AMST 403(F) Notions of Race and Ethnicity in American Culture (Same as History 469)*

While "race" and "ethnicity" have always played fundamental roles in shaping the course of American history and the image of American society, our understanding of the concepts of race and ethnicity has often been less than clear. Our goal in this course is to determine and examine how Americans have defined race and ethnicity at various points in our history and how these notions have been acted out in policy, practice, and theory. Examples of the social and legal construction of race and ethnicity and their expression in American culture will include white-Native American relations, slavery and its legacy, the "Yellow Peril," science and race, and contemporary race relations. Students will be evaluated on class participation and three written assignments: an annotated bibliography, an historiographical essay, and a final research paper. Enrollment limit: 18. Priority given to American Studies senior majors and then to History majors. Group A

Hour: WONG