- Department: History
- Module co-ordinator: Prof. Henrice Altink
- Credit value: 30 credits
- Credit level: I
- Academic year of delivery: 2021-22
- See module specification for other years: 2022-23
Starting with Haiti in 1804, slavery was gradually abolished in the Americas in the nineteenth century. But Abolition did not bring racial equality. This course explores how people of African descent in the US, Latin America, and the Caribbean tried to achieve full and equal citizenship from abolition to the Black Lives Matter movement. It is focusses not just on organisations, such as the UNIA and Black Panthers, but also on spontaneous actions, including strikes and marches, and popular expressions of black radicalism, such as music and film. Attention will also be paid to the writings of key black activists, including Angela Davis (US), Walter Rodney (Guyana), and Abdias do Nascimento (Brazil). Proceeding in a roughly chronological order, the module will show that demands for inclusion in the nation as full and equal citizens coexisted with exclusionary practices. Women, for example, were often excluded from leadership positions in black radical organisations. And it will also highlight the tension in the black radical tradition between separatism and integration. The module will not only draw comparisons between black radical traditions in different parts of the Americas, paying attention to different racial regimes, but also explore the exchange of black radical ideas and practices across the region. By focussing on the radical ways in which black people across the Americas have tried to resist anti-black racism in the long twentieth-century and the impact of their actions on politics and culture, this module will highlight the agency of black people in history.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
---|---|
A | Spring Term 2021-22 to Summer Term 2021-22 |
The aims of this module are:
Students who complete this module successfully will:
Teaching Programme:
This 30-credit module is taught through a weekly two-hour seminar run from weeks 2-10 in the spring term and a four week period of project work undertaken in weeks 1-4 of the summer term. Students will complete their group project work within that period and tutors should arrange to be available for consultation with students twice during that time. There will be no formal seminar teaching during this period.
Seminars will likely cover the following areas:
Task | Length | % of module mark |
---|---|---|
Groupwork 3,000 word group project |
N/A | 33 |
Online Exam - 24 hrs (Centrally scheduled) 24-Hour Open Exam |
8 hours | 67 |
None
Formative assessment will be a group presentation between weeks 5 and 7 of the spring term.
For summative assessment students take a 24-hour open exam in the summer term assessment period, usually released at 11:00 on day 1 and submitted at 11:00 on day 2. For those taking two Explorations modules the 24-hour open exams are held on consecutive days, with both papers released at 11:00 on day 1 and both due for submission on 11:00 of day 3.
Students also submit a piece of written work for their group project of no more than 3,000 words in week 5 of the summer term.
The exam carries 67% of assessment and the project element 33% for this module.
Students who need to be reassessed in the project component of this module (for example due to Exceptional Circumstance) will be required to submit in the summer reassessment period a shorter individual project (2,000 words) which should include a short reflection (500 words max) on group work, considering how this project could be expanded if a team of three to four people were working on it. Students should consider how they would divide up the research tasks, and reflect briefly on problems which might arise and how they would manage them. Module tutors will advise on the content and design of this project.
Task | Length | % of module mark |
---|---|---|
Groupwork 3,000 word group project |
N/A | 33 |
Online Exam - 24 hrs (Centrally scheduled) 24-Hour Open Exam |
8 hours | 67 |
Following their formative assessment task, students will typically receive written feedback that will include comments and a mark within 10 working days of submission.
Work will be returned to students in their seminars and may be supplemented by the tutor giving some oral feedback to the whole group. All students are encouraged, if they wish, to discuss the feedback on their procedural work during their tutor’s student hours. For more information, see the Statement on Feedback.
For the summative assessment task, students will receive their provisional mark and written feedback within 20 working days of the submission deadline unless submitted in week 5 of the summer term, in which case these are available within 25 working days. The tutor will then be available during student hours for follow-up guidance if required. For more information, see the Statement of Assessment.
For term time reading, please refer to the module VLE site. Before the course starts, we encourage you to look at the following items of preliminary reading:
Kate Quinn, ed., Black Power in the Caribbean (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2014), introduction + Part 1.
Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition (London: Zed Books, 1983), chaps 6-12.
Peter Wade, Race and Ethnicity in Latin America (London: Pluto Press, 2010), chaps 3-6.