• AAS 2240

    Africans in America
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course will focus on recent African arrivals to the United States, exploring the history of Africans who voluntarily entered the country. We will examine the lives of Africans who came to the US in the late 19th, 20th, and 21st century as students, visitors, missionaries, & temporary residents, as well as the reasons for African migration, settlement patterns and adjustment issues, and immigrant relationships with Americans, black and white.

  • AAS 2500

    Topics Course in Africana Studies
     Rating

    3.73

     Difficulty

    2.40

     GPA

    3.54

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Lower-level topics course: reading, class discussion, and written assignments on a special topic in African-American and African Studies Topics change from term to term, and vary with the instructor.

  • AAS 2559

    New Course in African and African American Studies
     Rating

    4.43

     Difficulty

    2.29

     GPA

    3.32

    Last Taught

    Summer 2025

    New course in the subject of African and African American Studies

  • AAS 2657

    Routes, Writing, Reggae
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.75

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    In this course, we will trace the history of reggae music and explore its influence on the development of Jamaican literature. With readings on Jamaican history, we will consider why so many reggae songs speak about Jah and quote from the Bible. Then, we will explore how Marcus Garvey's teachings led to the rise of Rastafarianism, which in turn seeded ideas of black pride and black humanity into what would become reggae music.

  • AAS 2760

    Empowered Women of Africa
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Summer 2025

    In this interdisciplinary survey course on women leaders in urban areas in Africa, we will examine the experiences of women from diverse societies across the Eastern and Southern regions of Africa during the colonial and postcolonial periods. Of particular importance is how women in these societies have faced challenges and how they emerge as leaders in their communities.

  • AAS 3157

    Caribbean Perspectives
     Rating

    4.78

     Difficulty

    3.67

     GPA

    3.90

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    Breaking with popular constructions of the region as a timeless tropical paradise, this course will re-define the Caribbean as the birthplace of modern forms of capitalism, globalization, and trans-nationalism. We will survey the founding moments of Caribbean history, including the imposition of slavery, the rise of plantation economies, and the development of global networks of goods and peoples.

  • AAS 3310

    Environmental Justice in the Mid-Atlantic Region
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course is dedicated to examining government responses to environmental injustice. Our readings and discussions will use an interdisciplinary social-science perspective to track the trajectory of environmental justice activism and official responses to it in the five states (DE, MD, PA, VA, WVA) the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) has designated as comprising the important but understudied mid-Atlantic region.

  • AAS 3500

    Intermediate Seminar in African-American & African Studies
     Rating

    3.87

     Difficulty

    2.70

     GPA

    3.54

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    Reading, class discussion, and written assignments on a special topic in African-American and African Studies. Topics change from term to term, and vary with the instructor.

  • AAS 3559

    New Course in African and African American Studies
     Rating

    2.89

     Difficulty

    3.33

     GPA

    3.41

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    New course in the subject of African and African American Studies.

  • AAS 3745

    Currents in African Literature
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    In this course, we will read a sampling of some exciting new works of fiction from Africa's young and established writers. In particular, we will examine the literary innovations that African writers use to narrate issues affecting the continent such as dictatorship, the lingering effects of colonization, the postcolonial nation state, the traumas of war and geo-politics, religion, gender and sexuality, and migration, among others.