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African/African American Studies Concentration (AFAMc)

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The African and African American Studies concentration is designed to complement a student's disciplinary major through an interdisciplinary specialization on the contexts and experiences of Africans and their many diasporas. Combining area studies and ethnic studies foci, the African and African American Studies concentration provides students the opportunity to explore the rich connections and exchanges among African people, their descendants, and the global locales--in the Americas, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East--in which they have made and are making their lives. Students can do this through both on-campus courses and off-campus studies programs.

Fostering interdisciplinary critical thinking, the African and African American Studies concentration prepares students for lifetime engagement in scholarship as well as in fields such as law, public policy, education, public health, social work, and the arts. Toward this end, and in addition to coursework, students are encouraged to take advantage of the rich array of speakers, exhibits, co-curricular, and extracurricular activities related to Africans and their diasporas.

Requirements for the Concentration

The African/African American Studies Concentration requires seven courses as follows:

One interdisciplinary course with an "AFAM" designation;

Two survey courses that introduce the "state of the field" of African and/or African Diaspora studies within specific disciplines;

Three distribution courses (from the list of relevant courses) chosen from at least two of the following disciplinary groups: Arts and Literature; Humanties; Social Sciences. Two of the three distributional courses must be at the 200-level or above. At least one of the distribution courses should be a 300-level course in which the student produces a substantial paper or project in African and/or African American Studies. In rare cases, a student can petition to write a substantial paper in a 200-level course (i.e., be released from the 300-level course requirement), if that course is highly relevant to their own focus.

The capstone experience consists of AFAM 398, a two-credit course in which the student creates a portfolio of their work in African and African American studies and writes a 5-10 page reflective essay tying these papers together. This course gives students an opportunity to seriously relfect about the courses they have taken and the work they have produced within the concentration, and to draw connections among them. The two-credit course is offered by the Director or another member of the program core faculty. If there are not enough students in a particular year to offer AFAM 398 as a course, it will be offered as a tutorial. Even in that case, if multiple students are completing their major or concentration in the same year, they will strive to take the tutorial simultaneously to facilitate common discussion of the main themes in African and African American Studies and how they are woven through the corpus of each student's undergraduate opus.

Concentrators are highly encouraged to take the AMST 345 junior methods course.

Structure of Courses Applicable to the Concentration

Interdisciplinary Course (6 credits). Each student must complete one interdisciplinary 6-credit course which, in part, specifically discusses African/African-American Studies as a discipline.

AFAM 113 Introduction to African/African American Studies (not offered in 2013-14)

AFAM 130 African-American Social Movements (not offered in 2013-14)

AFAM 182 Black Identity and Belonging

AFAM 194 The Black Middle Class

Survey Courses (12 credits). Each student must take two of the following 6-credit courses:

ARTH 140 African Art and Culture (not offered in 2013-14)

ENGL 117 African American Literature

HIST 125 African American History I

HIST 126 African American History II

HIST 183 History of Early West Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 184 Colonial West Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

Distribution Courses (18 credits). Each student should take 18 credits chosen from at least two of the following disciplinary groups: Arts and Literature, Humanities and Social Sciences including one six-credit course which must be at the 300-level.

Arts and Literature

ENGL 238 African Literature in English

ENGL 243 Text and Film (not offered in 2013-14)

ENGL 252 Caribbean Fiction

ENGL 258 Contemporary American Playwrights of Color

ENGL 350 The Postcolonial Novel: Forms and Contexts (not offered in 2013-14)

FREN 235 Francophone Literature of Africa and the Caribbean (not offered in 2013-14)

FREN 245 Francophone Literature of Africa and the Caribbean

FREN 250 Film and Society in Mali (not offered in 2013-14)

FREN 251 Negotiating the Past--the Challenges of Nation-Building in Mali (not offered in 2013-14)

FREN 252 Literature and Society in Mali (not offered in 2013-14)

FREN 308 France and the African Imagination (not offered in 2013-14)

MUSC 130 History of Jazz

MUSC 131 The Blues From the Delta to Chicago (not offered in 2013-14)

MUSC 132 Golden Age of R and B

MUSC 245 Music of Africa

MUSC 332 Motown

Humanities

HIST 100 American Antebellum Slavery

HIST 219 Is Obama Black? American Mixed-Race History

HIST 276 The African Diaspora in Latin America (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 280 African in the Arab World (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 281 War in Modern Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 282 Masquerades in Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 286 Africans in the Arab World: On Site and Revisited (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 322 Civil Rights and Black Power (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 381 History, Memory and the Atlantic World: Ghana and the United States (not offered in 2013-14)

HIST 382 History, Memory, and the Atlantic World: On Site and Revisited (not offered in 2013-14)

RELG 227 Liberation Theologies

RELG 246 Religion and the Black Freedom Struggle (not offered in 2013-14)

RELG 247 RAP and Religion: Rhymes about God and the Good (not offered in 2013-14)

RELG 262 Islamic Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

RELG 330 Radical Pacifism Social Inquiry (not offered in 2013-14)

Social Sciences

EDUC 225 Issues in Urban Education (not offered in 2013-14)

ENTS 264 Agriculture and Rural Livelihoods in Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

ENTS 280 Tanzania Program: Research Projects on Conservation and Development (not offered in 2013-14)

ENTS 284 Tanzania Program: Cultural Studies (not offered in 2013-14)

ENTS 285 Wildlife Conservation and Livelihoods (not offered in 2013-14)

POSC 207 Urban Politics in a Global Era (not offered in 2013-14)

POSC 266 Urban Political Economy

POSC 306 How Race Matters in American Politics (not offered in 2013-14)

POSC 351 Political Theory of Dr. Martin Luther King (not offered in 2013-14)

POSC 366 Urban Political Economy (not offered in 2013-14)

PSYC 384 Psychology of Prejudice

SOAN 256 Ethnography of Africa (not offered in 2013-14)

SOAN 272 Race and Ethnicity in the United States

SOAN 395 Ethnography of Reproduction

Arts Practice

DANC 301 Contemporary Styles and Techniques: African Dance

MUSC 183J Ethnic Drumming Instruction (Juried)

MUSC 191 Karimba (not offered in 2013-14)

MUSC 192 West African Drum Ensemble

MUSC 193 African Mbira Ensemble (not offered in 2013-14)

MUSC 195 Jubilee Singers

MUSC 199 Class African Drum

Senior Seminar/Capstone Experience (2 credits)

The capstone experience consists of AFAM 398, a two-credit course in which the student creates a portfolio of their work in African and African American Studies and writes a 5-10 page reflective essay tying these papers together. This course gives students an opportunity to seriously reflect about the courses they have taken and the work they have produced within the concentration, and to draw connections among them.