ETHSM-2000-8: Globalization and Hip-Hop
Fall 2025
- Subject: Critical Ethnic Studies - Seminar
- Type: Seminar
- Delivery Mode: In-Person
- Level: Undergraduate
- Course Dates: September 02, 2025 — December 15, 2025
- Meetings: Mon 9:00-11:30AM, Main Bldg - E4
- Instructor: TBD
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 18/18 Closed
Description:
This course will explore the impact of Globalization on members of youth communities in the United States and around the world through the use of Hip Hop practices and methods of expression in response to specific economic and cultural forces brought about by global economic capitalism. Included are the roots of Hip Hop in the communities of color in New York in the 1970s, centered around the idea that Hip Hop is connected to traditional West African music making practices. We will explore the multi-cultural aspects of the Hip Hop music and culture, and frame the influence of Hip Hop as a resistance culture in locations around the world, examining sites of cultural expression, identity formation, and social movement activity in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, Asia, and the United States. The role of Hip Hop in the process of youth of identity formation will be explored as it relates to youth in various regions, specifically, transnational and migratory youth communities. Critical Ethnic Studies 2000-level seminars introduce students to the complexities and nuances of intersectionality, gender, disability, decolonial theory & philosophy, in imperialist and non-imperialist societies. 2000-level seminars may incorporate one or more of the following interdisciplinary fields of critical ethnic studies: Africana studies, African-American Studies, Asian American studies, Indigenous studies, Chicano/a /x, and Latino /a/x studies, border studies, cultural studies, critical disability studies, critical gender studies, and global racialized and global silenced communities.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
Visit Workday to view this information.