Sociology 216DR - Special Topics in Sociology: 'Dialoguing for Racial Change'

Dialoguing for Racial Change

Spring
2026
01
4.00
Kristie Ford

T 01:30PM-04:20PM

Mount Holyoke College
129945
kford@mtholyoke.edu
130021,129945
A critical analysis of race, racism, and justice in the United States, as set in a socio-historical context defined by power. In addition to traditional modes of teaching-learning, students use intergroup dialogue and collaborative group work to examine how race is constructed, experienced, reproduced, and transformed within social structures. Topics include racial identity development and how individuals internalize and 'live race' in everyday interactions; historical mechanisms for how bodies and spaces have become 'raced' over time; institutional dimensions of racial inequality (e.g., law, education, popular culture); and practices for pursuing racial justice.
Permission is required for interchange registration during all registration periods.