2022-2023 Pierce College Catalog 
    
    Apr 27, 2024  
2022-2023 Pierce College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

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HUM 105 Black American Thought and Cultures (5 credits)



Distribution Area Fulfilled Humanities; General Transfer Elective
Formerly HUMAN 105

Course Description
HUM 105 offers an introductory, multi-genre approach to the humanities from the perspectives of Black American artists, theorists, and influences.   

Course Content
A.  African traditions, The Black Diaspora, the legacy of slavery, and Civil Rights
B. Black artists and theorists across multiple genres of the humanities
C. Movements in African American history and their impact on art (e.g. The Harlem Renaissance, The Black Arts Movement, The Civil Rights Movements, Black Feminism, Black Lives Matter)
D. The role of collectivity, resistance, and reform in Black thought and cultures
E. Positionality, intersectionality, and cross-cultural influences
F. Impact of Black artists and their works in a global context.

Student Outcomes
1. Explain major cultural, historical, philosophical, spiritual, and political themes (e.g. African traditions, The Black Diaspora, slavery, and Civil Rights) which have contributed to Black thought and culture in order to explain how identities and positionalities impact Black artists and their cultural works.

2. Analyze the aesthetics, purposes, and experiences that inform the creation of Black forms of expression in multiple genres and cross-genre forms.

3. Analyze the relationship between contemporary Black art and activism (e.g., Critical Race Theory, Black Lives Matter, Black Feminism, The Black Arts Movement, The 1619 Project) in order to conceptualize the relationship between social and civic engagement/action, artists, and their works.

4. Describe the resilience of African American artists in response to systemic racism and tactics of oppression (e.g. rejection, othering, limited canonization, appropriation).

5. Examine the cross-cultural contributions, intersectionality, positionality, influences, and impact of Black artists on global culture.

6. Evaluate one’s own positionality and relationship to Black humanities and cultures in order to advance intercultural engagement.

Degree Outcomes
Humanities: Graduates acquire skills to critically interpret, analyze and evaluate forms of human expression and create and perform as an Expression of the human experience.

Intercultural Engagement: Graduates demonstrate self-efficacy in intercultural engagement to advance equity, diversity, and inclusion through reflections and expressions of cultural humility, empathy, and social and civic engagement and action. Further, graduates examine how identities/positionalities such as races, social classes, genders, sexual orientations, disabilities, and cultures impact perceptions, actions, and the distribution of power and privilege in communities, systems, and institutions.  

Critical, Creative, and Reflective Thinking: Graduates will evaluate, analyze, and synthesize information and ideas in order to construct informed, meaningful, and justifiable conclusions.

Lecture Contact Hours 50
Lab Contact Hours 0
Clinical Contact Hours 0
Total Contact Hours 50



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