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Nov 22, 2024
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HST-1530 History of African Americans since 1877 Credits 3 This course surveys African-American History from the end of Reconstruction through the present. Particular emphasis is placed on describing and analyzing black Americans’ efforts to counteract the inequalities their communities experienced largely as a result of racist Jim Crow laws and racial disenfranchisement. Moreover, it examines the Great Migration, the Harlem and Chicago Renaissances, the Post-World War II integrationist and Black Nationalist movements, and black political activism at the turn of the millennium. This course is designed to assist students in gaining an improved understanding of (and appreciation for) the myriad ways in which black Americans have impacted the cultural, political, social, and economic structures of the United States, and, in turn, how living within American society has impacted the evolution of African-American thought and action. The instructional format is based on face-to-face lectures and classroom discussions (with an Honors option available during the spring semester and an online option available during the fall, spring, and summer semesters). Honors version available. Corequisite(s): EGL-0090 . Course Outcomes
- Discuss programs for racial uplift and civil rights that variant African-American leaders and organizations advanced from the Nadir of Black Life in America through the Black Power Movement.
- Describe the ways in which the Great Migration altered African Americans’ economic and political aspirations and culture.
- Discuss ways in which African-American led and inspired movements helped shape American society, politics, and culture over the past 50 years.
- Analyze primary sources in their historical context.
- Identify basic historical arguments in secondary sources.
- Construct justifiable historical arguments based on evidence from primary and secondary sources.
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