AFAM 200
George Mason University
Fall 2005 TTH 1:30-2:45
Paul Robeson Room (JC 240A)
3 credits
Dr. Suzanne Carbonneau
College Hall C213
scarbonn@ gmu.edu
703-993-2190
office hours: TTH 9-10/3-4
COURSE SYLLABUS
INTRODUCTION TO AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
If you dont know how black you are, you dont know how American you are.
Robert Farris Thompson, art historian
The African slave who sailed to the New World did not sail alone. People brought their
culture, no matter how adverse the circumstances. And therefore part of America is
African.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., scholar and critic
I dont recognize any white culture. I recognize no American culture which is not the
partial creation of black people. I recognize no American style in literature, in dance, in
music, even in assembly-line processes, which does not bear the mark of the American
Negro.
Ralph Ellison, novelist and essayist
I, too, sing America.
Langston Hughes, poet
America would not and could not be precisely the America it is, except for the influence,
often silent, but nevertheless potent, that the Negro has exercised in its making.
James Weldon Johnson, writer and activist
I think we have to be uncomfortable with the present racial arrangement. In a sense, I
think we have to be willing to be uncomfortable, willing to demand more of ourselves and
more of our country, and willing to make the invisible visible.
John A. Powell, legal scholar
I understand the vocation of the intellectual as trying to turn easy answers into critical
questions and ask these critical questions to those with power.
Cornel West, philosopher
You cannot fix what you cannot face.
James Baldwin, novelist and essayist
If you deprive a man of who he is, you can make him anything that you want him to be.
But if you teach him his heritage and his culture, he will aspire to be greater than those
before him.
Major H.L. Barner, a descendant of enslaved Africans in America
If the house is to be set in order, one cannot begin with the present; he must begin with
the past.
John Hope Franklin, historian
History does not refer merely, or even principally, to the past. On the contrary, the great
force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us, unconsciously controlled
by it in many ways, and history is literally present in all that we do.
James Baldwin, novelist and essayist
To talk about race in America is to explore the wilderness inside ourselves and to come
to terms with a history that wed rather conceal.
Cornel West, philosopher
The race problemhas been omnipresent and all-pervading since long before the AfroAmerican was raised from the degradation of the slave to the dignity of the citizen. It has
never been settled because the right methods have not been employed in the solution. It is
the Banquos ghost of politics, religion, and sociology which will not down at the bidding
of those who are tormented with its ubiquitous appearance on very occasion.
Ida B. Wells-Barnett, journalist and activist
Race has become metaphorical, a way of referring to and disguising forces, events,
classes, and expressions of social decay and economic division far more threatening to
the body politic than biological race ever was.
Toni Morrison, novelist and Nobel laureate
It has often been said that every American is an expert on race. I have concluded the
opposite: that no American is an expert on race. Each of us has our own experience, and
sometimes it is intense enough to make us think that we know the subject thoroughly.
When we recognize that we do not, we will take the first step toward learning.
David K. Shipler, author of A Country of Strangers
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course is an overview of the field of African American Studies. Interdisciplinary in
nature, African American Studies embraces history and literature, the arts and material
culture, as well as sociological, political, economic, public policy, and philosophical
perspectives on the experience of people of African descent in the United States. In
addition, the importance of viewing the African American experience in relation to
Africa and the Diaspora will be considered. In acknowledgement of the multiplicity of
approaches inherent in African American Studies, this course will feature guest experts
from the faculty of George Mason University as well as from local, national, and
international organizationsin order to suggest the range of intellectual and professional
study that the discipline embraces. Course readings, lectures, and visual and audio
sources will present an historical survey of the African American experience, with an
emphasis on movements for liberation, self-determination, and the assertion of equal
rights. Contemporary reclamations of hidden history that have been the focus of
contemporary scholarship will also be emphasized. Readings feature the work of
important African American public intellectuals, as well as primary source materials from
the historical record. Visual and audio sources will take their place alongside the written
record and be examined for the unique evidence of the African American experience they
provide.
REQUIRED TEXTS
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Cornel West, The Future of the Race. Vintage, 1997.
Manning Marable and Leith Mullins, eds. Let Nobody Turn Us Around; Voices of
Resistance, Reform, and Renewal: An African American Anthology. Rowman &
Littlefield, 2000.
W.E.B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk. Penguin Classics, 1996.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The Trials of Phillis Wheatley: Americas First Black Poet
and Her Encounters with the Founding Fathers. Basic Books, 2003.
Other short reading assignments as listed (underlined) in the Course Outline. They
are available on the course website at http://beauty.gmu.edu. The password is
visible.
VISUAL MATERIALS
Videos and DVDs assigned for viewing outside of class are available on reserve in the
Media Services area of the Johnson Center Library. Their call numbers are listed on the
Course Outline.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Class attendance is essential. We will have many visits by guest speakers, and often
there will be presentations of audio and visual materials. All of this material will be
covered on exams. Also, please note that class participation is weighted significantly
in your grade.
Completion of assigned readings and videos, and participation in class discussion
indicating familiarity with these materials
Should students have to miss class for any reason, they are expected to take initiative
in obtaining notes, assignments, and/or handouts from class partners.
Class communications will be sent via GMU email. You must activate, maintain, and
regularly check your GMU email. You are responsible for notices sent via email.
Cell phones, pagers, and other electronic devices must be turned off in class.
Three take-home exams.
Attendance at a Fall for the Book event as listed on the Course Schedule.
Brief written reports on three visual sources (chosen from list provided by instructor).
Attendance at three outside events related to course material (approved by instructor).
GUIDELINES FOR CLASS DISCUSSION
NOTE: There are varying comfort levels with speaking extemporaneously in a group.
For this reason, I ask that if you have little problem with speaking that you make an effort
to self-monitor (e.g., occasionally yielding the floor to those who may be slower with a
response). If you are reluctant to speak in class, please challenge yourself to offer oral
commentary. Your insights and questions are vital to our collective success. Each class
member is responsible for the success or failure of the discussion.
The following guidelines will be followed in class discussion:
You must bring your book to class, as well as something to write with and on.
You must come on time and come prepared.
You must discuss carefully and be prepared to listen as well as to talk.
Discussion will be grounded in readings and videos, and will remain focused.
Respect for the opinions of other class members forms the basis of class discussion.
If, for some reason, you have come to class unprepared, identify yourself as such and
limit yourself to listening to the discussion.
Use the following guidelines for class preparation:
Mark your books when reading to note passages of interest or curiosity or confusion.
Make a list of questions about the reading, noting relevant page numbers.
Come to class prepared to discuss the reading and videos in detail, focusing on
specific passages from the texts.
EVALUATION AND GRADING
Student evaluation will be based on:
30% Prepared participation in class discussion
20% Take-home exam #1
20% Take-home exam #2
20% Take-home exam #3
5% Written reports on three supplementary visual sources
5% Attendance at three outside events related to course material
Grading Standards:
A grade of A is given for superlative work that demonstrates a profound
commitment to the course material, and further, that goes on to employ this material
as a springboard for independent thought and work
A grade of B is given for very good work that completely fulfills all the requirements
of the course in a conscientious and dedicated manner, and that demonstrates mastery
of the course content
A grade of C is given for work that fulfills all the requirements of the course in a
satisfactory manner, but that falls short of demonstrating rigor and mastery
A grade of D is given for work that is unsatisfactory
A grade of F is given for work that fails to fulfill the requirements of the course as
listed above
Expectations of the Instructor:
1. You should plan to attend class. You will find it impossible to pass exams if you
habitually miss classes. Much of the material of this course will be offered by
guest instructors and you will be responsible for understanding the content of
these (and all) lectures. If there is an emergency that forces you to miss class,
please let me know and plan to meet with me. Also, contact your class partner
immediately to find out what went on that day.
2. Due to the scheduling of guests, there will certainly be changes in the Course
Schedule. These changes will be announced in class or via GMU email, and/or
listed on the course website. You are responsible for keeping abreast of changes.
3. Plan to spend three hours of preparation for each hour of time spent in class. If
you feel that this assumption is unfair, it would be in your own interest not to take
this course. AFAM 200 is 3 credits; 3 credits x 3 hours/credit = 9 hours per week
in class preparation.
4. My door is open. I invite you to see me at any point in the term to discuss your
progress in the course or any anxieties you may be feeling about the work. If you
are getting behind in the course, feel as though you are not understanding
something, or are having an unspecified problem, please come and talk with me
without delay. I am here to facilitate your learning.
5. My door is also open to discuss your enthusiasms and interests. I am glad to help
you deepen your research and to guide you in following your interests.
6. I expect that this course will be a journey of discovery that we take together. We
are here to learn from each other and will do so with respect and mutual regard.
University Policies
As a courtesy to others in the class, and in accordance with George Mason University
policy, please turn off all beepers, cellular telephones, and other wireless
communication devices at the start of class.
Official Communications
Mason uses electronic mail to provide official information to students. Examples include
communications from course instructors, notices from the library, notices about academic
standing, financial aid information, class materials, assignments, questions, and instructor
feedback. Students are responsible for the content of university communication sent to
their Mason e-mail account, and are required to activate that account and check it
regularly.
Honor Code
Students in this class are bound by the Honor Code, as stated in the George Mason
University Catalog. The honor code requires that the work you do as an individual be the
product of your own individual synthesis or integration of ideas. (This does not prohibit
collaborative work when it is approved by your instructor.) As a faculty member, I have
an obligation to refer the names of students who may have violated the Honor Code to the
Student Honor Council, which treats such cases very seriously.
Using someone elses words or ideas without giving them credit is plagiarism, a very
serious Honor Code offense. It is very important to understand how to prevent
committing plagiarism when using material from a source. If you wish to quote verbatim,
you must use the exact words and punctuation just as the passage appears in the original
and must use quotation marks and page numbers in your citation. If you want to
paraphrase or summarize ideas from a source, you must put the ideas into your own
words, and you must cite the source, using the APA or MLA format. (For assistance with
documentation, I recommend Diana Hacker, A Writers Reference, Fifth Edition.) The
exception to this rule is information termed general knowledgeinformation that is
widely known and stated in a number of sources. Determining what is general knowledge
can be complicated, so the wise course is, When in doubt, cite.
Be especially careful when using the Internet for research. Not all Internet sources are
equally reliable; some are just plain wrong. Also, since you can download text, it
becomes very easy to inadvertently plagiarize. If you use an Internet source, you must
cite the exact URL in your paper and include with it the last date that you successfully
accessed the site.
No grade is important enough to justify cheating, for which there are serious
consequences that will follow you for the rest of your life. If you feel unusual pressure
about your grade in this or any other course, please talk to me or to a member of the
Counseling Center staff.
Students with Disabilities and Learning Differences
If you have a diagnosed disability or learning difference and you need academic
accommodations, please inform me at the beginning of the semester and contact the
Disabilities Resource Center (SUB I room 234, 703-993-2474). You must provide me
with a faculty contact sheet from that office outlining the accommodations needed for
your disability or learning difference. All academic accommodations must be arranged in
advance through the DRC.
Writing Center
Students who are in need of intensive help with grammar, structure or mechanics in their
writing should make use of the services of the Writing Center, located in Robinson A116
(703-993-1200). The services of the Writing Center are available by appointment, online
and, occasionally, on a walk-in basis.
COURSE OUTLINE
*****Course Outline is subject to change. Changes will be announced in class.*****
Note: Visual materials on reserve are listed with their library call numbers (underlined),
and are available in the Media Reserves area of the Johnson Center Library. Course
readings that are underlined are available on the course website (http://beauty.gmu.edu);
the password is visible.
Tuesday, August 30
Introduction to Course
Screening: First Person Singular: John Hope Franklin
Thursday, September 1
READING:
Manning Marable, Race in American Life: A Conversation with John Hope
Franklin.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., African-American Studies in the 21st Century
Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Whats in a Name? Some Meanings of Blackness.
Michael Eric Dyson, Why I Am an Intellectual
AUDIO:
Listen to the hour-long documentary, Say It Plain: A Century of Great AfricanAmerican Speeches. Link available at:
http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/sayitplain/
Tuesday, September 6
READING:
Michael Eric Dyson, Giving Whiteness a Black Eye
DVD:
Race: The Power of an Illusion, parts 1-3 (GN269 .R34 2003b)
Thursday, September 8
Guest: Professor Marilyn Mobley McKenzie, Founder of the Program in African
American Studies and Associate Provost for Educational Programs
READINGS:
Toni Morrison, The Site of Memory
Marilyn Sanders Mobley, A Different Remembering: Memory, History and
Meaning in Toni Morrisons Beloved
Tuesday, September 13
REVIEW of readings and visual material to date
READING:
The Future of the Race, Preface (pp. vii-xvii) and Appendix (pp. 115-177)
Orlando Patterson, Why We Still Need Affirmative Action
Thursday, September 15
Guest: Dr. Carmen Rose Marshall, author of Black Professional Women in Recent
American Fiction (McFarland, 2003)
READING:
The Future of the Race, pp. 1-112
Thomas M. Shapiro, Introduction, The Hidden Cost of Being African American:
How Wealth Perpetuates Inequality
FALL FOR THE BOOK. ATTEND AT LEAST ONE EVENT:
Thursday, September 15, 8pm, Dewberry Hall South: Walter Mosley discusses
his new novel Cinnamon Kiss, an Easy Rawlins mystery.
Tuesday, September 20, noon, Grand Tier, Center for the Arts: Marking this
years 40th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, Pulitzer Prize-winning
journalist Nick Kotz explores the relationship between two pivotal figures in the
Civil Rights era in his book, Judgment Days: Lyndon Baines Johnson, Martin
Luther King Jr., and The Laws That Changed America.
Tuesday, September 20, noon, outside Johnson Center: Ned Sublette, cofounder
of the Qbadisc record label and author of Cuba and Its Music: From the First
Drums to the Mambo, surveys the history of Cuban music from the 16th century
through the present-day and examines its influence on the evolution of other New
World musical forms, including ragtime, jazz, and rhythm and blues. This event
also features music and dance, including a performance by The Salsa Club. Cosponsored by Fall for the Book and by George Mason's Office of Diversity
Programs and Services.
Tuesday, September 20, 4:30pm, Johnson Center Meeting Room D: Harvard
history professor Jill Lepore discusses her investigations into a supposed slave
plot to destroy New York in the 18th centuryand plumbs whites fears of black
revolt in colonial Americain her groundbreaking social history, New York
Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan.
Wednesday, September 21, 3pm, Harris Theater: Tricia Rose discusses the
anthology, Longing to Tell: Black Women Talk about Sexuality and Intimacy,
gathering first-person narratives focused on topics ranging from marriage and
divorce to interracial dating, sexual abuse, drug addiction and AIDS.
Tuesday, September 20
Guest: Dr. Toni-Michelle Travis, Director of African American Studies and Professor of
Government and Politics
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 3-18, 23-35
VIDEOS:
Africans in America, parts 1-3 (E441 .A27 1998)
Thursday, September 22
READING:
Garry Wills, Introduction: The Three-Fifths Clause in Negro President:
Jefferson and the Slave Power
Marable and Mullings, 35-42, 48-57
VIDEO:
Africans in America, part 4 (E441 .A27 1998)
Thursday, September 27
READING:
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. The Trials of Phillis Wheatley: Americas First Black Poet
and Her Encounters with the Founding Fathers. Basic Civitas Books, 2003.
Marable and Mullings, 67-68, 114-116
Thursday, September 29
READING:
Eric Foner, Blacks and the U.S. Constitution
Eric Foner, Ken Burns and the Romance of Reunion
Marable and Mullings, 91-109, 119-134, 157-167
EXAM #1 Distributed
Tuesday, October 4
Guest: Professor Scott Trafton, English
READING:
TBA
W. E. B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk (http://www.bartleby.com/114/)
Thursday, October 6
Guest: Professor Benedict Carton
READING:
TBA
EXAM #2 DUE
Tuesday, October 11
Columbus HolidayNO CLASS
Thursday, October 13
Guest: Officer from TransAfrica Forum
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 173-200, 209-212, 227-230
TBA
VIDEO:
Marcus Garvey: Look for Me in the Whirlwind (E185.97 .G3 M3644 2001)
Tuesday, October 18
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 302-303
VIDEO:
Rise and Fall of Jim Crow, parts 1-4 (E185.61 .R58 2002)
Thursday, October 20
Guest: Professor Michael McDonald, Public and International Affairs, speaking on the
Voting Rights Act
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 259-295
VIDEO:
Ill Make Me a World, parts 1-4 (E185 .I44 1999 or E185 .I44 1999b)
Tuesday, October 25
READING:
Deborah Willis, Picturing Us: African American Identity in Photography and
Gordon Parks and the Image of the Capital City. Family History Memory. Hylas
Publishing, 2005.
David Levering Lewis, A Small Nation of People: W.E.B. Du Bois and Black
Americans at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. A Small Nation of People:
W.E.B. Du Bois and African American Portraits of Progress. The Library of
Congress, 2003.
VIDEO:
Scottsboro: An American Tragedy (KF224 .S34 S36 2001 and 2001b)
Thursday, October 27
Guest: Julie Galonska, Site Manager, Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
ASSIGNMENT:
Marable and Mullings, 87-91, 125-131
VIDEO:
Frederick Douglass: When the Lion Wrote History (E449 .D75 F76)
This Far by Faith (DVD: BR563 .N4 T55 2003)
Tuesday, November 1
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 320-325, 327-331, 333-339, 351-364
VIDEO:
Eyes on the Prize, parts 1-3 (E185.615 .E9 or E185.61 .E94 1995)
Thursday, November 3
Guest: Paul Brathwaite, Executive Director, Congressional Black Caucus
READING:
TBA
VIDEO:
Paul Robeson: Here I Stand (E185.97 .G3 M3644 2001)
EXAM #2 Distributed
Tuesday, November 8
Guest: Professor Keith Clark, English
READING:
TBA
VIDEO:
The Black Press: Soldiers without Swords (PN4882.5 .B532 1998)
Thursday, November 10
Guest: Professor Lawrence Butler, Art History
READING:
TBA
EXAM #2 DUE
Tuesday, November 15
Guests: Dr. Jeanne Middleton-Hairston, National Director, and Warren Buford,
Volunteer Coordinator, Children Defense Fund Freedom Schools
READING:
Marable and Mullings, 376-409, 419-425
VIDEO:
Eyes on the Prize, parts 4-6 (E185.615 .E9 or E185.61 .E94 1995)
Thursday, November 17
Guest: Professor Keith Clark, English, speaking on playwright August Wilson
READING:
August Wilson, Fences
Marable and Mullings, 427-468
VIDEO:
Eyes on the Prize II, parts 1-4 (E185.615 .E91 or E185.61 .E91 1999)
Tuesday, November 22
READING:
Manning and Marable, 468-491, 519-535
VIDEO:
Eyes on the Prize II, parts 5-8 (E185.615 .E91 or E185.61 .E91 1999)
Thursday, November 24
ThanksgivingNO CLASS
Tuesday, November 29
Guest: Professor Yvette Richards Jordan, Womens Studies
READING:
TBA
VIDEO:
Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice (E185.97 .W55 133 2004)
Thursday, December 1
Guest: Professor Jim Lepore, Dance
READING:
Ned Sublette, Ned Sublette, Cuba and Its Music: From the First Drums to the
Mambo, pp. 73-74.
VIDEO:
Ill Make Me a World, parts 5-6 (E185 .I44 1999 or E185 .I44 1999b)
Tuesday, December 6
READING:
Manning and Marable, 550-633
VIDEO:
Two Towns of Jasper (HV6534 .J36 T86 2003)
Thursday, December 8
Wrap-Up and Overview
EXAM #3 Distributed
Thursday, December 15, 4:15pm
EXAM #3 DUE