Winter 2023 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Lecture | Discussion |
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HUM 325-5-20 | Refugees/Migration/Exile: A Workshop in Digital Storytelling | J. Michelle Molina | W 2:00 - 4:30 pm | |
HUM 325-5-20 Refugees/Migration/Exile: A Workshop in Digital StorytellingIn this course, students will research a case study from among the many refugee and migration crises that have dominated the news cycle in recent years. The final project is a short video about your case study. To develop your research projects, the class foregrounds different methodological approaches: 1) To move beyond journalism, we will conduct primary and secondary historical research to understand the complex historical roots of each case study. 2) We will analyze and practice forms of ethnographic writing to better situate and describe the lived experiences of migration and exile, both past and present. 3) We will pay attention to various forms of media, whether print culture, sound, or visual media, to interrogate but also experiment with contemporary modes of narrating and conveying human experience in the digital age. Our work in class will be collaborative, thus a key prerequisite is that you are mature and self-motivated. You do not need to have prior research experience, but you need to demonstrate a desire to dig into your topic and hone your ability to write deeply informed, rigorous, and nuanced arguments and to think about creative ways to bring rigorous historical and ethnographic detail to visual storytelling. Students are required to petition for permission to enroll in the class—see instructions in the “Registration Requirements” section of CAESAR. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-5-20 | The Philosophy of Punishment and Incarceration | Jennifer Lackey | F 10:30 am - 1:15 pm (This does not include travel time to Stateville) | |
HUM 370-5-20 The Philosophy of Punishment and IncarcerationThe United States is currently home to 5% of the world’s population, but 25% of its incarcerated population. With more than 2.3 million people under the control of the American criminal legal system, the United States has more total people who are incarcerated than any other country in the world. Moreover, the United States has one of the most punitive approaches to criminal justice, imposing lengthy prison sentences, forcing people who are incarcerated to spend years—sometimes even decades—in solitary confinement, and providing very few educational, vocational, and recreational programs in prisons. Punishment and incarceration also disproportionately impact people of color. Black Americans are incarcerated at more than 5 times the rate of whites. While Black Americans and Hispanics make up about 32% of the US population, they constitute 56% of the incarcerated population. This course will use a philosophical lens to examine the causes and consequences of this crisis of mass incarceration in the United States, along with possible solutions to it, with a particular emphasis on the theories of punishment grounding our criminal legal system and, thus, our prisons. The course will have a seminar-style format and will be held at Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill, Illinois. Enrollment will include both Northwestern students from the Evanston campus and students in the Northwestern Prison Education Program. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-24 | Art, Ecology, and Politics | Rebecca Zorach | MW 12:30 - 1:50 pm | |
HUM 370-6-24 Art, Ecology, and Politics | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-20 | Black Women on the Musical Stage | Masi Asare | W 3:00 - 5:50 pm | |
HUM 370-6-20 Black Women on the Musical StageThis course engages the performances of Black women on the US musical stage from 1900 to 1970, focusing on singer-actresses and their vocal sound. Under the capacious vaudeville tent or proscenium arch of musical theatre belting, how did the blues shouter’s sound influence the Broadway belter’s technique? How were these sounds carried forward by Black torch singers and character actresses, nightclub vocalists, television variety performers, and Black Broadway glamour girls? Drawing on the work of scholars Shane Vogel and Daphne Brooks, | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-22 | The Crime Centered Documentary | Debra Tolchinsky | TTh 12:30 - 1:50 pm | |
HUM 370-6-22 The Crime Centered DocumentaryFulfills Distro VI: Literature and Fine Arts In this course, we will view non-fiction and hybrid films that revolve around crime, criminal justice, and criminal court cases. Our emphasis will be on cases that are either mired in controversy or emblematic of wider social concerns. Readings will augment viewings as we weigh legal, philosophical, or scientific perspectives: What is accurately depicted? What is omitted? What is misrepresented? Concurrently, we will investigate the films aesthetically: How is the film structured and why? What choices are being made by the filmmaker regarding camera, sound, and editing, and how do these choices affect viewers? Throughout the course, we will consider the ethics of depicting real people and traumatic events. We will also look at specific films in regard to their legal or societal impact. Assignments will include a series of short response papers and a substantial final project, which can take the form of either (up to the student) a ten to twelve-page paper or a six to twelve-minute film/podcast/media project. Projects should center upon a legal topic. Ideas include, but are not limited to, a paper that compares two films depicting the same criminal case or a polished/edited film interview with an individual connected to a crime or involved with the legal system (a defendant, a lawyer, a judge, a policeperson, etc.). Additional topics could center around mitigation films, viral crime videos, local courts, legal advocacy centers, or hybrid crime films. | ||||
Bio coming soon |