• AMST 4321

    Caribbean Latinx: Cuba, Puerto Rico and the DR
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.66

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    In this course we will read texts by Latinx writers from Puerto Rico, Cuba and the Dominican Republic. We will explore how their works speak to issues of race, colonialism and imperialism based on their individual and shared histories. We will discuss their different political histories and migration experiences and how these in turn impact their literary and artistic productions in the US.

  • AMST 2660

    Spiritual But Not Religious: Spirituality in America
     Rating

    4.58

     Difficulty

    2.50

     GPA

    3.67

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    What does "spiritual but not religious" mean, and why has it become such a pervasive self-description in contemporary America? This interdisciplinary course surveys spirituality in America, with a particular eye for the relationship between spirituality and formal religion, on the one hand, and secular modes of understanding the self, such as psychology, on the other.

  • AMST 3200

    African American Political Thought
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.67

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course explores the critical and the constructive dimensions of African American political thought from slavery to the present. We will assess the claims that black Americans have made upon the polity, how they have defined themselves, and how they have sought to redefine key terms of political life such as citizenship, equality, freedom, and power.

  • AMST 3471

    American Cinema
     Rating

    3.00

     Difficulty

    2.50

     GPA

    3.69

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    This course provides an introduction to film studies through an examination of American film throughout the 20th & 21st centuries. We will learn basic film techniques for visual analysis, and consider the social, economic, and historical forces that have shaped the production, distribution & reception of film in the US Examples will be drawn from various genres: melodrama, horror, sci-fi, musical, Westerns, war films, documentary, animation, etc.

  • AMST 1050

    Slavery and Its Legacies
     Rating

    4.67

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.74

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    This course examines the history of slavery and its legacy at UVA and in the central Virginia region. The course aims to recover the experiences of enslaved individuals and their roles in building and maintaining the university, and to contextualize those experiences within Southern history.

  • AMST 3790

    Moving On: Migration in/to the US
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.80

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    This class examines the history of voluntary, coerced, and forced migration in the U.S., tracing the paths of migrating groups and their impact on urban, suburban, and rural landscapes. We'll dig for cultural clues to changing attitudes about migration over time. Photographs, videos, books, movies, government records, poems, podcasts, paintings, comic strips, museums, manifestos: you name it, we'll analyze it for this class.

  • AMST 5559

    New Course in American Studies
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.80

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    New Course in the subject of American Studies.

  • AMST 2130

    Narratives of Girlhood
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.95

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This course treats a range of contemporary English language literatures about girlhood. Our comparative analyses of texts will pay particular attention to their play with genre and their use of literary devices -- e.g., structure, voice, point of view, dialogue, temporality, language ¿ to render narratives about girlhood in contexts of (im)migration, loss, displacement, violence, revolution, war, and trauma.

  • AMST 3280

    Introduction to Native American Studies: (Mis)Representations
     Rating

    4.00

     Difficulty

    2.00

     GPA

    3.99

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    An intro to the broad field of Native Studies, this class focuses on themes of representation and erasure. We read Indigenous scholars and draw from current events, pop culture, and historical narrative to explore complex relationships between historical and contemporary issues that Indigenous peoples face in the US. We examine the foundations of Native representations and their connections to critical issues in Native communities.

  • AMST 2421

    Borderlands Food and Culture
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    This course examines foodways (the ideas, practices, and material realities surrounding food) through the interdisciplinary lens of American Studies. Focusing on borderlands as sites of cultural exchange, conflict, and creativity, we will explore how food shapes and is shaped by histories of migration, empire, race, class, gender, and labor.