Courses Archive

  • African American Studies 138 Black Nationalism

    Four hours of lecture per week. Prerequisites: 5B. Examines the concept of black nationalism and its historical and intellectual development. Special attention will be given to the role of African American religion and the attempt to develop "black socialism."
  • African American Studies 158B Poetry for the People: Practicum

    Four hours of seminar, plus peer teaching and performance. Prerequisites: 158A. 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. This course satisfies the American cultures requirement.
  • African American Studies 256 Multiculturalisms

    Three hours of seminar per week. This seminar uses an epistemological and hermeneutic approach to locate and study the ethnic question in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. It examines the social construction of ethnicity and deconstructs it in relation to the gender and class positions of the subject. Modernist and postmodernist theories dealing with state formation and inter-ethnic relations will be scrutinized. National, transnational, and global aspects of ethnicity will be discussed. The technology of the infrapolitics of minority groups in both colonial and postcolonial settings will be assessed.
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  • African American Studies 8B Intermediate Wolof

    Four hours of recitation and one hour of laboratory per week. Prerequisites: 8A. This course reviews and expands students' knowledge of fundamental structures from Elementary Wolof, and appropriate cultural contexts of these structures in oral and written communication. More grammar and vocabulary in a culturally and socially appropriate context is developed. Speaking ability is expanded through oral exercises, individual reports, class discussions, and recordings available at the Berkeley Language Center. Writing and reading are expanded through compositions, written exercises, and independent reading projects with texts available through Berkeley's African Library Collection and supplemented by the instructor's materials.
    • 4
  • African American Studies 27AC Lives of Struggle: Minorities in a Majority Culture

    Three hours of lecture per week. The purpose of this course is to examine the many forms that the struggle of minorities can assume. The focus is on individual struggle and its outcome as reported and perceived by the individuals themselves. Members of three minority aggregates are considered: African Americans, Asian Americans (so called), and Chicano/Latino Americans. The choice of these three has to do with the different histories of members of these aggregrates. Such differences have produced somewhat different approaches to struggle. This course satisfies the American cultures requirement.
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  • African American Studies 115 Language and Social Issues in Africa

    Three hours of lecture per week. This is an upper division course dealing with the relevance of language to social issues in African societies. It will focus on political developments in Africa and the use of language in fostering national identity; attaining cultural emancipation; and as a tool of oppression, of maintenance of social relations, and of addressing issues of education and childhood development, etc. The course will examine such issues as the roots of national language policies as influenced by Africa's reaction to colonialism; the role of western languages in African society and the attitudes towards African languages and cultures; the challenges of nation-building in modern African states; the use of African languages in government, education, and technology; the role of language in dealing with the HIV/AIDS pandemic, and other health issues; minority languages, endangered languages, and language preservation; cultural responses to migration and African diaspora: the use of African languages in the age of globalization and information technology.
  • African American Studies 139 Selected Topics of African American Social Organization and Institutions

    Course may be repeated for credit. One to four hours of lecture per week per unit. Prerequisites: Determined by offering. Topics will vary each semester.
  • African American Studies 159 Special Topics in African American Literature

    Course may be repeated for credit. One to four hours of lecture per week per unit. Prerequisites: Reading and composition requirement, plus those set by instructor. Special topics in African American literature.
  • African American Studies 256B Diaspora, Citizenship, and Transnationality

    Three hours of seminar per week. This seminar analyzes the social construction and reproduction of diasporic communities in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. It examines the relations of the diaspora to the homeland in the context of the globalization process. The role of transnational migration and deterritorialization in the production of bipolar, fragmented, and multiple identities will be analyzed. Postnational models of citizenship--differentiated, transnational, and multicultural--will be assessed in light of poststructuralist theories.
    • 4
  • African American Studies 9A Advanced Wolof

    Four hours of recitation and one hour of laboratory per week. This course reviews and expands students' knowledge from Intermediate Wolof. Oral and written communication will be presented in appropriate cultural contexts. Developing oral language skills will be strongly emphasized as part of this course and will be expanded through individual presentations, class discussions, and recordings available at the Berkeley Language Center. Writing, grammar, vocabulary, and reading are expanded through compositions, written exercises, and independent reading projects with texts available through Berkeley's African Library Collection and supplemented by the instructor's materials.
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