Class number:
2931
|
|
Title: Black American Women's History |
|
Department: History |
Career: Undergraduate |
|
Component: Seminar |
|
Session: Regular |
Instructor's Permission Required: No |
|
Grading Basis: Regular |
|
Units: 1.00 |
Enrollment limited to 19 |
|
Current enrollment: 5 |
|
Available seats: 14 |
Start date: Tuesday, January 21, 2025 |
|
End date: Friday, May 9, 2025 |
|
Mode of Instruction: In Person |
Schedule: MW: 10:00AM-11:15AM, AAC - 231 |
|
|
Instructor(s): Miller, Channon |
Prerequisite(s): None |
Distribution Requirement: Meets Humanities & Identity Power Equity Req |
Course Description:
In this course, through lectures, readings, and discussion - we will follow the lives of Black women in America - a people enslaved by European powers - and then held in the bellies of ships that would sojourn through and across the Atlantic Ocean. Upon arrival to North American soil, their stationing as nonhumans would be solidified. We will trace how this intersectional, racial and gendered status, has followed them through the generations. Centrally, we will tend to the ways and means by which Black women have endeavored to live free and make a way of out of no way. We will unearth the ways in which the margins are, as scholar bell hooks states, "a position and place of resistance." |