Department
of Anthropology
Anthropology 3100.13 (3100.012): Peoples and
Cultures of Mexican American. 3 hours.
Anthropology 3100.12 (3100.011): Peoples and
Cultures of Mesoamerica. 3 hours.
Department of History
History 3150: Historical and Cultural Development
of the Mexican American Community. 3 hours.
Historical evolution of Mexican American culture, social structure, family
patterns and community organizations, and their effects on education,
economic and religious institutions.
History 4150: Mexican Immigration and the Chicano
Community. 3 hours.
Introduction to the history of Mexican immigration in the United States,
focusing on the dynamic effects immigration has had throughout the 19th
and 20th centuries on the formation of the Chicano community. Utilizes
lectures, discussion of the readings, films, and speakers to emphasize
a variety of themes including labor, politics, nativism, citizenship,
demography, gender and
culture. Prerequisite(s): History 3150 recommended.
History 4160: Chicano Political History: 19th
and 20th Century. 3 hours.
Surveys the history of Chicano politics in the U.S. since 1821. Briefly
examines antecedents in the colonial era. Comparing the Chicano political
experience before and after American sovereignty, the course assesses
the continuity of the Chicano political tradition. Emphasizes reading
and discussing new literature in the field. Prerequisite(s): History 3150
recommended.
History 4180: Colonial Mexico and the Spanish
Southwest. 3 hours.
Conquest and expansion of the Spanish in North America.
History 4190: Mexico, 1810-Present. 3
hours.
Social, economic and political history since independence.
Department of English
English 3922: Chicano Literature. 3 hours.
Study of the cultural and historical specificity of Mexican American literature.
Comparison of that literature to
canonical texts and trends, or examination of that literature as a counter
discourse to dominative theories.
Department of Foreign Languages and Literature
Spanish 3040: Mexican Culture and Civilization.
3 hours.
Study of the politics, social structures and traditions of the Mexican
world from the pre-Columbian period until today, with a special focus
on their contemporary life in order to build a foundation for a more in-depth
study of the life, literature and culture of Mexico. Taught entirely in
Spanish. Prerequisite(s): Spanish 2050 or equivalent.
Spanish 4010: Aspects of Contemporary Mexican
Culture. 3 hours.
Study of various aspects of Mexican culture, including historical, literary,
artistic, political and economic arenas. Offered in Mexico to provide
total immersion in the language and culture with field trips to culturally
significant sites. Prerequisite(s): completion of at least one year of
Spanish or the equivalent. Spanish majors and minors are preferred.
Department of Sociology
Sociology 2010: Race, Class, Gender and Ethnicity.
3 hours.
Social, cultural and economic perspectives on Native, African, Asian and
Mexican Americans; emphasizes work and family patterns for both women
and men, racism and sexism and contemporary movements for equality.
Women's Studies
Women's Studies 4240: Latinas In and Out of the Mainstream.
3 hours.
Gender and cultural issues related to identify construction of Latinas
and Latinos during the past thirty years. Focused primarily on women,
issues include those related to gender-coded identity and sexual preference
(including pre-Columbian notions
of sexuality), machismo and marianismo, and immigration. Demographic patterns
of Mexican American, Puerto Rican and Cuban populations as they relate
to the creation of Latinas and Latinos as a cultural denomination. |