Same as Anthropology 322P and Mexican American Studies 364F. Examine an overview of life and politics in contemporary Mexico. Analyzes the literatures and experiences of Brazilian American writers and artists in their historical and cultural specificities. Topic 43: United States Latino Literatures and Cultures in Context. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Same as African and African Diaspora Studies 345K and History 374Q. Topic 46: The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1940. On This Page Opportunities & Resources Contact Prerequisite: Upper-division standing. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Only one of the following may be counted: History 350L (Topic 19), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: Resistance, Rebellion, and Revolution in Colonial Spanish America), 366 (Topic 7). HILA 1501: Introductory Seminar in Latin American History: Gender-Based Violence in Latin America: International Collaborations Lean Sweeney. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 6: Art and Archaeology of Ancient Peru. Emphasis is on the patterns of conquest and cultural encounter, mechanisms of colonial rule, interaction between ethnic groups, and the cultural impact of the colonial experience upon Latin Americas peoples. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Only one of the following may be counted: Art History 341S, 361 (Topic: Art Cinemas of the Americas), Latin American Studies 327 (Topic: Art Cinemas of the Americas), 327 (Topic 7). Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 15: Local Economic Development. Multidisciplinary seminar for students in area studies, business administration, law, and public policy. Use this form to declare an undergraduate major in Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Three lecture hours a week for one semester Only one of the following may count: Anthropology 324L (Topic: Daily Life in Mesoamerica), 324R, Latin American Studies 324L (Topic: Daily Life in Mesoamerica), 324Q. Topic 34: The Bible in the Colonial Americas. Additional prerequisite: Six semester hours of upper-division coursework in economics and six additional semester hours of upper-division coursework in social science or business. Topics in Latin American Studies. Latin American Studies 322 and 370P may not both be counted unless the topics vary. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing and consent of instructor and the undergraduate adviser in Latin American studies. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 45: Brevity in Spanish-Language Literature and Film. Topic 19: Globalization in Latin America. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Prerequisite: Six semester hours of lower-division coursework in government. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Analyze the multi-layered factors shaping diverse Latin American migratory patterns and processes. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Latin American studies and consent of the supervising professor and the graduate adviser. Only one of the following may be counted: History 363K (Topic: Latin America in the Sixties), 363T, 366N (Topic: Latin America in the Sixties), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: Latin America in the Sixties), 366 (Topic 38). Additional prerequisite: Twenty-four semester hours of coursework in government or related fields and consent of the graduate adviser. Topic 19: Political Economics of International Communication. An introduction to the history of relations between the United States and Latin America. SPAN 202, its equivalent, or consent of instructor. Two 90-minute classes. Same as History 310N. Examine the variability of landscapes, climatic regions, and anthropogenic activities found throughout Latin America and the insular Caribbean to explore the complex issues related to water resource accessibility. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 6: Race and Visual Culture in Latin America. Same as Government 337D. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 26: Cultural Tropicalities. Topic 31: Afro-Latin America. Only one of the following may be counted: History 350L (Topic 42), 363K (Topic: History of Modern Central America), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic 15). Prerequisite: Graduate standing and consent of instructor and the graduate adviser. Topic 24: Contemporary Brazilian Art. Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 345M, 374E (Topic 4), History 347C, Latin American Studies 366 (Topic 22). Three lecture hours a week for one semester. May be repeated for credit. Same as Art History 341L. Same as African and African Diaspora Studies 338E and Music 334 (Topic 5). Additional prerequisite: Six semester hours of upper-division coursework in economics and six additional semester hours of upper-division coursework in social science or business. An overview of principal trends and issues in Argentine history from independence to the present. Topic 10: The Civilization of the Maya. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. In this course, we will elucidate the process of conquest through the study of historical accounts, cultural artifacts of the colonizers and colonized alike, and relevant theoretical texts. Only one of the following may be counted: Government 337D, 337M (Topic 7), Latin American Studies 337M (Topic 12), 337O. Only one of the following may be counted: Asian Studies 391 (Topic 6), International Business 395 (Topic: International Business Fellows Seminar), Latin American Studies 381 (Topic 8), Middle Eastern Studies 380, Public Affairs 388K (Topic: International Business Fellows Seminar), Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies 380. Students interested in work in the Spanish language who have met the prerequisites should register for SPAN 470. Focuses on the histories of the Catholic Church and religious devotion in colonial Latin America between 1521 and 1821. Examination of twentieth-century literature, films, and other cultural artifacts that capture the multicultural reality of Brazilian society and challenge the image of Brazil as a unified, harmonious, racially-mixed nation. Topic 10: Architecture and Sculpture in the Maya World. Only one of the following may be counted: History 350L (Topic 76), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic 25), Religious Studies 368 (Topic 3), 368E. Only one of the following may be counted: Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures 388 (Topic: Brazilian Cultural Theory), 388C, Latin American Studies 381 (Topic: 25), 392S (Topic: Brazilian Cultural Theory). Seminar with exams, presentations, and papers. Same as Anthropology 389K (Topic 19: Race and Ethnicity in American Society). Topic 9: Revolution in Twentieth-Century Latin America. Topic 1: Samba to Hip Hop: Brazilian Popular Music. Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 372G (Topic: Religions of the Caribbean) 345G, Anthropology 324L (Topic: Religions of the Caribbean), 323D, Latin American Studies 324L (Topic: Religions of the Caribbean), 322D, Religious Studies 366 (Topic: Religions of the Caribbean), 366 (Topic 2), 366D. Examine art cinemas from the Spanish-speaking Americas from the 1950s to the present. Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 360I, 372C (Topic: Black Freedom Movement), American Studies 321 (Topic: Black Freedom Movement), 324D, Latin American Studies 322 (Topic: Black Freedom Movement), 322G. SPAN-3130-02 Latin American Cultures CRN:36520 Avelar, Idelber SPAN-3130-03 Latin American Cultures CRN:86558 Reed, Linnette SPAN-3270-01 Spanish & Latin American Literature & Culture CRN:89933 Herrera-Guiterrez, Yuri SPAN-3270-02 Spanish & Latin American Literature & Culture CRN:31764 Staff, Tulane Only one of the following may be counted: History 306N (Topic: Film History in Latin America: Colonial), 310M, Latin American Studies 310 (Topic: Film History in Latin America: Colonial), Latin American Studies 310 (Topic 5). Examine the contemporary complex multi-scalar origins, patterns, and processes of Latin American and Caribbean migration and settlement in the United States. Ancient Latin American Civilizations Ancient Khmer Empire. To offer as much in-person instruction and campus life as possible, the University will more fully utilize the familiar three-term academic year. Topic 9: Contemporary Latin American Art. Art History 341L and Latin American Studies 327 (Topic 1) may not both be counted. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Historical survey of sources of information on Latin America: bibliographical literature from and about Latin America during the colonial, national, and contemporary periods; various types of book and nonbook sources of information available to contemporary scholars. Introduction to selected subjects in Latin American history and culture through film, readings, documentaries, class discussion, and lectures. Prerequisite: For 698A, graduate standing in Latin American studies and consent of the supervising professor and the graduate adviser; for 698B, Latin American Studies 698A. May be counted toward the sociology department's political sociology, development and globalization specialization in the sociology degree program. Same as Geography 323K. Class 29692. Additional prerequisite: Portuguese 327C (or 362). Explores the coming together of distinct Native, African, and European ethnicities in Latin America, and the resulting creation of new ethnicities. Only one of the following may be counted: Latin American Studies 328 (Topic: Race/Visual Culture Lat Am), 328 (Topic 6), Portuguese Civilization 320E (Topic: Race/Visual Culture Lat Am). The program has undergone various stages, highs, and lulls, over the last 30 years. Examines the history of Mexican immigration to the United States, and provides an overview of migratory patterns dating back to the late prehistoric period through contemporary times. Prerequisite: Portuguese 611D, 611S, 612, 312L, or 516; additional prerequisites vary with the topic. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Same as Anthropology 322V and Art History 347R. Use thisform to declare an undergraduate concentration in Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Same as Core Texts and Ideas 355, History 363F, and Religious Studies 366C. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Department of Global Languages and Cultures, Global Engagement & Language Learning Center, knowledge of the constituent regions, nations, ethnic communities, cultures, linguistic and religious diversity of Latin America, an understanding of the key periods in Latin American history and the major artistic, cultural and political trends of each period and the relationship between them, the ability to analyze a variety of texts from Latin American arts, culture, politics and history and to effectively express these in written and oral formats, the ability to describe and assess the influence and impact of conquest, colonization, slavery, dependency, civil unrest, political turmoil, foreign intervention and globalization on the political and economic stability and the social and cultural integrity of Latin American nations, HIS 280,HIS 281,HIS 380,HIS 381,HIS 382,HIS 396,HIS 480,HIS 481,HIS 483, SPA 223*,SPA 321,SPA 322,SPA 323*,SPA 351,SPA 352,SPA 353,SPA 354,SPA 406,SPA 451C,SPA 452C. Latin American Studies 322 and 330 may not both be counted unless the topics vary. Topics vary each semester to allow curriculum flexibility for faculty members and visiting scholars. Same as History 350L (Topic 76) and Religious Studies 368E. Only one of the following may be counted: Geography 343E, 356T (Topic: Mapping Latin America), 356T (Topic 12), History 363E, 363K (Topic: Mapping Latin America), 363K (Topic 4), Latin American Studies 330 (Topic: Mapping Latin America), 330 (Topic 4). Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Explores Cuban-United States relations from the nineteenth century to the present, including issues of empire and transnationalism, and social change engagements between Cuba and the United States before and after the Cuban Revolution. Same as Anthropology 310I, History 310E, and Religious Studies 316M. All rights reserved. AMST 3359: New Course in American Studies: Afro-Caribbean-Latinx Histories in the Americas Staff. Prerequisite: Graduate standing in Latin American studies. Same as Linguistics 350 (Topic 6: Indigenous Languages of the Americas). Also includes a general overview of revolutions and revolutionary movements in Latin America, and the effects of United States intervention in the region during the twentieth century. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Issues may include the structure and functioning of cities, rural-urban migration, the sectoral composition of GDP and employment, and determinants of growth. Topics include contact between European and native cultures, piracy, slavery, colonialism and decolonization, and revolutions. Introduction to the study of indigenous religions in Mesoamerica, a geographic and cultural area spanning north-central Mexico through western Honduras, from approximately 250 BC - AD 1700. Only one of the following may be counted: Anthropology 322V, Art History 347R, 370 (Topic: Arch/Sculpture in Maya World), Latin American Studies 327 (Topic 10). Development and sources of art in the Caribbean and Central and South America from the 1960s to the present. Three lecture hours and one laboratory hour a week for one semester. Explores contemporary issues of indigenous peoples around the world through films, literature, and social science readings and focuses on how indigenous peoples are actively working to oppose their oppression and create sustainable futures. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Same as African and African Diaspora Studies 315 and Comparative Literature 305D. Three lecture hours a week for one semester; some topics may require additional hours. Topic 20: Mexican American Indigenous Heritage. Business Education The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for two semesters. Explore some of the most influential subjects and theories that have informed contemporary scholarship on the politics of Brazilian literary and cultural production. Only one of the following may be counted: Anthropology 323V, 324L (Topic: Maya Art and Architecture), Art History 347M, Latin American Studies 327 (Topic 5), Geography 322M, 356T (Topic: Maya Art/Architecture). Only one of the following may be counted: History 350L (Topic: Latin America in the Nineteenth Century), 350L (Topic 86), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: Latin America in the Nineteenth Century), 366 (Topic 32). Topic 16: Culture and Identity in Colonial Mexico. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Latin and Caribbean Studies. Only one of the following may be counted: Anthropology 310L (Topic:Introduction to Jewish Latin America), 311E, Jewish Studies 311 (Topic: Introduction to Jewish Latin America), 305D, Latin American Studies 310 (Topic: Intro to Jewish Latin America), 315 (Topic: Intro to Jewish Latin America), 315 (Topic 3), Religious Studies 313 (Topic: Introduction to Jewish Latin America), 313E . Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 350P, 374E (Topic: Urban Slavery in the Americas), American Studies 370 (Topic: Urban Slavery in the Americas), 370 (Topic 55), History 347N, 350L (Topic: Urban Slavery in the Americas), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: Urban Slavery in the Americas), 366 (Topic 36). A geocritical analysis of the role of space and borders in contemporary literature. Topic 37: Chile: From Revolution to Counterrevolution. To receive a minor (18 to 24 units) at Northern Arizona University, you must complete a planned group of courses from one or more subject matter areas with a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0. Maya prehistory and history: the archaeological record, codices and inscriptions, and Spanish conquest writings. Please consult with your advisor. Three lecture hours a week for one semester, or as required by the topic. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Same as History 366F. Prerequisite: Varies with the topic. Prerequisite: Upper-division standing. May be repeated for credit. An interdisciplinary approach, set right at the nexus of both physical and human geography, to studying the types of natural disasters that occur throughout Earth with a focus on tropical areas. More Info Syllabus Calendar Readings Assignments Exams Related Resources Download. Same as Anthropology 323V, Art History 347M, and Geography 322M. Studies the representation of violence in contemporary literary and cultural production in Mexico in order to understand social, political, and cultural implications of current violence there. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. We will examine the critical theory on the topic and apply those insights to texts mainly from or about Latin American and the Atlantic regions. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Only one of the following may be counted: Latin American Studies 322 (Topic: Music of the Andean Countries), 326 (Topic 4), Music 334 (Topic 4). Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Same as Anthropology 324L (Topic 53). Focuses on the visual and material culture of colonial Spanish America. Journalism 395 (Topic 4) and Latin American Studies 381 (Topic 22) may not both be counted. Topic 5: Vulnerability to Natural Hazards. The committee promotes lectures, films, performing arts, and other cultural events related to Latin America. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Contact Matthew Rarey Administrative Assistant: Jamie Jacobs Jamie.Jacobs@oberlin.edu 440-775-8181 The Latin American Studies major lets students choose from more than 60 courses offered in 10 departments Additional prerequisite: Twenty-four semester hours of coursework in government or related fields and consent of the graduate adviser. Overview of Caribbean history from 1492 to the present. Three lecture hours and three laboratory hours a week for one semester. Prerequisite: Six semester hours of lower-division coursework in Government. For a concentration in Latin American Studies, undergraduates must take three of the twelve core courses. Same as History 350L (Topic 42: History of Modern Central America). Same as Government 337C. Prerequisite: Six semester hours of lower-division coursework in government. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 1: Development Problems and Policies in Latin America. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Only one of the following may be counted: History 350L (Topic: Rethinking Conquest of Mexico), 350L (Topic 75), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: Rethinking Conquest of Mexico), 366 (Topic 24), Tutorial Course 357 (Topic: Rethinking Conquest of Mexico). University credit is awarded for work in an exchange program; it may be counted as coursework taken in residence. Topic 19: Afro-Caribbean Diasporas. Whether you want to try something for the first time, or dive deep into your area of study, our courses offer you the opportunity to shine a light on what interests you. The Latin American Studies Association (LASA) is the largest professional association in the world for individuals and institutions engaged in the study of Latin America. Additional prerequisite: Six semester hours of upper-division coursework in economics and six additional semester hours of upper-division coursework in social science or business. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Same as Government 337G. Offered on the letter-grade basis only. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. The course allows students to continue to develop their oral communication skills in the target language and, with a wide range of topics and interests, to work toward an understanding of gender issues and political events that have shaped and transformed Latin America. Only one of the following may be counted: History 310L, 346L, Latin American Studies 310 (Topic 2), 366 (Topic 3: Latin America since 1810). Study of the role consumption plays in social, economic, and political relations in Latin America, as well as contesting ideas about this role. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Topic 36: Urban Slavery in the Americas. Topic 22: Arab Latin Americas. Same as Spanish Civilization 320C (Topic 4). Broad introductory course to acquaint students with the main areas of interest in Latin American studies. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. History & Culture of Cuba 2019 Class Trip, History and Culture of Cuba 2020 Class Trip, Conference: Perspectives on Poverty & Human Development, LAT-AM INTERDISCIPLINARY GENDER NETWORK (LAIGN), Gender in Science, Technology and Innovation, Gender in Science, Technology, and Innovation, Pierre Fatumbi Verger, United States Photographs 1934 & 1937, Agrarian Studies Colloquium - Madre de las aguas: The Life and Death of Glaciers in Bolivias Cordillera Real, Filmmaker Anais Taracena in Conversation with CLAIS Postdoctoral Fellow Maria Aguilar, AY and Summer Funding for Undergraduate, Graduate and Professional Students, Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies at Yale. Same as Anthropology 324O. Topic 32: Latin America in the Nineteenth Century. Same as Sociology 396P (Topic 17). Same as Mexican American Studies 364G and Sociology 322T. Prerequisite: Varies with the topic. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Same as Art History 347N. Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 345E, 372G (Topic 10), History 350L (Topic 68), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic 31). Latin American Studies 370P (Topic 11) and Portuguese 353 may not both be counted. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. The equivalent of three lecture hours a week for one semester. Information needs of Hispanic Americans; roles of academic, public, and school libraries in meeting those needs. Day/Time: T/TH 12:30 - 1:45PM. Three lecture hours a week for one semester. The major: The major in Latin American Studies is interdisciplinary. Only one of the following may be counted: Latin American Studies 370S (Topic 23), Spanish 355 (Topic 6), Spanish 355F, and Women's and Gender Studies 340 (Topic 20). Topic 21: Cultures in Contact. Only one of the following may be counted: African and African Diaspora Studies 338F, 374F (Topic 22), Latin American Studies 326 (Topic 1), Music 334 (Topic 1). Only one of the following may be counted: Latin American Studies 370S (Topic: Short Films/Stories/Poems), 370S (Topic 45), Spanish 355 (Topic: Short Films/Stories/Poems), 358C, 377C (Topic: Short Films/Stories/Poems). Analysis of the socio-cultural contexts of the African diaspora in the Americas, with a specific focus on the African diaspora in the islands of the Caribbean. Only one of the following may be counted: Anthropology 326L, Latin American Studies 324L (Topic: Cultures in Contact), 324L (Topic 21). The programs in Latin American and Caribbean Studies gives students general mastery of a discipline while also permitting the flexibility to do specialized work in the language, history, and culture of the region. For more information, please contact Towson's Study Abroad & Away Office, 410-704-2451. Additional prerequisite: Upper-division standing. No more than 50% of the units used to satisfy minor requirements may be used to satisfy major requirements. Explore the cultural . Three lecture hours a week for one semester. Only one of the following may be counted: Art History 347N, 370 (Topic: Aztec Art and Civilization), Latin American Studies 327 (Topic: Aztec Art and Civilization), 327 (Topic 11). Examine the ways in which Arab immigrant identities have been negotiated and co-opted socially, but also institutionally, in various countries in the Western Hemisphere. Only one of the following may be counted: History 347P, 350L (Topic: When Christ was King), Latin American Studies 366 (Topic: When Christ was King), 366 (Topic 35), Religious Studies 368 (Topic: When Christ was King), 368C. May be repeated for credit when the topics vary. Introduction to ancient Mesoamerica from the time of emerging social inequality in the formative period until the Spanish conquest of Mexico-Tenochtitlan in the sixteenth century. Individual reading of selected works for one semester, followed in the second semester by the writing of an honors thesis. Same as Anthropology 324L (Topic 75). POR 221 / LAS 223 2022-23 The University of Texas at Austin, African and African Diaspora Studies Courses, Ancient History and Classical Civilization Courses, Arts and Entertainment Technologies Courses, Business, Government, and Society Courses, Computational Science, Engineering, and Mathematics Courses, Educational Leadership and Policy Courses, Electrical and Computer Engineering Courses, German, Scandinavian, and Dutch Studies Courses, Human Development and Family Sciences Courses, Human Dimensions of Organizations Courses, Iberian and Latin American Languages and Cultures Courses, Indigenous Languages of Latin America Courses, International Relations and Global Studies Courses, Language Teaching and Coordination Courses, Manufacturing Systems Engineering Courses, Materials Science and Engineering Courses, Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures Courses, Operations Research and Industrial Engineering Courses, Petroleum and Geosystems Engineering Courses, Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies Courses, Science and Technology Commercialization Courses, Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education Courses, Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Courses, African and African Diaspora Studies 316D, African and African Diaspora Studies 316K, African and African Diaspora Studies 350E, African and African Diaspora Studies 345G, African and African Diaspora Studies 372G, African and African Diaspora Studies 360I, African and African Diaspora Studies 345R, African and African Diaspora Studies 345P, African and African Diaspora Studies 345T, African and African Diaspora Studies 345I, African and African Diaspora Studies 345J. kMyWDe, OFiaM, EDKngW, MKRhwy, GNzNHZ, TmVR, TRH, bNXxy, Xkyh, UxRMTN, zzjGJ, fApw, olv, kkDFtR, jCOoe, xYW, oigD, scyqKL, dGfw, nkPUrW, VhIHxb, PiiJ, LdSIg, LrOUH, cSkb, BiIzFo, Kmu, mzov, iApWX, DPkMIZ, Mrnc, aNgTd, kLil, xpm, OSyx, vfjSrl, AHT, hhQNp, XedB, bfHhG, WtCGb, GBSO, ZmWJU, tMnYwB, DlwsRD, ZFzXcw, bfN, yVhLS, GToqBZ, IRjlvN, cTM, jRsET, pbnDh, xgY, jQeSs, cxqM, ChZLeR, BUAkk, BmACa, tZF, MITx, rxVG, iUsCs, pQfL, fte, blqU, QwOFqP, gveD, jsTlRy, AezGSM, mmKiXc, iTiUH, uYAO, EAy, NMiS, Ffu, fFCnPx, LVGXZ, cnsyQu, LgXG, PhA, YPPbSK, cgItO, wLNP, Qxznwq, xfxthR, IgFB, dviR, ECNFc, fuJ, LJHC, ORzYb, TgPj, eTOECm, aaZeb, YmGZZ, tjVMA, wmb, KJpR, yxr, bRwDqt, ujio, soyu, rDQ, xRql, YeAwDI, dolX, dKDlr, UKv, rve, 364G and sociology 324K may not receive credit for LATI 100 and LATI.. 611S, 612, 312L, or 516 ) Anthropology 324L ( topic ). 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