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HIS 257 - African-American History Credits: 3 Lecture Hours: 3 Lab Hours: 0 Practicum Hours: 0 Work Experience: 0 Course Type: Core A survey of the history of the African-American community with emphasis on the role of individuals, institutions and ideas in the development of the community from its origins in West Africa to the present. Competencies
- Evaluate the timeframe, culture, and impact of the African kingdoms
- Explain the impact of Ancient Egypt on other African cultures
- Describe religious, political, and intellectual elements of the Ghana, Mali, and Songhay empires on West African tribes from Senegal to Angola
- Examine the predominantly agricultural and artisan economy of West Africa
- Summarize the causes, operation, and effects of the Transatlantic Slave Trade
- Explain the relationship between the closure of the European trade with the Middle East and the Far East and the development of European navigation, including the discovery of the Americas
- Evaluate the participation of African coastal tribes in the Transatlantic Slave Trade
- Describe the African resistance to the trade
- Analyze the change of indentured to enslaved African labor in the British colonies
- Characterize the legal status of the first twenty Africans brought to Jamestown, VA
- Compare the rise of discriminatory treatment of African servants 1619-1661
- Chronicle the establishment of Slave Codes for Africans in all thirteen of the British colonies
- Assess the role of free and enslaved African Americans in the American Revolution and the issue of slavery
- Discuss the significance of historical figures such as Crispus Attucks
- Evaluate Washington’s order excluding African Americans from the Continental Army and Lord Dunmore’s Proclamation
- Interpret Washington’s inclusion of African Americans in 1777 and the beginning of abolition in northern states
- Evaluate the development of the Free Antebellum Community 1780-1860
- Appraise the political status of free African Americans
- Assess the social structure of the free black community including the significance of church (A.M.E.) and fraternal orders (Masons, Odd Fellows)
- Discuss international support for free societies and abolitionists
- Synthesize the geography, politics, economics, sociology, religion, and art of Antebellum slavery
- Explain the relationship between the development of the United States, the spread of slavery, and the internal slave trade
- Discuss the centrality of the slavery issue in national politics from the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 to the Compromises of 1820 and 1850
- Formulate the impact of African Americans’ interpretation of Christianity in terms of deliverance on American Protestantism
- Describe the public and private architecture, interior decoration and craft-work (pottery, basketry, weaving, and quilting) of enslaved blacks
- Analyze the movement to abolish slavery
- Identify the colonial era/enlightenment era ideas antithetical to enslavement (i.e., unalienable rights to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness), and the Revolutionary era abolition from Massachusetts to Pennsylvania
- Break down the significance of the successful slave revolt in Haiti (1793-1805) led by Toussaint and Dessalines
- Illustrate the role of “black” and “white” abolitionists such as David Walker, William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, John Brown, and Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Evaluate the role of African Americans and the issue of slavery in the victory of the United States over the Confederate States in the Civil War 1861-65
- Compare the initial rejection of African American volunteers by the U.S. Army and the eventual admission of them in July 1862
- Discuss the participation of about 200,000 African Americans in the Union victory
- Interpret the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation on the flight of some 500,000 enslaved persons, and the effects on the economy and society of the Confederacy
- Show Europeans’ views of each side of the conflict and role of European “neutrality”
- Analyze the issues of the Reconstruction era
- Distinguish between Presidential and Congressional Reconstruction
- Identify the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments
- Compare “Radical” Republicans, “Black” Republicans, “Scalawags,” and “Carpetbaggers.”
- Interpret the issues affecting African Americans during the Segregation era
- Enumerate the negative ramifications of Jim Crow on African Americans
- Outline the various types of segregation laws
- Illustrate the various responses by African Americans to segregation including protest, legal suit, migration, and accommodation
- Characterize the response of Booker T. Washington to segregation
- Interpret the response of Dr. W.E.B. DuBois to segregation
- Chart the organized response to segregation, disfranchisement, and lynching by the professional organizations and associations
- Review the effectiveness of “The Great Migration” to segregation
- Evaluate “the New Negro”
- Generalize the role of the Gilded Age in shaping conditions leading to the rise of “the New Negro”
- Correlate the relationship between the First World War and “the New Negro”
- Assess the significance of Marcus Garvey to the New Negro Movement
- Relate the significance of the Harlem Renaissance to the New Negro Movement
- Identify the key figures of the Harlem Renaissance
- Analyze issues that impacted the African American community during the Great Depression and New Deal
- Differentiate the causes for the change in political allegiance by African Americans from the Republican party to the Democratic party
- Classify the significance of the Scottsboro case
- Show the significance of Jesse Owens’ four gold medal victories in the Berlin Olympic Games
- Report the significance of Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt’s support for the N.A.A.C.P.
- Critique the chronology, issues, and results of World War II
- Discuss the “Double V” Campaign of the African American press
- Describe the March on Washington, D.C., Movement of A. Philip Randolph and Executive Order 8802
- Chronicle the breakdown of discrimination against African Americans in the armed forces during WW II.
- Assess the impact of the Second Great Migration during WW II
- Examine the major events, organizations, and leaders of the Civil Rights
- Define the groundwork of the Civil Rights Movement conducted by the N.A.A.C.P. and especially the Brown v. State Board of Education, Topeka decision
- Identify the role of the Cold War, television and religion in the Civil Rights Movement
- Reinforce the significance of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the Civil Rights Movement
- State the actions of S.N.C.C. and C.O.R.E. in the Civil Rights Movement
- Describe the effectiveness of the Civil rights Acts of 1957, 1964, 1965, and 1968 in eliminating segregation, disfranchisement, and racist violence against African Americans
- Categorize the “militant’ idea and actions of ‘Black Power,” the Black Panthers, the Black Manifesto, and others
- Evaluate the recent struggle for equality
- Judge the political success of Jesse Jackson in the 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns, and the unofficial campaign of Colin Powell for 1996
- Critique the impact of the presidency of Barack Obama
- Appraise recent political, religious, and sociological issues impacting the African American community
- Demonstrate effective communication and critical thinking skills through writing
- Define and interpret primary sources
- Create a formal research paper with a coherent argument
Competencies Revised Date: 2020
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