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CAS AA 207: Introduction to Ethnic, Race and Minority Relations
Social definition of race and ethnicity. The adjustment of different ethnic groups and their impact upon U.S. social life. How prejudice and discrimination create class identities and how caste relations have affected patterns of integration during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Also offered as CAS SO 207. -
CAS AA 304: Introduction to African American Women Writers
Surveys the writings of African American women writers from slavery to the present and explores the African American female literary tradition in the context of black history and culture. Topic for Fall 2010: Toni Morrison’s American Times. Examines four of the Nobel Laureate novels, using primary and secondary materials to construct historical contexts and critical perspectives. Also offered as CAS EN 370. -
CAS AA 310: History of the Civil Rights Movement
History of the African American struggle for racial equality and democracy from the turn of the century through the 1960s. Use is made of the most recent scholarship, memoirs, documentary films, and oral history accounts. Also offered as CAS HI 378. -
CAS AA 316: African Diaspora Arts in the Americas
Study of the transmission of African artistry in the Caribbean, South America, and the United States from the period of slavery to the present. Topics include Kongo and Yoruba arts and their influence on the arts of SanterĂa, Vodun, and carnival. Also offered as CAS AH 316. -
CAS AA 363: Race and the Development of the American Economy: A Global Perspective
Surveys the economic history of African Americans within the context of the development of the American and global economies. Topics include the economics of slavery; race and industrialization; the Great Migration; anti-discrimination legislation; and the historical origins of contemporary racial inequalities. Also offered as CAS EC 363. -
CAS AA 371: African American History
The history of African Americans from African origins to present time; consideration of slavery, reconstruction, and ethnic relations from the colonial era to our own time. Also offered as CAS HI 371. -
CAS AA 385: Atlantic History
Examines the various interactions that shaped the Atlantic World, connecting Europe, Africa, and the Americas between 1400 and 1800. Begins by defining the political interaction, then emphasizes cultural exchange, religious conversion, and the revolutionary era. Also offered as CAS HI 385. -
CAS AA 388: Black Radical Thought
Black radical thought in America, Europe, and Africa since the eighteenth century through writings of abolitionists, leaders of revolutions and liberation movements, Black nationalists, and Black socialists. Emphasizes the global nature of the "Black World" and its role in world history. Also offered as CAS HI 388. -
CAS AA 395: Power, Leadership, and Governance in Africa and the Caribbean
Haitian Revolution; British Caribbean, leadership, governance, and power in Africa during the period of legitimate trade; visionaries, dictators, and nationalist politics in the Caribbean; chiefs, western elites, and nationalism in colonial Africa; road to governance in post-colonial Caribbean and Africa. Also offered as CAS HI 395 and IR 394. -
CAS AA 396: State and Commerce in Atlantic Africa, 1450-1850
Examines--both by region and across the larger Atlantic area--the ways that overseas commerce, in particular the slave trade, interacted with and was shaped by African politics and economic variables. Also offered as CAS HI 396. -
CAS AA 408: Seminar: Ethnic, Race, and Minority Relations
Formation and position of ethnic minorities in the United States, including cross-group comparisons from England, Africa, and other parts of the world. Readings and field experience. Also offered as CAS SO 408. -
CAS AA 489: The African Diaspora in the Americas
Topic for Spring 2010: African American History in Global and Comparative Perspective. African American history in an international framework. Examines development of racial categories in early transatlantic trade, Black participation in armed conflict, diverse Black communities in the twentieth century. Also offered as CAS HI 489. -
CAS AA 490: Blacks and Asians: Encounters Through Time and Space
Exploration of historical encounters between Africans and people of African descent, and Asians and people of Asian descent. How such people imagined themselves, interacted with each other, viewed each other, influenced each other, and borrowed from each other. -
CAS AA 491: Directed Study in African American Studies
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CAS AA 492: Directed Study in African American Studies
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CAS AA 501: Topics in African American Literature
Topic for Fall 2008: Political Activism and African American Literature. Examines representations of politics in African American literature, along with the historical impact of U.S. political movements on the tradition's forms and themes. Authors include Wheatley, Equiano, Douglass, Delany, Hopkins, Washington, Du Bois, Garvey, Wright, Giovanni, and Lorde. Also offered as CAS EN 588. -
CAS AA 502: Topics in African American Literature
Topic for Spring 2011: Twentieth-Century African American Novel. Major works from the Harlem Renaissance, Realism, Modernism, the Black Arts Movement, and the contemporary period. Authors include Jean Toomer, Nella Larsen, Wallace Thurman, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, John Wideman, and Toni Morrison. Also offered as CAS EN 380. -
CAS AA 504: African American and Asian American Women Writers
Cross-cultural comparison of African American and Asian American women writers. Explores and evaluates the cultural impact of their work, and looks at how these two groups bound together by "otherness" pursue the theme of conflicting cultures. Also offered as CAS EN 371. -
CAS AA 505: Black Community and Social Change
Forces within the larger society that enhance and/or inhibit development of the black community. Assesses potential of the black community to initiate and implement changes affecting its own development locally and nationally. Also offered as CAS HI 555. -
CAS AA 507: Literature of the Harlem Renaissance
A study of the major writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Explores how they proclaimed a renewal of racial consciousness and cultural pride, and how they challenged racial and cultural barriers in American society. Also offered as CAS EN 377.
Note that this information may change at any time.

