AFRICAN LANGUAGES & LITERATURE 300 African Literature in Translation: Con Artists in Arabic Literature Instructor: Samuel England Core Course

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201 Introduction to African Languages and Literature General survey of African languages, linguistics, oral traditions, and literatures. Open Instructor: Samuel England 210 The African Storyteller The oral tradition and the written word; the composition of stories, relationship between performer and audience, and transmission of tradition in various African societies. Open to Freshmen. Instructor: Matthew Brown 212 Introduction to African Popular Culture This course will use aspects of popular culture (such as popular literature, music, television, news media, movies, etc.) to introduce students to the African continent and its cultures, people, and anguages. Students will be exposed to a variety of texts from different regions on the continent, learning about differences and similarities across the continent at the level of aesthetics and context. Instructor: John Nimis 300 African Literature in Translation: Con Artists in Arabic Literature Instructor: Samuel England 303 African Literature & Visual Culture: Dissident Women Voices from the Middle East & North Africa Instructor: Nevine El-Nossery 322 Second Semester Arabic African 321 or consent of instructor required. Open 1 P a g e core courses contain at least 25% African content but cannot be used towards the certificate or FLAS without special approval from the African Studies Program advisor and the course s instructor. Requests must be made and approved by the second Friday of the semester in which the course in question will be taken. Request forms are available at the African Studies Program office.

324 Fourth Semester Arabic African 323 or consent of instructor required. 325 Colloquial Arabic African 321 & 322 or equivalent required. 326 Colloquial Arabic African 325 required. 332 Second Semester Swahili African 331 or consent of instructor required. Open 334 Fourth Semester Swahili African 333 or consent of instructor required. 336 2nd Semester Languauges of South Africa: Zulu African 335 or consent of instructor required. Open 362 Second Semester Hausa African 361 or consent of instructor required. Open 372 Second Semester Yoruba A development of basic Yoruba structure. Reading and writing simple stories in Yoruba. African 371 or consent of instructor required. Open to Freshmen. 374 Fourth Semester Yoruba More advanced conversational skill, and introduction to simple Yoruba poems and plays. African 373 or consent of instructor required. 405 Africans in Paris The course studies the presence of Africans in Paris (and France by extension), beginning in the interwar period when Black intellectuals (or would-be intellectuals) converged on Paris from francophone Africa, the United States, and the Caribbean. The course will focus on their encounter and the resulting intense cultural exchanges and production (Presence Africaine, Negritude writers, music, cinema, etc.); it will also privilege the political and social struggles that took place then and continue to the present day, e.g., from issues of social integration in French society, to the creation of independence movements. Themes include immigration, assimilation, discrimination and citizenship. Course will be taught in English. Instructor: Aliko Songolo 2 P a g e

405 New Media, Wired Identities This course examines various mediated cultural forms such as broadcasting, news, performance, music, film, or social media created and used and across regions and countries in Africa, addressing issues such as cultural identity, nation building, constraints on expression, access, and reception, and the interaction of global and African cultural forms. Pre-Reqs: African 201, 210, 211, 212, or 277. Instructor: Jo Ellen Fair 412 Contemporary African Fiction This course includes a variety of recent novels by African writers from a several different regions of Africa. Students will be exposed to innovative, complex ideas and perspectives on pressing issues to Africa and to the world today. Junior standing or Instructor: John Nimis 436 Advance Studies in Swahili Language: Reading Reading, conversation and composition beyond the fourth semester level with emphasis on the literary tradition of the language and concentration on texts appropriate to the level of the student. African 435 or consent of instructor required. 446 Advanced Arabic Texts: Contemporary Arabic Graduate standing or intructor consent required. Instructor: Dustin Cowell 451 Lusophone African Literature Chronological and thematic survey of major trends, authors, and works of Lusophone Africa since 1936. Portuguese 221 & 311/312 or instructor consent required. Instructor: Ellen Sapega 476 6th Semester Yoruba More complex linguistic structure. Proverbs. Yoruba cultural background in the works of Wole Soyinka. African 475 or consent of instructor required. 496 6th Semester Arabic Instructor: Mustafa Mustafa 697 Directed Study of a Less Commonly Taught Language Monitored self-instruction of a less commonly taught language. Students will meet individually with the instructor. Requires development of an individualized study plan, bibliographic and online research, work with conversation partners online or in the community, and regular self-assessments. Pre-Reqs: Must be taken concurrently with African 670 during the first enrollment. Instructor: Katrina Thompson 901 Seminar in Modern African Literature: Melodrama Graduate standing required. Instructor: Matthew Brown 3 P a g e

925 Seminar in Field Methods of African Languages & Literature This graduate-level methods seminar is an intensive introduction to reading and writing new ethnographies. Taking a discourse-centered approach to culture and to writing as a form of qualitative analysis, we will explore theories and examples of autoethnographies, autobiographies, ethnographic fiction, poetry, and drama, and literary ethnographies. Our main examples will be writing by Africans and Africanists, but students working in other world areas are welcome. Important themes will include language, voice, dialogic research, transcription, and translation. The course will help students whose primary interests are in literature, languages, and second language acquisition to gain expertise in ethnographic research practices and evocative writing. Seminar meetings will involve both discussion of readings and workshopping participants writing. Instructor: Katrina Thompson AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES ANTHROPOLOGY ANTHROPOLOGY 490 Anthropology of Biomedicine Discussion and preparation of reports on specific topics indicated by changing title of seminar. Pre- Reqs: Junior standing and Not open to Graduate students. Instructor: Claire Wendland Extended * ANTHROPOLOGY 4 P a g e

ART 579 Proseminar in African Art: Carnival Arts of the African Diaspora Critical examination of selected theoretical and methodological issues affecting the study of African art and architecture in their historical and cultural perspectives. Instructor: Henry Drewal ART 879 Carnival Arts of the African Diaspora Critical examination of selected theoretical and methodological issues affecting the study of African art and architecture in their historical and cultural perspectives. Instructor: Henry Drewal COMMUNITY & ENVIRONMENTAL SOC 940 Seminar: Sociology of Economic Change Theoretical and technical problems in research concerning organizational and socio-psychological aspects of changes in large scale social systems. Pre-Reqs: Graduate standing and consent of instructor. Instructor: Gay Seidman Extended * DANCE 118 African Dance Technique and practice of several basic African dance forms with study of their musical, historical and cultural contexts. DANCE 218 African Dance Performance Technique, practice and performance of complex African and African-based dances in relation to polyrhythmic musical and percussive accompaniment. Study of historical and cultural contexts of these forms. Development of improvisational skills in dialogue with musicians. Pre-Reqs: Dance 118 or Instructor: Christopher Walker ECONOMICS EDUCATION POLICY STUDIES 760 Intro to International Development Education Targeted at graduate students with international or local cross-cultural interests, the course considers international development education from a variety of theoretical frames from human capital to human rights and capabilities; from institutional to critical/neo-marxist and feminist approaches; and from anthropological and poststructural to post-colonial critiques. EPS 760 is designed as a seminar, structured around instructor-led discussions and student participation, and aims to support students pursuit of their geographical and thematic interests. Instructor: Miriam Thangaraj Extended * 5 P a g e

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES - GAYLORD NELSON INSTITUTE 339 Environmental Conservation Examines major environmental conservation approaches in the U.S. and developing countries and how they are influenced by sociopolitical factors, cultural values and scientific understandings of nature. Historical and contemporary cases are explored with emphasis on biodiversity and climate change issues. Sophomore standing required. Instructor: Matthew Turner Extended * FOLKLORE PROGRAM 210 The African Storyteller The oral tradition and the written word; the composition of stories, relationship between performer and audience, and transmission of tradition in various African societies. Open to Freshmen. Instructor: Matthew Brown FRENCH (FRENCH AND ITALIAN 449 Paris Noir The course studies the presence of Africans in Paris (and France by extension), beginning in the interwar period when Black intellectuals (or would-be intellectuals) converged on Paris from francophone Africa, the United States, and the Caribbean. The course will focus on their encounter and the resulting intense cultural exchanges and production (Presence Africaine, Negritude writers, music, cinema, etc.); it will also privilege the political and social struggles that took place then and continue to the present day, e.g., from issues of social integration in French society, to the creation of independence movements. Themes include immigration, assimilation, discrimination and citizenship. The course will be taught in French. Instructor: Aliko Songolo FRENCH (FRENCH AND ITALIAN) 665 Intro aux etudes francphone Study of literary texts from diverse Francophone cultures (Africa, the Caribbean, Quebec) and the cultural and political dynamics between these texts and these cultures. Graduate standing required Instructor: Nevine El-Nossery GEOGRAPHY 6 P a g e

GEOGRAPHY 339 Environmental Conservation Examines major environmental conservation approaches in the U.S. and developing countries and how they are influenced by sociopolitical factors, cultural values and scientific understandings of nature. Historical and contemporary cases are explored with emphasis on biodiversity and climate change issues. Sophomore standing required. Instructor: Matthew Turner Extended * GEOGRAPHY 278 Africans in Americas 1492-1808 Topics include demography and structure of the slave trade, but major focus on continuities and transformations of African cultures and social structures in the Americas--ethnicity, religion, kinship, gender, oral tradition, creolization, etc. Sophomore standing required. Instructor: James Sweet 444 History of East Africa Formation of ethnic groups, state building, the development of pre-colonial trade institutions, and African social and political history in the colonial period. Sophomore standing. 600 Advanced Seminar in History: Cannibals & Cannibalism Development and application of advanced research skills to a specific historical topic. Intensive writing and small group discussion results in a project demonstrating original or creative analysis of primary and secondary sources. Pre-Reqs: Junior or Senior standing and Instructor: Florence Bernault Extended * 600 Islam & Politics in the 20th Century Development and application of advanced research skills to a specific historical topic. Intensive writing and small group discussion results in a project demonstrating original or creative analysis of primary and secondary sources. Instructor: Michael Chamberlain Extended * 7 P a g e

Core course INTERDIS COURSES (C A L S) 375 Uganda-International Health & Nutrition Consent of instructor required Instructor: John Ferrick INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 317 The Politics of Human Rights Examines the origins and development of human rights in international politics. The course discusses what human rights are, international human rights movements, the international search for justice after mass crimes, and international humanitarian intervention. Junior standing required. Instructor: Scott Straus Extended * INTERNATIONAL STUDIES 603 Media, Celebrity, Culture & Humanitarianism Instructor: Jo Ellen Fair JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION 620 International Communication This course examines the connections between war and the media in an international context. Throughout the class, students will approach these issues from a critical, cultural perspective, investigating the ethical and socio-political stakes of these various media technologies and practices. Instructor: Lindsay Palmer Extended * LANGUAGES & CULTURES OF ASIA 322 Second Semester Arabic African 321 or consent of instructor required. Open LANGUAGES & CULTURES OF ASIA 324 Fourth Semester Arabic African 323 or consent of instructor required. Instructor: Mustafa Mustafa LANGUAGES & CULTURES OF ASIA 446 Advanced Arabic Texts: Contemporary Arabic Graduate standing or intructor consent required. Instructor: Dustin Cowell POLITICAL SCIENCE 8 P a g e

POLITICAL SCIENCE 317 The Politics of Human Rights Examines the origins and development of human rights in international politics. The course discusses what human rights are, international human rights movements, the international search for justice after mass crimes, and international humanitarian intervention. Junior standing required. Instructor: Scott Straus Extended * POLITICAL SCIENCE 919 Seminar-Advanced Methodology: Political Ethnography The seminar will focus on the politics of the quotidian, the small events, phenomena, attitudes, and emotions of daily life, with the assumption that however apolitical they might seem to be on the surface, they might really be deeply political on levels we might not always be aware of. In other words, where do we situate the political realm? The seminar will also ask how can we relate these small events, phenomena, behaviors, and attitudes politics writ small to the larger political phenomena that interest us both as political scientists and as citizens. Can we link the microworld of daily existence and experience to the macro-world of both politics and political science? Moreover, and this is primarily a methodological question, how may we best accomplish this linkage? Graduate standing required. Extended * POLITICAL SCIENCE PORTUGUESE (SPANISH & PORTUG) 451 Lusophone African Literature Chronological and thematic survey of major trends, authors, and works of Lusophone Africa since 1936. Portuguese 221 & 311/312 or instructor consent required. Instructor: Ellen Sapega SOCIOLOGY SOCIOLOGY 940 Seminar: Sociology of Economic Change Theoretical and technical problems in research concerning organizational and socio-psychological aspects of changes in large scale social systems. Pre-Reqs: Graduate standing and consent of instructor. Instructor: Gay Seidman Extended * 9 P a g e