Graduate Topics in African American Studies (480-0-21)
Topic
African American History since 1865
Instructors
Brett V. Gadsden
Harris Hall 209
Meeting Info
Harris Hall room 101: Fri 2:00PM - 4:50PM
Overview of class
African American History is currently centered in several conversations about its production and meaning. This course returns to the work of academic historians who have and continue to transform what we know about the history of African Americans and the United States. Open to historians and non-historians, this course reviews works that use historical methods to uncover US histories of people of African descent as they confronted various structures of racial inequity after emancipation. In this graduate research seminar, students will examine many of the most salient historical questions and scholarly interventions that have shaped the field of modern African American history in recent years. Course content will focus on—among other subjects— historical agency, community formation, citizenship and nationhood, war, protest and resistance, gender and sexuality, and policy and political mobilization.
Class Materials (Required)
Kate Masur, Until Just Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement from Revolution to Reconstruction
Dylan C. Penningroth, Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights
Thomas Guglielmo, A New History of Racism and Resistance in America's World War II Military