HIST 505 (01) - African American History

African American History

Durham   Liberal Arts :: History
Credits: 4.0
Term: Spring 2024 - Full Term (01/23/2024 - 05/06/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   40  
CRN: 54553
Explores the forced integration of the Atlantic World through the African slave trade and the development of creole cultures in America, and takes the story of Black Americans' "creative survival" and the evolution of African-American culture through the end of the Civil War. Course meets the History major requirements for Group I.
Registration Approval Required. Contact Instructor or Academic Department for permission then register through Webcat.
Attributes: Writing Intensive Course, Historical Perspectives(Disc)
Instructors: Alexis Broderick

Times & Locations

Start Date End Date Days Time Location
1/23/2024 5/6/2024 M 5:10pm - 8:00pm HORT 307
Final Exam 5/13/2024 5/13/2024 M 6:00pm - 8:00pm HORT 307
Additional Course Details: 

African Americans shaped their own histories in slavery and freedom. This course is a survey of the first era of African American history from the Trans-Atlantic slave trade through the end of the Civil War. The course follows Africans’ forced journeys from communities 

in West and Central Africa, traces Black experiences during slavery, and follows African Americans’ fights for civil rights and freedom. In the process, it necessarily poses a series of big questions about the relationship between slavery and democracy, and the meaning of freedom in the United States. The course engages a range of critical subjects in African American history: African communities and the Middle Passage; the emergence of slavery in 

North America; African Americans and the American Revolution; African American life 

and resistance under slavery; the abolitionist movement; and African Americans in the Civil 

War. It ends with a look forward to the revolutionary potential of Reconstruction. Students will come away from this course with knowledge of important trends, concepts and interpretations related to African American history. What might the histories of anti-Blackness, resistance, and emancipation have to teach us about our current moment? How might these histories help us understand the national protests and new calls for abolition?