300
An examination of contemporary Latina literary productions in the context of representations of Latinas in mainstream U.S. society. The focus of the course is on women of Hispanic descent living and writing in the United States, including work by and about Chicanas, Puerto Ricans, Dominican Americans, and Cuban Americans. Previous course work in Latina/Latino literature not required, but some previous course work related to African American or other ethnic literature, women's literature/feminism, and/or film studies is strongly recommended.
3
Survey of the historical forces, within the African American community and elsewhere, which have shaped the African American experience. The course explores the cultural, social, and political development of African Americans from their African origins through Reconstruction.
3
Prerequisites
HIST 105 or HIST 133
Survey of the historical forces, within the African American community and elsewhere, which have shaped the African American experience. The course explores the cultural, social, and political development of African Americans from Reconstruction to the present.
3
Prerequisites
HIST 106 or HIST 133
A survey of the history of North America from the perspective of Native Americans, covering topics from the period before contact through the present. Possible topics may include precontact history and societies, the challenges of contact and colonization, Indian Removal, and continuing questions of sovereignty and treaty rights.
3
Prerequisites
HIST 105 or HIST 106 or HIST 133 or
ETHN 205 or
HIST 150 or
HIST 151 or
HIST 152 or
HIST 160 or
HIST 161 or
HIST 170 or
HIST 171 or
HIST 222 or
HIST 223 or
HIST 232 or
HIST 233 or
HIST 243
Introduces the major topics and themes in the ethnohistory of early America from the earliest contacts between Native Americans and Europeans to the early 18th century through a comparative study of British, French, and Spanish interactions with indigenous peoples.
3
Prerequisites
HIST 102 or HIST 105 or HIST 115 or HIST 133
Interdisciplinary approach to race and ethnicity in the United States and other contemporary multiethnic/multiracial societies. Because these courses are equivalents, students who have earned credit for HIST/INDS/WOST 220 are not able to earn credit for this course.
3
Creating an ETHN specific course different from the INDS version.
1-3