HIS 317 BORDERS, EMPIRE, IMMIGRATION
This course canvasses the colonial, imperial, and national her/histories of North America up to 1898, illustrating the power of borderlands, empire, and im/migration pasts for: women, sexual minorities, and African-, Asian-, Mexican-, and Indigenous Americans. Some questions that will guide this course are: What are borderlands, how are they different, and how have they transformed the continental, indigenous, imperial, and nation-state histories in the spaces that we now occupy? How were racial and national identities, such as “Mexican,” “Diné (Navajo),” or “Black/Negro,” shaped over space and time and in relation to one another? And finally, how has White Supremacy—manifested through U.S. colonialism and imperialism—affected the social milieu of the North American continent?
Enrollment Limit
Enrollment limited to 18 students.
Attributes
MOIB, MOIE