DRAFT: July 22, 2005
Thinking Globally: Individual, Authority,
and Nature in World Contexts
Course Goals and Description
�Who are you and what in the world are you doing?�� This learning community will study global dynamics by exploring the changing definitions and interconnections of the individual person, authority, and nature.� It compares historic civilizations and the emergence of global dynamics through markets, the system of nation-states, colonialism, urbanization, communication technologies, and sources of knowledge and authority (science, civilization, religion).� Students will develop an empirical and theoretical foundation in global patterns of interconnectedness and change and in the conflicts driving global policy debates.�
Thinking Globally is a
� acquire systematic knowledge of historical and contemporary patterns:
� historical, civilizational change and resistance
� global patterns of interconnectedness and change: markets, the system of nation-states, colonialism, urbanization, communication technologies, and sources of knowledge and authority (science, civilization, religion)
� global issues, debates, and conflicts among states, firms, groups, and individuals over policies, practices, and outcomes
� theoretical approaches, concepts, and debates
� develop an awareness of interconnectedness
� changing definitions and interconnections of the individual person, authority, and nature
� interrelations of individualism, interstate system, capitalism, and civilizations/cultures
� global, national, and local institutions
� develop skills for thinking critically about institutions, policies, practices, and outcomes
� criteria to evaluate available sources
� gather and organize information
� develop and write a coherent analytical argument
� interpret evidence and assess theories and arguments in light of evidence
� information literacy
� oral communication
� develop one�s personal reflections and commitments on theoretical and practice issues
����������� The Learning Community will meet in different formats and contexts.� On Mondays (12:40 � 3:30), the faculty will present materials through lectures, discussions, and in-class exercises.� In Tuesday and Wednesday noon sessions (11:40 � 1:30), there will be a film series, guest speakers, library projects, and discussion groups.� On Wednesday immediately following (1:40 � 3:30), there will be breakout sessions in which the Learning Community is divided into three groups, and each group will meet with one of the three SGS faculty.� The freshman English course is integrated into the community with sessions on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.� The themes and skills for critical thinking cut across the Learning Community.� Substantive arguments and information will be topics of writing and discussion in the English section; the writing and critical thinking skills developed in the English section will be used and evaluated throughout the Learning Community.
����������� Each faculty, graduate student, and peer mentor brings different training and expertise to the Learning Community.� We will be learning from each other as we attempt to transcend the established scholarly disciplines of humanities and social sciences.� We will bring together different approaches to build a better understanding of global processes.� In the Learning Community we will use abstract concepts even as we grapple with detailed historical patterns and different cultural contexts.� In addition to the big themes of the individual person, authority, and nature, we will use concrete themes to illustrate interconnectedness.� We, for example, will develop a concept of space: landscapes, gardens, wilderness, urban space, parks, and personal space.� Many empirical patterns and lines of argument will seem counter-intuitive; for example, that individualism emerged and grew with the expansion of strong centralized states and national societies; or, that a romantic emphasis on individual emotional expressiveness has grown with an increase in practical rationality; or, that governments of even the most developed countries are plagued by corruption.�
����������� The student will be challenged to engage the different teaching styles and claims of expertise from the different faculty, to integrate abstract argumentation with empirical comparative-historical evidence, and to have a high tolerance for new and counter-intuitive approaches.� The immediate payoff is a lot of General Studies credits.� The longer term payoff, we are confident, will involve substantive knowledge, critical thinking, and a proactive stance toward the world.
Because the School of Global Studies (SGS) was only recently established, during its first semester Thinking Globally has the following course numbers:� FLA 194, POS 194, SOC 194, and ENG 101/105.� It carries the following General Studies Designations:�
SBS:� � Social and Behavioral Sciences
HU: ���� Humanities (by petition)
G:�������� Global Awareness
H:�������� Historical Awareness (by petition)
Faculty and Staff
Faculty
Sarah Fedirka, Instructor of English
George M. Thomas, Professor of Global Studies
Carolyn Warner, Professor of Global Studies
Stephen H. West, Foundation Professor of Chinese and Global Studies
Librarian
Deborah Abston
Graduate Assistants
Kyla Mocharnuk, Political Science
Bill Wolfgram, Political Science
To Be Announced, English
Peer Mentors
Cara Adelmann ����������
Jessica Kokal
Robert LeBarge
Books
Required
Cao Xueqin.� The Story of the
Stone.� Penguin Classics.
Victor Mair, et al.
Aldous Huxley.�� Brave New World
and Brave New World Revisited (Perennial Classics)
Romeo and Juliet, any good edition.
Lee Cuba.�
A Short Guide
Jacqueline Joyce Royster, ed. Critical Inquiries:
Laura Tohe.� No
Parole Today.� NY:
Optional/recommended
Marshall G.S. Hodgson, The Venture of Islam: The Gunpower Empires and Modern Times (Vol.
3,
Diego Gambetta, The Sicilian Mafia, Harvard Univ Press 1993.
Packet of other readings
A packet of the other readings will be available at a local copy shop.
Course Work and Evaluations:�
Grades
Grade/Assignment
Breakdown
This does NOT include English.� See detailed English syllabus that follows.
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Assignment |
Points |
Due Date |
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3 Exams |
(3 @ 100 pts) 300 |
Sept 28, Nov 2, Dec 7 (?) |
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Reaction Narrative |
25 |
Sept 7 |
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Revised Reaction Narrative |
25 |
Sept 19 |
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Annotated Bibliography |
25 |
Oct 3 |
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Book Review |
25 |
Oct 17 |
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Topic Proposal |
25 |
Oct 24 |
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8-10 page Analytic Paper |
125 |
Dec 12 |
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Film Logs |
(10 @10 pts) 100 |
Weekly |
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Participation, In-Class Work, Homework |
(30 @ 5pts) 150 |
Weekly |
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Total Points |
800 |
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Grades
Letter grades will be assigned:� A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, D, E.
Blackboard: Online access to grades, materials and announcements
This is not an
online course, but there is a myASU website that contains the syllabus.� We will post on the website grades, announcements,
and handouts.� You should view the
website only as a supplemental aid and not as a replacement for attending
class.�
Note
1.�
There is no extra credit work.
2.� There will be no recording of the
lectures/discussions unless special permission is given for unique
circumstances.� Please contact us early
if you need any other services.
3.� Plagiarism is not tolerated.� We follow university policy found in the
Student Code of Conduct and Student Disciplinary Procedures (http://www.asu.edu/aad/manuals/sta/sta104-01.html).�
4.� Announcements and instructions throughout the
course will amplify, supplement, and possibly change the syllabus. The student
is responsible for keeping up-to-date on these announcements.
Outline and Schedule
I.� What is a Person?
Week 1 Aug 22:� Introduction and Overview:� What is a Person?
�Introduction,� in
�Shang Dynasty
Oracle Bone Inscriptions,� in
�Shang and Zhou
Ritual Bronze Inscriptions,� in
�The Tradition of the Daode jing,� and �Zhuangzi,� in Hawai�i Reader in Traditional Chinese, pp. 78�95.
Eviatar Zerubavel, Social Mindscapes, ch. 1 (22 pp.)
Alan Fiske, �The Four Elementary Forms of Sociality� Psychological Review. Vol. 99 (Oct. 1992), pp.� 689-723,� available via ASU e-journals� Read 689-710
Week 2 Aug 29:� What is a person?� Individual I:�
Moral identity and embeddedness
�Confucius and the Birth of Chinese Philosophy,�
in
�Filial
Piety,� in
�Xunzi
and the
�Admonitions for Women,� in
�Biographies of Exemplary Women,� in
�In Praise of
Martyrs: Widow-Suicide in Late Imperial
�The Seven
Worthies of the Bamboo Grove,� in ,� in
Peter Berger, B. Berger, and H. Kellner, The Homeless Mind, (selections.)
Alan Fiske, �The Four Elementary Forms of Sociality�� Psychological Review. Vol. 99 (Oct. 1992), pp.� 689-723,� available via ASU e-journals read 710-717
Film:���� �Eat, Drink, Man, Woman�
Week 3 Sept 5 (Labor Day)
continued discussions of personhood;� library assignment.
Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, chs. 1-8.
Film:���� �Blade Runner�
����������� �
Week 4 Sept 12:� What is a person?� Individual II:� Agency, rationality, and emotionality
Ralph Turner, �Institutions and impulse.�� American Journal of Sociology (selections)
Charles Taylor. Sources of the Self, (selections)
Christian Smith.� Moral, Believing Animals: Human Personhood and Culture.� 2003.� Pp. 7-33 (33-43 recommended).
Aldous Huxley, Brave New World, finish.
David D. Laitin, Hegemony
and Culture,
Film:� �Bend it Like Beckham�
Week 5 Sept 19:� What is a person?� Individual III:� Global individualisms
�Accounts of
Bengal in Extensive Records on Four
Foreign Lands,�
�
�The Qianlong Emperor�s letter to King George (1793) ,� see http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/core9/phalsall/texts/qianlong.html
�The Hai-lu,� see http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/core9/phalsall/texts/hai-lu.html
Roland Robertson, 1992.� Globalization excerpted as �Globalization as a Problem,� in F. Lechner and J. Boli (eds.), The Globalization Reader.� 2004, pp. 93-99.
George M. Thomas.� Selections on �Religions in world society.�
Olivier Roy. ��Why
is Neofundamentalism Successful?�� in his
Globalized Islam: the Search for a New
Ummah��
Film:���� �The Wedding Banquet�
����������� �My Son the Fanatic�
Week 6 Sept 26:� Review for Wed Exam
II. How do people boss each other around?�
Week 7 Oct 3:� How do people boss each other around?� I:�
Comparative governance, states, and the individual
�The Five Phases,�
�Heaven�s Mandate,� in Hawai�i Reader in Traditional Chinese, pp. 32�34.
�Sung,� in A
Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial
�Yingying�s Story,� The Anthology of Chinese Literature, ed. Stephen Owen (New York: Norton� Press, 1996), pp. 540�49.
Read also: �Early Discussions of Music and Literature,� in Hawai�i Reader in Traditional Chinese, pp. 130�34.
Joseph. Strayer, "The historical
experience of nation-building in
John Boli.� �Human rights or state expansion? Cross-national definitions of constitutional rights, 1870-1970.� Pp. 133-149 in Thomas, G.M. et al. Institutional Structure. 1987.
Carolyn M.
Warner� �The Rise of the State System in
Film:���� �Monty Python and the Holy Grail�
����������� �The Return of Martin Guerre�
Week 8 Oct 10:� How do people boss each other around?� II:� Comparative
governance, states, and the individual
13th, 14th c. Chinese administrative maps
Guan
Hanqing, �The Butterfly Dream,� trans. Stephen West
Guan Hanqing, �The Injustice to Dou E,�
trans. Stephen West
Li Xiandao, �The
Chalk Circle,� trans. Stephen West
R. Nisbet,
"Besieged by the state." Harper's 268(June):49-52. 1984.
H.S. Commager,
"Tocqueville's mistake." Harper's 268(Aug):70-4. 1984.
Romeo and Juliet
Diego Gambetta, The Sicilian Mafia.
Film:���� �Romeo and Juliet�
����������� �Farewell my Concubine�
Week 9 Oct 17:� How do people boss each other around?� III:�
Space, place, nature, progress, and democracy
�Travel Tips for Merchants,� Shilin guangji, trans. Stephen West.
�The Pearl-Sewn Shirt,� in Stories from a Ming Collection (London: Bodley Head, 1958), pp. �
S.N. Eisenstadt.� Paradoxes of Democracy, (selections).
R. Wuthnow.� �The institutionalization of science,� pp.� in Meaning and Moral Order.� 1987.
Gill S. Drori et al.� 2003.� Science in the Modern World Polity, pp. 1-17.
Jeffrey Herbst, States and
Power in
Suzanne Daley, �11 Years Caged in an Airport:� now he fears to fly�� New York Times Sept. 27, 1999 (available on Lexis Nexis)..
Film: ��� �The Story of Qiu Ju�
Week 10 Oct 24: How
do people boss each other around?� IV:� Global governance and civilizations
Cao Xueqin, The Story of the Stone: The Golden Years (New York: Penguin Classics, 1999), Introduction, chapters 1-5.
F. D. Gaer.� �Reality check: human rights NGOs confront
governments at the UN.��
J. Boli and G.M. Thomas.� 1997.� �World culture in the world polity:� a century of international non-governmental organization.�� American Sociological Review 62:171-190, (selections).
Marshall GS
Hodgson, �The Impact of the Great Western Transmutation� in The Venture of Islam, Vol. 3, pp.
176-222..
Marshall GS Hodgson, �European World Hegemony: The 19th Century� in The Venture of Islam, Vol. 3, pp. 222-248
Film:����������������
Interview w/ Said (video in ASU library) HAYDEN LOWER LEVEL D860 .S25x 1998 VIDEO SHELF
Lawrence of Arabia (ASU West has DVD; ASU Haydon has video)
Week 11 Oct 31: Review for Exam
III. How do People
get Stuff and Money?
Week 12 Nov 7: How do people get stuff and money?� I:� Non-capitalist economies
Story of the Stone, chapters 6-12.
Karl Polanyi, The Great Transformation.�
Carolyn M. Warner� "The Political Economy of Quasi-Statehood and the Demise of 19th Century African Politics."� Review of International Studies 25 (April, 1999): 233-255 [available on-line via ASU catalogue].
�����������
Week 13 Nov 14: How do people get stuff and money?� II:� Rise and nature of capitalism
Karl Polanyi, The
Great Transformation.�
Fred Block �The Ruling class does not rule:� notes on a Marxist theory of the State� in his Revising State Theory, (Temple Univ Press 1987) ch 3
�
Excerpts from US Supreme Court decision on right of eminent domain (June 23, 2005)
Film:� �The Tree of Wooden Clogs�
Week 14 Nov 21:� How do people get stuff and money? III:� Global capitalism, governance, and
civilizations
Story of the Stone, chapters 13-20.����
P. McMichael.� Development and Social Change.� 2004, (selections).
Selections from �Economic globalization� in F. Lechner and J. Boli (eds.), The Globalization Reader.� 2004.
R.T. Naylor, �Loose Cannons:�
Covert Commerce and Underground Finance in the Modern Arms Black Market�
in Wages of Crime,
Film:� �� �The Cola Conquest�
Week 15 Nov 28: How in
the world do people get stuff and money, boss each other around, and act like
persons?
Story of the Stone, chapters 21-26.����
Peter Berger and Samuel P. Huntington.� Many Globalizations. 2002. (excerpt)
Benjamin Barber, �Jihad vs. McWorld?�� The Atlantic Monthly (March) 1992
Adam Gopnik, �The Balzar Wars� and �The Strike� in
Film:���� �The Gods must be Crazy�
Week 16 Dec 5:� Review for Exam on Tuesday Dec 6
English Section Schedule of Assignments
(This schedule is subject to change.� Changes will be announced in class.
It is your responsibility to keep up with them.)
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Week 1 |
Claiming Identity |
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T |
8/23 |
In-class: Course introduction;
selected poems. |
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Th |
8/25 |
Due: Read �Where I Lived and
What I Lived For� (CI 9).� Short response #1: How does Thoreau
address the title questions of this excerpt? In-class: Discussion: Claiming an
identity with, through, and in writing. Discuss writing as cognitive, social,
and political act. |
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Week 2 |
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8/30 |
Due: Read WASS chapter 3;
�Things I Shouldn�t Write,� excerpt from Daughters
of the Can In-class: Introduction |
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Th |
9/1 |
Due: Short Response #2: Statement of self. In-class: Claiming an identity
with, through, and in writing continued. |
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Week 3 |
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9/6 |
Due: Read �The God of Small
Feasts� and �Eleven (CI 29 and 36). In-class: Using language |
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W |
9/7 |
Due: Reaction narrative |
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Th |
9/8 |
Due: Read �C.P. Ellis� (CI
47). In-class: Discussion: claiming
identity and moral responsibility. |
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Week 4 |
We, the People |
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T |
9/13 |
Due: Read Declaration of
Independence (CI 136) and selected poems (CI 163-167).� Short
Response #3: Select one poem and consider how it supports, rewrites or
responds In-class: Whose rights? |
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Th |
9/15 |
Due: Read WASS chapters 1 and
2. Bring In-class: Library research
introduction. |
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Week 5 |
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M |
9/19 |
Due: Revised reaction narrative. |
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9/20 |
Due: �What In-class: Dialoguing with reading
and rhe |
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Th |
9/22 |
Due: Read �A Black Feminist
Statement� (CI 155) and �On the Equality of the Sexes� (available online at http://www.pinn.net/~sunshine/book-sum/grimke3.html). Short response #5: List of possible
annotated bibliography sources. In-class: Discussion: authority,
authorship, and obligation. |
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Week 6 |
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9/27 |
Due: Draft of Annotated Bibliography. In-class: Writers� workshop. |
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Th |
9/29 |
Due: Read �A Polyglot Nation�
and �The Confusing State of Minority Language Rights� (CI 173 and189). In-class: Connecting language,
identity, and authority. |
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Week 7 |
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M |
10/3 |
Due: Annotated
Bibliography. |
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T |
10/4 |
Due: Read �A Chinese Ishmael,�
�The Bird of Love� and �An Autumn Fan� available online at U of VA Electronic
Text Center (Go In-Class: Discussion:
How do conceptions of place, home, family shape self? |
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Th |
10/6 |
Due: Read �Homeplace� (CI 63).
Short Response #6: Book review
proposal paragraph. In-class: How
do conceptions of place, home, family shape self? Continued. |
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Week 8 |
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10/11 |
Due: Draft of book review. In-class: Writers� workshop. |
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Th |
10/13 |
Due: Read �Landscape and
Narrative,� �Taking a Visi In-class: Discussion: authorizing narratives of nation,
nature, and self. |
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Week 9 |
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M |
10/17 |
Due: Book review. |
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10/18 |
Due: Read WASS chapter 4. Short Response #7: Research paper In-class: Library research. |
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Th |
10/20 |
Due: Read No Parole Today.� In-class: Discussion: How the self
gets �mapped� and by whom. |
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Week 10 |
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10/25 |
Due: Draft of In-class: Writers� workshop. |
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Th |
10/27 |
Due: Finish No Parole Today. In-class: Discussion: The
importance of names, naming. |
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Week 11 |
Migration, Immigration,
Nation |
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M |
10/31 |
Due: Topic proposal. |
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T |
11/1 |
Due: Read selected poems (CI
252-258). In-class: Discussion. |
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Th |
11/3 |
Due: Read �The Homeland� (CI
275). Short response #8: Select
one poem and consider how its form contributes In-class: Discussion: Connections
between form and content.� |
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Week 12 |
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T |
11/8 |
Due: Read �1955�
(handout).� Short Response #9: With which character do your sympathies lie? In-class: View Independent Lens� �A
Lion�s Trail� or �Chavez Ravine.� |
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Th |
11/10 |
Due: Catch-up day. In-class: Discussion. |
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Week 13 |
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T |
11/15 |
Due: �Space is Numeric� and
�The Good Deed� (CI 538 and 549) In-class: Discussion: Authority,
exchange and markets on the digital frontier.�
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Th |
11/17 |
Due: Short response #10: Draft of research paper claim/thesis. In-class: Library research. |
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Week 14 |
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11/22 |
Due: Read �Commodifying Human
Relationships� (CI 572). In-class: Discussion: How has human
experience been commodified? |
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Th |
11/24 |
No
Class. Thanksgiving Break |
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Week 15 |
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11/29 |
In-class: Presentations of research
paper |
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Th |
12/1 |
Due: Draft of research paper. In-class: Writers� workshop.� Presentations of research paper |
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Week 16 |
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T |
12/6 |
In-class: Presentations of research
paper |
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