PHIL2025

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PHIL 2025 - The Aesthetics, Ethics, and Politics of Black Horror (3 Cr.) Race, Power and Justice

D Philosophy (10402) DCLA - College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences

Course description

This course will explore Blackness, Whiteness, racism, racial trauma, racial healing and racial reconciliation through the lens of horror film including and centering the Black experience. By analyzing horror as a genre and an art form - making a claim on what counts as art, defining what art can do, and shaping ethics, politics, and ideology - and examining the complex conceptions of race and racism that are reflected in changing engagement with them presented in Black horror we will come to have a clearer understanding of horror, art, and racism. We will also better be able to see the role that horror, film, and art in general play in shaping our discourse on and understanding of race and racism.

Minimum credits

3

Maximum credits

3

Is this course repeatable?

No

Grading basis

OPT - Student Option

Discussion

This course fulfills the following Liberal Education requirement(s)

Theorizing Race, Power, and Justice

Typically offered term(s)

Periodic Fall & Spring