#  AAAS 97: Sophomore Tutorial 

 



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## Course Description


This course will examine the complexity of contemporary racial and ethnic experience in the United States, focusing on self-identified "mixed-race" groups and voluntary immigrant groups from Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean (e.g. from Brazil, Cape Verde, Ethiopia, Haiti, Puerto Rico, and Nigeria). Interdisciplinary course readings will introduce key theoretical issues in the social sciences and humanities, such as cultural relativism, the social construction of race, class, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity, and the negotiation of identity in diaspora and minority settings. Assignments will include both written work and social engagement with local communities resulting in multimedia projects. Note: Required for concentrators in African and African American Studies. Open to all undergraduates.

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  [### The Curly Crew

 ](/resource/curly-crew) 

   [### Nigerian Fashion and Diasporic Identity

 ](/resource/nigerian-fashion-and-diasporic-identity) 

   [### Evaluating Notions of Family and Diasporic Community Through Ethiopian Music and Dance

 ](/resource/evaluating-notions-family-and-diasporic-community-through-ethiopian-music-and-dance) 

   [### Cape Verdean American Views on Education

 ](/resource/cape-verdean-american-views-education) 

   [### Lakay Nou (Our Home): Notions of Citizenship in the Haitian Diaspora

 ](/resource/lakay-nou-our-home-notions-citizenship-haitian-diaspora) 

   [### Diversity In the Nigerian Diaspora

 ](/resource/diversity-nigerian-diaspora) 

   [### The Orthodox Church in the Ethiopian Diaspora

 ](/resource/orthodox-church-ethiopian-diaspora) 

   [### Cape Verdean American Social Portrait

 ](/resource/cape-verdean-american-social-portrait) 

   [### Culture, Cuisine, and Community

 ](/resource/culture-cuisine-and-community)