Course Info: CSI-0214
Course | CSI-0214 People Without History |
Long Title | 'People Without History': Historical Archaeologies of Atlantic Africa and the African Disapora |
Term | 2015F |
Note(s) |
Satisfies Distribution Textbook information |
Meeting Info | Franklin Patterson Hall WLH on TH from 12:30-3:20 |
Faculty | Rachel Engmann |
Capacity | 25 |
Available | 13 |
Waitlist | 0 |
Distribution(s) |
Culture, Humanities, and Languages |
Cumulative Skill(s) | Independent Work Multiple Cultural Perspectives Writing and Research |
Additional Info | |
Description | Too often 'Western' historical narratives consider Africans and African Diasporans as 'People Without History'. Such a notion refers to peoples who cultures do not possess or have few formally written histories. This class employs archaeological evidence in order to investigate histories of imperialism, colonialism, genocide, slavery, resistance and black nationalism, dismantling the colonial library by exploring local histories once marginalized, silenced and erased. This course focuses on the major themes, ideas and research entailed in the historical archaeology of the Africana experience, on both sides of the Atlantic, in Africa and in the Americas. Throughout this course we will adopt an interpretive framework that draws upon the use of objects, texts and oral narratives, thereby illustrating the historical and cultural continuities between Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora. We will begin by examining archaeological evidence from West Africa, exploring the impact of the Atlantic economy on African daily social life, for example shaping settlement patterns, architecture, sociopolitical organization and sociocultural practices. We will then focus on material from North America and the Caribbean, exploring the ways in which enslaved Africans in the diaspora interpreted their conditions in the Americas, addressing topics such as social, racial, ethnic, religious and gendered identities, power and inequality, resistance and maroonage. |