AFRC076 - AFRICA SINCE 1800

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
AFRICA SINCE 1800
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
404
Section ID
AFRC076404
Meeting times
F 1200PM-0100PM
Meeting location
COLLEGE HALL 315A
Instructors
FEIGH, LACY
Description
Survey of major themes, events, and personalities in African history from the early nineteenth century through the 1960s. Topics include abolition of the slave trade, European imperialism, impact of colonial rule, African resistance, religious and cultural movements, rise of naturalism and pan-Africanism, issues of ethnicity and "tribalism" in modern Africa.


Course number only
076
Use local description
No

AFRC076 - AFRICA SINCE 1800

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
AFRICA SINCE 1800
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
403
Section ID
AFRC076403
Meeting times
F 1100AM-1200PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 2
Instructors
WU, TING-CHIH
Description
Survey of major themes, events, and personalities in African history from the early nineteenth century through the 1960s. Topics include abolition of the slave trade, European imperialism, impact of colonial rule, African resistance, religious and cultural movements, rise of naturalism and pan-Africanism, issues of ethnicity and "tribalism" in modern Africa.


Course number only
076
Use local description
No

AFRC076 - AFRICA SINCE 1800

Activity
REC
Title (text only)
AFRICA SINCE 1800
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
402
Section ID
AFRC076402
Meeting times
F 1100AM-1200PM
Meeting location
COLLEGE HALL 315A
Instructors
FEIGH, LACY
Description
Survey of major themes, events, and personalities in African history from the early nineteenth century through the 1960s. Topics include abolition of the slave trade, European imperialism, impact of colonial rule, African resistance, religious and cultural movements, rise of naturalism and pan-Africanism, issues of ethnicity and "tribalism" in modern Africa.


Course number only
076
Use local description
No

AFRC076 - AFRICA SINCE 1800

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
AFRICA SINCE 1800
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC076401
Meeting times
MW 1200PM-0100PM
Meeting location
COLLEGE HALL 200
Instructors
CASSANELLI, LEE
Description
Survey of major themes, events, and personalities in African history from the early nineteenth century through the 1960s. Topics include abolition of the slave trade, European imperialism, impact of colonial rule, African resistance, religious and cultural movements, rise of naturalism and pan-Africanism, issues of ethnicity and "tribalism" in modern Africa.


Course number only
076
Use local description
No

AFRC070 - COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
COLONIAL LATIN AMERICA
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC070401
Meeting times
TR 0900AM-1030AM
Meeting location
DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB A5
Instructors
FARNSWORTH-ALVEAR, ANN
Description
This course provides an introduction to the broad literature on Latin America's rich colonial history. We will begin by tracing some of the early origins of - and points of contact between - the Indian, Iberian, and African men and women who formed the basis of colonial society. As the course progresses, we will explore the variety of ways in which colonial subjects lived, worked, ate, worshipped, and socialized. Lectures and reading assignments will draw upon a variety of sources, including court cases, artistic renderings, city maps and street plans, travel accounts of visits to the regions, and the material, cultural, and intellectual products made possible by the wealth and dynamism of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The course will conclude with an analysis of the Age of Revolutions, a period of dramatic upheaval that remains at the center of lively scholarly debates. By the end of the semester, students will be able to engage the key questions driving these debates, the most important of which, perhaps, is: what is Latin America's colonial legacy?


Course number only
070
Use local description
No

AFRC053 - MUSIC OF AFRICA

Activity
ONL
Title (text only)
MUSIC OF AFRICA
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC053401
Meeting times
CANCELED
Instructors
MULLER, CAROL
Description
African Contemporary Music: North, South, East, and West. Come to know contemporary Africa through the sounds of its music: from South African kwela, jazz, marabi, and kwaito to Zimbabwean chimurenga; Central African soukous and pygmy pop; West African Fuji, and North African rai and hophop. Through reading and listening to live performance, audio and video recordings, we will examine the music of Africa and its intersections with politics, history, gender, and religion in the colonial and post colonial era. (Formerly Music 053).


Course number only
053
Use local description
No

AFRC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
402
Section ID
AFRC050402
Meeting times
MWF 1000AM-1100AM
Meeting location
LERNER CENTER (MUSIC BUILDING 101
Instructors
ZHANG, SHELLEY
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.


Course number only
050
Use local description
No

AFRC050 - WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
WORLD MUSICS & CULTURES
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC050401
Meeting times
TR 1030AM-1200PM
Meeting location
FISHER-BENNETT HALL 419
Instructors
ROMMEN, TIMOTHY
Description
This course examines how we as consumers in the "Western" world engage with musical difference largely through the products of the global entertainment industry. We examine music cultures in contact in a variety of ways-- particularly as traditions in transformation. Students gain an understanding of traditional music as live, meaningful person-to-person music making, by examining the music in its original site of production, and then considering its transformation once it is removed, and recontextualized in a variety of ways. The purpose of the course is to enable students to become informed and critical consumers of "World Music" by telling a series of stories about particular recordings made with, or using the music of, peoples culturally and geographically distant from the US. Students come to understand that not all music downloads containing music from unfamiliar places are the same, and that particular recordings may be embedded in intriguing and controversial narratives of production and consumption. At the very least, students should emerge from the class with a clear understanding that the production, distribution, and consumption of world music is rarely a neutral process.


Course number only
050
Use local description
No

AFRC041 - HOMELESSNESS & URBAN INEQUALITY

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
HOMELESSNESS & URBAN INEQUALITY
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC041401
Meeting times
F 0200PM-0500PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 167-8
Instructors
CULHANE, DENNIS
Description
This freshman seminar examines the homelessness problem from a variety of scientific and policy perspectives. Contemporary homelessness differs significantly from related conditions of destitute poverty during other eras of our nation's history. Advocates, researchers and policymakers have all played key roles in defining the current problem, measuring its prevalence, and designing interventions to reduce it. The first section of this course examines the definitional and measurement issues, and how they affect our understanding of the scale and composition of the problem. Explanations for homelessness have also been varied, and the second part of the course focuses on examining the merits of some of those explanations, and in particular, the role of the affordable housing crisis. The third section of the course focuses on the dynamics of homelessness, combining evidence from ethnographic studies of how people become homeless and experience homelessness, with quantitative research on the patterns of entry and exit from the condition. The final section of the course turns to the approaches taken by policymakers and advocates to address the problem, and considers the efficacy and quandaries associated with various policy strategies. The course concludes by contemplating the future of homelessness research and public policy.


Course number only
041
Use local description
No

AFRC010 - RACE CRIME & PUNISHMENT

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
RACE CRIME & PUNISHMENT
Term session
0
Term
2017C
Subject area
AFRC
Section number only
401
Section ID
AFRC010401
Meeting times
T 0130PM-0430PM
Meeting location
VAN PELT LIBRARY 402
Instructors
GOTTSCHALK, MARIE
Description
This course is cross-listed with PSCI 010 (Freshmen Seminar) when the subject matter is related to African American or other African Diaspora issues. Topics vary. A recent topic is "Race, Crime, and Punishment." See the Africana Studies Department's website at https://africana.sas.upenn.edu for a description of the current offerings.


Course number only
010
Use local description
No