Showing posts with label Studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Studies. Show all posts

Monday, November 9, 2015

Medical Racism in African American Studies


Greetings, Class Community.

Medical racism in an understated discussion in African American Studies.  We explored this topic briefly in class. Please consider answering one or all of the following questions:

How does any of the information our class community discussed affirm, change or complicate your understanding of African Americans, African American Studies, or American Culture?    

How does any of the information our class community discussed affirm, change or complicate your understanding of medical history, birth control campaigns, and medical advancements in the US?

How does any of the information our class community discussed affirm, change or complicate your understanding of the history of the feminist movement?


Please don't hesitate to review your notes or research any additional information before commenting. 

Monday, September 28, 2015

The Impact of Gender and Intersectional Identity in Slave Communities

Study the Masters by Lucille Clifton
like my aunt timmie.
it was her iron,
or one like hers,
that smoothed the sheets
the master poet slept on.
home or hotel, what matters is
he lay himself down on her handiwork
and dreamed. she dreamed too, words;
some cherokee, some masai and some
huge and particular as hope.
if you had heard her
chanting as she ironed
you would understand form and line
and discipline and order and
america.   

Greetings, Class. 

In this course, we are exploring the ways gender and intersectional identity may have impacted the experiences of enslaved people.  This poem by Lucille Clifton may help us to unpack some of the complexities associated with gender in slave communities.  

from http://clclt.com/charlotte/not-just-black-history-america-i-am/Content?oid=2774133
Consider how gender (male or female) and intersectional identity (Black/African and female) impacted the individual experiences of people in enslaved communities.  You may include examples from the The African American Odyssey or another form of previous knowledge.  Feel free to include links and additional resources as examples. 

Yours truly, 


Dr. Hill