazz
innovators, and musicians in the classical and gospel traditions.
This course is the same as Music 239 and Women's Studies 239.
Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 30. L.
Williams.
249. African American Popular Music. When Americans stared
at their black-and-white television sets in the early 1950s, they
saw only a white world. As with music, variety shows primarily
spotlighted the talent of white performers. Change came slowly,
and during the late 1950s American Bandstand introduced viewers
to such African American artists as Dizzy Gillespie and Chubby
Checker. Over the last two decades, however, the emergence of
music videos has created the need for a critical and scholarly
understanding of the emerging forces of African American music,
dance, and drama in the United States from the 1950s to the
present. This course is the same as Music 249. Open to first-year
students. Enrollment limited to 40. L. Williams.
250. Interdisciplinary Studies: Methods and Modes of Inquiry.
Interdisciplinarity involves more than a meeting of
disciplines. Practitioners stretch methodological norms and reach
across disciplinary boundaries. Through examination of a single
topic, this course introduces students to interdisciplinary
methods of analysis. Students examine what practitioners actually
do and work to become practitioners themselves.
Prerequisite(s): any two courses in women's studies,
African American studies, or American cultural studies. This
course is the same as American Cultural Studies 250 and Women's
Studies 250. T. Chin.
262. Ethnomusicology: African Diaspora. This introductory
course is a survey of key concepts, problems, and perspectives in
ethnomusicological theory drawing upon the African diaspora as a
cross-cultural framework. This course focuses on the social,
political, and intellectual forces of African culture that
contributed to the growth of ethnomusicology from the late
nineteenth century to the present. This course is the same as
Music 262 and Anthropology 262. Open to first-year students.
Enrollment limited to 25. L. Williams.
280. Education, Reform, and Politics. The United States
has experienced nearly two centuries of growth and change in the
organization of private and public education. The goals of this
course are to examine 1) alternative educational philosophies,
practices, and pedagogies; and 2) contemporary issues and
organizational processes in relation to the constituencies of
schools, learning, research, legal decisions, planning, and
policy. The study of these areas includes K-12, postsecondary,
graduate vocational schools, and home schooling. Examples of
specific study areas are African American pedagogy and
philosophy-practice, tracking, race and educational research,
teacher effectiveness and accountability, and the elimination and
reinvention of parent involvement. This course is the same as
Sociology 280 and Education 280. Open to first-year students.
Enrollment limited to 40. Staff.
360. Independent Study. Independent study of selected
topics by individual students. Approval of the chair is required.
Students must meet periodically with the instructor and complete
papers or projects. Students are limited to one independent study
per semester. Written permission of the instructor is required.
Staff.
390A. The Harlem Renaissance. This course examines the
extraordinary creativity in the arts and in other aspects of
intellectual life by African Americans in the 1920s and 1930s.
Although this cultural phenomenon was national in scope, most
scholars agree that New York City, and Harlem in particular, was
its epicenter. Possible topics include: the artist as iconoclast;
contributions to the theater and the performing arts; racial and
cultural identity in literature; the formation of a community of
black critical theorists; the role in promoting the arts by
political movements such as the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Marcus Garvey's
Universal Negro Improvement Association; the visual arts and
racial identity; and the New Negro Movement, campus revolts, and
the "first wave" of demands for black studies in the college and
university curriculum.
Prerequisite(s): one of the following: English 250,
Rhetoric 275, or History 243. Enrollment limited to 15. C.
Nero.
399B. Junior-Senior Seminar in Ethnomusicology. This
course introduces students to ethnomusicological methods by
encouraging the development of critical and analytical tools of
inquiry necessary for fieldwork and research. The course focuses
on the social, cultural, political, and intellectual forces that
shaped the growth of ethnomusicology in the United States and
abroad. Students are expected to undertake an innovative research
project on a theoretical approach for studying music in its
cultural and historical context. Students critically examine the
music, current philosophical thoughts of ethnomusicology, and
their own personal interviews with musicians.
Prerequisite(s): one of the following: African American
Studies/Music 249, African American Studies/Anthropology/Music
262, or Music 232. This course is the same as Music 399B.
Enrollment limited to 15. L. Williams.
457. 458. Senior Thesis. The research and writing of an
extended essay or report, or the completion of a creative
project, under the supervision of a faculty member. Students
register for African American Studies 457 in the fall semester
and for African American Studies 458 in the winter semester.
Majors writing an honors thesis register for both African
American Studies 457 and 458. Staff.
Short Term Units
s22. Africa in Me: Cultural Transmission in Brazil.
Brazil is second only to Nigeria in population of people of
African descent. Brazil, along with Cuba, has the longest history
of slavery in the Western world in modern times. Slavery was
abolished in Brazil in 1888, and its long history continues to
have a decisive effect upon contemporary social and political
institutions. This unit examines the impact of slavery in modern
Brazil by examining African retentions in history, culture, and
religion. This unit is the same as Spanish s22. Open to first-
year students. Enrollment limited to 60. B. Fra-Molinero, C.
Nero, Staff.
s50. Individual Research. Registration in this unit is
granted by the program only after the student has submitted a
written proposal for a full-time research project to be completed
during the Short Term and has secured the sponsorship of a member
of the program to direct the study and evaluate results. Students
are limited to one individual research unit. Open to first-year
students. Staff.
The major in African American studies consists of eleven courses
distributed as follows:
- African American Studies 140A. Introduction to African
American Studies.
- Survey of African American Studies:
English 250. The African American Novel.
History 243. African American History.
Rhetoric 275. African American Public Address.
- Race as a Critical Tool for Analysis. One course required
from among:
African American Studies/Education/Sociology
280. Education, Reform, and Politics.
Art 288. Visualizing Race.
English 121I. Reading "Race" and Ethnicity in American
Literature.
Rhetoric 331. Rhetorical Theory.
Sociology 240. Race and Ethnicity in the United States.
- Feminist Histories and Analyses. One course required from
among:
Political Science 235. Black Women in the Americas.
Women's Studies 201. African American Women and Feminist Thought.
- Africans in the Diaspora (non-United States). One course
required from among:
African American Studies/Anthropology/Music 262. Ethnomusicology: African Diaspora.
Anthropology 250. Caribbean Societies: Emergence of Post-
Nationalism.
Anthropology/English s21. Cultural Production and Social Context,
Jamaica.
English 395A. Twentieth-Century Caribbean Narrative.
- Methods and Modes of Research. One course required from
among:
African American Studies/American Cultural Studies/
Women's Studies 250. Interdisciplinary Studies: Methods and Modes of
Inquiry.
Sociology 305. Quantitative Research Methods.
Sociology 306. Qualitative Research Methods.
- Electives. Three courses that may come from sections "b"
through "e" and from among:
African American Studies/Music 249. African American Popular Music.
African American Studies 390A. The Harlem Renaissance.
Art/Political Science/Rhetoric 289. Hate, the State, and Representation.
Classics 305. Africa and the Classics.
English 395B. Dissenting Traditions in Twentieth-Century American
Literature.
English 395K. African American Literary and Cultural Criticism.
English s30. Feminist Literary Criticism.
German 260. Germany and Its Others.
History 144. Social History of the Civil War.
History 261. American Protest in the Twentieth Century.
History 349. Black America in the Twentieth Century.
History 390K. Modern American Intellectual History: From Cultural
Pluralism to Multiculturalism and Beyond.
Music 246. American Music: The Experimental Traditions.
Music 247. Jazz and Blues: History and Practice.
Music s23. Drumming in West Africa: Rhythm, Texture, and Flow.
Political Science 233. African American Politics.
Rhetoric 255. Moving Pictures: The Rhetoric of Committed
Documentary.
Rhetoric 386. Language and Communication of Black Americans.
Sociology 345. Beliefs about Social Inequality.
Theater 225. The Grain of the Black Image.
Theater 226. Minority Images in Hollywood Film.
Theater 250. Twentieth-Century American Dance I.
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