AFRC640 - PROSEMINAR IN AFRICANA STUDIES

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PROSEMINAR IN AFRICANA STUDIES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
301
Section ID
AFRC640301
Meeting times
W 0200PM-0500PM
Meeting location
3401 WALNUT STREET 330A
Instructors
BEAVERS, HERMAN
Description
This course focuses on the historical and cultural relationship between Africans and their descendants abroad.


Course number only
640
Use local description
No

AFRC630 - DEMOGRAPHY OF RACE

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
DEMOGRAPHY OF RACE
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC630401
Meeting times
W 0900AM-1200PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 110
Instructors
ZUBERI, TUKUFU
Description
This course will examine demographic and statistical methods used to capture the impact of racial stratification in society. This course covers the skills and insights used by demographers and social statisticians in the study of racial data. A key challenge facing researchers is the interpretation of the vast amount of racial data generated by society. As these data do not directly answer important social questions, data analysis and statistics must be used to interpret them. The course will examine the logic used to communicate statistical results from racial data in various societies. We will question the scientific claims of social science methodology by extending the critical perspective to biases that may underlie research methods. We will discuss good and bad practices within the context of the historical developments of the methods. This advanced special topics course and course description is for Fall 2017 only.


Course number only
630
Use local description
No

AFRC591 - POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC591401
Meeting times
R 0200PM-0400PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 217
Instructors
BENHAIM, ANDRE
Description
An introduction to major literary movements and authors from five areas of Francophonie: the Maghreb, West Africa, Central Africa, the Caribbean and Quebec.


Course number only
591
Use local description
No

AFRC575 - PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL INTERACTIONS WITH BLACK MALES

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
PSYCHOEDUCATIONAL INTERACTIONS WITH BLACK MALES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC575401
Meeting times
R 0430PM-0630PM
Meeting location
PSYCHOLOGY LAB B35
Instructors
CARTER, ROBERTSTEVENSON, HOWARD
Description
This course is designed to introduce students to innovative approaches to the psychology of education, especially with regard to populations from at-risk contexts, sociocultural dimensions of education, and social-emotional learning.


Course number only
575
Use local description
No

AFRC548 - ADVANCED AMHARIC

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
ADVANCED AMHARIC
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
680
Section ID
AFRC548680
Meeting times
R 0300PM-0500PMT 0300PM-0500PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 582WILLIAMS HALL 217
Instructors
ZEMICHAEL, ERMIAS
Description
An advanced Amharic course that will further sharpen the students' knowledge of the Amharic language and the culture of the Amharas. The learners communicative skills will be further developed through listening, speaking, reading and wwriting. There will also be discussions on cultural and political issues.


Course number only
548
Use local description
No

AFRC547 - RELIGIONS OF AFRICANA DIASPORA

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
RELIGIONS OF AFRICANA DIASPORA
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC547401
Meeting times
T 0130PM-0430PM
Instructors
BUTLER, ANTHEA
Description
Religions of the African Diaspora - Religion shapes and defines the lives of many persons in the Africans Diaspora. This course will explore both the historical and present day manifestations of religions practices by those in the African Diaspora, including Voodu, Candomble, Obeah, Rastafari, African Initiated Churches, Pentecostalism, and Catholicism. Theoretical issues including sexuality, gender, and material culture will also be covered in the course.


Course number only
547
Use local description
No

AFRC543 - INTERMEDIATE AMHARIC I

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
INTERMEDIATE AMHARIC I
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
680
Section ID
AFRC543680
Meeting times
MW 0730PM-0900PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 6
Instructors
HAILU, YOHANNES
Description
Offered through the Penn Language Center


Course number only
543
Use local description
No

AFRC540 - ELEMENTARY AMHARIC I

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
ELEMENTARY AMHARIC I
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
680
Section ID
AFRC540680
Meeting times
MW 0530PM-0730PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 6
Instructors
HAILU, YOHANNES
Description
An introductory course for students with no previous knowledge of Amharic. Amharic belongs to the southern branch of Hemeto-Semitic languages which is also referred to as "Afrasian." Amharic is the official language of Ethiopia and is spoken by 14 million native Amharas and by approximately 19 million of the other ethnic groups in Ethiopia. The goals of this course are to introduce students to the culture, customs, and traditions of the Amharas. Students will develop communicative skills through listening, speaking, reading, and writing.


Course number only
540
Use local description
No

AFRC533 - POL.CULTURE&AMER CITIES: POLITICAL CULTURE AND AMERICAN CITIES

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
POL.CULTURE&AMER CITIES: POLITICAL CULTURE AND AMERICAN CITIES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC533401
Meeting times
T 0600PM-0900PM
Meeting location
3440 MARKET STREET 300
Instructors
REED, ADOLPH
Description
This course is cross-listed when the subject matter is related to African, African American, or other African Diaspora issues. Courses recently offered are, "Political Culture and American Cities, Social Movements and Social Change, Critical Race Theory. See the Africana Studies Department's website at https://africana.sas.upenn.edu for a description of the current offerings.


This course brings together the vantage points of urban political economy, history and urban anthropology. Readings and discussions will cross those literatures, folding in considerations of race, ethnicity and gender in the American city life, with a focus on the relation between culture and political economy. We will reconstruct the history of the different tracks of urban studies in the U.S., beginning with its roots in sociology and anthropology in the Chicago School and in political science in reform-oriented studies of public administration. We will revisit the community power debate of the 1950s-1970s, which shook out significantly along disciplinary lines, and will examine the development of the urban political economy perspective in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as developments within U.S. urban anthropology since the 1960s. We will employ local case study materials, and at every point we will try to understand the intellectual trajectories of the urbanist discourses in relation to dynamics contemporaneously shaping urban politics and policy. Course requirements are seminar preparation which includes each student's leading discussion around specified reading assignments -- and a research paper, the topic of which must be approved by week 5.


Course number only
533
Use local description
No