In this
class the emphasis is on recent scholarship in the intersections
of gender, race, nation, and the sciences. I have organized the
sections of the class around intellectually stimulating areas of
rhetorical scholarship and discussion, rather than around a strict
historical time-line or around a thematic outline of the field,
beginning with some of those who have set the foundations for contemporary
rhetoric, particularly as related to science, such as Nietzsche,
in his Genealogy of Morals and Twilight of the Idols and Foucault,
in his The Order of Things. The next subsection of the class looks
at recent work on the interdependency of the rise of modern science
and colonialism, including the raced and gendered dimensions of
the colonial enterprise, and the critical role of the concept of
"nature" in that, as in the works of Londa Schiebinger,
Donna Haraway and Bruno Latour. The second sub- section looks at
the area of medicine, life sciences and the body, and highlights
the politics, law, and science of race and gender, and the shifting
ontologies of medical objects and subjects, and includes the work
of Nancy Tuana as well as Deirdre McClosky. The next major section
deals with our embodied, sensual relations to visual media as rhetorically
constructed. We will ground ourselves in key texts of phenomenology
by Merleau-Ponty and his followers and then, from the perspective
of these theoretical concerns about the body, pursue an analysis
of the different media technologies before whose screens our bodies
so frequently sit: film, video, television, computer, etc. Sample
readings include texts by: Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Jean Baudrillard,
Susan Bordo, Marshall McCluhan, Steven Shaviro and Vivian Sobchack.
|
|