History 181 - Colnl & Pst Colnl Afric

Spring
2021
01
4.00
Sean Redding
TTH 11:50AM-01:10PM
Amherst College
HIST-181-01-2021S
ONLI ONLI
sredding@amherst.edu
HIST-181-01,BLST-121-01

(Offered as HIST-181 [AF/TE] and BLST-221 [A]) Africa is a continent of fifty-four countries, but in many people's minds, the continent's name conjures up a host of stereotypes—some positive and some negative—that misrepresent the continent as an undifferentiated whole. This course's primary goal is to introduce students to the historical evidence and scholarly conversations about Africa’s pasts from the 1870s to the present. The main themes will be the social, political, and economic impacts of imperial policies on African societies, and the long afterlife of these impacts. We will discuss the construction and alterations of “tribal” identities and nationalist politics, the problems caused by colonial labor policies and the denial of civil rights to Africans, the reconstruction of gender identities and roles, and the emergence of various forms of protest politics in both the colonial and post-colonial periods. Requirements include active participation in class and multiple graded and ungraded written assignments. Three class meetings per week.

Spring semester. Enrollment is limited to 18 students. Professor Redding.

Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.