Latinx and Latin Amer Studies 200 - Debate Latinx/LA Studies

Spring
2022
01
4.00
Paul A. Schroeder Rodriguez

TTH 03:00 PM-04:20 PM

Amherst College
LLAS-200-01-2122S
CHAP103
pschroeder@amherst.edu
LLAS-200-01, AMST-206-01

(Offered as LLAS 200 and AMST 206) In this course students will become familiar with the major debates that have animated Latinx and Latin American Studies, addressing a wide range of issues from the Conquest to the present. Each week students will focus on specific questions such as: Does Latin America have a common culture? Is Latin America part of the Western world? Is Latinx a race or an ethnicity? Is U.S. Latinx identity rooted in Latin America or the United States? Are Latin American nations post-colonial? Was the modern concept of race invented in the Caribbean at the time of the Conquest? The opposing viewpoints around such questions will provide the main focus of the reading assignments, which will average two or three articles per week. In the first four weeks, students will learn a methodology for analyzing, contextualizing, and making arguments that they will apply in developing their own positions in the specific controversies that will make up the rest of the course.

Limited to 15 students. Fall semester. Professor Schroeder Rodriguez. 

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.