Women and Cultural Change (Women and Gender in Latin America) (HIST*2930) | College of Arts

Women and Cultural Change (Women and Gender in Latin America) (HIST*2930)

Code and section: HIST*2930*01

Term: Winter 2024

Details

Format: In-person lecture course 3 x 50 minutes MWF

COURSE SYNOPSIS:

This course will cover the historical experiences of women and gendered others in Latin America and the Caribbean from pre-contact times to the present. As a large course, there will be lectures but there will also be films, interactive exercises and discussions, and some music. Topics covered include pre-contact indigenous cultures (Aztec, Inca, Maya, Guaraní), swashbuckling female conquistadores, rebellious nuns and the Inquisition, folk healers, pirates, family life, enslaved Black women’s lives, revolutionaries, right-wing women, intellectuals, artists, and modern day migrants and human rights. 

COURSE OUTCOMES:

  1. Improved skills: research, persuasive writing, critical analysis and oral communication.
  2. Acquired substantive content knowledge of women and historical events in the region.
  3. Ability to discuss and analyze complex issues related to race, gender, class, power.

ALLOCATION OF GRADES:

Article summary - 10%
Midterm exam - 30%
Document Analysis - 30%
Final exam - 30 %
_____________
Total - 100%

REQUIRED READING

  • Catalina de Erauso, Lieutenant Nun
  • Ochoa & S. Guengerich, Cacicas: The Indigenous Women Leaders of Spanish America
  • P. MurrayWomen and Gender in Modern Latin America: Historical Sources and Interpretations
  • Wendy Vogt, Lives in Transit: Violence & Intimacy on Migrant Journey

 

 

*Please note: This is a preliminary web course description only. The department reserves the right to change without notice any information in this description. The final, binding course outline will be distributed in the first class of the semester.

**Please login to WebAdvisor, once the course schedule goes live, for instructor and room information.

Syllabus