COLQ:ASIAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE

Through the course of the semester, students will consider the many histories, experiences, and cultures that shape and define the ever-changing, ever-evolving field of Asian/Pacific/American (A/P/A) Studies, an interdisciplinary space marked by multiple communities, approaches, voices, issues, and themes. The course will cover the first wave of Asian immigration in the 19th century, the rise of anti-Asian movements, the experiences of A/P/As during World War II, the emergence of the "Asian American" movement in the 1960s, and the new wave of post-1965 Asian immigration.

COLONIAL N AMERICA 1492-1763

This course provides an overview of early American history, from contact in 1492 to the eve of colonial independence movements in 1763. Together, we will pay as much attention to the how and why (processes, motivations, imaginaries) as to the what (dates, events) of colonial history, focusing on diverse sites of contact, exchange, and conflict in the colonial projects of England and Spain in North America.

COLQ: CORP CAPITALISM,MEDIA,

"Don't hate the media, become the media." The U.S. Constitution recognizes a free press as the lifeblood of democracy, informing citizens and holding the powerful accountable. But as this bumper sticker conveys, there is widespread distrust of the media. This course analyzes the transformation of the press into a corporate enterprise over the past 150 years, and the opposition this has provoked.

COLQ:CURATING AMERICAN MEMORY

Topics course. Enrollment limited to 20. Which histories become part of national memory, and which do not? This course will interrogate the intellectual, political, and pedagogical bases of museums and public history collections in the US from the eighteenth century to today. We will devote part of our time to the theoretical readings that will ground our inquiry: texts will range from museum studies, anthropology, and sociology, to history, literary studies, and cultural studies.

MAPPING ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMER STU

What is Asian/Pacific/American Studies? How is it done? What are its disciplinary, geographical, and imaginative boundaries? This course will introduce students to this relatively new field through a series of lectures. Lectures will highlight the interdisciplinary nature of studying A/P/A histories, ethnicities, communities, experiences, and issues. Faculty members from across the Five College Asian/Pacific/American Studies Certificate Program will present lectures and facilitate discussion. To be held at Smith. Graded S/U only.

SEM: LIT OF AFRICAN DIASPORA

Topics course. This seminar will focus on some of the major perspectives, themes, and theoretical underpinnings in the field of African Diasporic Studies. We will read 20th and 21st century fiction and nonfiction from a range of cultural traditions that explore the conditions of displacement and uprootedness, which characterize the African Diaspora; we will also investigate the transformations of culture and identity that result from forced and voluntary migrations.

FEMINISM, RACE & RESISTANCE

This interdisciplinary course will explore the historical and theoretical perspectives of African American women from the time of slavery to the post-civil rights era. A central concern of the course will be the examination of how Black women shaped, and were shaped by the intersectionality of race, gender, and sexuality in American culture. Not open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 25.
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