Course Info: CSI-0209

CourseCSI-0209 Black Natives
Long TitleBlack Natives: Anti-Blackness, Indigeneity, and Decolonization
Term2021F
Note(s) Textbook information
Meeting InfoFranklin Patterson Hall ELH on T,TH from 10:30-11:50
FacultyRobert Caldwell
Capacity23
Available6
Waitlist0
Distribution(s)
Cumulative Skill(s)
Additional InfoStudents in this course can expect to spend 6 to 9 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time.
Description

Crispus Attucks, the first martyr of the U.S. War for Independence, was a working-class New Englander of both African American and Indigenous descent. In the five hundred years since Europeans first brought Africans to the shores of North America, they forged shared histories, communities, and families alongside, and often together with, Native peoples. Racism, legal frameworks, and historical particularities have often divided the two communities. This course considers examples of Black-Native unity, Blood quantum, historical and contemporary anti-Blackness in the U.S., communities of Black Indians including Louisiana Creoles, and the enslavement of African Americans by "civilized tribes" and resulting Freedmen.