Courses Archive

  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies C265 Research Advances in Race, Diversity, and Educational Policy

    This introductory graduate seminar will engage the research literature on race, diversity, and educational policy to provide a foundation for examining contemporary issues in American public schooling. We will examine research on race, culture, and learning alongside more policy driven research on school structures, governance, finance, politics, and policy. In doing so, we will blend micro level examinations of teaching and learning with macro level considerations of politics and policy.

    • Th 11AM-12PM
    • Scott, J
    • 3507 A Tolman
    • 3
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 241 Special Topics in Development Studies of the Diaspora 1 – 4 Units

    One hour of lecture per week per unit. Topics will vary from term to term depending on student demand and faculty availability.
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 240 Special Topics in Cultural Studies of the Diaspora

    One hour of lecture per week per unit. Topics will vary from term to term depending on student demand and faculty availability.

    • W 3PM-6Pm
    • Laguerre, M
    • 258 Dwinelle
    • 4
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies H195B Senior Thesis

    The student will complete a primary research and writing project based on study of an advanced topic with faculty sponsor. Fulfills department thesis requirement. Application and details at departmental adviser's office. Students must enroll for both semesters of the sequence.

  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies H195A Senior Honors Thesis

    The student will complete a primary research and writing project based on study of an advanced topic with faculty sponsor. Fulfills department thesis requirement. Application and details at departmental adviser's office. Students must enroll for both semesters of the sequence.

  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies C178 Cultural Studies

    Although the Caribbean has been recognized in recent years as being one of the most compelling areas in regard to questions of interculturality, hybridity, and miscegenation, the Dutch-speaking part of it has somehow been neglected. This course intends to give an opportunity to those who do not necessarily have a command of Dutch language, but wish to complete their knowledge of Latin-American and Carribean history, culture, and literature.
    • Tu/Th 330PM-5PM
    • Dewulf
    • 20 Barrows
    • 4
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 159 Special Topics in African American Literature

    Special topics in African American literature.

    • Tu/Th 4PM-6PM
    • Stanley, C
    • 122 barrows
    • 3
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 158B Poetry for the People Practicum

    A teaching practicum, with the regular and active supervision of the instructor, for students who completed 156AC during the previous year and 158A in the previous fall. They serve as student teacher poets for 156AC. The focus of 158B is on the teaching of poetry. Each student poet is responsible for a group of seven to ten students, and, under the direct supervision of the instructor, helps the students in his/her group learn to read, criticize, and produce poetry.

    • Tu/Th 12PM-2PM
    • De Leon, A
    • 78 Barrows
    • 4
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 156AC Poetry for the People: introduction to the Art of Poetry

    A large lecture/discussion class which introduces students to poetry as culture, history, criticism, politics, and practice. Focusing comparatively on poetry from three American racial/ethnic groups, this course requires students to learn both the technical structure of various forms of poetry as well as the world views which inform specific poetic traditions. The groups and traditions vary from semester to semester. This course satisfies the Arts and Literature breadth requirement.

    • W 10AM-12PM
    • De Leon, A
    • 166 Barrows
    • 4
  • Spring 2016 : African American Studies 153C Novels of Toni Morrison

    We will closely read seven of Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison's novels, as well as a short story and some of her essays, considering the works in relation to: her interest in creating what she calls "village literature" and in writing literature that does "trope work" that intervenes in American representations of blackness and racial identity; her contributions to the renaissance of black women's writing (and African American literature in general) in the 1980s and 1990s.
    • TuTh 330-5PM
    • De Leon
    • 104 Barrows
    • 4