Topics in Anthropology (290-0-21)
Topic
American Suburbs: Race, Class, & Placemaking
Instructors
Matilda Lynn Stubbs
Matilda Stubbs offers learning experiences surrounding the human condition through courses on topics ranging from communication and linguistic anthropology, the senses, visual and digital anthropology, tourism, automobiles and other material culture...like slime or other ASMR artifacts! She received her BA (2005) in Anthropology from the University of California, Santa Cruz, as well as both MA (2012) and PhD (2018) in Anthropology at Northwestern University.
Meeting Info
ANTHRO Sem Rm 104 - 1810 Hinmn: Wed 2:00PM - 4:50PM
Overview of class
This course will explore U.S. suburbia through an anthropological lens. In addition to the study of the history of suburban development and sprawl, this course examines ethnographies, film, and popular media to explore major themes related to suburban landscapes: the construction of the American suburb in the national imaginary; the relationship between the city and the suburb; race and racial formation; class and mobility; gender and generation; and shifting demographics, politics, and labor in contemporary suburbs.
Teaching Method
Seminar
Evaluation Method
Class participation, writing assignments, final paper
Class Materials (Required)
Main texts: 1) Cheng, Wendy. 2013. The Changs Next Door to the Diazes: Remapping Race in Southern California. MN: University of Minnesota Press. 978-0816679829 2) Heiman, Rachel. 2015. Driving After Class: Anxious Times in an American Suburb. CA: University of California Press. 978-0520277755 3) May, Kirse Granat. 2001. Golden State, Golden Youth: The California Image in Popular Culture, 1955-1966. NC: University of North Carolina Press. 978-0807853627 Recommended texts: other course texts available on the class Canvas page and/or in the NU library