Course Catalog 2007-2008 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Comparative American Studies
|
|
Return to: College of Arts and Sciences
Pablo Mitchell, Assoc.Professor of History & Comparative American Studies; Program Director
Pawan Dhingra, Associate Professor of Sociology and Comparative American Studies
Harry Hirsch, Professor of Politics and Comparative American Studies
Gina Pérez, Associate Professor of Comparative American Studies
Meredith Raimondo, Assistant Professor of Comparative American Studies
Comparative American Studies is an interdisciplinary program that examines issues of power and identity formation in the United States through the lenses of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality. Comparative American Studies takes a broad view of “America” that extends beyond U.S. geopolitical boundaries to consider the global reach of American political, economic, and military power as well as U.S. cultural production and histories of social change. Course materials encourage students to engage critically with notions of “American” and “Americanness” and to locate these concepts within historicized transnational and global contexts. While Comparative American Studies draws on the research and insights of a wide range of fields—including American Studies, African American Studies, Asian American Studies, Ethnic Studies, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Studies, Latina/o Studies, Native American Studies, and Gender and Women’s Studies—the program is distinctive in that it pursues comparative approaches to analyzing identities, territories, and modes of social change.
Return to: College of Arts and Sciences
|