
Minor information
You'll study the experiences of Africans and peoples of African descent as well as the role and contributions of Africans and their descendants around the world. You'll take courses like “History of the Black Athlete in America” and "Politics of Developing Nations.” And you’ll have opportunities to study in African countries.
Minor credits: 20
What can I do with a degree in African Studies?
What can I do with a degree in African Studies?
The African Studies minor is adaptable - and valuable - leading to many different fields and fulfilling careers. Here are a few popular paths, but a 鶹Ƶ degree can take you anywhere.
- Government
- International Development Agencies
- Counseling
- The Foreign Service
- Peace Corps
$56,752 Average salary 5 years post graduation
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After 鶹Ƶ
After 鶹Ƶ
Gusties who minor in African Studies are prepared for a variety of jobs and graduate programs at other top-tier organizations. Here's where some recent grads have landed and what they're doing:
- Advocates for Human Rights
- Lutheran Social Service
- Epic Systems
- Teacher
- Therapist
- Outreach Worker

Course Examples
Interested in pursuing an African Studies Minor? Here are some of the key courses offered within these programs.
AFS 190 - Introduction to Africa
-The course introduces students to the African continent and its peoples from an interdisciplinary perspective. Among other things, it focuses on pre-colonial and colonial history, modern African states, traditional cultural forms such as kinship, oral and written literatures, human geography, and Africa's role in contemporary world affairs. Students discuss, do presentations, write research papers, and take exams.
AFS 274 - African Digital Literatures
This course surveys the quickly growing field of African digital literatures. Social media and online platforms have allowed for the emergence of new, creative ways of producing literature that have shaped how the contemporary field of African literature is developing. We will read online literary magazines like Kwani and Brittle Paper, platforms like Comic Republic, and social media literatures like Facebook and blog serial fiction, twitterature, and Instagram Stories by and about Africans.
POL 250 - Politics of Developing Nations
This course is concerned with the poor nations of the world and the institutions that govern them. What role does the government play in the quality of life of the people of developing nations in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East? What factors inhibit and foster political order, freedom, and human dignity? We will examine the net worked causes of human suffering in developing nations: colonial legacies, poverty, violent conflict, culture, and political and economic instability.
HIS 202 - Atlantic Slavery/Freedom
Slavery and sugar: One brutal, the other (literally) sweet, together they transformed the Atlantic world-Europe, Africa, the Americas (including the eventual United States)-creating simultaneously unimaginable misery for enslaved people and unimaginable wealth for the planters and merchants who profited from their labor. This course explores the emergence, operation, and ultimate demise of the world-altering trans-Atlantic slave system.

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