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Description:
This course will examine arguments for reparations for slavery with an eye towards understanding what withholding and extending reparations have meant for American democracy and citizenship. We will contextualize arguments for reparations within a larger conversation about repairing democratic norms, institutions, and social conditions within recent democratic theory. Together we will investigate what historical and ongoing injustices and inequalities reparations are meant to repair, how reparations would address those harms, and how arguments for reparations have mobilized social activists on both sides of the question. Our readings will span history, legal studies, politics, literature and the arts and arguments for reparations to be paid by the American state down to institutions such as corporations, universities, and other jurisdictions.
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Distribution(s):
III - Social Sciences , SI - Speaking-Intensive , WI - Writing-Intensive , TP - Topics Course
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| Meeting Dates         |
Method         |
Meeting days         |
Meeting times         |
Building name         |
Room     |
Frequency     |
| 10/21/2020 - 12/14/2020   |
Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   |
Monday   |
12:45PM - 02:00PM   |
TBA   |
TBA   |
Weekly |
| 10/21/2020 - 12/14/2020   |
Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   |
Tuesday and Thursday   |
12:45PM - 01:45PM   |
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Weekly |
| 10/21/2020 - 12/14/2020   |
Flex. Immersive Seminar/Disc.   |
Wednesday and Friday   |
12:45PM - 02:30PM   |
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Weekly |