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Latin American Studies Concentration (LTAMc)

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The Latin American Studies Concentration provides students with a framework for developing a deeper understanding of Latin American history, society, and culture from an interdisciplinary perspective, and is intended to complement a disciplinary major. Concentrators pursue a program of study combining language training with courses in history, sociology and anthropology, literature and film in the Spanish department, political science, as well as other disciplines, culminating in a capstone experience, the Latin American Forum.

Students interested in exploring Latin American Studies as a possible concentration are strongly encouraged to enroll in at least one of several gateway courses early in their career at Carleton. Those designated courses are: History 170 Modern Latin America, 1810-present, Political Science 221 Latin American Politics, Sociology/Anthropology 250 Ethnography of Latin America, and Spanish 242 Introduction to Latin American Literature.

Requirements for the Concentration

HIST 170 Modern Latin America, 1810-present

LTAM 300 Issues in Latin American Studies

LTAM 398 Latin American Forum

One additional survey course, selected from:

POSC 221 Latin American Politics (Not offered in 2015-2016)

SOAN 250 Ethnography of Latin America

SPAN 242 Introduction to Latin American Literature

And 30 credits in electives

Concentrators must also complete Spanish 204 or equivalent. Electives may be chosen from the following list, with at least 12 credits drawn from the first list and twelve from the second. No more than three courses from the student's major may apply to the concentration, and no more than three in the same discipline.Up to twelve elective credits may be comparative or Latino in focus (Economics 240, 241, Music 141, Religion 227, Sociology/Anthropology 203, 233, 234, 259, 302). Up to 18 credits from approved off-campus programs may be counted as electives. Credits in natural science courses taken in Latin America may be applied toward the electives requirement if the director approves. In most cases they will count under the Group II list.

Elective Courses:

Group I:

CAMS 295F Cinema in Chile and Argentina-FLAC (not offered in 2015-2016)

CAMS 295 Cinema in Chile and Argentina: Representing and Reimagining Identity (not offered in 2015-2016)

CAMS 296 Cinema and Cultural Change in Chile and Argentina (not offered in 2015-2016)

ENGL 119 Introduction to U.S. Latino/a Literature (not offered in 2015-2016)

LTAM 100 The Politics of Memory in Latin American Literature

LTAM 382 Conflictive Development: Peru 1980 to Present (not offered in 2015-2016)

MUSC 141 Global Popular Music (not offered in 2015-2016)

MUSC 243 Musical Cultures of the Caribbean (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 207 Exploring Hispanic Culture (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 220 Magical Realism in Latin American Narrative

SPAN 222 Two Voices: Gabriel García Márquez and Laura Restrepo (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 242 Introduction to Latin American Literature

SPAN 255 Women Dramatists in Latin America: Staging Conflicts (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 260 Forces of Nature (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 262 Myth and History in Central American Literature (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 263 History of Human Rights

SPAN 265 Peru Program: Cultures in Transition: The Old and the New in Contemporary Peru (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 266 Postwar Central American LIterature (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 277 The Poem as Artifact: Art and Work in Contemporary Spanish American Poetry

SPAN 321 Murder as a Fine Art: The Detective Novel in Latin America (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 323 The Other American Revolutions (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 330 The Invention of the Modern Novel: Cervantes' Don Quijote

SPAN 342 Latin American Theater: Nation, Power, Gender

SPAN 344 Women Writers in Latin America: Body and Text (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 358 The Spanish Civil War (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 366 Jorge Luis Borges: Less a Man Than a Vast and Complex Literature

SPAN 371 Yours Truly: The Body of the Letter (not offered in 2015-2016)

SPAN 377 History and Subjectivity in Latin American Poetry

Group II:

ECON 240 Microeconomics of Development

ECON 241 Growth and Development

HIST 169 Colonial Latin America 1492-1810 (not offered in 2015-2016)

HIST 170 Modern Latin America 1810-Present

HIST 272 The Mexican Revolution: History, Myth and Art (not offered in 2015-2016)

HIST 273 Go-Betweens and Rebels in the Andean World (not offered in 2015-2016)

HIST 276 The African Diaspora in Latin America (not offered in 2015-2016)

HIST 278 The Spanish Inquisition (not offered in 2015-2016)

LTAM 270 Chile's September 11th: History and Memory since the Coup

POSC 221 Latin American Politics (not offered in 2015-2016)

POSC 322 Neoliberalism and the New Left in Latin America* (not offered in 2015-2016)

RELG 227 Liberation Theologies

SOAN 203 Anthropology of Good Intentions

SOAN 233 Anthropology of Food

SOAN 234 Ecology, Economy, and Culture (not offered in 2015-2016)

SOAN 241 Guatemala Program: Mesoamerican Cultures

SOAN 250 Ethnography of Latin America

SOAN 251 Guatemala Prog: Resource Management and Sustainable Development in the Maya World

SOAN 259 Comparative Issues in Native North America (not offered in 2015-2016)

SOAN 295 Guatemala Program: Field Methods and Individual Research Project

SOAN 302 Anthropology and Indigenous Rights (not offered in 2015-2016)

SOAN 323 Mother Earth: Women, Development and the Environment (not offered in 2015-2016)