383a. Nation, Race and Gender in Latin America and the Caribbean – Senior SeminarPosted in Caribbean/Latin America, Course Offerings, History, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2013-04-01 21:18Z by Steven |
383a. Nation, Race and Gender in Latin America and the Caribbean – Senior Seminar
Vassar College
Poughkeepsie, New York
2013/2014
Light Carruyo, Associate Professor of Sociology
(Same as Sociology 383) With a focus on Latin America and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean this course traces and analyzes the ways in which the project of nation building creates and draws upon narratives about race and gender. While our focus is on Latin America, our study considers racial and gender formations within the context of the world-system. We are interested in how a complicated history of colonization, independence, post-coloniality, and “globalization” has intersected with national economies, politics, communities, and identities. In order to get at these intersections we examine a range of texts dealing with policy, national literatures, common sense, and political struggle. Specific issues addressed include the relationship between socio-biological theories of race and Latin American notions of mestizage, discursive and material “whitening,” the myth of racial democracy, sexuality and morality, and border politics.