Unify Course Listings

Courses of Instruction

AFRS BC 3004x Introduction to Africana Studies: Africa Past, Present and Future

Interdisciplinary and thematic approach to the study of Africa, moving from pre-colonial through colonial and post-colonial periods to contemporary Africa. Focus will be on its history, societal relations, politics and the arts. The objective is to provide a critical survey of the history as well as the continuing debates in Africana studies.
General Education Requirement: Cultures in Comparison (CUL). General Education Requirement: Historical Studies (HIS).
3 points

AFRS BC 3005x Introduction to Caribbean Societies

Multidisciplinary exploration of the Anglophone, Hispanic and Francophone Caribbean. Discusses theories about the development and character of Caribbean societies; profiles representative islands; and explores enduring and contemporary issues in Caribbean studies (race, color and class; politics and governance; political economy, the struggles for liberation; cultural and identity and migration.)
3 points

AFRS BC 3006y Introduction to Africana Studies: The African Diaspora

Interdisciplinary and thematic approach to the African diaspora in the Americas: its motivations, dimensions, consequences, and the importance and stakes of its study. Beginning with the contacts between Africans and the Portuguese in the 15th century, this class will open up diverse paths of inquiry as students attempt to answer questions, clear up misconceptions, and challenge assumptions about the presence of Africans in the 'New World.'

- M. Ralph
General Education Requirement: Cultures in Comparison (CUL). General Education Requirement: Historical Studies (HIS).
3 points

AFRS BC 3020y Harlem Crossroads

Studies Harlem in the context of African-American and African diaspora culture and society as well as American urbanization. Primarily focusing on Harlem of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the course offers students opportunities to discuss political economy, immigration, migration and the role of the city in social life.

- Laurie Woodard
General Education Requirement: Historical Studies (HIS).
3 points

AFRS BC 3055x Slave Resistance in the United States from the Colonial Era to the Civil War

Analyzes the multifaceted nature of slave resistance, its portrayal and theorization by scholars. Critically examines the various pathways of resistance of enslaved Africans and African-Americans, both individually and collectively (e.g., running away, non-cooperation, theft, arson, as well as verbal and physical confrontation, revolts and insurrections). Considers how gender shaped acts of resistance.

- C. Naylor
3 points

AFRS BC 3100x (Section 01) Medicine and Power in African History

Examines medical discourse and practice in Africa, emphasizing relationships between power and medical knowledge. Topics include: medicine and empire, tropical medicine, colonial public health and social control, labor, reproductive health, and HIV/AIDS.

- C. Cynn
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC). Not offered in 2010-2011.
4 points

AFRS BC 3109y Africana Colloquium: Critical Race Theory

Engages social constructions of race and racial identity through literary representations. Our conversations will draw upon a number of articulations of race theory, including specific post-1980s Critical Race Theory. In negotiating the persistent links between concepts of race and racialized discursive practice, we will also draw into our discussions anthropological and linguistic theories about race.
General Education Requirement: Social Analysis (SOC). General Education Requirement: Literature (LIT). Not offered in 2010-2011.
4 points

AFRS BC 3110x Africana Colloquium: Post Colonialism & Beyond

Introduces students to the origins and development of postcolonial theory, to the historical and political contexts in which postcolonial theory emerged, and to some of the central historical texts and debates in postcolonial studies. Among other topics, we will examine the Marxist analysis of imperialism; race and/in the negritude and the indigene movements; decolonization, nationalism, and gender; the critique of Orientalism; and feminism, the postcolonial state, and globalization.

- B. Abu-Manneh
4 points

AFRS BC 3120y History of African-American Music

Survey interrogates the cultural and aesthetic development of a variety of interconnected musical genres - such as blues, jazz, gospel, soul, funk, R&B, hip-hop, classical and their ever changing same/names - viewed as complex human activities daringly danced at dangerous discourses inside and outside the American cultural mainstreams.

- W. Lowe
General Education Requirement: The Visual and Performing Arts (ART).
3 points

AFRS BC 3122y Ethnography of Black Americans In the United States

Interdisciplinary survey of writings, film and music on and by black Americans from the 17th-20th century. Examines theories of race and gender constructions, performance and power, as well as systems of image construction in popular culture. Also explores the dynamic nature of notions of authenticity and author.
Not offered in 2010-2011.
3 points

AFRS BC 3146x African American and African Writing and the Screen

Focuses on the context and history of representations of African Americans and Africans in early American and other cinematographies; the simultaneous development of early film and the New Negro, Negritude and Pan African movements; and pioneer African American and African cinema.

- Y. Christianse
4 points

AFRS BC 3148y Literature of the Great Migration

(Also ENGL BC 3148) Examination of fiction, poetry, essays and films about the Great Migration (1910-1950) of African-Americans from the rural South to the urban North, focusing on literary production in New York and Chicago. (This course satisfies the Harlem Requirement for the Africana Studies major).

- Q. Prettyman
General Education Requirement: Literature (LIT).
3 points

AFTH BC 3150y Race and Performance In The Caribbean

Analysis of the shifting place and perception of Afro-Caribbean performance in Caribbean societies. This course takes a cross-cultural approach that examines performance through the lens of ethnography, anthropology, music and literary criticism.

- M. Horn
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor. Sophomore Standing. Enrollment limited to 18 students. General Education Requirement: The Visual and Performing Arts (ART). Not offered in 2010-2011.
4 points

AFRS BC 3560x Human Rights and Social Change in Sub-Saharan Africa

Examines the evolution of the ideas, institutions and practices associated with social justice in Africa and their relationship to contemporary international human rights movement and focuses on the role of human rights in social change. A number of themes will re-occur throughout the course, notably tensions between norms and reality, cultural diversity, economic and political asymmetries, the role of external actors, and women as rights providers. Countries of special interest include Liberia, Senegal, South African and Tanzania.

- J. Martin
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
4 points

AFRS BC 3570y Black Baghdad: How Haiti's Story Tells the West

Looking at a variety of literary texts from France, the United States and the Caribbean, students will consider the manner in which Haiti has been reconfigured to meet the discursive needs and fill the racial fantasies of the colonial and postcolonial "Western" world.

- K. Glover
Prerequisites: Permission of the Instructor
4 points

AFRS BC 3570x Engendering Black Britain

Examines the history of the multivalent social, political, and cultural processes that produced the postcolonial formation of Black Britain. Pays particular attention to the role of gender and race in the constitution of �Britishness� and �blackness� for these subjects as they negotiated the tensions of Empire both in the Caribbean and in the UK. Engages historical, literary, ethnographic and visual texts.

- T. Campt
4 points

AFRS BC 3590x The Middle Passage

In addition to learning about the history of the Middle Passage, students will examine literary and political responses to this forced immigration out of Africa. Identifying responses to slave holding pasts, the seminar culminates in a visit to an historic site of importance in the Middle Passage.

- K. Hall
Prerequisites: Admission to this seminar is by application only. Applications will be made available on the Africana Studies website: www.barnard.edu/africana Not offered in 2010-2011.
4 points

AFRS BC 3998x-BC3999y Senior Seminar

A two-semester program of interdisciplinary research leading to the writing of the senior essay. Senior Seminar is not an independent study, but a structured seminar on methodology and criticism, which in the first semester results in an approved and substantial thesis proposal and annotated bibliography, and in the second semester produces the final thesis. In some cases, a senior seminar in one of the departments contributing to the program may be substituted for the first semester of the Senior Thesis.

- K.Hall
8 points

Cross-Listed Courses

Art History and Archaeology

W3209 Contemporary African Art

W3780 African American Artists in the 20th and 21st Centuries

BC3948 The Visual Culture of the Harlem Renaissance

W4075 Arts of Africa

American Studies

W3931 Race, Poverty, and American Criminal Justice

Anthropology (Barnard)

V1002 The Interpretation of Culture

V2010 Major Debates in the Study of Africa

V3160 The Body and Society

V3660 Gender, Culture, and Human Rights

V3943 Youth and Identity Politics in Africa

W3945 The Ethnographic Problem in Ethnic Studies

V3983 Ideas and Societies in the Carribean

Anthropology

V3926 Rewriting Modernity: Transculturation and the Postcolonial Intellectual

V3977 Trauma

V3988 Race and Sex in Science and Social Practice

Institute for Research in African-American Studies

C1001 Introduction to African-American Studies

C3930 Topics in the Black Experience: "Islam in the African-American Community"

C3930 Topics in the Black Experience: "The Spiritual Quest of August Wilson: Enlightenment, Black Religion and the African American Conjure Tradition"

C3930 Topics in the Black Experience Seminar: "Wild Women, Improvisation and Power: The Jazz Text in 20th century African American Literature"

G4080 Topics in the Black Experience: "Reading in African American Religious History: Religion and Culture in Post Civil Rights Black America"

Art History (Barnard)

BC3941 Contemporary African Photography and Video

BC3948 The Visual Culture of the Harlem Renaissance

Comparative Ethnic Studies

W1012 History of Racialization in the United States

W3200 Migration, Gender, and Race in the Global Americas

W3925 Comparative Social Formation in Urban Space

W3943 Urban Ethnography

Dance (Barnard)

BC2580 Tap as an American Art Form

BC3570 Latin American and Caribbean Dance: Identities in Motion

BC3578 Traditions of African-American Dance

BC3980 Performing the Political: Embodying Change in American Performance

Economics

W4438 Economics of Race In the U.S.

English & Comparative Literature

W3400 African-American Literature II

W3733 Ellison, Bellow, Roth

W3740 Studies In African-American Literature: The Novels of Toni Morrison

English (Barnard)

BC3140 Seminars on Special Themes: Explorations of Black Literature: Early African-American Lit. 1760-1890

BC3144 Black Theatre

BC3148 Literature of the Great Migration: 1916-1970

BC3190 Global Literature in English

BC3196 Home to Harlem: Literature of the Harlem Renaissance

BC3997 Senior Seminars Studies in Literature: The Enlightenment and the African Diaspora: Slavery in English Literature 1660-1820

French and Francophone Studies

W3421 Introduction To French and Francohone Studies, II

French (Barnard)

BC3070 Negritude

BC3071 Major Literary Works of the French-Speaking World

BC3072 Francophone Fiction: Unhomely Women of the Caribbean

BC3073 Africa in Cinema

French and Romance Philology

W3421 Introduction To French and Francophone Studies II

W3504 Cultural Studies: Islam and/in France

History

C1020 African Civilization

W3540 History of the South

W3618 The Modern Caribbean

W3760 Main Currents In African History

W3762 South Africa in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries

W3772 West African History

W4429 Telling About the South

W4434 The Atlantic Slave Trade

W4518 Slavery and Emancipation In the United States

W4531 Migration and Ethnicity in U.S. History

W4767 Apartheid and its Afterlife: History and Memory in 20th Century

W4988 The African Diaspora in the Atlantic World

History (Barnard)

BC1760 Introduction to African History: 1700-Present

BC3180 Merchants, Pirates, and Slaves in the Making of Atlantic Capitalism

BC3980 World Migration

BC4402 Selected Topics in American Womens History

BC4546 The Fourteenth Amendment and Its Uses

BC4763 Children and Childhood in African History

Italian

W4180 Imagining Africa: Italian Colonialism and its Legacy

Jazz Studies

W4900 Topics in Jazz Studies: South African Jazz: Identity & Authenticity

Music

W4540 Histories of Post-1960's Jazz

Political Science (Barnard)

V3604 Civil Wars and International Interventions in Africa

BC3810 * Colloquium on Aid, Politics & Violence in Africa

W4445 Politics of the Middle East and North Africa

Political Science

W3619 Nationalism and Contemporary World Politics

Religion (Barnard)

V3630 Religion and Black Popular Cultures

V3650 Religion and the Civil Rights Movement

W4630 African-American Religion

Sociology (Barnard)

V3235 Social Movements

V3247 The Immigrant Experience, Old and New

Drama and Theatre Arts (Barnard)

BC3144 Black Theatre

Urban Studies

V3410 Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in Urban America

Women's and Gender Studies

BC3121 Black Women In America

Women's Studies (Barnard)

BC3121 Black Women in America

BC3134 Unheard Voices: African Women's Literature

V3312 Theorizing Women's Activism

W4305 Feminist Postcolonial Theory