|
Proseminar in Black History and Culture G11.2000 Core requirement. 4 points. Introduces incoming M.A. students in the Program in Africana
Studies to significant areas and topics of research as well as the primary
methods of inquiry that have defined the study of black culture and history
since the mid-19th century. Topics include Pan-Africanism, the Harlem
Renaissance, black migration, black feminism, and black cultural studies.
Ethnography and the Global City G11.2102 4 points. Introduces students to the theory and practice of
ethnographic research in contemporary urban settings. Particular emphasis is
directed toward examining theoretical and methodological issues associated with
the study of complex “global” cities. How, for example, do we frame and
investigate questions of cultural identity, social inequality, and political
agency in cities that are nodal points in the transnational circulation of
capital, commodities, labor, and cultural forms?
Seminar: Visual Studies G11.2303 4 points. This seminar explores how the trope of “blackness” is
mediated over a range of ideas, images, and expressions of social difference in
cinema. Screenings and readings examine how popular cinema, ranging from black
independence to the commercial “mainstream,” deals not only with issues of race
and color, but how these issues intersect, and interact, with other social
categories of difference(s) mainly related to class, sexual orientation, and gender
but including many others. The course explores such issues as seeing beyond the
“black-white binary” model of race relations; gendered perspectives on
“blackness” and black women’s filmmaking; the cultural and political dynamic
between blackness and gayness on the screen; and issues of class, caste, and
“colorism” in cinema. The course also examines a number of ideas and theories
related to the material, including passing, double consciousness, unmarked
difference, and creolization.
Colloquium in Women’s History: Race and Reproduction
G11.2600 4 points. From the policies, priorities, and perversions of slave
owners to the pronatalist campaigns of colonial Africa, to the family planning
programs that are a hallmark of liberalism and development in the postcolonial
world, and, most recently, to the promotion of assisted reproduction
technologies among western elites, race and reproduction have always been among
the primary axes on which large-scale political, economic, cultural, social,
and intellectual processes are configured. Because reproduction connects the
intimate experiences of individuals to larger historical structures and forces
and because reproduction is such a fundamental (if varied) biological and
social experience, this topic in particular lends itself to comparative work.
This course explores issues in the history of race and reproduction, focusing
primarily (though not exclusively) on American and African contexts. This
cross-cultural breadth helps students to consider the relationship between
biological experiences (which are often portrayed as universal) and
sociocultural context. Through readings, students consider how different
disciplinary orientations (social history, medical anthropology, feminist
theory, art history, etc.) approach women’s history both methodologically,
theoretically, and in terms of narrative and analytic strategies.
Exodus: The Politics of Black Liberation G11.2610 4 points. Seminar on the struggle for cultural and political autonomy
in the United States among African Americans, primarily in the urban North, who rejected the church-based
nonviolent Civil Rights Movement. Focuses on the “Negro” or African side of what W. E. B. DuBois called Afro-American “double-consciousness.”
To the Mountaintop: The Movement for Civil Rights
G11.2612 4 points. Seminar on the struggle to end racial segregation and
discrimination in the former slave societies of the United States. Focuses on
the “American” side of what W. E. B. DuBois called the Afro-American
“double-consciousness.”
Steal Away: African Atlantic Religious Culture G11.2614 4 points. This seminar is a comparative study of African Atlantic
religious celebration, primarily in the context of Afro-Christianity, but
touching on Islam, “Voodoo,” Santería, and Candomblé. Although designed for
graduate students, this seminar is also open to seniors with a GPA of 3.65 or
better, who may choose to take the seminar on a pass-fail basis.
Topics in Postcoloniality G11.2645 4 points. Explores and interrogates the notion of the “postcolonial”
in relation to certain key aspects of contemporary African and/or Caribbean
societies, cultures, and histories. Individual areas of investigation include
theories of Africa and Africans, Caribbean literary theory, modern postcolonial
theory and its applicability and relevance to recent developments in the
African continent and its diaspora, new identity formations, African and
Caribbean cultural studies, nationalism and the nation-state, creolization, and
theories of resistance.
Haiti in the Caribbean Context G11.2652 4 points. Francophone communities in the Caribbean are as different
from each other as they are different from their Anglophone and Hispanophone
neighbors. This course concentrates on the representation of Haiti, arguably
the most distinctive Caribbean country in the region and the second independent
republic in the hemisphere, in the imagination of Caribbean writers. It is as
much an introduction to key issues in Haitian politics, history, and culture as
an investigation of the impact of Haiti on the rest of the hemisphere. The
latter aspect of the course is examined through a number of texts that react to
Haiti and are drawn from literature for the most part but also from history and
anthropology in the 20th century.
Afro-Latino Culture and History G11.2802 4 points. Latinos are now called “the nation’s largest minority,”
outpacing African Americans and thereby signaling a benchmark in the changing
meaning of what it means to be American. In public accounts of this dramatic
shift, Latinos are commonly counterposed against African Americans in mutually
exclusionary terms: either you are Hispanic or you are black. Little if any
attention goes to the huge though uncounted black Latino population, the group
that fits neatly in neither the Hispanic nor the black category and yet may
play a decisive role in the emerging cultural configurations and political
alignments of our times. This course examines the profound sociological and
cultural implications of the growing Afro-Latino presence in light of recent
theorizing on race and diasporas. After an overview of the historical
background of African-descendant peoples in the Spanish-speaking Americas, the
course then traces the longstanding social experience of black Latinos in the
United States. Along with a discussion of migration patterns and community
formations, there is a focus on narrative accounts of Afro-Latino life and on
the traditions of cultural expression; special attention goes to Afro-Latino
poetry and to the rich history of Afro-Latino music through the generations,
from rumba, mambo, and Cubop to salsa, Latin soul, and hip-hop. Finally, the
course turns to the possible theoretical and political consequences of this
increasingly self-conscious transnational identity formation.
African Literature and Culture G11.2803 4 points. Deals with ethnicity, identity, and the nation-state in
African literature. Analyzes the connections between storytelling and inclusion
in history and shows that African attempts to narrate identity, religious
belonging, and nationalism are pursuits of historical recognition. Crucially,
explores these definitions and their power to bring Africans into relation with
historicity.
Locations of Africa G11.2964
4 points. Focuses on specific regions and peoples on the African
continent, providing in-depth historical, anthropological, sociological, and
aesthetic considerations of their cultures and forms of social organization—as
well as how they have been constructed, classified, and otherwise misread by
Western ethnographers and anthropologists. A representative sample—not an exhaustive list—of affiliated
courses in other departments follows.
CINEMA STUDIES
Third World Cinema H72.1107
4 points.
Brazilian Cinema I H72.2117
4 points.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
Topics in Caribbean Literature I: Caliban and Prospero in
the Development of Caribbean Literature G29.2650 4 points.
FRENCH STUDIES
France
and Francophone Africa G46.2412 4
points.
HISTORY
African American History G57.1782 4 points.
African Culture and Experience in North America
G57.2029 4 points.
African Slavery and the Atlantic Slave Trade G57.2555 4 points.
Race, Civil War, and Reconstruction G57.2607 4 points.
Urban Blacks in 20th-Century America G57.2714 4 points.
Back to Top
|