Africana Studies
Africana Studies embraces a number of scholarly disciplines and subjects at Sarah Lawrence College, including anthropology, architecture, art history, dance, economics, film, filmmaking, history, Islamic studies, law, literature, philosophy, politics, psychology, religion, sociology, theatre, and writing. Students examine the experience of Africans and people of African descent in the diaspora, including Latin America, the Caribbean, North America, and beyond. Study includes the important cultural, economic, technological, political, and social intellectual interplay and exchanges of those peoples as they help make our world. Students will explore the literature of Africans and peoples of African descent in various languages, including Spanish, Portuguese, French, and English. The dynamics of immigration and community formation are vital in this field. Students will examine the art and architecture of Africa and the diaspora; their history, societies, and cultures; their economy and politics; the impact of Islam and the Middle East; the processes of slavery; the slave trade and colonialism; as well as postcolonial literature in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The program also includes creative work in filmmaking, theatre, and writing.
Courses in other disciplines related to Africana Studies
- Africa Contemporary: Art From 1950-Present
- Africa Global: Arts From Around the Atlantic
- First-Year Studies: Child and Adolescent Development in North American and African Contexts: Opportunities and Inequalities
- Environment, Race, and the Psychology of Place
- Ethnomusicology of Africa, Asia, and the Middle East: Structures of Music, Structures of Power
- First-Year Studies: Contemporary Africa Literatures: Against the Single Story of Things Fall Apart
- First-Year Studies: Global Africa: Theories and Cultures of Diaspora
- Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food
- Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back
- Individualism and/or Diversity Reconsidered
- Kinship: An Anthropological Story
- Rethinking Civil Rights History and the Origins of Black Power
- Rethinking the Racial Politics of the New Deal and the War on Poverty
- Sickness and Health in Africa
- Writing Warrior (Wo)men: Mothering, Movements and Migration in Black Literature