Spring 2024 Ethnicity and Race, Center for Study of UN3303 section 001

Whiteness, Sentiment and Political Belon

Whiteness, Senti Politica

Call Number 13126
Day & Time
Location
R 10:10am-12:00pm
467 EXT Schermerhorn Hall [SCH]
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required Instructor
Instructor Catherine Fennell
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

Scholars of gender, sexuality, ethnicity and race have long been preoccupied with the terms, categories, and processes through which the United States has excluded or qualified the citizenship of particular groups, including women, immigrants, indigenous nations, and descendants of enslaved Africans. Yet it has spent less time interrogating the unqualified content of Americanness, and the work that the imagination of a "default" American identity does in contemporary political life. This seminar introduces students to this problem through an unspoken racial dimension of American political belonging -- the presumed whiteness of ideal American citizens. Readings drawn from several disciplinary traditions, including anthropology, linguistics, sociology, history, and journalism, will ground students in the course's key concepts, including racial markedness, the history of racialization, and public sentiment. Students will mobilize these tools to analyze several cases that rendered white sentiment explicit in politically efficacious ways, including the "panic" incited by the destabilization of race-based residential segregation, the "paranoia" of conspiracy theorists, the "sympathy" associated with natural disasters, and the "resentment" or "rage" associated with the loss of racial privileges

Web Site Vergil
Department Ethnicity and Race, Center for
Enrollment 15 students (15 max) as of 9:14PM Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Status Full
Subject Ethnicity and Race, Center for Study of
Number UN3303
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Section key 20241CSER3303W001