Africana Studies (Barnard)
The Barnard course listing includes courses offered through Barnard College as well as some courses offered through Columbia University’s Arts and Sciences departments. Please direct questions about Barnard courses (those with the BC prefix) to the appropriate Barnard department.
NOTE
Course scheduling is subject to change. Days, times, instructors, class locations, and call numbers are available on the Directory of Classes.
Fall course information begins posting to the Directory of Classes in February; Summer course information begins posting in March; Spring course information begins posting in June. For course information missing from the Directory of Classes after these general dates, please contact the department or program.
Click on course title to see course description and schedule.
Fall 2009
Africana Studies (Barnard)
Credit Courses
Interdisciplinary and thematic approach to the study of Africa, moving from
pre-colonial through colonial and post-colonial periods to contemporary
Africa. Focus will be on its history, societal relations, politics and the
arts. The objective is to provide a critical survey of the history as well
as the continuing debates in Africana studies.
Spring 2010
Africana Studies (Barnard)
Credit Courses
Interdisciplinary and thematic approach to the African diaspora in the
Americas: its motivations, dimensions, consequences, and the importance and
stakes of its study. Beginning with the contacts between Africans and the
Portuguese in the 15th century, this class will open up diverse paths of
inquiry as students attempt to answer questions, clear up misconceptions,
and challenge assumptions about the presence of Africans in the �New
World.�
Survey interrogates the cultural and aesthetic development of a variety of
interconnected musical genres - such as blues, jazz, gospel, soul, funk,
R&B, hip-hop, classical and their ever changing same/names - viewed as
complex human activities daringly danced at dangerous discourses inside and
outside the American cultural mainstreams.
(Also ENGL BC 3148) Examination of fiction, poetry, essays and films about
the Great Migration (1910-1950) of African-Americans from the rural South
to the urban North, focusing on literary production in New York and
Chicago. (This course satisfies the Harlem Requirement for the Africana
Studies major).
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