ALANA U.S. ETHNIC STUDIES PROGRAM
(African American/Latino/Asian American/Native American)
http://www.uvm.edu/~alana/
Brian Gilley, Director of ALANA U.S. Ethnic Studies
A502 Old Mill Annex,
These courses can be taken for
credit
towards the ALANA U.S. Ethnic Studies minor.
Every course here is taught from a multicultural perspective
and devotes at least two-thirds of its content to the study of
FALL 2009 COURSES
ALAN 051A D1: Intro to
ALANA
Brian Gilley
09:35 10:25 M W F
Introduction to
Ethnic
Studies will critically examine conventional wisdom about race,
ethnicity,
gender, nationalism, and identity. The goal of the course is to engage
the ways
difference is constructed in contemporary society and how differences
produce
social, political and economic experiences for various groups of people.
ANTH 160A D1: North American Indians
93693
Brian Gilley
01:55 02:45 M W F
North America
Indians
examines Native American society in cultural and historical
perspective. The
course will address the social, political and cultural aspects of the
Native
American experience, including "prehistory," European contact and
contemporary Native society. The goal of the course is to
critically
examine the Native experience, question stereotypes, and evaluate the
socio-political realities of being Indigenous in
ANTH 160
Z1 D1: North
American Indians 93694
Brian Gilley
01:55
02:45 M W F
See
ANTH 160A for description
ENGS 005
Sarah Turner
Toni Morrison’s canon thus far spans close to 40 years and contains
nine novels, six children’s books, a short story, three works of
non-fiction plus numerous pieces of scholarly and social criticism.
This TAP course will consider a selection of her works and will explore
her impact upon the American literary canon through a variety of
written responses both traditional and not.
ENGS 057A D1: Race
and Ethnicity in Literary Studies: Intro
90546
Sheila Boland Chira
09:35
10:25
M W F
ENGS 057B D1: Race and Ethnicity in Literary
Studies: Intro 90548
Sheila Boland Chira
10:40
11:30
M W F
See ENGS 057A for description.
ENGS 057C D1: Race
and Ethnicity in Literary Studies: Intro
90550
Isabella Jeso
11:45
12:35
M W F
ENGS 057D
D1:Race
and Ethnicity in Literary Studies: Intro
93609
Isabella Jeso
12:50
01:40
M W F
See ENGS 057C for description.
ENGS 057E
D1:Race
and Ethnicity in Literary Studies: Intro
93926
Jamie Williamson
10:40
11:30
M W F
We will be reading work by American Indian writers, and coming at the
issue of race relations and ethnic identity from a variety of
perspectives. The work will include fiction, both short stories and
novels, biography and autobiography, and traditional narratives drawn
from the repertoires of oral storytellers. Much of the work will focus
on the recent and contemporary period; some will focus on the earlier
period of European contact, giving a chronological/historical context
necessary to evaluate the later material; we will also read some
material reflecting oral narrative traditions pre-dating contact
(“myths” and “legends”) to provide a sense of continuity between the
period of political and social autonomy and the period of subjugation
by European powers. Writers may include Sherman Alexie, Eden Robinson,
Joseph Marshall, James Welch, and others. We will also view several
films, including Skins and Incident at Oglala.
ENGS 057F D1:Race and Ethnicity in Literary
Studies: Intro 93928
Jamie Williamson
11:45
12:35
M W F
See ENGS 057E for description.
ENGS 057G D1:Race and Ethnicity in Literary
Studies: Intro 93929
Jamie
Williamson
12:50
01:40
M W F
See ENGS 057E for
description.
ENGS 057H D1:Race and
Ethnicity in Literary Studies: Intro 94303
Sarah Turner
In an interview several years ago, Nobel Prize winning author Toni
Morrison stated that racism is a scholarly affair and one that is
useful for whites. In the 1998 movie American History X, Ed Norton's
character claims that all problems in this country are race-related.
Poet and activist Maya Angelou envisions a time when “ideally, race
should be [only] as important as the color coordination of one’s
costume.” What do these statements mean? And what relevance do they
have for us, in 2009, as this country welcomes its first biracial
president? This course considers a variety of contemporary texts --
novels, short stories, movies -- written by and about non-hegemonic
groups living in the United States today that explore the intersections
of race, class, socioeconomics, racism and institutionalized racism.
Because the course expects students to engage in polemical and engaging
dialogue, students are asked to “agree to disagree’ in a respectful
environment.
ENGS 111A Multiethnic Literature and Film 93612
Jinny Huh
02:30
03:45
T R and 04:00
06:45
T
How do we narrate and visualize race? How do narrative and visual
depictions alter across different racial groups? This course will
examine how twentieth century American literature and popular culture
construct certain “racial knowledges” in the formation of American
identity. Through a comparative race approach (Whiteness Studies,
African American Studies, Asian American Studies, and Afro-Asian
Studies), we will focus on a wide range of literary texts (novels,
short stories, plays, and personal essays as well as interdisciplinary
theoretical essays) and visual “texts” (feature films, music videos,
and television). Furthermore, we will also examine how various genres
(including the passing narrative, the gothic, and comedy/satire) offer
unique approaches to the narrative and visual constructions of race and
difference. Some themes and theoretical concerns we will explore
include: history and memory, whiteness and multicultural angst, racial
hauntings, identity passing, and ethnic humor and satire.
ENGS 160A D1:African American Literature and Culture
Before 1900 93902
Mary Lou Kete
02:30
03:45
T R
"Disremembered and unaccounted for, she
cannot be
lost because no one is looking for her, and even if they were,
how can they call
her if they don’t know her name?"
Toni Morrison, Beloved
This
course attempts to answer the question of how to call---to remember and
to account for---the tradition of African American literature.
Beginning under the conditions of slavery and colonization, this
tradition continues to develop through the periods of Emancipation and
Reconstruction to explode with the works of the 20th-century's Harlem
Renaissance. Our goal is to survey the key works of this
tradition
while considering the relationship between literature and
history.
This course is reading and writing intensive.
ENGS 163B Jazz and the Cultural
Imagination 93976
John Gennari
10:40
11:30 M W F
This course will consider how jazz as an experience of certain sounds,
movements, and states of feeling has always been mediated and
complicated by
peculiarly American cultural patterns, especially those of race and
sexuality.
Our interdisciplinary focus will be on representations of jazz
musicians and
the jazz world in writing (novels, poems, memoirs, criticism,
journalism) and
visual art (film, painting, photography). We'll study writers,
filmmakers, and
artists who've turned to jazz as a source of new and old stories,
heroes and
myths, and as an aesthetic model for new modes of writing and
representation.
In short, we'll consider a variety of texts that appropriate, remember,
dismember, love, and abuse jazz. Prerequisites: knowledge of jazz
history, and
prior completion of the D1 "diversity" requirement.
ENGS 176A D1:20th Century African American Fiction
93427
Emily Bernard
04:00
05:15
T R
This course
is a survey of modern African American fiction. We will
begin with The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man, the first modern
African American novel, and cover most of the significant episodes in
20th century African-American literary production. This is a
reading-intensive course in which we will investigate the evolution of
the African-American literary tradition, as well as the debates and
challenges surrounding this evolution. Our textual analyses will
rely
upon close readings as well as pertinent biographical and historical
material. By the end of the term, you will have a firm
understanding
of the basic themes and concerns of modern African-American
fiction.
Even more important, you will come to appreciate the particular ways in
which African-American writers have used the written word to explore
the unique and precarious relationship between African-American
identities and the larger social and political contexts from which they
emerge.
ENGS 176Z1 D1: 20th Century African American Fiction
94042
Emily Bernard
04:00
05:15
T R
See ENGS 176A for description.
ENGS 177A
Lokangaka Losambe
11:30
12:45
T R
The Harlem Renaissance Movement is believed to have played a great role
in the emergence of the African and West Indian Negritude Movement in
Paris in the early 1930s. This course explores points of connection and
disconnection between these two most prominent 20th-century Black
cultural movements and their relevance to contemporary pan-African
literary production. Authors include Claude Mckay, Langston Hughes,
Countee Cullen, Alain Locke, Jean Toomer, Sterling Brown, Gwendolyn
Bennett, Helene Johnson, Arna Bontemps, Aime Cesaire, Leopold Senghor,
Leon Damas, David Diop, Rene Maran, and Hamidou Kane
ENGS 177B
Lokangaka Losambe
01:00
02:15
T R
See ENGS 177A for
description.
ENGS 195A African American Women Writers
93871
Emily Bernard
02:30
03:45
T R
Literature has always been the primary terrain upon which
African-Americans have cultivated their individual identities and
defended their collective humanity. Within the larger phenomenon
of
the African-American literary tradition, African-American women’s
writing has had to contend with the “politics of respectability” in a
way that has not defined African-American writing by men as
directly.
In this course, we will examine African-American women’s fiction, not
only for its literary achievements, but also for the way it has
addressed, accommodated, and eluded implicit demands that it represent
black male and female lives in specific ways. Throughout this
course,
we will engage in larger discussions about the category of
African-American women’s writing itself. Who is served by the
segregation of black women’s writing into its own groups? Who, in
fact, is authorized to author a black text? Can a white author
write
“black” fiction, and vice-versa? This is a reading intensive
course.
Work for this class will include: multiple reading quizzes, essays, and
a final exam.
ENGS 195Z1 African
American Women's Fiction 94043
Emily Bernard
02:30
03:45
T R
See ENGS 195A for description.
ENGS 251A Post-Coloniality in African American Literature 93911
Lokangaka Losambe
04:00
06:45
This seminar examines the origin and politics of the postcolonial
discourse in African literature and society. We will particularly
consider African writers’ responses to the European, colonial ordering
of the African otherness. Authors will include Joseph Conrad, Joyce
Cary, Olaudah Equiano, Frantz Fanon, Leopold Senghor, Chinua Achebe,
Wole Soyinka, Mariama Ba, Tsitsi Dangarembga and Zakes Mda. Fulfills
A& S Non-European Culture requirement; Eligible for African Studies
Credit.
Prerequisite: ENGS 86. Instructor permission required.
GEOG 060A D1:Geography of Race and Ethnicity in the
Pablo Bose
04:05
05:20
M W
Examination of the ways in which spatial and locational processes shape
and are shaped by ethnic and racial identities, struggles, and
relationships.
HST
187A D1:African American
History:1619-Civil War 91121
Amani Whitfield
10:40
11:30
M W F
This course will
examine
African American history from the earliest settlements in
Prerequisite: 3 hours history.
HST
240A D2: Comparative
Slavery: Historical Perspective 90729
Sean Stilwell
04:05 07:05 W
This seminar
explores the
history of slavery over a variety of time periods and
geographies.
We will first explore the meanings, forms and definitions of slavery as
an
institution, followed by an examination of the practice of slavery in
the
Ancient World, Africa, and the
Prerequisites: Junior, senior or graduate standing; 12 hours of history.
Amani
Whitfield
04:00-6:45 R
Few issues in American history have been as vigorously debated as
the
so-called "Peculiar Institution." this class is not an
examination of
the various systems of slavery in the United States. Instead, it
is
about how historians have interpreted the most controversial and
definitive element of our history. We will examine various
debates
including the origin of American slavery, the nature of master/slave
relations, slave culture, and the slave family. As an upper-level
seminar, students will write a short essay and a 20-page historiography
paper about a particular debate in American slavery.
Prerequisite: Junior, senior or graduate standing; 12 hours of history.
MU
005A D2: Intro to Jazz
History 90923
Ray Vega
11:30 12:20 R
Survey of
Jazz from its roots in ragtime and
blues of the late nineteenth century to contemporary styles.
Prerequisites: Ability to read music, or permission of
instructor.
Not open to music majors for credit.
POLS 229A Race and American Political Development 93450
Alec Ewald
03:00 04:15 M W
This course
analyzes
connections between race and political institutions in the
Prerequisite: POLS 21, three hours at 100 level, Junior/Senior
standing; open
to POLS majors/minors only until April 16.
PSYC 095B TAP: Race, Gender, Sexuality and Violence
93265
Dharam Yadav
10:00 11:15 T R
Through a series of
topical
discussions, case studies and visual presentations, students will be
introduced
to theory and research concerning the Psychology of media images of
race,
racial stereotypes, gender, sex roles, sexuality and violence, and how
these
images shape human consciousness. The goal of the course is to
give the
students a basic understanding of the nature of these pervasive images
and the
Psychological, social and developmental impacts these images have on
society
and in the lives of children and adults in such areas as social
prejudice,
gender roles, human aggression, health, and consumer behavior.
TAP A&S 1st
Year only
SOC
019A D1: Race Relations
in the
Nikki Khanna
08:30
09:45
T R
The course
analyzes racial prejudice,
discrimination and other dominant group practices directed toward
Native-,
Asian-, and African-Americans. It also explores the social
movements of
these groups for integration, accommodation, and separatism
SOC
019Z1 D1: Race Relations
in the
Moustapha Diouf
05:30
08:15
M
See SOC 19A for description
SOC
119A D1: Race and
Ethnicity 93500
Katrinell
10:40
11:30
M W F
Description and analysis of ethnic, racial, and
religious groups in the U.S. Examination of social/cultural patterns in
the
larger society and in these groups themselves.
SOC
219A D1: Race Relations 91297
Nikki Khanna
11:30 12:45 T R
Examination
of American racial subordination in social and historical perspective.
Analysis
of interracial contacts, racial subcultures and social structures, and
responses to racial prejudice and discrimination.
Prereqs:
Six hours of Sociology including 1 and
100, or 1 and 101, or instructor permission.
SOC
295B International
Migration and American Society 93510
Thomas Macias
11:45
12:35
M W F
Based on a survey
of the
contemporary sociological literature on immigration, comparisons will
be made
across categories, social groups and historical periods, including:
post-1965
"new immigration" from Asia and Latin America and early 20th century
"old immigration" from eastern and southern
SOC
295D Race, Gender
& Work 93512
Katrinell
12:50
01:40 M W F This is a
sociological assessment of
intersections between race and ethnic relations, the politics of
gender, and
employment opportunity in the 21st century American workplace.
Through a
combination of lectures, readings, films, and discussions, we will
explore the
origins and the consequences of race, gender and workplace hierarchies
that
shape the employment experiences of social groups in the
SWSS 140A D1: Social
Work with Indigenous Communities: The Abenaki in
VT 91897
Gary Widrick
An introduction to
social
work practice and cultural competency with theAbenaki tribe in
Prerequisites: Sophomore standing and Social Work major.
Last modified August 25 2009 03:44 PM