A critical introduction to archives in Latin America. More than the raw materials of history, archives are sites for imagining the past, present, and future — but also sites of inequality that shape whose stories are told and whose silenced. Through readings, discussions, guest lectures, and field trips, students engage with different kinds of archives — from traditional collections of papers to non-traditional living and digital archives — to think about what archives are and can be, how different communities use them here and in Latin America, and how we can work towards a more egalitarian engagement with them.
2
UnitsLetter
Grading1, 2, 3
PasstimeNone
Level LimitLetters and science
CollegeHe was a good professor and this class is fascinating. However, it is hard. Like there is a tonnnn of content and lots of papers and writing.
He was a very nice and understanding professor. He would speak quickly in lectures but he always made an attempt to slow down when asked. The content was manageable and was broken down easily.
A lot of reading and lectures move quickly. It can be hard to grasp everything shared in lecture bc a lot is covered in the class. only 2 papers, midterm and final. Theres 1 quiz and 1 discussion every week but those are pretty simple. theres multiple attempts on quizzes. He is really nice and willing to help. very passionate about his work
You have to write 3 essays that were kinda easy. Lots of reading but I didn't read almost anything and I think I'll get an A. I guess its good for a gen ed but it was so painfully boring, each lecture all I did was play wordle. Cobo was cool but his accent was hard to understand (british). If you like history you'll probably like this class.
The grade is mainly based on weekly quizzes you can retake and 3 essays; one of them being the final exam essay and two of them being collaborative essays. He's very passionate and always willing to help.
A lot of reading and work but he's a really nice professor!! Very good at teaching.