AMST 201(F,S) Introduction to American Studies
To be an "American" means something more than U.S. citizenship. In this course, we focus on the problems and possibilities of American identity. Access to Americanness is shaped
by factors such as class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, religion, and region-categories
which themselves change in meaning over time. Given the geographical, racial, and cultural
diversity of the United States, the ways in which Americans imagine nation inevitably vary
over time, according to place, and among different individuals and groups. Rather than a
survey of any one aspect or period of American history, literature, or popular culture, this
course is an introduction to the interdisciplinary field of American Studies, a field defined
both by the range of texts we read (essays, novels, autobiographies, photographs, films, music, architecture, historical documents, legal texts), and by the questions we ask of them:
How have different Americans imagined what it means to be an American? What ideas
about national history, patriotism, and moral character shape their visions of Americanness?
How do the educational system, mass media, government policies regarding citizenship and
immigration shape American identities? How are boundaries of inclusion and exclusion in
the nation drawn? What uses have been made of the claim to an American identity, and
what is at stake in that claim? How have Americans imagined a national landscape, a national culture, and to what ends?
Format: discussion. Evaluation will be based on a series of short critical essays and a group
project.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 25 per section (expected: 25 per section). Preference
given to sophomores and first-year students with AP 5 in U.S. History. One section in the
fall; one section in the spring.
Hour: First Semester: WANG
Second Semester: RÚA, AUBERT