This course examines divisions among peoples produced by "color-lines" and explores possibilities for overcoming barriers and creating connections. It is taught by Prof. Nelson Maldonado-Torres at Rutgers University and focuses on topics like borderlands, global anti-Blackness, and decolonization. Assessment includes participation, letter writing, midterms, and a virtual tour presentation challenging color-lines and borderlands. Required readings include works by Anzaldua, Fanon, and the Combahee River Collective.
This course examines divisions among peoples produced by "color-lines" and explores possibilities for overcoming barriers and creating connections. It is taught by Prof. Nelson Maldonado-Torres at Rutgers University and focuses on topics like borderlands, global anti-Blackness, and decolonization. Assessment includes participation, letter writing, midterms, and a virtual tour presentation challenging color-lines and borderlands. Required readings include works by Anzaldua, Fanon, and the Combahee River Collective.
This course examines divisions among peoples produced by "color-lines" and explores possibilities for overcoming barriers and creating connections. It is taught by Prof. Nelson Maldonado-Torres at Rutgers University and focuses on topics like borderlands, global anti-Blackness, and decolonization. Assessment includes participation, letter writing, midterms, and a virtual tour presentation challenging color-lines and borderlands. Required readings include works by Anzaldua, Fanon, and the Combahee River Collective.
This course examines divisions among peoples produced by "color-lines" and explores possibilities for overcoming barriers and creating connections. It is taught by Prof. Nelson Maldonado-Torres at Rutgers University and focuses on topics like borderlands, global anti-Blackness, and decolonization. Assessment includes participation, letter writing, midterms, and a virtual tour presentation challenging color-lines and borderlands. Required readings include works by Anzaldua, Fanon, and the Combahee River Collective.
Department of Latino and Caribbean Studies CA-A5 T/Th 10:20 to 11:40 pm Latino and Caribbean Studies 202: Color-Lines and Borderlands Today it is easier than perhaps at any other point in human history for peoples to know about each other and connect with each other. Yet we live in a time of violent divides and confrontations. What is at the root of these divides? And what resources are there to overcome the destructive effect that some of them have? This class will examine the power of “color- lines” in producing divisions among peoples and individuals as well as explore the possibilities of crossing borders of separation and creating new forms of human connection and community in the 21st century. Required Texts Gloria Anzaldúa. Borderlands/La frontera. 4th Edition. Aunt Lute Books, 2012. ISBN: 9781879960855 Frantz Fanon. Black Skin, White Masks. Trans. Richard Philcox. Grove/Atlantic, 2007. ISBN: 9780802143006 *There will be additional required readings on Sakai and on-line through the library catalogues. Learning Goals This course is certified for the SAS Core Curriculum Learning Goals CCD (Diversities and Social Inequalities), and AHo (Philosophical and Theoretical Issues), that is, particularly, to “Analyze issues of social justice across local and global contexts,” and to “Examine critically philosophical and other theoretical issues concerning the nature of reality, human experience, knowledge, value, and/or cultural production. ” Learn more about the SAS Core Curriculum at the linked page: https://sasoue.rutgers.edu/core/core-learning-goals This course also contributes to meet the Department of Latino and Caribbean Studies Learning Goals: https://latcar.rutgers.edu/academics/undergraduate/learning-goals
Class requirements, grade criteria, and evaluation:
*15%: Attendance, on time arrival to lecture, evidence of preparation for lecture and discussions, participation, and adherence to class protocols (important: see specific protocols and details on Canvas). *25%: Creative Lab 1: Letter Writing *25%: Two short midterms *35%: Creative Lab 2: Challenging Color-lines and Crossing Borderlands Virtual Tour *Optional forums for up to five bonus points. Three to five postings required. *Note: It is important that you understand the cell phone and tech devices policy for this class. By enrolling in this class you are accepting the protocols and terms that appear on Canvas 2
Latino and Caribbean Studies 202:
Color-Lines and Borderlands I. Understanding the Color-line and Borderlands Week 1: Introduction: The Color-Line and the Definition of the Human (Jan. 18-20) Tuesday. Discussion of syllabus; introduction to the course; video and new reading related to the video. Thursday. Reading: Osamu Nishitani. “Anthropos and Humanitas: Two Western Concepts of Human Being” (Relevant selections are identified in the digital copy). Week 2: Identifying and Defying the Color-Line (Jan. 25-27) Tu: W.E.B. Du Bois. Selections from Souls of Black Folk; “A Negro Student at Harvard at the End of the Nineteenth Century.” (Canvas) Th: W.E.B. Du Bois. “Souls of White Folk” (Canvas); James Baldwin, “A Letter to My Nephew” (Canvas). Week 3: Understanding the Borderlands (Feb. 1-3) Gloria Anzaldúa. Borderlands/La Frontera. Chapters 1-3. Week 4: Rebirth: The New Mestiza (Feb. 8-10) Gloria Anzaldúa. Borderlands/La Frontera. Chapters 4-7. Week 5: Group Work and Creative Lab 1: Letter Writing (Feb. 15-17) Tu: Creative lab 1. Come to class with a draft of a letter to anyone in the present, past or future, real or imagined, including family members, friends, leaders, artists, historical characters, etc. The letter should explain and provide examples of the color-lines and borderlands that are found in the readings that we have explored so far. You are also welcome to include other reflections on current state of affairs, situations that you consider of great importance today or for your generation. The first draft of the letter should be between 900 and 1,200 words (the final version should be between 1200 and 1500 words). Details of the complete assignment on Canvas. II. Global Anti-Blackness Week 6: Language and Love in an Antiblack World (Feb. 22-24) Frantz Fanon. Selections from Black Skin, White Masks Week 7: Towards the World of the You (March 1-3) Frantz Fanon. Selections from Black Skin, White Masks Week 8: Combahee River Collective (March 8-10) Combahee River Collective Statement **Short midterm 1 Week 9: SPRING BREAK (March 15-17) 3
III. Crossing Borders and Abolishing Color-Lines
Week 10: La Colectiva Feminista en Construcción (March 22-24) Colectiva Feminista en Construcción. “La Manifiesta.” (On Canvas) Isabela Herrera. “For This Feminist Collective in Puerto Rico, the Mass Protests Were a Long Time Coming,” New York Times. Recommended: Eduardo Lalo. “Unnatural Disaster: Puerto Rico and Hurricane María.” (On Canvas) Editorial Board, New York Times, “Yes, Mr. Trump, Hurricane María was a ‘Real Catastrophe’.” Sept. 2, 2018 (On Canvas) Week 11: Decolonize This Place I (March 29-31) Decolonize This Place. “Anti-Columbus Tours of the American Museum of American History 2016-2019” (Canvas) “Decolonial Operations Manual.” (Canvas) Week 12: Decolonize This Place and the IIAAF (April 5-7) Decolonize This Place (cont.); “Strike MoMa: Framework and Terms for Struggle” (Canvas) **Short midterm 2 **Creative Lab 2: Virtual Tours (preparation): brainstorming and sharing; arranging groups; dividing work; creating a timeline. IV. Creative Lab 2: Beyond the Color-Lines Week 13: Creative Lab 2-Virtual Tours (Preparation cont.; April 12-14) **Creative Lab 2 Virtual Tours (preparation): brainstorming and sharing; arranging groups; dividing work; creating a timeline; visit library; group discussions. Week 14-15: Creative Lab 2-Virtual Tours (Presentations; April 19-28) **Creative Lab 2 Virtual Tours presentation Course wrap up