The material on this page is from the 2000-01 catalog and may be out of date. Please check the current year's catalog for current information.
Professors: Taylor (English) (on leave, 2000–2001) and Kessler (Political Science); Associate Professors: Creighton (History), Chair, Bruce (Religion) (on leave, fall semester and Short Term), Fra-Molinero (Spanish) (on leave, fall semester and Short Term), Eames (Anthropology), Kane (Sociology), Nero (Rhetoric) (on leave, winter semester and Short Term), Carnegie (Anthropology), Hill (Political Science), and Jensen (History); Assistant Professors: Williams (Music and African American Studies), Johnson (Sociology) (on leave, winter semester), Smith (Education), Ulysse (African American Studies), and McClendon (American Cultural Studies and Political Science); Mr. Pope.L (Theater) (on leave, winter semester and Short Term) American cultural studies is an interdisciplinary program that seeks to understand the differences and commonalties that inform changing answers to the question: What does it mean to be an American? Courses offering diverse methods and perspectives help to explore how self-conceptions resist static definition, how cultural groups change through interaction, and how disciplines transform themselves through mutual inquiry. The centrality of courses in American cultural studies helps provide a lens through which to view how groups of Americans see themselves and each other and how American institutions have constructed such differences as race, gender, class, ethnicity, and sexuality. Seen as such, the critical study of what it means to be American relies not on fixed, unitary, or absolute values, but rather on dynamic meanings that are themselves a part of cultural history. Respecting diverse claims to truth as changing also allows them to be understood as changeable. Major Requirements. The major in American cultural studies requires ten courses in addition to a senior thesis. There are three required courses: an introduction to African American history or African American studies; a course introducing race, ethnicity, and gender as analytical categories; and a course introducing interdisciplinary methods of analysis. Seven courses in addition to the thesis are to be chosen from the list below. These electives should include advanced courses in at least two disciplines and constitute a coherent area of concentration. In addition, one course should study the African diaspora, one course should use gender as a primary category of analysis, and one course should have an experiential or fieldwork component. The sequence of courses should be discussed with the faculty advisor and approved by the fall semester of the junior year. All majors must complete a senior thesis (American Cultural Studies 457 and/or 458). Pass/Fail Grading Option. There are no restrictions on the use of the pass/fail option within the major. The following courses from across the curriculum can be applied to the major: African American Studies 140A. Introduction to African American Studies. Anthropology 101. Social Anthropology. Art 283. Contemporary Art. Asian Studies 280. Ethnicity and Gender: United States, Japan, and Korea. Economics 220. American Economic History. Education 231. Perspectives on Education. English 121G. Asian American Women Writers. First-Year Seminar 014. Slavery in America. French s35. French in Maine. History 140. Origins of the New Nation, 1500–1820. Music/African American Studies/Women's Studies 239. Black Women in Music. Political Science 115. American Government and Public Policy. Psychology/Sociology 210. Social Psychology. Religion 217. Religion in the American Experience. Rhetoric 255. Moving Pictures: The Rhetoric of Committed Documentary. Sociology 140. Social Problems. Spanish 215. Readings in Spanish American Literature. Theater 225. The Grain of the Black Image. Women's Studies 100. Introduction to Women's Studies. Courses220. Fieldwork in American Cultural Studies. Central to the Program in American Cultural Studies is the examination of and engagement with diverse American communities. Students in this course come to know something of this diversity through fieldwork and experiential learning in Maine. The course begins with the study of Bates's own cultures, using exercises in home-based ethnography, material culture analysis, and archives in Ladd Library Special Collections. In cooperation with the Center for Service-Learning, students then move beyond the Bates periphery to work in service oriented settings in the state. Besides extensive fieldwork, students participate in weekly seminar discussions, and prepare a research paper relevant to their community experience. Enrollment limited to 12. M. Creighton. 237. Multicultural Education. An examination of the cultural and political dimensions of multicultural education as an academic and intellectual undertaking. Students explore how social divisions on the basis of unequal access and control of cultural institutions and instruments reproduce and affirm conditions of domination. Yet, the cultural resistance movements offer new alternatives to the dominant culture. Recommended background: courses in the social sciences and humanities. Open to first-year students. J. McClendon. 240. Cultural Politics in African American Studies. This course addresses the relationship between political culture and cultural politics within African American studies. Particular attention is paid to the contending theories of cultural criticism in African American studies. Cornel West, Molefi Asante, Patricia Hill Collins, Angela Davis, bell hooks, Maramba Ani, and Henry Lewis Gates, Jr. are some of the theorists under review. Recommended background: Political Science 119 or significant work in political science, American cultural studies or African American studies. Open to first-year students. Enrollment is limited to 50. This course is the same as Political Science 240. J. McClendon. 250. Interdisciplinary Studies: Methods and Modes of Inquiry. Interdisciplinarity involves more than a meeting of disciplines. Practitioners stretch methodological norms and reach across disciplinary boundaries. Through examination of a single topic, this course introduces students to interdisciplinary methods of analysis. Students examine what practitioners actually do and work to become practitioners themselves. Prerequisite(s): any two courses in women's studies, African American studies, or American cultural studies. This course is the same as African American Studies 250 and Women's Studies 250. E. Eames. 339. Africana Thought and Practice. This seminar course examines in depth the Pan-American scope of Black thought. Students study the various philosophical problems and the theoretical issues and practical solutions offered by such scholar/activists as W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Gaavey, Kwame Nkrumah, Claudia Jones, C.L.R. James, Leopold Senghor, Amilcar Cabrah, Charlotta Bass, Lucy Parsons, Walter Rodney and Frenz Fanon. Recommended background: a course on the Africana world, or a course in philosophy or political theory. Enrollment is limited to 15. This course is the same Political Science 339. Open to first-year students. J. McClendon. 348. Race and Ethnicity in America. An investigation of how race and ethnicity as cultural and political categories in the United States are materially anchored in specific sets of social relations. Of particular import is the concept of whiteness as a racial category, and its connection to racism and national oppression. What social groups are excluded from the racial category of white and how they are consequently excluded from American nationality? Enrollment limited to 15. J. McClendon. 360. Independent Study. Independent study of selected topics by individual students. Students must meet periodically with faculty and complete papers or projects. Students are limited to one independent study per semester. Written permission of the instructor is required. Staff. 457, 458. Senior Thesis. Under the supervision of a faculty advisor, all majors write an extended essay that utilizes the methods of at least two disciplines. Students register for American Cultural Studies 457 in the fall semester and for American Cultural Studies 458 in the winter semester. Majors writing an honors thesis register for both American Cultural Studies 457 and 458. Staff. Short Term Unitss18. African American Culture through Sports. Sports in the African American culture have served in a variety of ways to offer a means for social, economic, cultural, and even political advancement. This unit examines how sports have historically formed and contemporaneously shape the contours of African American culture. Particular attention is given to such questions as segregation, gender equity, cultural images, and the political effects for African American athletes and the black community. In addition to the required and recommended readings, lectures, and discussions, videos and films are central to the teaching and learning process. This unit is the same as Political Science s18. Open to first-year students. Enrollment limited to 30. J. McClendon. s50. Individual Research. Registration in this unit is granted by the program committee only after the student has submitted a written proposal for a full-time research project to be completed during the Short Term and has secured the sponsorship of a member of the program faculty to direct the study and evaluate the results. Students are limited to one individual research unit. Staff. |
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