AFRC345 - SINNERS, SEX AND SLAVES: RACE AND SEX IN EARLY AMERICA

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
SINNERS, SEX AND SLAVES: RACE AND SEX IN EARLY AMERICA
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC345401
Meeting times
MW 1200PM-0100PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 286-7
Instructors
BROWN, KATHLEEN
Description
This course explores the lost worlds of sinners, witches, sexual offenders, rebellious slaves, and Native American prophets from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries. Using the life stories of unusual individuals from the past, we try to make sense of their contentious relationships with their societies. By following the careers of the trouble-makers, the criminals, and the rebels, we also learn about the foundations of social order and the impulse to reform that rocked American society during the nineteenth century.


Course number only
345
Use local description
No

AFRC335 - "WHERE MY GIRLS AT?":AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN PERFORMERS IN THE 20TH CENTURY

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
"WHERE MY GIRLS AT?":AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN PERFORMERS IN THE 20TH CENTURY
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC335401
Meeting times
CANCELED
Instructors
TILLET, SALAMISHAH
Description
African American women performers from blues woman Bessie Smith to Paris revue star Josephine Baker, from jazz darling Billie Holiday to rock legend Tina Turner, and from hip hop giant Lauryn Hill to millennial star Beyonc¿, have constantly redefined and expanded American popular music. Using the long 20th century as our historical marker, this course will explore how African American women performers, across genres and time, have consciously and sometimes contradictorily navigated the racial and sexual limits of American popular culture in order to assert their own particular narratives of artistic and political freedom.


Course number only
335
Use local description
No

AFRC325 - AUGUST WILSON AND BEYOND

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
AUGUST WILSON AND BEYOND
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC325401
Meeting times
M 0200PM-0500PM
Meeting location
3401 WALNUT STREET 330A
Instructors
BERGER, SUZANABEAVERS, HERMAN
Description
The purpose of this course is to engage students in the rigorous process of mining experiences for material that can be transformed into a public performance piece. In-class writing, group discussions, and field work in the Philadelphia area. AUGUST WILSON AND BEYOND. The people need to know the story. See how they fit into it. See what part they play. - August Wilson, King Hedley II. In this seminar, students will read groundbreaking playwright August Wilson's 20th Century Cycle: ten plays that form an iconic picture of African American traumas, triumphs, and traditions through the decades, told through the lens of Pittsburgh's Hill District neighborhood. Other readings include supporting material on Wilson's work and African American theatre, the works of contemporary playwrights whom Wilson has influenced (such as Suzan-Lori Parks and Tarell Alvin McCraney), and context on Penn's relationship with West Philadelphia.


As an Academically Based Community Service (ABCS) course,this seminar gives students the opportunity to enhance their understanding of the plays, and history and culture that shaped them, by forming meaningful relationships with West Philadelphia residents. Wilson's plays provide the bridge between the two groups. The course culminates with students writing an original theatre piece inspired by the readings and relationships, which they will share at an end-of-semester performance.


Course number only
325
Use local description
No

AFRC284 - ADVANCED SWAHILI I

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
ADVANCED SWAHILI I
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
680
Section ID
AFRC284680
Meeting times
F 0400PM-0500PMTR 0900AM-1030AM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 217WILLIAMS HALL 217
Instructors
MSHOMBA, ELAINE
Description
This is an advanced Kiswahili course which will engage learners in extended spoken and written discourse. Advanced learners of Kiswahili will listen to, read about, write, and speak on authentic video materials, contemporary novels, and newspapers. They will also participate in various discussions on cultural and political issues.


Course number only
284
Use local description
No

AFRC280 - INTERMEDIATE SWAHILI I

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
INTERMEDIATE SWAHILI I
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
680
Section ID
AFRC280680
Meeting times
F 0300PM-0400PMTR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 217WILLIAMS HALL 217
Instructors
MSHOMBA, ELAINE
Description
The objectives of this course are: to strengthen students' knowledge of speaking, listening, reading, and writing Swahili and to compare it with the language of the students; to learn more about the cultures of East Africa and to compare it with the culture(s) of the students; to consider the relationship between that knowledge and the knowledge of other disciplines; and using that knowledge, to unite students with communities outside of class.


Course number only
280
Use local description
No

AFRC276 - AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND CULTURE IN SLAVERY

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND CULTURE IN SLAVERY
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC276401
Meeting times
MW 0200PM-0330PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 705
Instructors
WILLIAMS, HEATHER
Description
This course will examine the lives of enslaved African Americans in the United States, both in the North and the South. We will engage historiographical debates, and tackle questions that have long concerned historians. For example, if slaves were wrenched from families and traded, could they sustain family relationships? If slaves worked from sun-up until sun-down, how could they create music? We will engage with primary and secondary sources to expand our understandings of values, cultural practices, and daily life among enslaved people. Topics will include: literacy, family, labor, food, music and dance, hair and clothing, religion, material culture, resistance, and memories of slavery. Several disciplines including History, Archaeology, Literature, and Music, will help us in our explorations. Written, oral, and artistic texts for the course will provide us with rich sources for exploring the nuances of slave life, and students will have opportunities to delve deeply into topics that are of particular interest to them.


Course number only
276
Use local description
No

AFRC274 - FACES OF ISLAM IN AFRICA

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
FACES OF ISLAM IN AFRICA
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC274401
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL CENTER FOR EARLY AMERI 105
Instructors
BABOU, CHEIKH
Description
This course is designed to provide the students with a broad understanding of the history of Islam in Africa. The focus will be mostly on West Africa, but we will also look at developments in other regions of the continent. We will examine the process of islamization in Africa and the interplay between Islam and the African traditional religions and customs. Topics include conversion, Islamic education and literacy, the status of women, Muslim response to European colonial domination, Islamic mysticism and the contemporary development of Sunni movements.


Course number only
274
Use local description
No

AFRC269 - CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
405
Section ID
AFRC269405
Meeting times
F 1000AM-1100AM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 705
Instructors
RADER, KATHERINE
Description
This course explores the creation and transformations of the American constitutional system's structures and goals from the nation's founding through the period of Progressive reforms, the rise of the Jim Crow system, and the Spanish American War. Issues include the division of powers between state and national governments, and the branches of the federal government; economic powers of private actors and government regulators; the authority of governments to enforce or transform racial and gender hierarchies; and the extent of religious and expressive freedoms and rights of persons accused of crimes. We will pay special attention to the changing role of the Supreme Court and its decisions in interpreting and shaping American constitutionalism, and we will also read legislative and executive constitutional arguments, party platforms, and other influential statements of American constitutional thought.


Course number only
269
Use local description
No

AFRC269 - CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
404
Section ID
AFRC269404
Meeting times
R 0330PM-0430PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 203
Instructors
AL-FAHAM, HAJER
Description
This course explores the creation and transformations of the American constitutional system's structures and goals from the nation's founding through the period of Progressive reforms, the rise of the Jim Crow system, and the Spanish American War. Issues include the division of powers between state and national governments, and the branches of the federal government; economic powers of private actors and government regulators; the authority of governments to enforce or transform racial and gender hierarchies; and the extent of religious and expressive freedoms and rights of persons accused of crimes. We will pay special attention to the changing role of the Supreme Court and its decisions in interpreting and shaping American constitutionalism, and we will also read legislative and executive constitutional arguments, party platforms, and other influential statements of American constitutional thought.


Course number only
269
Use local description
No