Skip to main content
Princeton Mobile homeCourses home
Detail

Contemporary African Politics and Society: Ethnographic Reading, Thinking and Writing

AFS 322/POL 463/ANT 222

1252
Info tab content
How can we read, write, and critically think (imagine) about African politics and society? The course presents contemporary ethnography on African politics and society during the postcolonial era, emphasizing the multiplicity, complexities, and diversity of African ideas, imaginations, practices, and experiences, in along with the variety of national and international factors that either influence or are impacted by them. Upon completing the course, students will have the essential critical thinking abilities and analytical tools required to recognize and challenge reductionist and biased narratives concerning Africa.
Instructors tab content
Sections tab content

Section S01

  • Type: Seminar
  • Section: S01
  • Status: O
  • Enrollment: 6
  • Capacity: 15
  • Class Number: 21820
  • Schedule: W 01:30 PM-04:20 PM