discussion sections

Hi everyone;

I’ve divided you up into two groups for our Tuesday discussions:

If your last name is between Martin-Zhao, please come at 9:30

If your last name is between Castillo-Lun, please come at 10:10.

that will give us 4o minutes of discussion for each group. We’ll switch in the middle of term, just to keep it fair..

Please come prepared to share your thoughts about the articles. You might want to think comparatively: what do the authors share? What are the points of divergence? What’s at stake for them? How is coming up with a definition of race important? Is it important to you?

See you tomorrow!

 

 

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about this course

Focused principally on the 20th and 21st centuries, this course will study the legacies and implications of the massive migration, forced and otherwise, from the African continent to the Caribbean, Latin America, and North America. Topics will range from the creation of racial categories in the contexts of slavery and colonialism to the making of transnational and transracial families to the recent cultural politics of “blackness” with emphasis on the ways that different kinds of archives produce multiple and often conflicting narratives. Students will produce as well as consume history. In addition to scholarly monographs and articles, course material will include film, sound, and fiction. I’m very excited to be teaching this course, and looking forward to working with you all semester. Please take a moment to familiarize yourself with the website and read the syllabus. We will use this site extensively for announcements, postings, and virtual conversations. You should feel free to treat it as your own, and post links, images, videos, or anything else of interest to the class.

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