Undergraduate Studies

African American Studies

Explore the lives, arts, stories, experiences, and politics of African, African American, and African diasporic people.
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About African American Studies

African American Studies encompasses many academic fields that explore the lives, arts, stories, experiences, and politics of African, African American, and African diasporic people. Central to the academic inquiry of Black Studies and related fields are questions of identity, power, othering, belonging, and justice.

As a student in a Black Studies class, you will interrogate how cultures, communities, and identity categories change, shift, and are constructed. You will encounter new ideas about how identity relates to access and power. Not only will you be better prepared with practical skills for careers in an ever-changing world, participating in programs that include Black Studies will transform your existing cultural wealth and knowledge through critical theory.

Black Studies are by their nature interdisciplinary. Programs explore:

  • African American literature and literary arts
  • Black agrarian traditions and Black farmers
  • Black movements in the U.S. and their international connections
  • Politics and political economy, including the role of mass incarceration and transformative justice
  • Black history, including enslavement, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and Civil Rights activism

You will have the chance to link theory to practice through applied, community-based learning opportunities that deal with these topics and more.

Black Studies are explored in related fields of study, especially Ethnic Studies and American Studies.

Check out related Courses and Programs in the Academic Catalog