CCE/CRJ: Ethnic Studies 100 (3 Units)
Ethnic America
*Fulfills GE Advanced
Studies, Writing Intensive & Race-Ethnicity Requirements
Professor: James Sobredo, Ph.D.
Spring 2012 Online Course for CCE/CRJ students (19 October
– 13 December 2012)
Office
Hours: Amador Hall 563A, Hours.
Thurs.12:00 – 1:20 pm and 3-4:30 pm
*Every 2nd
Fri. of MONTH = Friday, 10:00
am - 1 pm
Telephone:
(916) 278-7566 & Web Address: http://www.csus.edu/aas/sobredo
Course Description
Through
an interdisciplinary approach, introduces the four major American ethnic
groups--Black, American Indian, Chicano, and Asian American. Focuses on themes
common to all four groups (racism, economic and political oppression) and
demonstrates the varied contributions of each culture to American social and
economic life. Prerequisite: Passing score on the WPE. 3 units.
*Students who have not passed the WPE/WPJ cannot enroll in
this course.
*DROPPING ETHN 100 or any class at Sac State:
The Professor is NOT responsible for DROPPING
you from
this course or any other course. It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY to
file the appropriate paper work with the RegistrarÕs Office and drop
ETHN 100 or any other class.
This
is an advanced course in the study of race and ethnicity in the United States.
ES100 will introduce students to the four major American ethnic groups: African
American, American Indian, Chicano, and Asian American. Their experience will
be examined within the context of historical, social, economic, and political
forces in American society. In the process, students shall also critically
examine how labor market status, race, class, and sex/gender relations affected
the evolution and formation of African American, American Indian, Chicano, and
Asian American communities.
Course Objectives
By the end of the class, students will have
learned about:
1. The
history of African American, American Indian, Chicano, and Asian American
community formation
2.
The historical context within which these migrations/settlements have occurred
3. How
race, class, gender and socio-economic forces affect African Americans,
American Indians, Chicanos, and Asian Americans
4. How to
utilize social science theories in critically analyzing and interpreting
American history
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
In
order to pass the class, students must complete all the major paper
assignments. Students are also required to attend all the class lectures,
arrive at class on time, participate in the class discussions, and are
responsible for all the readings and lectures. Students are required to have a
CSUS e-mail account (free too all CSUS students) and participate in all the
class assignments and discussions.
As
a course that fulfills the writing requirements for a GE curriculum, students
are required to write the equivalent of a 5,000 word analytic essay,
which for this class will amount to three analytic papers for the entirety of
the course. Since this is a writing intensive (advanced studies) course
and all students taking this class are required to have passed the writing
proficiency exam (WPE), the professor expects students to communicate their
ideas in comprehensible English. Each of the critical, analytic papers must
be double-spaced, type-written and will be graded on their content,
analysis, coherence, correct documentation of source citations, and
clarity of expression. Students are required to follow standard academic format
for proper source citation.
CLASSROOM POLICIES
1.
Only medical and family emergencies will be considered as legitimate excuse by
the instructor. Unless prior arrangement has been made with the class
instructor, the professor does not accept late assignments.
2.
The professor does not tolerate disruptive class behavior. For example,
it is disruptive to come in fashionably late, hold private conversations, let
your cell phone ring or have a cell phone conversation in class (turn off
your cell phone or put it on silent).
3.
Inappropriate classroom behavior: It is disruptive to have a private
conversation with other students, to walk in ÒfashionablyÓ late to class (let
me know ahead of time if youÕre going to be late and go to the back of the
class and quietly find a seat). It is disruptive to the instructor if you
fall asleep in class (this particular instructor spends many long hours
preparing for his class lessons)—let me know ahead of time if you work
nights/evenings or have children and other pressing responsibilities.
4.
Professional Ethics. Students are expected to behave and conduct
themselves in a polite and professional manner. The course instructor is to be
addressed as ÒDr. SobredoÓ or ÒProfessor Sobredo.Ó
5.
Plagiarism. The professor does not tolerate academic dishonesty--consult
the CSUS Student Handbook (http://www.csus.edu/admbus/umanual/UMA00150.htm)
for policies governing student conduct and responsibilities. It is the
studentÕs responsibility to understand what plagiarism is and how to provide
the appropriate and correct citation of ideas and sources that are not their own. An ÒFÓ grade will be given to any student who plagiarizes
by (a) passing another personÕs idea or work as theirs or (b) failing to
provide to provide the appropriate citation for original theories/concepts,
quotes or research data—I will also write a letter about the incident to
the Dean of Student Affairs.
6.
College-level Writing Skills and Grammar. In taking this class you are
supposed to have passed the WPE writing exam. This is a class on Ethnic Studies
and not a Òhow toÓ class on college English composition; consequently,
it is assumed you know how to write a college-level academic paper. In writing
papers for this intensive writing class, it is your responsibility to
know how to write a sentence, the mechanics of grammar, and the correct
format for the Chicago or MLA (Modern Language Association) style of source
citation.
7.
Late/Missing Work. Unless prior arrangements has been made with the
professor, late work will be assessed a 5 percent reduction in grade. The
instructor does not give "make-up" quizzes, exams or grade on a
curve.
8.
DO NOT use the instructorÕs private email address to send
communications—instead use WebCT
communications & email.
9.
Do not call or email the instructor regarding homework assignments. All
homework assignments are available online, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
(24/7). Should any mistakes occur regarding online postings of assignments, the
instructor will make the appropriate changes and adjustments.
10.
EXTRA
CREDIT: The
professor will allow students no more than 1 (ONE) extra credit assignments
(short paper, 2 pages minimum). [*Exceptions: no extra credit work is
accepted during the shortened online and summer sessions.]
11.
Your
final grade will reflect your ability to follow these classroom policies, to
follow and complete class assignments, and to follow professional ethics.
ASSESSMENT
& GRADING
|
3 Short assignments |
100
pts |
Assignment 1: 300 words, 20 pts -General
writing evaluation Assignment 2: 700 words, 30 pts -Source
citations & use of quotes Assignment 3: 1,000 words, 50 pts -Arguments
& Evidence *Do
a Òword countÓ and post the number of words. If you do not, you will be
penalized 5% of your grade. |
|
1
long assignment |
100
words |
Long
paper: 2,000 words *Do
a Òword countÓ and post the number of words. If you do not, you will be
penalized 5% of your grade. |
|
Class
Discussion, Short assignments, Online, Classroom Ethics |
100
pts |
CLASS
DISCUSSION, ONLINE SESSIONS & ASSIGNMENTS. 90 pts. Students will be
evaluated on their small group discussion sessions, class assignments &
online participation. CLASSROOM
ETHICS. 10 pts. Students will be graded on their ability to follow class
policies, attend class regularly, and follow professor's instructions. |
|
TOTAL |
300
pts |
|
GRADING SCALE 300 pts Total
300-282
points.... A, 281-270...A-, 269-260... B+, 259-250...B, 249-240...
B-,
239-230...C+, 229-220...C, 219-210...C-, 209-179...D, 178 and below...
"E" [not passing]
REQUIRED TEXTS: None. All course materials are available
online.
WEEKLY TOPICS & READINGS (tentative
schedule)
|
PART I |
CONTACT, CONQUEST & EUROPEAN EXPANSIONISM |
|
Week
1 |
Introduction |
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Lecture
1: Introduction, my background, course syllabus, etc. Lecture
2: Concepts of Race, Ethnicity, and class ¥
*Concept & Theories of Race: SF Chronicle, 2-28-98, ÒWhat is Race?Ó—available at http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/kron/archive/1998/02/23/race_part1.dtl&type=special ¥
PBS Transcript: ÒGhosts of RwandaÓ—available at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/ghosts/etc/script.html |
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The Search for Asian Markets & Finding ÒIndiansÓ ¥
Nicholas Kristof, NY
Times Ò1492: The PrequelÓ—available at http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/millennium/m3/kristof.html ¥
Zheng HeÕs
Treasure Ship, TIME Asia, 20-27 Aug. 2001—available
at http://www.time.com/time/asia/features/journey2001/intro.html |
|
|
PAPER 1: Evaluative Essay, 300 words min. - 400 max.,
20 pts ¥
TOPIC: Evaluation of Writing Skills ¥
Papers will be returned and grade with typed
comments. ¥
Due: Friday, 26 October 2012—submit via
email on SacCT |
|
Week
2 |
Contact, Conquest & Genocide á
PBS
Transcript of Jared DiamondÕs Guns, Germs & Steel. Download at: http://www.pbs.org/gunsgermssteel/show/transcript2.html ¥
Nicholas P. Canny, "The Ideology of
English Colonization: From Ireland to America," The William and Mary
Quarterly, 3rd Ser., Vol. 30, No. 4. (Oct., 1973), pp. 575-598--available at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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Creating White Supremacy & Eurocentrism ¥
Stephen J. Gould, ÒThe Geometer of Race,Ó Discover,
November 1994—available at http://discovermagazine.com/1994/nov/thegeometerofrac441 (as of
2/1/2008). ¥
Madison Grant, Part I (Chapters 1-VII), in
classic work The Passing of The Great Race: Or the Racial Basis of
European History (Charles Scribner's Sons, 1916). Available at www.books.google.com |
|
Week
3 |
Unfree Labor, Race
& the Creation of American Slavery |
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¥
ÒAfricans in AmericaÓ (PBS), Online Readings:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/index.html ¥
Winthrop D. Jordan,
"Modern Tensions and the Origins of American Slavery," The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 28,
No. 1. (Feb., 1962), pp. 18-30-- available at CSUS
Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Richard Graham,
"Slavery and Economic Development: Brazil and the United States South in
the Nineteenth Century," Comparative
Studies in Society and History, Vol. 23,
No. 4. (Oct., 1981), pp. 620-655--available at CSUS
Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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PAPER 2: Source Citation Essay, 700 words min.
– 800 max, 30 pts ¥
TOPIC: Source citation exercise & use of
quotes ¥
Papers will be returned and grade with typed
comments. ¥
Due: Friday, 9 November 2012—submit via
email on SacCT |
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PART III |
CONSTRUCTING WHITE SUPREMACY & RACIAL IDEOLOGY |
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Week
4 |
Stealing Indian Lands` á
Nicole
Lim, ÒTribal Sovereignty & Governmental AuthorityÓ in *Eric Vega,
Rita Cameron-Wedding, & Gregory Yee Mark (eds.), Ethnic America
(Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt, 2006) (*Library Reserve). á
Sherburne F. Cook, "Interracial Warfare and
Population Decline among the New England Indians," Ethnohistory, Vol. 20, No. 1. (Winter, 1973), pp. 1-24--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Edwin A. Miles,
"After John Marshall's Decision: Worcester v. Georgia and the
Nullification Crisis," The Journal
of Southern History, Vol. 39, No. 4.
(Nov., 1973), pp. 519-544--available at CSUS Library database
(JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Wilcomb E. Washburn, "The Historical Context of American Indian Legal
Problems," Law and
Contemporary Problems, Vol. 40, No. 1,
The American Indian and the Law. (Winter, 1976), pp. 12-24--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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Assimilation & Cultural/Economic Domination ¥
Lilian Friedberg, "Dare to Compare: Americanizing the Holocaust," American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 24,
No. 3. (Summer, 2000), pp. 353-380--available at CSUS
Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Gary C. Anders,
"The Reduction of a Self-Sufficient People to Poverty and Welfare
Dependence: An Analysis of the Causes of Cherokee Indian
Underdevelopment," American Journal of
Economics and Sociology, Vol. 40, No. 3.
(Jul., 1981), pp. 225-237--available at CSUS Library
database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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Week
5 |
Migrant Workers in the Field: Mexicans |
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¥
Norman A. Graebner, "The Mexican War: A Study in
Causation," The Pacific
Historical Review, Vol. 49, No. 3.
(Aug., 1980), pp. 405-426--available at CSUS Library
database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Sonia Nazario,
ÒEnriqueÕs JourneyÓ (LA Times, 2003). This Pulitzer Prize series was
published into a book and is available in its entirety at: http://www.pulitzer.org/works/2003-Feature-Writing ¥
Shawn Malia Kanaiaupuni,
"Reframing the Migration Question: An Analysis of Men, Women, and Gender
in Mexico," Social Forces, Vol. 78, No. 4. (Jun., 2000), pp. 1311-1347--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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Migrant Workers in the Field: Asians ¥
Harry H. L. Kitano,
"Asian-Americans: The Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Pilipinos,
and Southeast Asians," Annals of
the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 454, America as a Multicultural Society. (Mar., 1981), pp.
125-138--available at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Terry E. Boswell,
"A Split Labor Market Analysis of Discrimination Against Chinese
Immigrants, 1850-1882," American
Sociological Review, Vol. 51, No. 3.
(Jun., 1986), pp. 352-371--available at CSUS Library
database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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PAPER III: Essay, 1,000 words min. – 1,300 max., 50 pts ¥
TOPIC: Creating/Interpreting Arguments
(Premises & Conclusions) ¥
Papers will be returned and grade with typed
comments. ¥
Due: FRIDAY, 23 November 2012—submit via
email on SacCT |
|
Week
6 |
Asia as the New Frontier: Philippines & Vietnam ¥
Russell H. Fifield, "The Thirty Years War in Indochina: A
Conceptual Framework," Asian Survey, Vol. 17, No. 9. (Sep., 1977), pp. 857-879--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
Gail P. Kelly,
"Coping with America: Refugees from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos in the
1970s and 1980s," Annals of the
American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 487, Immigration and American Public Policy. (Sep., 1986), pp.
138-149--available at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
John M. Gates,
"People's War in Vietnam," The Journal
of Military History, Vol. 54, No. 3.
(Jul., 1990), pp. 325-344--available at CSUS Library
database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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PART III |
CONTEMPORARY RACE & ETHNIC RELATIONS |
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Week
7 |
Civil Rights Movement and 1964 Civil Rights Reform Act ¥
Speeches of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr, http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/publications/speeches/contents.htm--please read
Dr. King's speeches given on these days: a.
5
December 1955:
Montgomery, Alabama b.
28
August 1963: Washington, DC c.
4
April 1967: Riverside Church, NYC ¥
Michael J. Klarman, "Brown" at 50," Virginia Law Review, 1613-1633--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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1965 Immigration Reform Act & Globalization ¥
Charles B. Keely, "Effects of the Immigration Act of 1965 on
Selected Population Characteristics of Immigrants to the United States,"
Demography, Vol. 8,
No. 2. (May, 1971), pp. 157-169--available at CSUS
Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. ¥
David M. Reimers, "Post-World War II Immigration to the
United States: America's Latest Newcomers," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 454, America as a Multicultural Society. (Mar., 1981), pp. 1-12--available
at CSUS Library database (JSTOR): http://db.lib.csus.edu/databases/. |
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Week
8 |
Changing ÒRaceÓ Concepts and Contemporary Race Relations ¥
ÒDoes Race Exist?Ó (A PBS debate): http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/first/race.html ¥
Dr. Spencer Wells, "Mapping the Human
Races' Journey" (NPR, 13 April 2005). http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4597357 ¥
Ramon G. McLeod, "`Minority Majority'
Well on Way in State: Striking changes in new census data," SF
Chronicle, September 4, 1998-- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/09/04/MN32368.DTL&type=special ¥
Edward W. Lempinen,
"Connerly Calls For Review Of UC Ethnic
Studies," SF Chronicle, June 17, 1998-- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/06/17/MN54948.DTL&type=special. ¥
"On Race Relations: An American
family," Editorial, SF Chronicle, May 12, 2002-- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2002/05/12/ED241354.DTL&hw=race+dna+genetics&sn=094&sc=167 |
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Race & Ethnicity in a Global Economy ¥
Charles Petit, "No Biological Basis For
Race, Scientists Say Distinctions prove to be skin deep," SF Chronicle,
Monday, February 23, 1998-- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1998/02/23/MN94378.DTL&type=special ¥
James P. Pinkerton, New York Times,
"The Human Clone -- Never Say Die," SF Chronicle, Monday,
February 12, 2001- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2001/02/12/ED47535.DTL&hw=race+dna+genetics&sn=107&sc=150 ¥
David Lazarus, "SPECIAL REPORT: Looking
Offshore Outsourced UCSF notes highlight privacy risk, '' SF Chronicle, March
28, 2004-- http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/03/28/MNGFS3080R264.DTL&hw=outsourcing&sn=009&sc=502 |
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LONG PAPER ("term paper"): 2,000 words min.
– 2,300 max., 100 points ¥
TOPIC: Creating/Interpreting Arguments
(Premises & Conclusions) ¥
Papers will be graded with no comments. ¥
Due: Last Day of Class = FINAL PAPER DUE (13
December 2012) |
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CLASS ENDS: 13 December 2012 |