Afro-American Studies

 

Afro-American Studies


Michael Washington, History, Director

Offered by the Department of History and Geography, the minor in Afro-American studies is designed to provide students with an interdisciplinary perspective of the life of African Americans, Africans and African people throughout the Diaspora and their contributions to humanity. Specifically, the program is designed to acquaint students with

  1. the historical experience of Africans and African Americans;
  2. contributions of Africans and African Americans to the humanities;
  3. the study of the African American experience from a behavioral and/or social science perspective as well as contributions of Black people to these areas of study;
  4. the influence of the African American experience in the fields of communications and/or social work

To complete the minor, students must earn 24 semester hours of designated Afro-American studies courses with no more than 3 semester hours of directed readings or independent study. There are 12 semester hours required; of the remaining 12 semester hours, a least one course must be taken from each of the three required areas. At least a "C" must be achieved to earn credit for a course. Specific requirements for this minor are the following.

Required Courses

AFR 100 *Introduction to Afro-American Studies
HIS 106 *History of African Americans to 1877
HIS 107 *History of African Americans since 1877
HIS 431 *Historical Themes in African American History

Required Areas

History Option

HIS 310 Colonial America to 1763
HIS 313 Expansion and Conflict, 1865-1861
HIS 316 Modern United States History Since 1939
HIS 317 History of the New South
HIS 318 Current Events in a Historical Perspective (when applicable)
HIS 325 Early Latin American History
HIS 335 History of Ancient Africa
HIS 336 History of Modern Africa
HIS 380 History and Film (when taught as History, African Americans and Film)
HIS 417 Civil War and Reconstruction, 1860-1877
HIS 426 Historical Geography of the United States
HIS 427 Urban History of the United States
HIS 435 History of Race Relations in the Americas, 1492-c. 1800
HIS 436 History of Race Relations in the Americas, c. 1800 to the Present
HIS 438 African-American Women’s History and Culture
HIS 444 History of Women in the United States to 1900
HIS 445 History of Women in the United States since 1900
HIS 496 Internships: Public History (when applicable)
HIS 499 Seminars (when applicable)
HIS 533 Expansion and Conflict
HIS 535 Civil War and Reconstruction
HIS 539 Modern United States History
HIS 546 History of the American Family
HIS 552 History of the Old South
HIS 553 History of the New South
HIS 556 African Americans in U.S. Culture, Education, and Politics
HIS 561 Modernization in the Non-Western World
HIS 594 Topics: History (when applicable)

 

Behavioral and Social Sciences/Social Work Option

ANT 240 *Peoples of Africa
ANT 301 World Patterns of Race and Ethnicity
ANT 330 Women, Gender, and Culture, a Global Perspective
GEO 103 *Geography of the Third World
GEO 309 Historical Geography of the United States
GEO 310 Geography of Population
GEO 403 Geography of Africa
GEO 492 Directed Research: Geography (when applicable)
GEO 594 Topics: Geography (when applicable)
GEO 594 Seminar: Geography (when applicable)
HNR 303 Honors Seminar: Humanity and the Imagination
HNR 306 Studies in Diversity
HSR 500 Multicultural Family Work: Principles and Practices
JUS 231 *Race, Gender, and the Crime
JUS 318 The African American, The Law and The Courts
JUS 321 Black Women, Crime and Politics
PSC 215 Race, Gender, and Politics
PSC 338 U.S. Foreign Policy in the Developing World
RTV 105 *Race, Gender, and The Mass Media
SOC 210 *Analysis of Racism and Sexism in the United States
SOC 300 Race and Ethnic Relations
SOC 301 World Patterns of Race and Ethnicity
SWK 307 Human Experience II: Literary Perspectives
SWK 308 Social Work Research (when offered as Afrocentric Paradigm)

 

Humanities and Creative Productions/Communications

ENG 211 *Survey of Women’s Literature I
ENG 212 * Survey of Women’s Literature II
ENG 217 *African-American Literature to 1940
ENG 218 *African-American Literature 1940-Present
ENG 300 *American Women Poets
ENG 305 *American Women Writers
ENG 354 Southern Women Writers
ENG 467 *Topics in African-American Literature
MUS 107 *Survey of African American Music
MUS 234 *Appreciation of Jazz
MUS 254 Women in Music in Europe and America II: The 20th Century
PHI 394 Topics: Philosophy (when applicable)
REL 325 *African American Religious Experience in America
REL 394 Topics Religious Studies (when offered as The Ethics and Theology of Martin Luther King Jr., and Malcolm X)
SPE 350 Rhetoric of Minority Groups
SPE 355 Cross-Cultural Communication
TAR 102 *Survey of Race and Gender in Dramatic Literature
TAR 452 Special Problems in Theatre (literature) (when applicable)

*These courses satisfy the general studies requirements in the areas of History, Literature, Fine Arts, Social Sciences, Non-Western, and Race/Gender

All internships, independent study and directed reading courses must relate to the area of Afro-American studies and may be applied to the minor upon prior approval of the director.

Introduction to Afro-American Studies (AFR 100) fulfills the general studies requirement in non-Western perspective or the general studies requirements in either social sciences or race/gender.

 

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Faculty

Michael Washington, Director
History and Geography
Telephone: (859) 572-6483
Email: Washington@nku.edu

John F. Alberti,

Literature and Language

Prince Brown Jr., Sociology/Anthropology/Philosophy
Willie Elliott, Allied Health/Human Services/Social Work
Carolyn Z. Hagner, Music
Clinton Hewan, Political Science
Mary Carol Hopkins, Sociology/Anthropology/Philosophy
Eric Jackson, History and Geography
Sally A. Jacobsen, Literature and Language
Yasue Kuwahara, Communication
Okera Nsombi History and Geography
James A. Ramage, History and Geography
Jonathan Reynolds, History and Geography
Robert Vitz, History and Geography
Edwin T. Weiss, History and Geography
Steven Weiss, Sommunication
Robert Wilcox, History and Geography
Kristine Yohe, Literature and Language