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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is an interdisciplinary approach to the study of class formations in society. Topics include: culture, ideology, politics, history, Marxism, Weberian sociology, (post-) structuralism, colonialism, textuality, praxis and desconstructionism.
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3.00 Credits
This course will survey the theoretical and methodological convergence/divergence of race, class and ethnicity. This class is designed as a graduate-multidisciplinary approach to racial, class and ethnic formations, relations, structures, institutions and movements.
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3.00 Credits
Seminar offering topical survey of theoretical approaches, research methodologies and subject areas within the interdisciplinary field of Native American Studies.
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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
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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3.00 Credits
This seminar examines cultural and ethnic representations in the tri-cultural Southwest. The course includes consideration of works by native and Hispano/Chicano authors who examine and contest the cultural ideation of the Southwest.
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