Fall 2021

EMR 1010: Topics in Latinx Studies: Imagining Latinidad

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Americo Mendoza-Mori

Mon & Wed, 12 pm - 1:15 pm

Course Site

This course is intended to provide hands-on practice toward doing research on Latinx issues, with an approach grounded in the understanding that terms ‘Hispanic’ and ‘Latinidad’ are not static concepts and, at the same time, not a homogeneous mix. We will examine culture,...

Read more about EMR 1010: Topics in Latinx Studies: Imagining Latinidad

GENED 1019: The Caribbean Crucible: Colonialism, Capitalism and Post-Colonial Misdevelopment In The Region

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Orlando Patterson

Tues & Thurs, 12 pm - 1:15 pm

Course Site

This course explores the complex, formative role of the Caribbean in the development of Western colonialism and capitalism and the consequences for the peoples of the region. Four major themes will be examined. First, the importance of the region in the origin and early...

Read more about GENED 1019: The Caribbean Crucible: Colonialism, Capitalism and Post-Colonial Misdevelopment In The Region

HIST 13C: St. Louis from Lewis and Clark to Michael Brown

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Walter Johnson

Course Site

St. Louis was the epicenter of American empire in the nineteenth century: the point of embarkation for Lewis and Clark; the military headquarters for U.S. Indian wars.   It was likewise central to the history of slavery: from the Missouri Compromise to Dred Scott.  The city’s intertwining of the history of...

Read more about HIST 13C: St. Louis from Lewis and Clark to Michael Brown

HDS 2055: Safe/Sacred/Free: Queer Movements and Religious Spaces

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Heather White

Wednesday, 6 pm - 7:59 pm

Course Site

The physical facilities of religious institutions, and especially that of mainline Protestant churches, have served as a unique staging ground for radical movements of the U.S. political left. Queer activist and community organizations, in particular, frequently met in religious spaces even as those...

Read more about HDS 2055: Safe/Sacred/Free: Queer Movements and Religious Spaces

HDS 3300: Religious Literacy and the Professions

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Diane Moore

Mon, Tues, & Thurs from 12 pm - 12:59 pm

Course Site

Religions have functioned throughout human history to inspire and justify the full range of human agency from the heinous to the heroic. Their influences remain potent here in the 21st century in spite of modern predictions that religious influences would steadily decline in concert...

Read more about HDS 3300: Religious Literacy and the Professions

HIST 2006: Readings in Native American and Indigenous Studies: Seminar

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Philip Deloria

Wednesday, 12:45 pm - 2:45 pm

Course Site

This course offers a survey of the historiography of Native American and Indigenous Studies.  Centered on six themes—Power and the Middle Ground, Borderlands, Settler Colonialism and Sovereignty, Race and Slavery, Modernity and Futurity, and Global and Comparative Indigeneity—the...

Read more about HIST 2006: Readings in Native American and Indigenous Studies: Seminar

HIST 1028: Race, Capitalism, and the Coming of the Civil War

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Walter Johnson

Tues & Thurs, 12 pm - 1:15 pm 

Course Site

This course treats the history of the 19th-century US and the Civil War in light of the history of US imperialism, especially the War of 1812, the Mexican-American War, and the illegal invasions of Cuba and Nicaragua in the 1850s. Likewise, it relates the history of slavery in...

Read more about HIST 1028: Race, Capitalism, and the Coming of the Civil War

DPI 385M: Race and Racism in the Making of the United States as a Global Power

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Khalil Muhammed

Monday, 3 pm - 4:15 pm

Course Site

This course is a core requirement for all MPP students. No other students are allowed to enroll at this time. The course is in response to longstanding efforts by HKS students, and most recently, the HKS Equity Coalition, to insist that understanding race and racism and their intersecting forms of...

Read more about DPI 385M: Race and Racism in the Making of the United States as a Global Power

HIST-LIT 90ES: Prison Abolition

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Thomas Dichter

Wednesday, 12 pm - 2:45 pm
Course Site

Is prison abolition a serious proposal, an aspirational ideal, a trendy slogan, or a blueprint for social transformation? This interdisciplinary and community-engaged course situates the prison abolition movement in deep historical context and explores its current relation to the politics of criminal justice reform. We will study the movement’s...

Read more about HIST-LIT 90ES: Prison Abolition

ANTHRO 1182: People of the Sun: The Archaeology of Ancient Mexico

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor, Dr. Jennifer Carballo

Monday, Wednesday 12-1:15pm

Course Site

This course provides a broad overview of the archaeology of ancient Mexico and Central America, focusing on the Indigenous cultures of highland Mexico such as the Aztecs and Zapotecs, as well as their predecessors and contemporary descendants. Anthropology 1182 is designed to provide students with a deeper understanding and appreciation...

Read more about ANTHRO 1182: People of the Sun: The Archaeology of Ancient Mexico

HISTSCI 1334: Nature on Display

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Janet Browne

Tuesday 10:30 AM - 11:45 AM; Thursday 10:30 AM - 11:45 AM

Course Site

Lecture course for undergraduates. This course aims to unpack human ideas about the concept of “nature”. We shall include indigenous ways of thought whenever possible. We concentrate on the way that "nature" is displayed in museums, zoos, botanic gardens, film, national parks, etc. ranging from the 17th century to the...

Read more about HISTSCI 1334: Nature on Display

HIST-LIT 90EI: Islam in Early America

Semester: 

Fall

Offered: 

2021

Professor Arianne Sedef Urus

Wednesday, 9:45 am - 11:45 am

Course Site

Muslims first arrived on the shores of the Americas at the turn of the sixteenth century, yet their long history in the western hemisphere has been largely forgotten. For centuries Islam was the second-most widely practiced monotheistic religion in the Americas, after Catholicism; some Muslims came from Spain to escape persecution at the...

Read more about HIST-LIT 90EI: Islam in Early America

Pages