Courses

Kamari Clarke has taught both undergraduate and graduate courses at the University of Pennsylvania, Yale University and Yale Law School, Carleton University, UCLA and the University of Toronto

  • Undergraduate Courses
  • Graduate Courses

The contemporary moment could not be more controversial in black social movements. From responses to the enduring effects of transatlantic and plantation slavery, to the historic lynching of black bodies, to histories of rape and contemporary police violence and mass incarceration, the issues are significant and have fueled histories of protest. These protests have taken a range of different forms and demand that we consider both the complex and multivariant ways that people engage in the development of a more livable world. In an attempt to make sense of new models of humanity and new methods of knowing, this course will ask what tools we need to understand demands for a radical imagination through which to pose questions about histories and contemporary realities of black social protest.

Through the interrogation of the symbols and meanings of black life, we will examine the ongoing theories and tools through which various forms of protest and social life circulate. From imagery related to black nationalist and black power fist pumps, to black queer imagery, to monument removal movements to Caribbean dance hall, the course will focus on black symbols of engagement and their socio-political, historical and affective contexts and will end with new gendered and sexual imaginaries that connect the black body to various forms of unapologetic sexual imaginaries. We will end the course by asking who gets to determine which symbols should occupy various private and public spaces and, in doing so, we will interrogate the means and considerations through which such practices happen.

This course explores notions of justice as they are being invoked and mobilized in transnational spaces – from social mobilization movements, to refugee claims, to international courts and to various domestic spaces, the course explores the meanings of justice, its principles and core tenets as well as the institutions and politics that make its claims viable. With a focus on popular conceptions, legal principles and political and democratic assumptions, the course explores the spheres of engagement, contestations, forms of instrumentalism as well as the forms of affective expressions that are part of it. The goal is to offer students an opportunity to learn about and critically reflect on the processes and purposes through which transnational justice is being made, structured, contested and remade in the contemporary period.

The objective of this course is to provide an introduction to ethnographic field methods in cultural anthropology.  The focus is on using and analyzing qualitative research methods in order to develop the skills to conduct and pursue socio-cultural exploration and analysis.  We will examine a wide array of fieldwork approaches (referred to as techniques) ranging from data collection procedures such as participant observation, structured and semi-structured interview techniques, event analysis, and survey development.   Data analysis will involve making sense of ethnographic data collection techniques, text coding and survey coding.  The course is divided into twelve weeks and organized into three main sections: (1) Anthropology and the Making and Unmaking of a Science, (2) Ethnographic Field Research: Techniques and Methods, and (3) Reflections on “the state” of the Ethnography.  Students should expect to spend a considerable amount of time with their own project development, data collection, and analysis, as well with offering feedback to others.   The readings and discussions will be combined with actual fieldwork-based projects by which students will collect data and analyze findings.  Much of the emphasis will be on learning fieldwork techniques and putting them into practice—that is, the hands-on implementation of ethnographic techniques in highly controlled contexts.

As scholars of social change grapple with the changing scope and scale of global human interaction and the speed and sites of interconnection, amongst the most challenging developments have been how to make sense of global interconnections. This course examines the intersection of globalization processes with social and cultural diversity explored through the use of ethnography. The goal is to understand the cultural dimensions of social change with the added goal of grounding students in theories of social change and various forms of circulation as well as to ponder the limits of theorizing globalization as a unique form of social change. We will cover scholarship that explores issues related to modernity, transnational formations, growing economic equality, bio-genetics, changing forms of corporality, diasporic formations, shifting identities and the processes of subject formation within specific historical and contemporary contexts.

This is an introductory course in international law and politics and explores legal and political approaches to the study of states, their actors, the afterlife of their decisions, and the political challenges of co-operation and enforcement. Taking international law to be law that deals with the relationships between states, or between persons or entities in different states and international politics to be how states and non-state actors cooperate and compete on political issues, we will begin by examining theories, histories and philosophical foundations concerning the emergence and rise of modern state sovereignty, notions of citizenship and the rise of the individual. We will then examine the role of international law in addressing issues relating to economic investment, human rights, the rule of law, international criminal law, and the management of international trade and laws of war. The goal is to acquaint students with concepts and ideas for understanding the contemporary statecraft. This ranges from relationships among a range of actors in international and new regional domains (from states to activists and transnational NGO mobilizers, to the media, the UN and other inter-governmental organizations and victims), to the analytic tools for exploring the actors and institutions that characterize world politics.

The late twentieth century resurgence of religion in world affairs has been among the most politically charged phenomenon of our time.  From the rise of transnational religious networks, to controversial legal challenges to religious rights, to state-sponsored trials for religious minorities, the issues remain critical and volatile.  In this light, this course explores contemporary issues dealing with the dueling principles of religious freedom set alongside cultural practices and the role of the nation-state in managing, accommodating and disengaging with protections based on religious difference and legal questions. By examining recent and emerging scholarship on religious practices embedded in legal/political/moral controversies, the central goal is to explore the ways that new uses of religion and the law are changing the ways that scholars are engaging these topics.

The course will be taught in seminar format and students will engage with the historical, theoretical and ethnographic literature on this topic. Themes will range from formations of secularism and genealogies of religion, debates over freedom and its fictions, and the social construction of law as it relates to dilemmas over pluralism, evidentiary questions and anthropological interrogations of the role of trials.

As anthropologists continue to grapple with changing notions of “the field” from local to global, this course covers ground breaking, recent and emerging scholarship.  The goal is to explore both pragmatic and theoretical problems of modernity, transnationalism, and diasporas in specific historical and ethnographic contexts.  Drawing on a range of analytic tools about how we might understand the dynamics of transnational formations-- from theories of connections, to scapes to vernacularization, to mappings, to friction--the course will emphasize the interrelations between international and transnational cultural processes and more circumscribed forms of practices.

This course will examine scholarship related to the development of the anthropology of Africa with a focus on Sub-Saharan Africa. The goal of the course is to explore the founding tenets of anthropological inquiry and methods and to ponder how those developments contributed to anthropological understandings of Africa in the scholarly imagination and its relationship to other ways of knowing. By asking why particular questions emerged and how those inquiries were presented, we will explore the social and political contexts in which particular studies emerged and assess the coherence and value of those analyses.  A central goal will be the evaluation of sources and methods of constructing arguments through which students will be encouraged to assess different ideological and/or theoretical approaches used in scholarly writing on Africa.

This course is centered on the work of a few key theorists around which we will explore the relationship between culture and power, freedom, agency and social reproduction.  We will assess the relationships between the individual, society, the state and its fictions, as well as questions having to do with how to understand and theorize social change.  We will begin by exploring the foundations of contemporary anthropology and its relationship to coloniality and postcoloniality and then move to explore the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School as an intervention into Marxist theorizing.  This will be followed by a focus on three of the most influential social theorists of the mid to late 20th century: Antonio Gramsci, Pierre Bourdieu, Michel Foucault, Agamben, and supplemented with the work of thinkers such as Achille Mbembe, Jean and John Comaroff, Judith Butler, and Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari.  Class discussions will emphasize contemporary debates concerning the relationship between power, cultural politics and processes of naturalization.

Since the beginning of the shaping of anthropology as a discipline, anthropologists have been concerned with questions about the maintenance of order, particularly in stateless societies.  Early anthropologists found that the study of law provided insights into these and larger questions about societal norms and culturally shaped attitudes.  Gradually the sub-field of legal anthropology took shape with these concerns in mind. Today, some have argued that we are living in an age in which the political is increasingly being displaced into the realm of the legal yet ethnographic fieldwork has shown that we have entered a period in which people are increasingly using political strategies to make legal claims. Scholarship on new social formations such as human rights movements, the invention of a notion of civil society, the growth of non-governmental organizations, and the “rule of law” has become all the more important.

New forms of legal language are becoming key resources in daily life; thus understanding the relationships between law and culture as well as law and politics is becoming all the more critical in the contemporary period.  By asking how relationships between legal, cultural and political realms are structured, we will study changing approaches to law in anthropological work.  The course will examine how law provides tools for both social struggle and social control and will explore classical and contemporary texts in legal and political anthropology in order to detail the cultural dimensions of law and law’s changing relationship to discipline.

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