Spring 2023

ANTHRO 1644: Remote Avant-Garde: Australian First Nations Art and New Media

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Jennifer Biddle

T - 9:00am to 11:45am

The course is an introduction to Australian First Nations Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island art and new media.  The focus is arts of the Central and Western Desert.  The course maps sites of language and cultural (re)production, forms of materiality and conditions of colonialism in order to develop appreciation of relationships between art, life and survival. Against neo-liberal and market driven tendencies to commodify Aboriginal culture, the course considers not only contexts in which art is...

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HLS 3162: Competing Values: Freedom, Equality, Property, & Democracy

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Joseph Singer

T - 3:45pm to 5:45pm

Prerequisite: None

Exam Type: No Exam

 

This reading group will cover a variety of current and enduring questions involving fundamental issues of freedom, equality, property, and democracy. We will focus on legal issues involving race, sex, sexual orientation, religious liberty, tribal sovereignty, the American rejection of titles of nobility, and inequality in access to income and wealth. Issues addressed include conflict of laws about...

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HIST 1014: Afro-Indigenous Intersections in Early America

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Tiya Miles

T, Th - 1:30pm to 2:45pm

In ways both charged and complex, Native Americans and African Americans together contributed the ground/work of the U.S. nation and the European colonies that preceded it. This course traces intertwined historical lines among Indigenous peoples and African-descended people within the borders of the present-day United States. We will discuss multiple regions, tribal nations, Black communities, and “mixed-race” families across the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries as well as contemporary...

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EMR 121: Native Americans in the 21st Century: Nation Building II

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Eric Henson

F - 1:30pm to 3:30pm

This community based research course focuses on some of the major issues Native American Indian tribes and nations face in the 21st century. It provides in-depth, hands-on exposure to native development issues, including: sovereignty, economic development, constitutional reform, leadership, health and social welfare, tribal finances, land and water rights, culture and language, religious freedom, and education. In particular, the course emphasizes problem definition, client relationships, and designing and...

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ANTHRO 1900: Counseling as Colonization? Native American Encounters with the Clinical Psy-ences

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Joseph Gone

M - 12:00pm to 2:45pm

American Indian, First Nations, and other Indigenous communities of the USA and Canada contend with disproportionately high rates of “psychiatric” distress. Many of these communities attribute this distress to their long colonial encounters with European settlers. Concurrently, throughout the 20th century, the disciplines and professions associated with mind, brain, and behavior (e.g., psychiatry, psychology, psychoanalysis) consolidated their authority and influence within mainstream society....

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SUP 625: Land Loss, Reclamation, and Stewardship in Contemporary Native America

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professors: Daniel D'Oca, Philip Deloria, Eric Henson

T - 9:00am to 11:45am

This course will explore three critical dimensions in American Indian land issues: 1) historical land loss, 2) contemporary tribal governmental efforts at land reclamation, stewardship, and co-management, and 3) indigenous futurism. We will begin by tracking the history of land dispossession from colonial settlement to the present day. We will then move on to explore the reality of contemporary tribal governance and how that critical function turns on jurisdiction over traditional...

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HIST 97P: "What is Indigenous History?"

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Philip Deloria

T - 12:00pm to 2:45pm

While some first peoples prefer culturally specific identities over the general term “indigenous,” others embrace indigeneity as an opportunity to establish global connections, explore overlapping colonialisms, assert political identities, or seek redress through international institutions. This seminar investigates the challenges and opportunities to be found in indigenous history.  Drawing from the Americas, the Pacific, the Arctic, Asia and elsewhere, we will consider settler colonialism,...

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HIST-LIT 10: Introduction to American Studies

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Philip Deloria

M, W - 10:30am to 11:45am

American Studies is an interdisciplinary effort to understand the complicated social and cultural lives of people in—and in relation to—the United States, both past and present. The intersections of History and Literature shape much of American Studies, but the field has also been marked by forays into music, arts, ethnic studies, economics, anthropology, journalism, and even forestry and climate science. This course will introduce students to the history and methods of the field, exploring evocative cases with a...

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ANTHRO 1475: Religious Dimensions in Human Experience: Apocalypse, Sports, Music, Home, Sacrifice, Medicine

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Davíd L. Carrasco

M, W: 10:30am to 11:45am

What is Religion? Why does it show up everywhere? Using archaeology, religious studies and social thought, this course will study the major themes in the history of religions including 'encountering the holy', sports' and ritual', 'crossing borders', 'sacrifice as creation', 'pilgrimage and sacred place', 'suffering and quest for wisdom', 'music and social change', 'violence and cosmic law'. Readings from Native American, African American, Latinx/+, Jewish, Buddhist, Christian, Hindu traditions. Focus...

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GENED 1032: A History of Representative Government

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Daniel Carpenter

M, W - 1:30pm to 2:45pm

What is a democratic republic, and can such a regime — one that trusts citizens to capably choose and monitor those in power, and one that trusts those in power to restrain themselves and each other while attending to the public good — survive and protect us from tyranny?

“A republic, if you can keep it.” So did Benjamin Franklin characterize his hopes for American government. What did Franklin and others mean by republic, and why did he and so many others worry that it might...

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GOV 1338: Governance in Native America

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2023

Professor: Daniel Carpenter

M, W - 12:00pm to 1:15pm

Examines the challenges and strategies of advocacy, sovereignty building and institutional development among Native Nations in the U.S.  Includes engaged scholarship working with Native Nations on these issues.

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