Caption: The heading row descibes the categories of information about the course,
while the row in the table body holds the course information itself.
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Course Prefix
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Course Number
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Course Title
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Lecture/Lab Hours
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Credit Hours
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HST
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214
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African-American History
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3 Lecture Hours
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3
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Course description
Studies African-Americans from African slave trade through slavery, reconstruction,
years of neglect, and civil rights revolution in the United States and their contributions
to American culture.
Topical outline
- From Africa to America
- The African-American in Colonial America
- The African-American and the Revolutionary War Period
- Shadow of Slavery
- African-Americans without Masters
- The Day of Freedom
- Reconstruction: The Dream Betrayed
- A Time of Transition
- Reaction and Renaissance
- The African-American in a Time of Democratic Crisis
- From Sit-in to Soul: the 1950’s and 1960’s
- The Present: A Second Reconstruction
Method of presentation
- Lecture
- Discussion
- Historical literature
- Audio-visual aids
Student outcomes
- identify and explain the cultural roots of African-Americans as evident in their heritage
from West Africa.
- determine and compare the experiences of the earliest African-Americans with the experiences
of African-Americans who lived in the era of slavery.
- explain and analyze the social and economic factors which resulted in the institution
of African slavery in the New World.
- compare and analyze the variety of historiographic theories regarding the origins
of African slavery in the New World.
- determine the reasons why African slavery developed and accelerated in the southern
regions of colonial North America.
- comprehend and investigate the multiplicity of experiences lived by African-Americans
during the American Revolution.
- relate and compare the various forms of resistance used by African-American slaves
against the institution of slavery.
- integrate the merging of African and European cultures, and analyze its significance
in shaping the unique social history of the United States.
- explain and analyze the role that the issue of slavery played in establishing the
origins of the Civil War.
- comprehend and investigate the multiplicity of experiences lived by African-Americans
during the era of the Civil War and Reconstruction.
- compare and analyze the variety of historiographic theories regarding the role of
Reconstruction’s importance in American history.
- investigate the temporary unity of whites and blacks in the Populist movement.
- determine and analyze the socio-economic and political factors which institutionalized
segregation in the American South.
- explain and interpret the social goals and artistic visions of the artists who excelled
during the Harlem Renaissance.
- compare and interpret the expressions of racist ideologies in American history.
- explain the socio-economic progress of African-Americans in the 20th century.
- explain and analyze precursors of the Civil Rights movement.
- relate, apply, and interpret the role of non-violent civil disobedience at a method
seeking social justice in the Civil Rights movement.
- relate and interpret the reasons for the split between violent and non-violent methods
of protest that occurred in the Civil Rights movement.
- determine and analyze the links between contemporary issues facing African-Americans
as these issues relate to the history that produced them.
- relate and discuss their questions and emerging interpretations of the material and
ideas presented in the course.
- read, analyze, and interpret a secondary work of history or work of fiction as it
pertains to the content of African-American history.
Method of evaluation
Typical classroom techniques
- Two examinations and a comprehensive final examination
- Essays and position papers on topics assigned by the instructor
- Team project
- Case studies
- Critical review
Course content learning outcomes
Additional assessment information (optional)
Textbooks
Jacobs. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. 2003.
Hine. African Americans: A Concise History. 2nd edition. Prentiss Hall, 2009.
Burns. To the Mountaintop: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Mission to Save America, 1955–1968, 2005.
Supplementary materials
Software
Updated: Fall, 2008