Indigenous Units/Readings in Course

ENGLISH 190VE: Voices of Environmental Justice

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Sarah Dimick

Monday & Wednesday 3:00-4:15pm

Course Site

 

This course considers the relationships between systems of human injustice and environmental
issues—including industrial disasters, ocean acidification, and resource extraction. We examine...

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IGA 455: Environmental Politics: Persuasion, Advocacy and Negotiation

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Rand Wentworth

Monday & Wednesday 4:30-5:45pm

Course Site

 

The world is on fire. Smoke darkens the sky. Scorching heat. Violent storms. Mass extinction.

In this perilous moment in human history, the world desperately needs leaders with the courage, drive and...

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EXPOS 20 225: Expository Writing 20: Domestic Labor

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Courtney Miller

Monday & Wednesday 10:30-11:45am

Course Site

Domestic work, according to labor activist Ai-jen Poo, is “the work that makes all other work possible,” yet the people who clean, cook, and care are so often invisible and undervalued. Because domestic labor takes place within the...

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FRSEMR 22T: Why We Animals Sing

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Brian Farrell

Thursday 9:45-11:45am

Course Site

 

We do not sing alone. On land, four kinds of animals produce songs or calls: birds, frogs, mammals and insects. Some of these (and fish) also do so underwater.  The principal sounds such animal species make are signaling...

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AFRAMER 20: Introduction to African Languages and Cultures

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  John Mugane

Monday & Wednesday 10:30-11:45am

Course Site

 

This course is an introduction to Africans through African languages and cultures. The course explores how sub-Saharan Africans use language and cultural production to understand, organize, and transmit indigenous...

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GENED 1089: The Border: Race, Politics, and Health in Modern Mexico

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor, Gabriela Soto Laveaga

Monday. & Wednesday 10:30-11:45am

Course Site

Why does the Mexico-U.S. border continue to be a space for debate and controversy? This course examines how the creation of the U.S.-Mexico border in 1848 shaped modern Mexican society from the nineteenth century to our present. For many, the border served (and serves) as a protective barrier from poverty, violence, and,...

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HIST-LIT 90FH: Witchcraft and Magic in the Atlantic World

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Arianne Urus

Tuesday 3:00-5:00pm

Course Site

Magic had long been an integral part of how people made sense of the world around them, but between 1450 and 1750 some 80 to 100,000 people (mostly women) were executed under charges of witchcraft in western Europe alone. During the same period, a...

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WOMGEN 1495: Feminist Ecologies and Economies

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Katherine Gibson

Wednesday 3:00-5:45pm

Course Site

Why is it easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism? As we witness the effects of global warming, species loss, economic inequality, and gendered and racialized violence, it is indeed hard to imagine that...

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AFRAMER 181X: African Religion in the Diaspora

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Jacob Olupona

Tuesday 12:00-2:45pm

Course Site

This course focuses on the history and phenomenology of African peoples’ religious experiences in the Americas. The historical and social processes that led to the emergence of African diasporic religions in Latin America and the Caribbean will form...

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HDS 3075: Cultures of Resistance

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Manuela Coppola

Wednesday 3:00-5:00pm

Course Site

This course introduces students to the theory and practice of cultural resistance in colonial and post-colonial contexts. The course offers an overview of key concepts, questions, and debates in postcolonial studies, including identity and...

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GOV 94YG: Global Ethnic Politics

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Gloria Ayee

Wednesday 12:00-2:45pm

Course Site

 

Global Ethnic Politics or Dominance and Difference: Ethnic Politics in Comparative Perspective is an advanced undergraduate reading and writing seminar on ethnic politics and social stratification....

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AFRAMER 192X: Religion and Society in Nigeria

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Jacob Olupona

Thursday 3:00-5:45pm

Course Site

The seminar examines the historical development of religion in Nigeria and explores its intersection with ethnic identity, culture, and society in pre-colonial, colonial, and contemporary periods. The course provides an understanding of various...

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ANTHRO 2211: Archaeology and Heritage

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor, William Fash

Monday 9:00-11:45am

Course Site

The links between archaeology, cultural heritage, and nation building have been fundamentally important to archaeological practice since the origins of the discipline. The uses and abuses of archaeology by the state over the past fifty years have been criticized by all manner of social scientists, journalists, local communities and indigenous people in...

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SPANSH 178: Queer Latinidad: Race, Sex, and Power in the U.S.

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor,  Jorge Sanchez-Cruz

Monday 12:00-2:00pm

Course Site

This course investigates the slippages between queerness and Latinidad. We will explore the contested terrain of the X—a colonial wound, a trace of enslavement, and a condition of crossing the borderlands—and, at the same time, engage with literary...

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Native Americans in the 21st Century: Nation Building II

Semester: 

Spring

Offered: 

2022

Professor Eric Henson

Friday, 10:30 am - 12:30 pm

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 completing...

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