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Special Topics in International Studies (390-0-1)

Topic

Race Across Time in Latin America

Instructors

Diego Arispe-Bazan
847/467-2770
1902 Sheridan Road Evanston, IL 60208

Meeting Info

Parkes Hall 224: Thurs 2:00PM - 4:50PM

Overview of class

This seminar will track both the shifts and continuities in racial ideologies operating in Latin America since the colonial period, following the work of historians and anthropologists. The course will consider impact of these ideologies on subject formation by reviewing their progression over time through theoretical arguments and evidence from case studies. Because race has been central to the forms of power and authority that first undergirded the colonial system and later birthed the many Latin American nations, we can trace a continued line of transmission of racialized ideologies that structure inequality in the region. Using a cultural and linguistic anthropological framework, we will approach these racial categories as composites of markers of otherness that include skin color, clothing, kin affiliations, occupation, among others. The course moves progressively from research about the early colonial period and forward chronologically until the 20th century, with a final discussion of migrant trajectories to the US. Topics covered will include variations in how race is defined and invoked in context, identity as a performative effect, coloniality as an ongoing process, and the role of historical memory in post-colonial Latin America.

Class Materials (Required)

• García, M.E. (2005). Making Indigenous Citizens: Identities, Education, and Multicultural Development in Peru. Stanford: Stanford UP. 9780804750158
• Roth-Gordon, J. (2016). Race and the Brazilian Body: Blackness, Whiteness, and Everyday Language in Rio de Janeiro. Univ of California Press. 9780520293809"