AFRC002 - Introduction To Sociology

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
Introduction To Sociology
Term
2019A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
403
Section ID
AFRC002403
Meeting times
T 10:30 AM-11:30 AM
Meeting location
MCNB 103
Instructors
Mengyang Zhao
Description
We live in a country which places a premium on indivi dual accomplishments. Hence, all of you worked extremely hard to get into Penn. Yet, social factors also have an impact on life chance. This class provides an overview of how membership in social groups shapes the outcomes of individuals. We will look at a range of topics from the organizational factors which promoted racial inequality in Ferguson, Mo to the refusal of (mostly elite) parents to vaccinate their children. The experience of women and men in the labor market -- and the social factors that lead women to earn less than men -- is another interesting topic taken up in the course. Who gets ahead in America? Course requirements include a midterm, research paper (five to six pages), final and recitation activities. Students are not expected to have any previous knowledge of the topic. Welcome to the course!
Course number only
002
Cross listings
SOCI001403
Use local description
No

AFRC002 - Introduction To Sociology

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
Introduction To Sociology
Term
2019A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
402
Section ID
AFRC002402
Meeting times
T 09:30 AM-10:30 AM
Meeting location
MCNB 103
Instructors
Mengyang Zhao
Description
We live in a country which places a premium on indivi dual accomplishments. Hence, all of you worked extremely hard to get into Penn. Yet, social factors also have an impact on life chance. This class provides an overview of how membership in social groups shapes the outcomes of individuals. We will look at a range of topics from the organizational factors which promoted racial inequality in Ferguson, Mo to the refusal of (mostly elite) parents to vaccinate their children. The experience of women and men in the labor market -- and the social factors that lead women to earn less than men -- is another interesting topic taken up in the course. Who gets ahead in America? Course requirements include a midterm, research paper (five to six pages), final and recitation activities. Students are not expected to have any previous knowledge of the topic. Welcome to the course!
Course number only
002
Cross listings
SOCI001402
Use local description
No

AFRC002 - Introduction To Sociology

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
Introduction To Sociology
Term
2019A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC002401
Meeting times
MW 11:00 AM-12:00 PM
Meeting location
ANNS 110
Instructors
Onoso I. Imoagene
Description
We live in a country which places a premium on indivi dual accomplishments. Hence, all of you worked extremely hard to get into Penn. Yet, social factors also have an impact on life chance. This class provides an overview of how membership in social groups shapes the outcomes of individuals. We will look at a range of topics from the organizational factors which promoted racial inequality in Ferguson, Mo to the refusal of (mostly elite) parents to vaccinate their children. The experience of women and men in the labor market -- and the social factors that lead women to earn less than men -- is another interesting topic taken up in the course. Who gets ahead in America? Course requirements include a midterm, research paper (five to six pages), final and recitation activities. Students are not expected to have any previous knowledge of the topic. Welcome to the course!
Course number only
002
Cross listings
SOCI001401
Use local description
No

AFRC001 - Intro Africana Studies

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
Intro Africana Studies
Term
2019A
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
001
Section ID
AFRC001001
Meeting times
MW 10:30 AM-12:00 PM
Meeting location
BENN 201
Instructors
Grace L. Sanders Johnson
Description
The term Africana emerged in public discourse amid the social, political, and cultural turbulence of the 1960s. The roots of the field, however, are much older,easily reaching back to oral histories and writings during the early days of the Trans-Atlantic African slave trade. The underpinnings of the field continued to grow in the works of enslaved Africans, abolitionists and social critics of the nineteenth century, and evolved in the twentieth century by black writers, journalists, activists, and educators as the sought to document African descended people's lives. Collectively, their work established African Studies as a discipline,epistemological standpoint and political practice dedicated to understanding the multiple trajectories and experiences of black people in the world throughout history. As an ever-transforming field of study, this course will examine the genealogy, major discourses, and future trajectory of Africana Studies. Using primary sources such as maps and letters, as well as literature and performance, our study of Africana will begin with continental Africa, move across the Atlantic during the middle passage and travel from the coasts of Bahia in the 18th century to the streets of Baltimore in the 21st century. The course is constructed around major themes in Black intellectual thought including: retentions and transferal, diaspora, black power, meanings of blackness, uplift and nationalism. While attending to narratives and theories that concern African descended people in the United States, the course is uniquely designed with a focus on gender and provides context for the African diasporic experience in the Caribbean and Latin America.
Course number only
001
Use local description
No

AFRC233 - Wrld Hist:Afrc/Mdl East

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Wrld Hist:Afrc/Mdl East
Term
2018C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC233401
Meeting times
M 02:00 PM-05:00 PM
Meeting location
MEYH B5
Instructors
Firoozeh Kashani-Sabet
Description
SPRING 2018: African cities in the past contributed to dynamic and prosperous civilizations. What happened? This course examines Africans' aspirations of modernity through the lens of African urban history using fiction, film and current scholarship in several disciplines. Each class will explore two temporalities--the precolonial history of African cities, and the colonial and postcolonial histories of economic, social and political progress which goes by the name of development. Grounded in the case studies of both ancient and modern cities, this course explores the emergence and decline of trading centers, the rise of colonial cities, and the dilemmas of postcolonial economies and politics.
Course number only
233
Cross listings
HIST232401, NELC282401
Use local description
No

AFRC277 - Penn Slavery Project Res

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Penn Slavery Project Res
Term
2018C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC277401
Meeting times
F 08:00 AM-11:00 AM
Instructors
Alexis NeumannKathleen M. Brown
Description
This research seminar provides students with instruction in basic historical methods and an opportunity to conduct collaborative primary source research into the University of Pennsylvania's historic connections to slavery. After an initial orientation to archival research, students will plunge in to doing actual research at the Kislak Center, the University Archives, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the American Philosophical Society, the Library Company, and various online sources. During the final month of the semester, students will begin drafting research reports and preparing for a public presentation of the work. During the semester, there will be opportunities to collaborate with a certified genealogist, a data management and website expert, a consultant on public programming, and a Penn graduate whose research has been integral to the Penn Slavery Project.
Course number only
277
Cross listings
HIST273401
Use local description
No

AFST490 - LUGANDA

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
LUGANDA
Term session
0
Term
2018A
Subject area
AFST
Section number only
050
Section ID
AFST490050
Description
The main objective of this course is to allow students to study an African language of their choice, depending on the availability of the instructor. The course will provide students with linquistics tools which will facilitate their research work in the target country. Cultural aspects of the speakers of the language will be introduced and reinforced.


Course number only
490
Use local description
No

AFRC281 - Twenty-First Century African American Literature

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Twenty-First Century African American Literature
Term
2018C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC281401
Meeting times
W 02:00 PM-05:00 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 4C4
Instructors
Margo Natalie Crawford
Description
In this advanced seminar, students will be introduced to a variety of approaches to African American literatures, and to a wide spectrum of methodologies and ideological postures (for example, The Black Arts Movement). The course will present an assortment of emphases, some of them focused on geography (for example, the Harlem Renaissance), others focused on genre (autobiography, poetry or drama), the politics of gender and class, or a particular grouping of authors. Previous versions of this course have included "African American Autobigraphy," "Backgrounds of African American Literature," "The Black Narrative" (beginning with eighteenth century slave narratives and working toward contemporary literature), as well as seminars on urban spaces, jazz, migration, oral narratives, black Christianity, and African-American music. See Africana Studies Department's website at https://africana.sas.upenn.edu for a description of the current offerings.
Course number only
281
Cross listings
ENGL281401
Use local description
No