AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM

INTRODUCTION TO AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY & STUDIES

Professor Maceo Crenshaw Dailey, Jr., Ph.D. HIST 3329 AFST 2300

Director of African American Studies Program MTWRF

Associate Professor, Department of History LART 319

Liberal Arts Building, Room 401 9:20-11:30 A.M.

Telephone 747-8650

E-mail:

SUMMER 2010

SYLLABUS

Time permitting, all topics listed below will be considered this semester, although not necessarily in the order presented. Students would be well advised to read several topics in advance of lectures and discussions. The primary textbook for the course is:

Required Textbook

John Hope Franklin and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, From Slavery To

Freedom, (9th Edition)

Recommended Textbooks

Darlene Clark Hine, William C. Hine, Stanley Harrold

The African-American Odyssey

James Blackwell, The Black Community

Nell Painter, Creating Black Americans

Paula Giddings, When and Where I Enter

Joanne Grant, Black Protest

Clayborne Carson, et. al., African American Lives:

The Struggle for Freedom

In addition to these books, secondary scholarly essays and tertiary articles will be placed on reserve in the library throughout the semester. The reading assignments are by no means exhaustive; they will, however, provide clues to more detailed treatments of the great majority of issues and questions to be raised in the introductory course in African American Studies and History.

A word about the approach to be used. As we proceed in this introductory course, it will be conceptually helpful for us to keep in mind the statements of the eminent African American historian Benjamin Quarles:

“Because freedom is a deep river, Negroes would prefer to cross over in

calm time. But cross over they must, being Americans.”

“The central theme of American History may well be control of the Negro.”

We will substitute African American for the word “Negro”, but in essence wend our way through the historical era guided largely by the premises of Professor Quarles, and, in the arena of identity construction, what Kool G. Rap referred to as the “nationality of reality.”

Pertaining to a working definition of African American Studies, Professor Manning Marable of ColumbiaUniversity writes:

“African American Studies, broadly defined, is the systematic study of

the black experience, framed by the socioeconomic, cultural, and

geographical boundaries of Sub-Saharan Africa and the black Diaspora of

North American, the Caribbean, Brazil, and Latin American, and

increasingly Europe itself. At its core, it is also the black intellectual

tradition as it has challenged and interacted with Western civilization and

cultures. In the social sciences and humanities, that intellectual tradition

has assumed a complex burden over many generations, seeking to engage

in a critical dialogue with white scholarship on a range of complex issues, and

most significantly, the definition and reality of race as a social construct,

and the factors that explain the structures of inequality which, greatly define

the existence of black people.”

This definition clearly necessitates an interdisciplinary approach, drawing on paradigms, critical theories, and computer analyses; and understanding the humanizing nature of learning about and eradicating racism and other “isms” damaging to people.

Note also that films and videos will be used extensively to heighten our appreciation of historical eras and issues.

Course requirements will include the submission of a book critique, satisfactory completion of the mid-term and final examinations, and group report and regular attendance and participation in classroom discussions (each category representing twenty percent of the student’s grade). The grading scale:

A=90-100

B=80-89

C=70-79

D=60-69

F=59 or less

Two unexcused absences will result in a deduction of ten points from the student’s final grade. Three or more unexcused absences can result in the student receiving a failing grade for the course. Please review your student handbook for policies pertaining to plagiarism. The policies will be adhered to strictly. The assignments and format for the tests will be discussed more thoroughly within the first week of the semester. Welcome!

Week OneIntroduction

Brief overview

Explanation of Assignments

“Lackawanna Blues”

Levittown, U.S.A.

The African American Experience in the United States:

Scholars and Society: Sociological and Psychological

Dimensions of an Historic Problem

Nell Painter, “Black History”

Beverly Tatum, “Talking About Race, Learning About Race”

Video, “A Girl Like Me”

Handout “Enough Said”

Construction of Theory of History

“What is Africa To Me?”

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 1-21

“Buked and Scorned”: The Middle Passage and All That

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 22-46

Film “Amistad”

Video “African Burial Ground”

Week TwoThe Origins of Slavery And The Lives of Slaves

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 47-101

Video, “A Thousand Miles To Freedom”

Freedom Over Me: Black Abolitionism and Community Building

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 103-28, 159-207

Video, “The Life of Frederick Douglass”

The Jubilee: The Coming of The Civil War

And The Problems of Reconstruction

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 208-59

Video, “The Massachusetts 54th”

From “The Nadir” To The “New Negro”

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 260-326

Video, “Buffalo Soldiers”

Video, “The Life of Booker T. Washington”

Video, “The Life of Ida Wells-Barnett”

Video, “The Life of Henry Flipper”

Week Three No Fear And No Fools: World War I,

The UNIA, And The Harlem Renaissance

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 327-416

Video, “The Life of George Washington Carver”

Depression, Deprivation, And Dilemmas American Style

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 417-509

Video, “Richard Wright”

An American Dream For All, Including

African Americans: The Coming of The Civil Rights Movement

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 510-548

Video, “Eyes On The Prize”

Video, “Life of Rev. Adam Clayton Powell”

Week Four “Strong Women, Strutting Men,” and

Sepia Children As Survivors

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 549-582

Aaron McGruder, “The Boondocks”

A Right To Be Hostile

Video, “The Color Purple”

Black Culture and Consciousness As Avenues To Uplift:

Reconsideration of Music, Dance, Humor, and Styling Out

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 583-611

Richard Pryor, Pryor Convictions

Video, “The History of Black Dance”

The Problems Of This Century

Franklin/Higginbotham, Slavery To Freedom, pp. 612-639

Book Critique Main Points:

Explain the limits of the work

Identify the central thesis

Note the assumptions under which the author operates

Summarize the main arguments

Evaluate the evidence used to support the arguments

Discuss anything you think the author failed to address in the monograph.

Due: End of Third Week

Mid-Term Examination:

End of Second Week

Final Examination

End of Fourth Week

Office Hours:

TWR 1-2 p.m.; 3 – 4 p.m.

And By Appointment