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AMST 356 /556: Topics in Native American Studies
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Topical survey of theoretical approaches, research methodologies and subject areas within the interdisciplinary field of Native American Studies.
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AMST 356 /556 - Topics in Native American Studies
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AMST 357 /557: Topics in African-American Studies
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Offers topics addressing African-American social, cultural, political and intellectual life. Topics include: black social movements, African-American intellectual history, black cultural studies, slavery in the Americas.
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AMST 357 /557 - Topics in African-American Studies
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AMST 358 /558: Topics in Latino/a Studies
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
This interdisciplinary topics course examines the fastest growing population in the U.S. and includes Latino intellectual history, political and economic relations, recovery projects, music, film and media representations and environment, community and post-colonial studies.
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AMST 358 /558 - Topics in Latino/a Studies
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AMST 359 /559: Interracialism in America
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
This course introduces students to historical and contemporary debates about the meaning of interracial romance, marriage and sexuality-and its relationship to definitions of American citizenship and democracy. Through engaged study of primary and secondary, social and cultural forms, students will develop an interdisciplinary understanding of race, gender and sexuality.
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AMST 359 /559 - Interracialism in America
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AMST 360 /560: Topics in Southwest Studies
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Offers topics dealing with the social, cultural and technological developments among the people of the Southwest. Topics include folk art and material culture; rural, urban and border communities; traditional healing; travel and tourism; Hispano/ Chicanos after 1848.
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AMST 360 /560 - Topics in Southwest Studies
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AMST 361: Native American Folklore of the Southwest
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
An in-depth study of the expressive behavior of Native American peoples of the Southwest with special emphasis on the traditional material culture, music, dance, oral tradition and festivals of Puebloans, Navajos and Apaches.
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AMST 361 - Native American Folklore of the Southwest
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AMST 362 /562: Native American Representation and Resistance
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
This course will examine popular representations of Native Americans from American literature, film, policy, science and popular culture. Topics include critical and cultural theories of representation and identity and Native resistance and cultural production.
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AMST 362 /562 - Native American Representation and Resistance
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AMST 363 /563: Chicano/Latino Film
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Covers the Chicano/Latino experience through its depiction on film and from the perspective of Latino filmmaking. The course analyzes film as communication, film narration, symbolism and subjectivity.
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AMST 363 /563 - Chicano/Latino Film
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AMST 385: Theories and Methods of American Studies
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Introduces students to interdisciplinary approaches in the study of American culture, focusing on "Race, Ethnicity, Gender and National Identity," "Media, Popular Culture, andCultural Studies," "Critical Regionalism," and "EnvironmenScience and Technology."
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AMST 385 - Theories and Methods of American Studies
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AMST 422 /522: The Atomic Bomb:Los Alamos to Hiroshima
3.00 Credits
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
Considers three interrelated sections: the political and scientific history of the Manhattan Project; strategic alternatives to the use of the atomic bomb; and the literature of the hibakusha survivors of the destruction of Hiroshima.
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AMST 422 /522 - The Atomic Bomb:Los Alamos to Hiroshima
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