-
Institution:
-
University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth
-
Subject:
-
Anthropology
-
Description:
-
Prerequisites: SOC 101 or ANT 111 or SOC/ANT 113 or AAS 101; Junior or Senior standing A comparative and interdisciplinary survey of African-derived religious and musical practices in the Americas, beginning with Haitian vodou and ending with hip-hop. We will examine the historic conditions in which these cultural forms evolved, and discuss how popular attitudes towards African-derived music and religion - often associated with unruliness and loose morals - reflect larger national anxieties about race, class and sexuality. Throughout, we will pay close attention to how different social actors (colonial regimes, the police, anthropologists and practitioners) have constructed African-based religiosity and music as witchcraft, folklore, heritage and roots. Cross-listed as AAS 366, SOC 366
-
Credits:
-
3.00
-
Credit Hours:
-
-
Prerequisites:
-
-
Corequisites:
-
-
Exclusions:
-
-
Level:
-
-
Instructional Type:
-
Lecture
-
Notes:
-
-
Additional Information:
-
-
Historical Version(s):
-
-
Institution Website:
-
-
Phone Number:
-
(508) 999-8000
-
Regional Accreditation:
-
New England Association of Schools and Colleges
-
Calendar System:
-
Semester
Detail Course Description Information on CollegeTransfer.Net
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.