Africana Studies (BA)

Faculty

Tatiana Cruz, Associate Professor and Chair of the Race, Gender, and Sexuality Department, and Interdisciplinary Program Director of Africana Studies and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Dawna M. Thomas, Professor of Sociology and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (on leave 2025 Fall)

Affiliated Faculty

Abel Amado, Associate Professor of Politics and Policy
Daren Graves, Professor, School of Social Work
Patrick Sylvain, Assistant Professor of Literature and Writing
Becky Thompson, Professor and Undergraduate Program Director of Sociology
Lena Zuckerwise, Associate Professor and Chair of the Politics and Policy Department

Program Overview

The Africana Studies program offers opportunities to critically examine the historical, political, social, economic, and cultural processes and institutions of people across the African diaspora, including the experiences of Black people in the United States and across the globe. The program has a long history at Simmons University. The program was established as Black Studies in 1972 in response to Black student activism on campus.

The Africana Studies program offers both a major and a minor. It is an interdisciplinary and transnational program situated primarily in the humanities and social sciences that provides opportunities for the intersectional study of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality. It provides a solid foundation in critical thinking, research, writing, and technology, equipping students with marketable, transferable skills that translate into living and working in a diverse world as well as demonstrate cultural competency to future employers in fields such as education, social work and nonprofit sectors, medicine, law, and business. Students with degrees in Africana Studies develop the tools to become global citizens and participate effectively to shape a more inclusive, equitable, socially just world.

The Africana Studies major and minor both pair well with any fields of study across the university. With a wide array of electives across many different departments, students have the freedom to choose a course of study that reflects their interests. Students interested in dual degree programs or self-designed majors should consult with program faculty to design an individualized program that best suits their interests. The program also offers internships and opportunities for advanced study in independent studies or a senior thesis for interested students as well as supports study abroad.

Program Learning Outcomes

I. Content: Analyze major historical, political, social, economic, and cultural developments and institutions of people of African descent, including diverse communities of Black people in the United States and abroad.

II. Knowledge of the Field: Demonstrate a broad understanding of the field, its intellectual and institutional history, its multidisciplinary / interdisciplinary nature, its core
concepts and theoretical frameworks, as well as its body of literature and key historiographical debates.

III. Analytical Framework: Identify the foundations and workings of racism, colonialism, classism, heteropatriarchy, and other systems of oppression, as well as the ability to effectively employ the theoretical concept of intersectionality.

IV. Skills & Methods: Demonstrate critical thinking and analysis, research, and writing skills, as well as evaluate and employ the field’s major methodological approaches and schools of thought.

V. Relevance & Applicability in a Diverse World: Develop cultural competence and debate current sociopolitical issues and initiatives that are relevant to people of African descent.

VI. Global Citizenship & Community Engagement: Apply knowledge to research and develop solutions to challenge systemic oppressions and take action to create social change in local communities and the world at large.

Program Requirements

The Africana Studies major consists of 9 courses (36 semester hours) of coursework. Students in the major are required to complete the following program of study.

Core Requirement: Introductory Courses (8 credits)

Complete the following two required courses.

AST 101Introduction to Africana Studies

4

AST 202 Introduction to Black Popular Culture

4

Africana Studies Courses (8 credits)

Complete two additional courses in the program (with AST course code), selected from following list.

AST 170/LTWR 170Introduction to 21st Century Global Literature

4

AST 176/LTWR 176African American Fiction

4

AST 210/WGSS 210Black Women, Gender, and Feminism(s)

4

AST 232/SOCI 232/WGSS 232Race, Gender & Health

4

AST 234/POLS 234African American Political Thought in Theory, Novels, and Film

4

AST 241/LTWR 241/WGSS 241Contemporary Black Women Writers

4

AST 249/SOCI 249Inequalities

4

AST 275/HIST 275The Black Freedom Movement: From Civil Rights to Black Lives Matter

4

AST 307Black History at the Movies

4

AST 313Hip Hop Pedagogy: Learning, Teaching, and Working through the Histories, Theories, and Practices of Hip Hop

4

AST 344/SOCI 344/WGSS 344Poetry for the People: Black Queer Poets

4

AST 350Independent Study

4

AST 355Senior Thesis

4

AST 365/SOCI 365/WGSS 365Intimate Family Violence: A Multicultural Perspective

4

AST 370Internship

4

AST 375/HIST 354/WGSS 375Behind the Veil: Simmons Black Oral History Project

4

Electives (16 credits)

Select four electives from the following list of approved courses.

  • At least one of the elective courses needs to be at the advanced 300-level.
  • No more than two elective courses can be from the same department and have the same prefix (i.e., HIST, POLS, etc.).
HIST 118Latin American History

4

HIST 210African American Experience

4

HIST 213Race and Ethnicity in U.S. History

4

HIST 214African Diaspora

4

HIST 217Caribbean History

4

HIST 240The Atlantic World 1500-1800

4

HIST 354/AST 375/WGSS 375Behind the Veil: Simmons Black Oral History Project

4

LTWR 170/AST 170Introduction to 21st Century Global Literature

4

LTWR 176/AST 176African American Fiction

4

LTWR 230Postcolonial Film

4

LTWR 235Identity and Race in 19th Century American Literature

4

LTWR 327Psychoanalysis, Race and Sexuality

4

POLS 215The Politics of Exclusion

4

POLS 226State and Local Politics

4

POLS 228The War on Drugs

3

POLS 234/AST 234African American Political Thought in Theory, Novels, and Film

4

POLS 242Colonial & Postcolonial Politics of Africa

4

POLS 386 Prisons in Political Thought

4

RGS 101/WGSS 101Identity and Power

4

RGS 102Introduction to Migration Studies

4

RGS 355Race, Gender and Sexuality Studies Capstone Project

SOCI 232/AST 232/WGSS 232Race, Gender & Health

4

SOCI 249/AST 249Inequalities

4

SOCI 344/AST 344/WGSS 344Poetry for the People: Black Queer Poets

4

SOCI 347Antiracism and Social Justice

4

SOCI 365/AST 365/WGSS 365Intimate Family Violence: A Multicultural Perspective

4

WGSS 210/AST 210Black Women, Gender, and Feminism(s)

4

Core Requirement: Capstone (4 credits)

Students will complete their major with a capstone, chosen from one of the following options.

AST 350Independent Study

4

AST 355Senior Thesis

4

AST 365/SOCI 365/WGSS 365Intimate Family Violence: A Multicultural Perspective

4

AST 370Internship

4

AST 375/HIST 354/WGSS 375Behind the Veil: Simmons Black Oral History Project

4