Institute Courses
The Institute for Common Power strives to facilitate the creation of a just and inclusive democracy while working to eliminate racial inequity. Education can and must lead to action. To this end, the Institute offers a series of courses taught by award-winning scholars who are widely recognized experts in their fields of study. The courses provide clear, comprehensive examinations of multiple topics related to race, culture, and politics in America.
Each course has been designed to be as interactive as a participant wishes. You can participate by asking and answering questions during live sessions, or simply watch the recording of the sessions at their convenience. Each course will last three to four weeks, and class will meet once during each of those weeks. Once registered, each participant will receive a course syllabus that includes suggestions for continued learning.
If you register and are unable to attend, a video recording will be made available for you for two weeks following the end of the course.
Teachers: You could be able to get continuing education credit for these courses. Please contact Dr. Terry Anne Scott, Director of the Institute for Common Power, with any questions (terry@commonpower.org).
Registrants who complete five courses will be awarded a certificate of excellence.
CALENDAR OF COURSES.
CALENDAR OF COURSES.
February 2025
Dr. Terry Anne Scott
Slavery in America: Inconceivable Struggle and Profound Resistance among African Americans
In this foundational course, Dr. Terry Anne Scott will survey the struggles and accomplishments of people of African descent in the United States during the institution of slavery. While some attention will be paid to African origins, the three sessions in this series will analyze the historical path from importation through the Civil War and the process of freedom. Through a largely, but not exclusively, chronological approach, Dr. Scott will emphasize how African Americans have worked to determine the trajectory of their own lives and worked to resist and perservere. Areas of exploration will include, but are not limited to, the following: the construction of racial identity and alterity, the slave family and community, the domestic slave trade, resistance and the process of freedom.
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