Winter 2022 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Lecture | Discussion |
---|---|---|---|---|
AMER_ST 301-2-20 | Remapping American Studies Through Black Chicago | Ivy Wilson | Tu 2:00 - 4:50PM | |
AMER_ST 301-2-20 Remapping American Studies Through Black ChicagoThis is the Winter 2022 Seminar for Majors. A general description: This course aims to provide a "how-to" of American Studies from an integrative, multiracial, and socio-cultural perspective. Taking U.S. American cultures as a site for testing classic and contemporary theories about how society works, this seminar in American Studies serves to introduce resources and techniques for interdisciplinary research. Students will be exposed to and experiment with a wide range of current theoretical and methodological approaches applied in American Studies and contributing disciplinary fields. The goal of the course is not only for students to develop knowledge of main currents in the field of American Studies but also to become practitioners through a series of assignments that will permit students to exercise their newfound skills. For instance, as students develop rhetorical analyses, describe and evaluate visual culture, or conduct and analyze interview data, they will also examine themes such as national narratives, civil rights and immigration, and the historical and social meanings of work, discipline, and justice. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 310-0-10 | Bad News | Lawrence Stuelpnagel | TTh 11:00AM - 12:20PM | |
AMER_ST 310-0-10 Bad NewsCo-listed with POLI_SCI 390-0-21. Bad news is what Americans are experiencing as a result of corporate media mergers that took place in the closing years of the last century. Today major companies control much of what people read, hear, and see. As many firms passed from largely family-owned to publicly traded companies, the pressure for profit from Wall Street has led to cutbacks in the size of news divisions and a change in news story values that have "softened" the types of news that people see on television. This course will begin with an examination of the monetary forces that are driving the news industry away from its primary mission of information. Critics, of whom the professor is one, contend that the drive for increasing profits is coming at the expense of both the quality and quantity of news that appear on television and radio, newspapers and magazines, and the Internet. The ever-diminishing number of news providers is also threatening democracy by limiting the number of voices that can be heard in our society. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 310-0-20 | American Teenage Rites of Passage | Sarah McFarland Taylor | Th 2:00 - 4:50PM | |
AMER_ST 310-0-20 American Teenage Rites of PassageCo-listed with RELIGION 364-0-20. Amish Rumspringa, the Apache ‘Isanaklesh Gotal, Jewish bar and bat mitzvah, the quinceañera, and high school senior prom. What do all of these have in common? They are all teenage rites of passage. Drawing from anthropological and sociological case studies, we will examine various rites of passage experienced by teens in the U.S. In analyzing these rites, students will become conversant with theories of ritual, contemporary surveys of teen demographics and cultural trends, media and cultural studies. We will examine teen popular media and consumption related to rites of passage as well as historical literature on the rise and development of the American teenager as a cultural phenomenon. Students will be asked to generate original research for their seminar final project, applying the tools from the course to a case study of their own choosing. This seminar will make use of multimedia materials and will feature multi-source digitized media viewing, analysis, and some mediamaking as part of course assignments. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 310-0-30 | Parks and Pipeline: Indigenous Environmental Justice | Joseph Whitson | TTh 11:00AM - 12:20PM | |
AMER_ST 310-0-30 Parks and Pipeline: Indigenous Environmental JusticeCo-listed withHUM 325-4-20 and ENVR_POL 390-0-27. This seminar explores how the relationship between the United States and Indigenous people has shaped the environments, ecosystems, and physical landscapes we live in today. Through engagement with a variety of digital resources including maps and digital media, we will learn how the environment of what is now the United States was managed by Indigenous people before and throughout colonization, how Indigenous people have been impacted by the environmental policies of the United States, and how Indigenous resistance and activism have shaped both the environmental movement in the U.S. as well as contemporary Indigenous political thought. In discussion, we will break down the politics, economics, and ethics of this history, challenging ourselves to think critically about the land we live on and its future. In lieu of a final paper, this course will include a digital, public-facing final assignment. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 310-0-40 | The History of American Medicine | Tess Lanzarotta | TTh 9:30 - 10:50AM | |
AMER_ST 310-0-40 The History of American MedicineCo-listed with HISTORY 300-0-20. Why does American medicine look the way it does? The United States spends more on health care than any other country in the world, but is almost singular in its lack of universal health care. American medicine is at once distinguished by its capacity for research and innovation and by its inability to resolve the profound health inequalities that shape this country. Which historical processes produced this unique set of circumstances? When and how have activists, patients, and politicians agitated for change? What alternate futures might we imagine? This course traces the history of American medicine from the nation’s founding to the present day. We will learn about the formation of the medical profession, track changing understandings of health and disease, discuss the development of drugs and medical technologies, and investigate the role of professional organizations in combatting efforts to nationalize healthcare. At the same time, we will hear about efforts to reform American medicine in the name of anti-racism, gender equality, decolonization, disability rights, and social justice. By studying these complex histories, we will ask questions about the relationship between health, power, bodies, and knowledge and consider what it has meant to provide care and pursue health throughout American history. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 310-0-50 | Modern Jewish American Literature: Ethnicity, Assimilation, Performance | Dana Mihailescu | TTh 11:00AM - 12:20PM | |
AMER_ST 310-0-50 Modern Jewish American Literature: Ethnicity, Assimilation, PerformanceCo-listed with JWSH_ST 279-0-1 and COMP_LIT 202-0-23. This seminar consists in modern Jewish American literary text analyses in point of their cultural markers, focusing on the relations between collective and individual memory, mainstream and minority tensions, identity and ethical dilemmas. We will assess how significant moments in the life of early twentieth century Eastern European Jews in America (e.g., the fusgeyer emigration movement from 1900 Romania, the 1903 Kishinev pogrom from the Russian Empire, the original “Bintel Brief” column in The Forward or the 1911 Triangle Fire in New York) were represented in early twentieth century literary works (by Abraham Cahan, Mary Antin, Anzia Yezierska, M.E. Ravage) and how they are represented in contemporary, twenty-first century literary works (by Liana Finck, Margot Singer, Leela Corman, Jill Culiner, Barbara Kahn, Aleksandar Hemon, Julia Alekseyeva). By examining moments of struggle and power imbalance, the seminar also explores the fundamental role of literature in mourning and historical reparation. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
AMER_ST 390-2-21 | Senior Seminar 2 (Winter) | Nicolette Bruner | W 2:00 - 4:50PM | |
AMER_ST 390-2-21 Senior Seminar 2 (Winter) | ||||
Bio coming soon |