LLS 296

Spring 2012 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 3 hours.

Course examines specific topics in Latina/Latino Studies not addressed in regularly offered courses. Examples include theories of ethnic identity, historical foundations, cultural expression, and relevant topics in public policy studies of Latina/Latino communities.

May be repeated in same or separate terms to a maximum of 6 hours.

Section Status updates every 10 minutes.
LLS 296 class schedule data for spring 2012
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
58349
Lecture-Discussion
LC
9:00AM -11:20AM
MW
226 Wohlers Hall
Cacho, L
Part of Term:
B
Date Range:
03/12/12-05/02/12
Section Title:
Race and Criminalization
Section Info:
Topic: "Race and Criminalization." Meets with AIS 190. This course examines how and why criminalization is a racialized process in the United States that affects different communities of color in different ways. For instance, why do Native Americans have a different relationship to the criminal justice system? Why did the private prison industry in Arizona push for SB 1070 (AZ?s recent anti-immigration law)? Why are women of color the fastest growing prison population? To discuss these and other questions, we will cover topics that include unlawful immigration, juvenile delinquency, prostitution, and street drug addiction.
54576
Lecture-Discussion
WC
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
221 Gregory Hall
Coyoca, W
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/17/12-05/02/12
Section Title:
Creative Writ Marginal People
Section Info:
Topic: "Creative Writing for Marginalized People." Meets with AAS 299 and CW 202. This course is a creative writing workshop designed particularly for writers of color, but also inclusive of writers from other marginalized and oppressed groups. Students will turn in either narrative fiction or creative non-fiction stories to be critiqued by their peers. The workshop will be a safe space in which writers can explore and develop their craft in an atmosphere of support and understanding, where writers can get feedback from each other, and where writers can be empowered to continue to write about the stories they feel are important and necessary. In this class we will examine the relationship between form and content, stories and politics. In addition to sharing your own creative pieces with each other, you will also read and discuss stories by published writers.
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