AFRS11
Bordering Hispaniola: Blackness, Mixture, and Nation in the Dominican Republic
Africana
BC
Subject code
AFR
Course Number
S11
Department(s)
Instructor(s)
J. Lyon
Course Long Title
Bordering Hispaniola: Blackness, Mixture, and Nation in the Dominican Republic
Cross Listed Courses
Description
This course explores Dominican identity and its relation to ideas of nation vis-à -vis the island’s shared border with Haiti. Before departing for Santo Domingo, students consider the contexts of colonialism, state formation, and labor migration that shape contemporary Dominican identities. In the Dominican Republic, students visit key sites in the African and Haitian diasporas in the country. Further, they examine performance and popular culture as key sites of antiracist engagement. Students employ participatory ethnographic methods and map making to examine key themes of identity, performance, and resistance. Cross-listed in Africana, anthropology, and Latin American and Latinx studies.
Modes of Inquiry
Analysis and Critique [AC], Historical and Social Inquiry [HS]
Writing Credit
No writing credit
Departmental Course Attributes - Major/Minor Requirements
(Africana: Diaspora)
INDS Program Relationship
IDAF - AFR Program, IDLL - LALS Program