AFRICAAM 120: Writing the Mind, Writing the Body
In this interdisciplinary course, we will explore how literary and philosophical texts by writers across the Black Diaspora portray the mind and body. The purpose of this course is to study how these writers of various genres employ language and style to portray, represent, or evoke mental and physical occurrences. In our close reading of these texts, we will study the ways literary and philosophical strategies for writing on the mind/body requires participatory work from readers. We also consider how race, gender, and disability revise and enhance our understandings of the mind/body nexus. Our theoretical readings are taken from various fields such as psychoanalysis, disabilities studies, dance criticism, phenomenology, lyric studies, and art theory. In addition to exploring questions of the mind/body, we also engage theories on the face and voice as thresholds between the mind/body. How does language capture or convey the mind/body? How does language fail to represent or portray what
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In this interdisciplinary course, we will explore how literary and philosophical texts by writers across the Black Diaspora portray the mind and body. The purpose of this course is to study how these writers of various genres employ language and style to portray, represent, or evoke mental and physical occurrences. In our close reading of these texts, we will study the ways literary and philosophical strategies for writing on the mind/body requires participatory work from readers. We also consider how race, gender, and disability revise and enhance our understandings of the mind/body nexus. Our theoretical readings are taken from various fields such as psychoanalysis, disabilities studies, dance criticism, phenomenology, lyric studies, and art theory. In addition to exploring questions of the mind/body, we also engage theories on the face and voice as thresholds between the mind/body. How does language capture or convey the mind/body? How does language fail to represent or portray what we would consider mental and/or physical experiences? How do these texts and our engagement with them blur the distinction of the mind/body or bring to light the strange connections between them? While considering primary texts from the Black expressive tradition, we also will investigate how race complicates - and perhaps conditions - these philosophical paradoxes.
Terms: Spr
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II
Instructors:
Pantoja, T. (PI)
AFRICAAM 244: Re(positioning) Disability: Historical, Cultural, and Social Lenses (CSRE 143, EDUC 144, PEDS 246D)
This course is designed to introduce undergraduate students of any major to important theoretical and practical concepts regarding special education, disability, and diversity. This course primarily addresses the social construction of disability and its intersection with race and class through the critical examination of history, law, social media, film, and other texts. Students will engage in reflection about their own as well as broader U.S. discourses moving towards deeper understanding of necessary societal and educational changes to address inequities. Successful completion of this course fulfills one requirement for the School of Education minor in Education.
Last offered: Autumn 2021
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP
AFRICAAM 442: (Re)Framing Difference: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Disability, Race and Culture (CSRE 343, EDUC 442, FEMGEN 442, PEDS 242)
This course uses social theories of difference to examine the intersections of disability, race and culture. The course will examine these concepts drawing from scholarship published in history, sociology of education, urban sociology, cultural studies, disability studies, social studies of science, cultural psychology, educational and cultural anthropology, comparative education and special education. Implications for policy, research and practice will be covered.
Terms: Win
| Units: 4
Instructors:
Artiles, A. (PI)
AMSTUD 106B: Creativity & Culture in the Age of AI (ARTHIST 168A, CSRE 106A, ENGLISH 106A, SYMSYS 168A)
Lecture/small-group discussion course exploring the social, ethical, artistic and policy implications of artificial intelligence systems. Includes field trips to the AI Tinkery, AI Playground, Institute for Human--Centered AI and elsewhere, both on and off campus. Engages scholarship on AI and education, decolonial AI, indigenous AI, disability activism AI, feminist AI and the future of work for creative industries across STEM, social sciences and the humanities. This is AI for the Thinking Person. If the scheduled discussion times don't work for you, please don't let that discourage you from enrolling. We're flexible with discussion times.
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-EDP
AMSTUD 107: Introduction to Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (CSRE 108, FEMGEN 101, HISTORY 108A)
Introduction to interdisciplinary approaches to gender, sexuality, queer, trans, and feminist studies. Topics include social justice and feminist organizing, art and activism, feminist histories, the emergence of gender and sexuality studies in the academy, intersectionality and interdependence, the embodiment and performance of difference, and relevant socio-economic and political formations such as work and the family. Students learn to think critically about race, gender, disability, and sexuality. Includes guest lectures from faculty across the university and weekly discussion sections.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4-5
| UG Reqs: GER:DB-SocSci, GER:EC-Gender, WAY-EDP, WAY-SI
Instructors:
Jean-Baptiste, R. (PI)
;
Kazem, H. (PI)
;
Lopez, Z. (PI)
;
Nunez, A. (PI)
;
Lopez, Z. (TA)
;
Nunez, A. (TA)
ANTHRO 139A: Archaeology & Disability (ANTHRO 239A, ARCHLGY 139, ARCHLGY 239, FEMGEN 139A)
In this course, we will explore the ways archaeology and disability relate to each other, including both the ways archaeologists interpret disability in the past and how ableism shapes the practice of archaeology in the present. We will examine a variety of theoretical frames drawn from Disability Studies and other disciplines and consider how they can be usefully applied to archaeology. Case studies from a variety of geographic and temporal contexts will provide the basis for imagining an anti-ableist archaeology. By the end of the quarter, students will be able to: 1. Articulate several major ideas from disability studies and apply them to archaeological case studies; 2. Explain how disability studies and disabled self-advocates are reshaping the practice of archaeology; 3. Demonstrate improvement in the research and writing skills that they have chosen to develop through the flexible assignment structure of the course.
Terms: Win
| Units: 5
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP
Instructors:
Heath-Stout, L. (PI)
ANTHRO 239A: Archaeology & Disability (ANTHRO 139A, ARCHLGY 139, ARCHLGY 239, FEMGEN 139A)
In this course, we will explore the ways archaeology and disability relate to each other, including both the ways archaeologists interpret disability in the past and how ableism shapes the practice of archaeology in the present. We will examine a variety of theoretical frames drawn from Disability Studies and other disciplines and consider how they can be usefully applied to archaeology. Case studies from a variety of geographic and temporal contexts will provide the basis for imagining an anti-ableist archaeology. By the end of the quarter, students will be able to: 1. Articulate several major ideas from disability studies and apply them to archaeological case studies; 2. Explain how disability studies and disabled self-advocates are reshaping the practice of archaeology; 3. Demonstrate improvement in the research and writing skills that they have chosen to develop through the flexible assignment structure of the course.
Terms: Win
| Units: 5
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP
Instructors:
Heath-Stout, L. (PI)
ARCHLGY 139: Archaeology & Disability (ANTHRO 139A, ANTHRO 239A, ARCHLGY 239, FEMGEN 139A)
In this course, we will explore the ways archaeology and disability relate to each other, including both the ways archaeologists interpret disability in the past and how ableism shapes the practice of archaeology in the present. We will examine a variety of theoretical frames drawn from Disability Studies and other disciplines and consider how they can be usefully applied to archaeology. Case studies from a variety of geographic and temporal contexts will provide the basis for imagining an anti-ableist archaeology. By the end of the quarter, students will be able to: 1. Articulate several major ideas from disability studies and apply them to archaeological case studies; 2. Explain how disability studies and disabled self-advocates are reshaping the practice of archaeology; 3. Demonstrate improvement in the research and writing skills that they have chosen to develop through the flexible assignment structure of the course.
Terms: Win
| Units: 5
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP
Instructors:
Heath-Stout, L. (PI)
ARCHLGY 239: Archaeology & Disability (ANTHRO 139A, ANTHRO 239A, ARCHLGY 139, FEMGEN 139A)
In this course, we will explore the ways archaeology and disability relate to each other, including both the ways archaeologists interpret disability in the past and how ableism shapes the practice of archaeology in the present. We will examine a variety of theoretical frames drawn from Disability Studies and other disciplines and consider how they can be usefully applied to archaeology. Case studies from a variety of geographic and temporal contexts will provide the basis for imagining an anti-ableist archaeology. By the end of the quarter, students will be able to: 1. Articulate several major ideas from disability studies and apply them to archaeological case studies; 2. Explain how disability studies and disabled self-advocates are reshaping the practice of archaeology; 3. Demonstrate improvement in the research and writing skills that they have chosen to develop through the flexible assignment structure of the course.
Terms: Win
| Units: 5
Instructors:
Heath-Stout, L. (PI)
ARTHIST 168A: Creativity & Culture in the Age of AI (AMSTUD 106B, CSRE 106A, ENGLISH 106A, SYMSYS 168A)
Lecture/small-group discussion course exploring the social, ethical, artistic and policy implications of artificial intelligence systems. Includes field trips to the AI Tinkery, AI Playground, Institute for Human--Centered AI and elsewhere, both on and off campus. Engages scholarship on AI and education, decolonial AI, indigenous AI, disability activism AI, feminist AI and the future of work for creative industries across STEM, social sciences and the humanities. This is AI for the Thinking Person. If the scheduled discussion times don't work for you, please don't let that discourage you from enrolling. We're flexible with discussion times.
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-EDP
