History 101.020: Betwixt and Between in the United States: Boundaries and the People who Defy ThemPosted in Anthropology, Course Offerings, History, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation on 2013-03-13 03:09Z by Steven |
History 101.020: Betwixt and Between in the United States: Boundaries and the People who Defy Them
University of California, Berkeley
Spring 2013
MacKenzie Moore, Visiting Lecturer
This 101 seminar is geared toward any student who wants to study the boundaries among and between people, nations, or states, broadly defined. It is also perfect for those wishing to explore what happens when such barriers are (inevitably) ruptured, questioned, or otherwise revealed to be unstable. Some, but by no means all, possible topics include: immigrant history, Native American/colonial contact, the history of American sexuality, frontier environments, mixed-race communities or individuals, the US/Mexico Borderlands, religious synthesis, or urban communities. We will begin the semester by exploring theoretical approaches to the question of boundaries and categories and the power that sustains them. We will also discuss what such categories mean to people as they construct communities, nations, and identities. We will then consider specific examples of people who, out of choice or circumstance, defy those boundaries. The rest of the semester will be run as a writing and reading seminar. We will support and encourage each other through peer editing, research partners, and other boundary-crossing activities.