CSRE 233A: Counseling Theories and Interventions from a Multicultural Perspective (AFRICAAM 233A, EDUC 233A)
In an era of globalization characterized by widespread migration and cultural contacts, professionals face a unique challenge: How does one practice successfully when working with clients/students from so many different backgrounds? This course focuses upon the need to examine, conceptualize, and work with individuals according to the multiple ways in which they identify themselves. It will systematically examine multicultural counseling concepts, issues, and research. Literature on counselor and client characteristics such as social status or race/ethnicity and their effects on the counseling process and outcome will be reviewed. Issues in consultation with culturally and linguistically diverse parents and students and work with migrant children and their families are but a few of the topics covered in this course.
Terms: not given this year
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
CSRE 235: Nation in Motion: Film, Race, and Immigration in Contemporary French Cinema (FRENCH 235, FRENCH 335)
[NOTE: See
French 65N schedule for Monday film viewing location.] An examination of the current debates in France regarding national identity, secularism, and the integration of immigrants, notably from the former colonies. Course confronts films' and other media's visual and discursive rhetorical strategies used to represent ethnic or religious minorities, discrimination, citizens' resistance to government policies, inter-racial marriages, or women's rights within immigrant communities. By embodying such themes in stories of love, hardships, or solidarity, the motion pictures make the movements and emotions inherent to immigration tangible: to what effect? Taught in English. Films in French with English subtitles. Consent of instructor for undergraduates.
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
Instructors:
Alduy, C. (PI)
CSRE 245: Understanding Racial and Ethnic Identity Development (AFRICAAM 245, EDUC 245)
African American, Native American, Mexican American, and Asian American racial and ethnic identity development; the influence of social, political and psychological forces in shaping the experience of people of color in the U.S. The importance of race in relationship to social identity variables including gender, class, and occupational, generational, and regional identifications. Bi- and multiracial identity status, and types of white racial consciousness.
Terms: Win
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
Instructors:
Grant, D. (PI)
;
LaFromboise, T. (PI)
CSRE 246: Constructing Race and Religion in America (HISTORY 256G, HISTORY 356G, RELIGST 246, RELIGST 346)
This seminar focuses on the interrelationships between social constructions of race, and social interpretations of religion in America. How have assumptions about race shaped religious worldviews? How have religious beliefs shaped racial attitudes? How have ideas about religion and race contributed to notions of what it means to be "American"? We will look at primary and secondary sources, and at the historical development of ideas and practices over time.
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 4-5
|
UG Reqs: GER:DBHum
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
Instructors:
Lum, K. (PI)
CSRE 255D: Racial Identity in the American Imagination (AFRICAAM 255, AMSTUD 255D, HISTORY 255D, HISTORY 355D)
Major historical transformations shaping the understanding of racial identity and how it has been experienced, represented, and contested in American history. Topics include: racial passing and racial performance; migration, immigration, and racial identity in the urban context; the interplay between racial identity and American identity; the problems of class, gender, and sexuality in the construction of racial identity. Sources include historical and legal texts, memoirs, photography, literature, film, and music.
Terms: Win
|
Units: 4-5
|
UG Reqs: GER:DBSocSci, GER:ECAmerCul
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
Instructors:
Hobbs, A. (PI)
CSRE 260: California's Minority-Majority Cities (HISTORY 260)
Historical development and the social, cultural, and political issues that characterize large cities and suburbs where communities of color make up majority populations. Case studies include cities in Los Angeles, Santa Clara, and Monterey counties. Comparisons to minority-majority cities elsewhere in the U.S. Service Learning Course (certified by Haas Center).
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 4-5
|
UG Reqs: GER:DBSocSci, GER:ECAmerCul
|
Grading: Letter (ABCD/NP)
Instructors:
McKibben, C. (PI)
CSRE 279C: Chroniclers of Desire: Creative Non-Fiction Writing Workshop (CSRE 179C, TAPS 179C, TAPS 279C)
This course emphasizes the study and practice of personal memoir writing and literary journalism. The class will explore those writings that contain a public and private story, navigating an intimate and institutional world. Student writers will serve as public chroniclers whose subjective point of view and experience attempt to provide a truth greater than what ¿the facts¿ can offer.
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter or Credit/No Credit
Instructors:
Moraga, C. (PI)
CSRE 279G: Indigenous Identity in Diaspora: People of Color Art Practice in North America (CSRE 179G, TAPS 179G, TAPS 279G)
This "gateway" core course to the IDA emphasis in CSRE offers a 21st century examination of people of color aesthetics and related politics, drawing from contemporary works (literature, music, visual and performing arts) in conversation with their native (especially American Indigenous and African) origins. Issues of gender and sexuality in relation to cultural identity are also integral to this study. Students will be required to produce a final work, integrating critical writing with a creative project.
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter or Credit/No Credit
Instructors:
Moraga, C. (PI)
CSRE 289E: Queer of Color Critique: Race, Sex, Gender in Cultural Representations (FEMST 389E, ILAC 389E)
Examines major questions and issues that arise in considering race, sex, and gender together. Focus on critical and theoretical texts queering ethnic and diaspora studies and bringing race and ethnicity into queer studies. Close reading of texts in a variety of media negotiating racialized sexualities and sexualized identities. How is desire racialized? How is racial difference produced through sex acts? How to reconcile pleasure and desire with histories of imperialism and (neo)colonialism and structures of power?
Terms: Spr
|
Units: 3-5
|
Grading: Letter or Credit/No Credit
Instructors:
Yarbro-Bejarano, Y. (PI)
