Colorado College offers a co-ordinated selection of courses on American-Ethnic Studies as well as numerous courses of related interest. In order to help students interested in American-Ethnic Studies to locate courses of interest, we have cross-listed those departmental courses which deal with Ethnic Studies under the course heading, American-Ethnic Studies. They are listed below.
Anthropology: 204-Prehistory: North America; 211-The Culture Area: Eskimos, 213-The Southwest, 242-The Anthropology of Food, 243-Hispanic Folklore of the Southwest.
Art History: 180-Native American Art.
Chinese: 250-Asian-American Literature.
Comparative Literature: 200-Protesting Cultures & Cultures of Protest: Afro-American and Russian Folk and Literary Expressions.
Drama: 200-Women and Theatre in Africa., 200 Asian and Asian-American Drama, 200 The Plays of August Wilson.
English: 280-Topics: Asian-American Literature, 385 20th-Century African-American Literature, 393 African American Folklore.
General Studies: 220-Blacks and the Cinema.
History: 200-Asian-American History, 203-Studies in American Social History: Native American History, 246-Slavery and Antislavery Movements to 1860; 244-Black People in the U.S. since the Civil War; 267-History of the Southwest under Spain and Mexico; 268-History of the Southwest since the Mexican War.
Music: 104 World Music, 205-Jazz, 294 Latino Musics of the United States, 393-Music Theory in the Non-Western World.
Political Science: 323-Minority Politics
Romance Languages: French-308-Cultures and Civilizations of French Speaking Regions: Africa & the Caribbean; Spanish 338-Latino Literature in the United States.
Sociology: 223-Racial Inequality.
Southwest Studies: 275-The Southwest: The Heritage and the Variety.
Women Studies: 210-Race, Class, Gender.
185-Introduction to American-Ethnic Studies. An interdisciplinary and cross-cultural approach to historical and current issues critical to the examination of Chicano/Latino, African American, Native American and Asian American experiences in the United States. In any one block, one of the four groups constitutes the central focus around which related issues pertaining to the remaining three orbit, thus pivoting from one cultural focus to another. (Required for American-Ethnic Studies minor.) (Taught at Newberry Library, Chicago.) 1 unit - Loeffler.
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