04:30 PM to 07:10 PM W
Krug Hall 210
Section Information for Spring 2017
This undergraduate course is designed to introduce students to the history of resistance and protest in the Atlantic World from slavery to the post-emancipation era. We will focus on the struggles of people of African descent to attain freedom and equality and explore the different ways black people responded to slavery, colonialism, and racial oppression (both legal and extralegal). With significant emphasis on the voices of protest in the Caribbean and the United States, students will explore how diverse ideas about slavery, freedom, citizenship, gender, class, and equality have shaped the politics of resistance in the Atlantic World. Through lectures, literature, film, biographies, and discussion students will examine the different histories of black protest and the obstacles to black freedom and equality. We will especially focus on the experiences and resistance strategies of black women. At the end of this course students should be able to think in a more critical fashion about the struggle of slaves and their descendants for freedom and equality. Students will also gain a better understanding of the global dimensions of black protest and makings and meanings of freedom in the Atlantic World.
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Credits: 3-6
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