Government 369 - AFRICAN AMER POLITICAL THOUGHT
Spring
2019
01
4.00
Erin Pineda
T 03:00-04:50
Smith College
30581-S19
HATFLD 201
epineda@smith.edu
This seminar examines central questions in African American political thought: freedom and domination; power, powerlessness, and subjectivity; inclusion, exclusion and autonomy; the meaning of race and its relationship to citizenship, democracy, and nationhood; and political action, resistance, and emancipation. In this course, we will take up the study of African American political thought both as political thinking generated by concrete historical experiences of enslavement, colonialism, violence, and resistance/resilience; but also, as political thinking that engages, challenges, and fundamentally shapes the core conceptual categories of modern political theory. Prerequisite: coursework in political theory or coursework in the history of political thought. Enrollment limit of 12.
Not open to first-years, sophomores