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May 09, 2025
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2021-2022 Academic Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOGUE]
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ENG 111 - Intersectional Feminism (W) (1)Our everyday interactions-the ways we see ourselves and the ways others treat us-are deeply influenced by the interrelationship of gender, sexuality, race, class, and other identity categories. Black and Latina feminists in the 1970s were the first to fully theorize this idea, which we now call “intersectionality.” From Black Power to Black Lives Matter, from the Combahee River Collective to the Crunk Feminist Collective, this course spans fifty years of intersectional thought. We will use intersectionality as a lens through which to analyze identity and power in poetry, film, video, nonfiction writing, contemporary social movements, social media culture, and more. By the end of the block, you will read more actively, ask better questions, add nuance to your critical thinking, hold better conversations, make strong claims supported by evidence, give useful feedback on the writing of others, incorporate feedback into successful revisions, and produce new media writing. Not open to students who have previously completed a First-Year Writing Course. (First Year Writing Seminar (FYW)) (Humanities)
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