PSCI5015 - Black Social Movements: A Transnational Perspective

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Black Social Movements: A Transnational Perspective
Term
2024A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSCI5015401
Course number integer
5015
Meeting times
R 3:30 PM-6:29 PM
Meeting location
BENN 139
Level
graduate
Instructors
Michael G. Hanchard
Description
This course invites graduate students and advanced undergraduates with prior authorization to explore scholarship and primary materials on the transnational dimensions of black social movements. Recent phenomena such as the world- wide protest against the extrajudicial killing of George Floyd and the political assassination of Rio de Janeiro city council member Marielle Franco are two examples of the ways in which events involving black death in one locale resonate in multiple sites across the globe. Uprisings and demonstrations seemingly divided by language, culture and nation-state find common cause in collective action in response to patterns and instances of injustice and inequality. Course materials provide documentary evidence and analysis of the transnational circuitry of black social movement networks that have arisen in response to racisms targeting black and brown population. Members of scheduled castes in India, aboriginal populations in Australia and New Zealand, and Afro-descendent populations in the Americas and Europe, have become agents of change and forged substantive alliances and strategic coalitions with other social movement tendencies. Scholarship from social movement theory, Black Studies, comparative history and political theory help constitute the core reading for this course. Film, documentary narrative and autobiography will supplement reading assignments.
Course number only
5015
Cross listings
AFRC5015401, LALS5015401, SOCI5015401
Use local description
No