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         African-american Studies Arts:     more books (100)
  1. African Americans in the Visual Arts (A to Z of African Americans) by Steven Otfinoski, 2011-02
  2. Language, Discourse and Power in African American Culture (Studies in the Social and Cultural Foundations of Language) by Marcyliena Morgan, 2002-08-12
  3. Represent: Art and Identity Among the Black Upper-Middle Class (Routledge Research in Race and Ethnicity) by Patricia A. Banks, 2009-12-10
  4. The Other Side of Color: African American Art in the Collection of Camille O. and William H. Cosby, Jr. by David C. Driskell, 2001-03
  5. A History of African American Theatre (Cambridge Studies in American Theatre and Drama) by Errol G. Hill, James V. Hatch, 2006-01-16
  6. African American Art and Artists by Samella Lewis, 1994-06-06
  7. Capoeira: A Martial Art and a Cultural Tradition (The Library of African American Arts and Culture) by Jane Atwood, 1999-03
  8. African Art in Transit (Cambridge Studies in Social & Cultural Anthropology) by Christopher B. Steiner, 1994-01-28
  9. Traditional African Designs (Dover Pictorial Archive Series) by Gregory Mirow, 1997-05-07
  10. The Baltimore Afro-American: 1892-1950 (Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies) by Hayward Farrar, 1998-05-30
  11. African American Viewers and the Black Situation Comedy: Situating Racial Humor (Studies in African American History and Culture) by Robin R. Means Coleman, 2000-02-01
  12. Technology and the African-American Experience: Needs and Opportunities for Study
  13. The White Press and Black America (Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies) by Carolyn Martindale, 1986-06-25
  14. Black Theatre and Performance: A Pan-African Bibliography (Bibliographies and Indexes in Afro-American and African Studies)

41. Ohio University College Of Arts And Sciences
regional campuses. The Department of African American studies is adepartment in the College of arts and Sciences. The College of
http://www.ohiou.edu/aas/faculty/employment/
Employment Opportunities with the AAS Dept. The Department of African American Studies is currently engaged in recruiting new faculty members. During the 2001-2002 academic year, we hired Dr. Keith Harris. Dr. Harris, who specializes in African American cinema, holds a joint appointment with the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and the School of Film. During the 2002-2003 academic year, the department plans to make two hires. One position will be in history, and the other in literature. The history position will focus on the 20th century history of the African diaspora in the Americas. The literature position will focus on the literature of the African diaspora in the Americas. 20th Century African American History The Department of African American Studies at Ohio University invites applications for a tenure-track position in African American and African Diaspora History in the Americas at the rank of assistant professor. Successful applicant must be prepared to teach survey courses in African American history in the United States as well as courses on the African Diaspora in the Americas in the 20th century. Starting September 2002. Ph.D. required. Salary competitive. Interview of selected candidates at the American Historical Association annual meeting, San Francisco, January 2002.

42. College Of Arts And Sciences >> Certificate In African American Studies
The certificate program in African American studies is designed Autobiography (3)Engl 3243, African American Literature (3 Literature and the arts Select from
http://www.cas.utulsa.edu/certificates/african.html
Certificate in African American Studies
Director

Teresa Shelton Reed
Assistant Professor of Music
Advisory Board
Kimberly Hanger, History
Anne Stavney, English
Gordon Taylor, English
The certificate program in African American studies is designed for traditional and non-traditional students who want to gain an understanding of the history, literature, and culture of African Americans. Students must be in the process of completing a degree at The University of Tulsa or have already earned a bachelor's degree from an accredited four-year college or university.
Certificate Requirements
Students must complete 18 hours of approved course work, nine of which must be at or above the 3000 level. Approved courses are listed each semester in the Schedule of Classes, and students should select courses that satisfy the following requirements: Core Course (mandatory for all students): Hist 2513, African American History Since 1877 (3) or Hist 3583, American Civil Rights Movement (3) or Engl 2083, African American Autobiography (3)

43. African American Studies Research Guide: Arts, Images, Literature, And Music
Article Searching American Ethnic studies Guide African American studies Program American studies Program For yale.edu/rsc/afam/arts.html Send
http://www.library.yale.edu/rsc/af-am/arts.html
Arts, Images, Literature, and Music Links to: Arts and Images African-American/African Diaspora Studies Audiocassettes and Videotapes (UC Berkeley Library)
Black Film Center/Archive
(Indiana U.)
California Newsreel

Carl Van Vechten Photographs
(Library of Congress)
Digital Schomberg: Images of African Americans from the 19th Century
. New York Public Library, 1998. Searchable archive of photographs and images.
Films/Videos About the African-American Experience
(First Run/Icarus Films)
Images of the Transatlantic Slave Trade: A Media Database
(Virginia Foundation for the Humanities) Online Arts Journals: Artnoir
Transition
v. 1-62 (1961-1993) Literature and Slave Narratives A list of Selected Literature available Full-Text. (James Madison U.)
African American Literature Online
(UVA Multicultural Pavilion Project)
African American Online Writers Guild

African American Poetry Database (1760-1900)
(Through Yale University Library) African American Women Writers of the 19th Century (Digital Schomberg Full Text) American Slave Narratives: An Online Anthology Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1938

44. UGA African American Studies
The primary objective of an African American studies curriculum, regardless of raceor color Foster interdisciplinary study in the humanities, arts, and sciences
http://www.uga.edu/~iaas/home.html
The Institute for African American Studies has evolved at The University of Georgia as an academic program of study since 1969, though its current status dates from 1992. It is dedicated to the production of creative research on the achievements of African Americans and to exciting instruction for a diverse community of thinkers. In addition, it serves as a cultural repository and resource for the citizenry of Georgia. The Institute offers several courses in the core curriculum. Students wishing to earn a certificate or undergraduate degree in African American Studies can do so by taking the recommended courses approved by the Director. The intent is to be both intellectually exciting and rigorously challenging. Often views might seem unusually innovative. Many students of the Institute are interested in professional study and scholarly research beyond the undergraduate level. Others might begin to lay out a systematic plan for thoughtful public service.
The Role of African American Studies
Western Civilization has been a reliable means to understand world cultures for many generations, but the rapidly changing demography of the United States requires a more profound awareness of cultural resources by thinkers of color. As seekers after human truth, African Americanists should test traditional assumptions about race to help students make more enlightened choices for themselves and their civilization. The primary objective of an African American studies curriculum, regardless of race or color, is education for positive and productive citizenship. Hence, a reasonable list follows:

45. UGA African American Studies
Sample of a Graduating Senior with a Major in African American studies—ModelLanguage, Literature and the arts 1. Freshman Year, Sophomore Year.
http://www.uga.edu/iaas/Sample.html
Model: Social Inquiry
Freshman Year Sophomore Year Core English Core Literature Social Sciences Social Sciences Sciences Major Courses AAM 200 Major Courses Fine Arts Major Courses SCI or Math Foreign Language Foreign Language Minor Electives Minor Electives Junior Year Senior Year Foreign Language Major Courses Major Courses Minor Courses Minor Courses Electives
Model: Language, Literature and the Arts
Freshman Year Sophomore Year English ENG English ENG Fine Arts Social Sciences Fine Arts Minor Electives AAM MUS (or PSY) Social Sciences HIS Social Sciences HIS SCI SCI or Math SCI Foreign Language Foreign Language Junior Year Senior Year Foreign Language CML REL/AAM PSY/AAM REL/AAM PSY/AAM POL/AAM ENG/AAM AAM 425 or 896 ENG 434 or 437T AAM(DRA) ENG/AAM ENG ENG ENG ENG/AAM ENG (LIN/AAM) ENG/AAM SPC (AAM) Electives Course
The example could easily be one in Psychology, Political Science, Religions, Drama, History, etc., as long as the choice would reflect one of the major three areas of concentration. A sociologist, for instance, would substitute several of the five new sociology classes for most of the literature ones. Someone interested in Religions would make disciplinary choices as well. A great deal of flexibility, in other words, is possible without diffusion.
Presumably the Curriculum Committee and Board of Regents will allow this course to count, as a similar one by Georgia State does, in Area E of the General Education Sequence. Political Science, Speech Communications, and Classics all allow for at least one 200 course to count in the major.

46. CAAS - African American Studies Links
members create and coordinate Internet networks that advance teaching and researchin the arts, humanities, and social Hnet African American studies Home Page.
http://www.umich.edu/~iinet/caas/links/aas.html
Welcome to the CAAS African American links page! We offer a sampler of some of the most useful websites sponsored by universities, research centers, non-profits, governments, and news organizations. Useful commercial sites are accessible through some of the gateways in our lists. Inclusion of a link on this page does not imply endorsement of the views or information presented.
General Organization of Africans in the Americas Africana.com African American Networking Afro-American Sources in Virginia, a Guide to Manuscripts ... Black Arts Movement
Literature Blackwriters.org African American Books Givens Collection of African American Literature Life and Literature, PBS Series on the Givens Collection ... Database of African American Poetry, 1760-1900, University of Michigan
Civil Rights Civil Rights Project, Harvard U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Citizens Committee on Civil Rights ... National Civil Rights Museum
History Museums Charles Wright Museum of African American History, Detroit Anacostia Museum (Center for African American History and Culture) African American Heritage Preservation Foundation, Inc. Making of America, Electronic Archive, University of Michigan ... Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site
General History Gateways Race and Place: African American Community Histories A Deeper Shade of History, MIT

47. University Of Houston - The College Of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences
has been named to head the African American studies Program in the Collegeof Liberal arts and Social Sciences at the University of Houston. Category Reference Education Houston Departments and Programs
http://www.hfac.uh.edu/
With disciplines ranging from African American Studies to Women's Studies, Art to Theatre, and Anthropology to Sociology, we are the University's largest and most diverse college.
We not only prepare tomorrow's creative artists and performers, economists, historians, journalists, linguists, literary critics, political scientists, psychologists, and philosophers, but also provide all Houston graduates with communication and research skills, cultural awareness, and the capacity for sound ethical and aesthetic judgments. We are the intellectual, cultural, and artistic heart of the University. SPRING 2003 CLASS ANNOUNCEMENTS
2003 Convocation
Fall Convocations a Great Success:
The College's first Fall Convocations , at 10:00 am and 2:00 pm on December 19 , were a great success, thanks to the outstanding efforts of many of the College's staff, faculty and student volunteers, as well as the staff at Cullen Performance Hall . Congratulations to all our fall graduates!

48. University Of Houston - African American Studies Program - Minor Requirements
a minimum of 18 semester hours, including AAS 2320 Intro to African American studies;a minimum of nine hours from humanities, fine arts, and communication.
http://www.hfac.uh.edu/aas/MinorRequirements.html
African American Studies Minor Requirements
Director: James L. Conyers, Jr. A minor in African American Studies requires a minimum of 18 semester hours, including AAS 2320 Intro to African American Studies; a minimum of nine hours from humanities, fine arts, and communication. Twelve of the 18 hours must be in residence. Twelve hours must be advanced, at least six of which must be in residence. A minimum 2.00 grade point average for all courses applied to the minor is required. Select courses from the following list. Required: AAS 2320: Introduction to African American Studies (3 hours)
Humanities, Fine Arts, and Communication (6 hours) AAS 2322: Introduction to African Religion and Philosophy AAS 3332: Anthology of African Culture AAS 3394: Selected Topics AAS 3396: Literature of Women of Color in U.S. AAS 4330: Black Church in America AAS 4334: The Struggle for Equality in America AAS 4370: Comparative Studies in Racism ARTH 2388: Primitive Art ENGL 3360: Survey of African American Literature ENGL 3363: Masterpieces of African American Literature ENGL 3396: Contemporary African American Fiction ENGL 4364: Minorities in Literature ILAS 4398: Special Problems/Community Internship HIST 3319: Urban History of the United States

49. Newcastle University Library - Electronic Journals - Arts - African American Stu
New Titles, Withdrawn Titles, Electronic Journals Guide, FAQ. arts AfricanAmerican studies. More Electronic Journal resources in this subject area.
http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/ejs/subjlist/artafams.html
NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Electronic Journals - Subject List
A-Z Title List Subject List Full-Text Collections Off-Campus Access ... FAQ
Arts - African American Studies
Electronic Journals Team Last Amended 10-Dec-2001.

50. African American Studies Department
Postdoctoral Fellowship NU Home WCAS Home CLI Home MMLC Home Weinberg Collegeof arts and Sciences Department of African American studies 308 Kresge Hall
http://www.afam.northwestern.edu/
Home Undergraduate Programs Faculty Events ... MMLC Home
Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences
Department of African American Studies
308 Kresge Hall Evanston, IL 60208-2209 Phone: (847) 491-5122
Fax: (847) 491-4803 Email: af-amstudies@northwestern.edu
Last Updated 10/25/2002
and University Policy Statements
© 2002 Northwestern University.

51. African American Studies
postdoctoral fellowship. Postdoctoral Fellowship. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY WEINBERGCOLLEGE OF arts AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF AFRICAN AMERICAN studies. PROGRAM.
http://www.afam.northwestern.edu/postdoc.html
postdoctoral fellowship
Postdoctoral Fellowship NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
WEINBERG COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
DEPARTMENT OF AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM
The African American Studies Postdoctoral Fellowship Program at Northwestern University invites applications from recent Ph.D.s with a commitment to the field of African American and Diaspora studies. This fellowship program provides a stipend, a visiting appointment in the Department of African American Studies, close association with faculty at the university, and assistance in furthering the fellow's development as a productive scholar. AWARDS The African American Studies Postdoctoral Fellowship available for 2003-2004, will afford the recipient an appointment in the Department of African American Studies at Northwestern. Disciplinary backgrounds of candidates may vary but preference will be given to those in the humanities and the social sciences. In addition to his/her research project, the fellow will be expected to deliver one public lecture on his/her research during the fellowship period, a departmental seminar on a work-in-progress, and is expected to teach one or

52. MSCD | School Of Letters, Arts And Sciences | African American Studies
Metro State, Search / Directories, News, Events The arts, For Students, AfricanAmerican studies. Quick Facts. Degree Requirements. Quick Links. Apply Now!
http://www.mscd.edu/academic/scolas/aas/
African American Studies
Quick Facts
Degree Requirements
Quick Links Apply Now! Registration/Records Online Courses Catalog ... Welcome

53. MSCD | School Of Letters, Arts And Sciences | African American Studies
African American studies. Campus Box 41, PO Box 173362 Denver, CO 80217. More informationfor the African American studies department will be available soon.
http://www.mscd.edu/academic/scolas/aas/home/
African American Studies
Campus Box 41, P.O. Box 173362
Denver, CO 80217
Phone: 303-556-3103 Fax: 303-556-3178 More information for the African American Studies department will be available soon.
Home
Academics Admissions Campus Life ... Welcome

54. African American Studies And Research Center (Purdue University)
webmaster, African American studies Research Center Beering Hall of Liberal Artsand Education (BRNG) 100 North University Street Interim Director Carolyn
http://www.sla.purdue.edu/academic/idis/african-american/
Current Students Prospective Student Alumni Interested Public ... Employment Upcoming/Current Events Fall 2003 Course Information Now Available! Established in 1970, the African American Studies and Research Center at Purdue University was the first interdisciplinary program in the School of Liberal Arts dedicated to the study of the history, culture, and literature of African Americans and the African diaspora. This interdisciplinary program offers courses in six interest areas: Africa, African Diaspora (United States, The Caribbean, and South American), Humanities, Social Sciences, Arts, and Education. The program hosts numerous annual lecture series, conferences, and fora as well as a bi-annual scholarly e-newsletter. The program's diasporic commitments have expanded beyond course offerings and campus programming to include a joint-sponsored study abroad program on the island of Martinique in the French West Indies and working advisory groups that strive to contribute to social policy debates affecting African Americans. webmaster
Beering Hall of Liberal Arts and Education (BRNG)
100 North University Street
Interim Director: Carolyn Johnson
West Lafayette, IN 47907-2067

55. African American Studies Program
Representing Blackness From The Black arts Movement of The Sixties To ThePresent Fourth Annual African American studies February 1416 2003.
http://www.macalester.edu/aas/conference/
Sponsored by the Macalester College African American Studies program Keynote Lecturer: Paul Carter Harrison. Obie-Award winning and nationally acclaimed playwright,
Writer in Residence at Columbia College, Chicago. Special pre-conference symposium Wednesday, February 12th 7-9 p.m. Paul Carter Harrison. Professor Harrison teaches and holds a position as Writer in Residence at Columbia College, Chicago. He is a much-published and produced playwright, whose works include "The Death of Boogie Woogie and the Great MacDaddy" (Obie-winner). Following in the Black Arts Movement tradition of identifying and cultivating a Black Aesthetic, Professor Harrison has written extensively about language and ritual in Black drama, and has invented several terms for the legacies alive in Black theater, including "Nommo" and "Mother/Word." He has edited seminal anthologies of contemporary (70s-present) African American theater. His most recent artistic project is a full-length opera, for which he wrote the libretto, Doxology, with musician Wendell Logan. it recently premiered at Columbia College, Chicago. For more information contact the African American Studies conference coordinator (651-696-6014)

56. Macalester College Catalog: African American Studies
History), Dale Shields (Dramatic arts Dance), Michelle Wright (English). Part TimeFaculty Mahmoud ElKati (History). The African American studies minor gives
http://www.macalester.edu/academic/catalog/program/afr_m.html

The Academic Program

The Curriculum
  • African American Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Art
  • Asian Studies ...
  • African American Studies home page
    African American Studies
    Faculty: Part Time Faculty: Mahmoud El-Kati (History) The African American Studies minor gives students the opportunity to analyze the intellectual and cultural contributions and the experiences of African Americans from a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives. Students develop a faculty-directed, systematic, and multi-disciplinary approach to the subject matter and are encouraged to integrate their interests in this subject matter with their work in other disciplines and programs. Students also have the opportunity to place the African American experience within the context of race and diversity in America through the relationship between African American Studies and the Comparative North American Studies program.
    General Distribution Requirements
    Courses approved for the African American Studies minor but offered through other departments count toward the general distribution requirements as specified by those departments. Courses offered directly by African American Studies do not count toward any distribution requirement.
    Diversity Requirements
    The course in African American Studies which satisfies the domestic diversity requirement is 10, Introduction to African American Studies.

57. Program Of African American Studies: Faculty
Sanders (Ph.D, Boston University) Assistant Professor of African American studiesin the Graduate Institute of Liberal arts and Women's studies kwalla2@emory
http://www.emory.edu/COLLEGE/AAS/faculty.html
For information about faculty research interests, consult the faculty pages on the appropriate departmental Web site. Delores P. Aldridge (Ph.D., Purdue University)
Grace Towns Hamilton Professor of Sociology
daldri2@emory.edu
Dwight D. Andrews (Ph.D., Yale University)
Associate Professor of Music
musicdda@emory.edu
Edna G. Bay (Ph.D., Boston University)
Associate Professor of History, in the Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts
ebay@emory.edu
Robert Brown (Ph.D., University of Michigan)
Assistant Professor of Political Science
rabrown@emory.edu
Rudolph P. Byrd (Ph.D., Yale University)
Associate Professor of American Studies in the Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts
rbyrd@emory.edu
Leroy Davis (Ph.D., Kent State University) Associate Professor of History and Associate Director of the Program of African American Studies ldavi04@emory.edu Peter Dowell (Ph.D., University of Minnesota) Associate Professor of English and Associate Dean of Emory College pdowell@emory.edu

58. African American And African Studies—College Of Liberal Arts (CLA)
African American and African studies Department of African American and Africanstudies College of Liberal arts (CLA) Catalog Web Site Advising. BA.
http://www.catalogs.umn.edu/ug/cla/cla01.html
Return to: U of M Home One Stop Directories Search U of M ...
Academic Calendars
African American and African Studies Department of African American and African Studies
College of Liberal Arts (CLA) : Catalog Web Site Advising B.A. This major offers three curriculum tracks. Students choose one track and usually select a concentration such as public policy/development studies, literature and the arts, or a more traditional disciplinary focus. The integrated studies of African people track focuses on African peoples and cultures of Africa and the western hemisphere. The African American studies track provides a comprehensive knowledge of African American history, psycho-social issues, and culture. The African studies track focuses on the history, social sciences, and cultures of Africa. All three tracks encourage students to study a language related to Africa and to take advantage of opportunities to study and work there. Degree Requirements Students must complete at least 120 credits to graduate, including at least 30 credits in the major.

59. Profiles.htm
Language Requirement The language requirement for the African American studies optionis the same as the College of Liberal arts and Sciences General Education
http://www.uiowa.edu/~afriam/undergrad.html
African American World Studies
Undergraduate degree
B.A. in African American World Studies; minor in African American Studies African American Studies Option AAWS Option African Studies Option Back to AAWS Home Page
Undergraduate Program
Bachelor of Arts
Students may earn a Bachelor of Arts with a major in African American World Studies by following one of three programs of study: the African American Studies option (30 semester hours), the African American World Studies option (39 semester hours), or an African Studies option (33 semester hours). Transfer course work for application to the major is evaluated on an individual basis. The African American studies option focuses on Blacks in the United States and gives some attention to their culture and history in relation to the culture and history of Blacks elsewhere in the world. The African American world studies option places greater emphasis on interrelationships of Black history and cultures in various places in the world. The African studies option places emphasis on Africa. Students must earn a grade-point average of 2.00 or higher in all courses in their major program. Back to the top
African American Studies Option
Required Courses
129:060 Introduction to African American Society
129:061 Introduction to African American Culture
For majors in the program, 129:060-061 are prerequisite to 129:116-117 African American Literature I-II, 129:065 Introduction to African American History, 129:189 Themes in African American History, and 129:099 Senior Seminar.

60. CRC // UF Guide // Liberal Arts & Sciences // Humanities // African American Stu
Opportunities in Agriculture Careers, Liberal arts Jobs. 352) 3921521 800 am - 500pm MF www.clas.ufl.edu, Center for African American studies 330 Little Hall
http://www.crc.ufl.edu/domain/ufguide/liberalarts/humanities/african_amer.php

Site Map
African American Studies UF Guide Main Liberal Education Main Guide to CLAS Majors and Careers African American Studies ... Religion
CRC hours have been extended! The CRC is now open 8:00 AM to 7:00 PM on Wednesdays to better meet students needs.
The Center for African Studies offers a minor in African studies that can be taken in conjunction with a department or interdisciplinary major leading to the bachelor's degree in the colleges of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Agriculture, Education, Fine Arts, Journalism and Communications and the Business Administration. The minor in African studies is awarded via an interdisciplinary program (outside the major discipline) on the various dimensions of the African continent and its peoples. The minor is intended to provide a solid foundation for careers in teaching and research as well as in other professional work for which knowledge of Africa is essential.
Examples of Career Opportunities
Teacher Advertising Exec

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