AFRC2238 - Modalities of Black Freedom and Escape: Ships

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Modalities of Black Freedom and Escape: Ships
Term
2022C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC2238401
Course number integer
2238
Meeting times
T 10:15 AM-1:14 PM
Meeting location
ADDM 301
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Grace Louise B Sanders Johnson
Description
The course circulates around ships and boats. The course combines methods from environmental humanities, visual arts and history to consider multi-modal practices of black freedom and escape. From free black sailors in the eighteenth century Caribbean Sea, to twentieth and twenty-first century West African fishing boats, notions of Haitian “boat people,” Parliament Funkadelic’s mothership, and sinking boats with Somali and Ethiopian migrants off Yemen’s coast, ships have been and remain technologies of containment and freedom for communities of African descent. In the face of environmental vulnerabilities and the reality of water ways as systems of sustenance and imminent death, this course asks: how do black people use the ship and the process and practice of shipping as vessels for freedom, escape, and as a site to experiment with futures? Using the city of Philadelphia and the Schuylkill and Delaware rivers as our primary site of interrogation, the course attends to the threats that black people experience following natural disaster (New Orleans, Haiti, Puerto Rico) and everyday engagement with the local and global state structures regarding water (Flint, MI). In this context, we also look to shipping as a site to theorize and account for black innovation, meanings of (non-)sovereignty, and alternative futures.
Course number only
2238
Cross listings
ANTH2338401, ANTH2338401, LALS2238401, LALS2238401
Use local description
No