Ethnic and Diasporic Studies
Ethnic Studies as an academic discipline lies at the intersection of several increasingly powerful developments in American thought and culture. First, interdisciplinary and comparative scholarship has become so prevalent as to represent a dominant intellectual norm. Second, the use of this new scholarly methodology to meet new academic needs and illuminate new subject matter has given rise to a plethora of discourses—women’s studies; Native American studies; African American studies; gay, lesbian, and transgender studies; and global studies. Third, and perhaps most important, there has been a growing recognition, both inside and outside academia, that American reality is incorrigibly and irremediably plural and that responsible research and pedagogy must account for and accommodate this fact.
We define Ethnic Studies, loosely, as the study of the dynamics of racial and ethnic groups (also loosely conceived) who have been denied, at one time or another, full participation and the full benefits of citizenship in American society. We see these dynamics as fascinating in themselves but also feel that studying them illuminates the entire spectrum of humanistic inquiry and that a fruitful cross-fertilization will obtain between Ethnic Studies and the College’s well-established curricula in the humanities, the arts, the sciences, and the social sciences.
Courses in other disciplines related to Ethnic and Diasporic Studies
- Cataclysm and Catharsis: 20th-Century Chinese Fiction
- Chan and Zen Buddhism
- Christianity and Classical Culture: An Enduring Theme in European Thought
- Contemporary Trends in Islamic Thought
- Crossing Borders and Boundaries: The Social Psychology of Immigration
- Cultures of the Colonial Encounter
- Disabilities and Society
- Environment, Race, and the Psychology of Place
- Ethnomusicology of Africa, Asia, and the Middle East: Structures of Music, Structures of Power
- First-Year Studies: Global Africa: Theories and Cultures of Diaspora
- First-Year Studies: Jewish Spirituality and Culture
- First-Year Studies: Reform and Revolution: China’s 20th Century
- Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development
- Gender Research Seminar: Focus on Men and Masculinities
- History and the ‘Arab Spring’
- Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food
- India and Orientalism
- Introduction to the Theory of Social Representations
- Kinship: An Anthropological Story
- Migration and Experience
- Pariah Lives: Modern Jewish Fiction and Autobiography
- Pilgrimage and Tourism: South Asian Practices
- Politics of/as Representation
- Racial Americana: On the Afterlives of Genocide and Enslavement
- Readings in Daoism: The Zhuangzi and Movement
- Sufism
- The Anthropology of Life Itself
- The Buddhist Tradition
- The Caribbean and the Atlantic World
- The Emergence of the Modern Middle East
- The Power of Words: Language, Hegemony, and Social Inequality
- The Qur’an and Its Interpretation