2022-2023 Catalog

CTSJ 395 Special Topics in Critical Theory and Social Justice

An advanced seminar in Critical Theory and Social Justice. May be repeated for credit with a different topic. Different topics may meet different requirements.

Humming in the in Between: Black Southern Organizing and Sound

This interdisciplinary course examines the politics of sound in how moments in between resistance and deep oppression are documented and understood when considering Black Southern pursuits of liberation. This course will challenge students to engage in familiar political moments in a sensory capacity, challenging understandings of political consciousness, movement success, and power building. In this course, sound will be used as a  critical field to examine the voices that will produce the sound as they construct and navigate constructions of democracies and oppressive state actions that have entangled their Blackness to a dance of freedom and coercion. Thinking through a sonicscape allows for an investigation of the overlapping of the institutional and lived realities of Black rural Southerners. Core Requirement Met: United States Diversity.

Writing Trauma
This is a writing-intensive course with a focus on marginalized identities and social justice. It examines the process of writing with, about, and through trauma. During the semester, we will investigate the origins of trauma through a social justice lens and how writing can be a transformative political act. We will examine trauma and writing as they pertain to current events. Critical writing is an integral part of this course.

Indigenous Literature as Decolonial Praxis

This course will examine Indigenous literature as a form of political cultural production. Using settler colonialism as a context, the texts under examination will be understood as assertions of Indigenous sovereignty. As a result, readers' will come to understand Indigeneity and Indigenous peoples more broadly. By examining primarily 20th and 21st century texts, a contemporary view of Indigenous epistemologies, including ideas of belonging, kinship networks, violence, etc., and social justice struggles will emerge as relevant to current decolonial efforts. Core Requirement Met: Global Connections.

White Queer Theory

This course critiques the ways in which queer theory and politics of the late 20th and 21st century have been a profound site through which whiteness has been able to reproduce and proliferate in the context of the neoliberal incorporation of raced, sexed, gendered difference into structures of capitalism and the US nation-state.  As such, students will engage both the so-called critical texts of white American queer theory and texts from queer indigenous studies, black queer studies, women of color feminisms, and queer of color critique along with the burgeoning fields of black trans studies and trans of color critique that have rigorously critiqued the limits of the so-called critical texts to think [critically] about their reproduction of whiteness and the ways in with their thinking of queerness does not encapsulate the ways in which indigeneity, blackness, and other racialized formations are marked as sexually deviant, non-heteronormative, and queer, both as sexual identities and as populations.  In order to thoroughly interrogate these proliferations students will engage a variety of texts that include theory, history, political movements, and popular culture — texts include the work of Foucault, Judith Butler, Glee, Paris is Burning, #ItGetsBetter, the phenomenon of Milo Yannopoulos (aka Milo Hanrahan), Christine Jorgensen, and the white queer antiblack backlash against the simultaneous passing of prop 8 in California and the election of Barack Obama as the first president; and the work Cathy Cohen, Qwo-Li Driskill, Jasbir Puar, Scott Morgensen, C. Riley Snorton, Roderick Ferguson, and other scholars who have reframed questions of queerness and its intersections with whiteness, settler colonialism, and racial capitalism through frameworks such as homonationalism, settler homonationalism, trans necropolitics, and the queerness of blackness. This class counts as a methods class for the CTSJ major. Core Requirement Met: United States Diversity.

Whiteness

This course seeks to engage the emergent body of scholarship known as Critical White Studies (CWS). This scholarship is designed to deconstruct the racial category “white.”  We will examine the historical, legal, economic, gender, and aesthetic constructions of whiteness.  Particular attention will be paid to the problem of blackface. We will also critically examine CWS. Core Requirement Met: United States Diversity.

Chattel Slavery and Its Afterlives

This course introduces students to the key theoretical and historical frameworks that elucidate the particularities of chattel slavery in the Americas both in its “pre-emancipation” manifestations and as, Saidiya Hartman notes, the ongoing machinations of captivity, domination, and dispossession by which antiblackness continues to structure and suture the world.   In this course, the particularity of chattel slavery emphasizes how the economic and social function of the enslaved as laborer and commodity, the centrality of blackness as a fungible and immutable category of the enslaveable (non)human, and the massive global function of chattel slavery as the foundation of capitalism distinguishes this formation from other historical or regional structures of slavery, labor exploitation, trafficking, and racialized domination.  Furthermore, students will be challenged to confront the ways in which the de jure abolition of chattel slavery (in 1865 in the US and across the Americas in the 19th century) has been a historical, legal, and structural misnomer that does not capture the ways in which societies, economies, and legal structures adapted to sustain rather than eradicate the global dependence on black subjection. Students will engage the prison industrial complex, abandonment & deindustrialization, policing, geographic containment, the consumption of blackness as popular culture, formations of neoliberalism, and antiblack state and state-sanctioned terror as contemporary formations of chattel slavery’s afterlives. The course engages the geographic contexts of the US, Jamaica, Haiti, and other parts of the Caribbean. Cross-listed as BLST 375Core Requirement Met: United States Diversity.

Racial Capitalism

This course examines the concept of racial capitalism, or the relationship between racialist ideologies and the uneven development of global capitalism. To do this, we will explore several phases in this process of development, starting with the colonization of the Americas and the development of intra-European nationalism, then looking at the colonization of South and/or East Asia, followed by the abolition of slavery in the U.S., and finally the post World War II decolonziation and/or neocolonization of Africa. Through this, we will investigate how the capitalist world system produces ideological heterogeneity rather than universalist homogeneity. Authors to be read include Cedric Robinson, Oliver C. Cox, Immanuel Wallerstein, Walter D. Mignolo, Maria Lugones, Lisa Lowe, Ranajit Guha, W.E.B. Du Bois, Kwame Nkrumah, and Frantz Fanon. Core Requirement Met: Global Connections.

Credits

4 units