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Jan 12, 2025
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ANTH 345 - Black Queer Diaspora This course examines ethnographies of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people across the Black diaspora. The history of colonialism, the transatlantic slave trade, and their ongoing aftermaths have created both interlinked and locally variant lifeways across the Americas, Africa, and Europe. Black queer studies queries the creativity and variation with which Black people have been shaped by and continuously reshape these histories, undermining presupposed norms of race, gender, and sexuality. We will look at ethnographic explorations of these particulars, differences, and commonalities as documented in texts, images, and sounds across multiple disciplines. We interrogate how conceptions of race, gender, and sexuality shift across time and space and as lived by Black social actors who both participate in and defy colonial and nationalist projects.
Unit(s): 1 Group Distribution Requirement(s): Distribution Group II Prerequisite(s): ANTH 201 or ANTH 211 Instructional Method: Conference Grading Mode: Letter grading (A-F) Cross-listing(s): CRES 395 Notes: This course meets the department’s area requirement. Not offered: 2024-25 Group Distribution Learning Outcome(s):
- Evaluate data and/or sources.
- Analyze institutions, formations, languages, structures, or processes, whether social, political, religious, economic, cultural, intellectual or other.
- Think in sophisticated ways about causation, social and/or historical change, human cognition, or the relationship between individuals and society, or engage with social, political, religious or economic theory in other areas.
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