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Timeline - Fall 2004

Week 1 Week 5 Week 9 Week 13
Week 2 Week 6 Week 10 Week 14
Week 3 Week 7 Week 11 Week 15
Week 4 Week 8 Week 12 Week 16

Part I: Rhetorical Wrestling Among the Ancients, the Moderns and the Postmoderns

 

Week 1 (Aug. 23-27)
Nietzsche: Gender, Rhetoric and Scientific Truth Part 1 [top]

 

Key Question: How does Nietzsche configure the relationships between the ancients and the moderns in terms of science and subjectivity?

Required Readings:

  1. C. Picart, Resentment and "the Feminine" in Nietzsche's Politico-Aesthetics (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 1999) ISBN: 0-271-01889-5.
  2. The Gay Science: With a Prelude in Rhymes and an Appendix of Songs
    by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
    • Paperback: 396 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.89 x 7.30 x 4.36
    • Publisher: Vintage Books USA; 1st edition (October 1, 1974)
    • ISBN: 0394719859

Possible Film: Mindwalk

Week 2 (Aug. 30-Sept. 3)
Nietzsche: Gender, Rhetoric and Scientific Truth Part 2
[top]
 

Key Question: Does Nietzsche’s view of rhetoric in relation to science and truth change in his latter writings?

Required Readings:

  1. The Genealogy of Morals (Dover Thrift Editions)
    by Friedrich Nietzsche, Horace Barnett Samuel
    • Paperback: 118 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.34 x 8.24 x 5.20
    • Publisher: Dover Publications; Dover Thri edition (April 1, 2003)
    • ISBN: 0486426912
  2. Twilight of the Idols or How to Philosophize With a Hammer (Oxford World's Classics)
    by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, Duncan Large
    • Paperback: 124 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.46 x 7.70 x 5.28
    • Publisher: Oxford University Press; New Ed edition (May 1, 1998)
    • ISBN: 0192831380
Week 3 (Sept. 6-10)
Foucault, Rhetoric and Power
[top]
 

Sept. 6: Labor Day- No Class

Sept. 8: “The Mystery of Goodness: Rescuers during the Shoah”
Wednesday, September 8, 2004
Room 003 Williams Building, FSU Campus
3:00 - 4:00 p.m.

Guest Speaker: Dr. Alan L. Berger
Raddock Eminent Scholar Chair for Holocaust Studies
Florida Atlantic University

If you attend the talk and write a short summary and critical response paper (250-500 words), this will function as a bonus quiz, and can be used to cancel one more lowest score in your quizzes.

Key Questions:
1. Where do Nietzsche’s and Foucault’s characterizations of rhetoric and power converge and diverge?
2. What makes Nietzsche “modern” and Foucault “postmodern”?

Required Readings:

  1. The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences
    by Michel Foucault
    • Paperback: 416 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.93 x 7.96 x 5.22
    • Publisher: Vintage Books USA; Reissue edition (April 1, 1994)
    • ISBN: 0679753354 **Personal Copy on Reserves at Strozier***
  2. Discipline and Punish by Michael Foucault
    • Publisher: Vintage Books USA; (1995)
    ***Personal Copy on Reserves at Strozier***

    Sept. 9: Guest Lecturer: Dr. Barry Faulk


Part II: The Rhetorics of Modern Science and Colonialism

 

Week 4 (Sept. 13-17)
The Bodies of Woman and Nature
[top]
 

Key Question: How has the rhetoric of science obscured its raced, gendered, classed and colonializing dimensions?

Required Readings:

  1. The Order of Things: An Archeology of the Human Sciences
    • Paperback: 416 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.93 x 7.96 x 5.22
    • Publisher: Vintage Books USA; Reissue Edition (April 1, 1994)
    • ISBN: 0679753354

    Sept. 12: Shana Mason (R1)

  2. Has Feminism Changed Science? by Londa Schiebinger
    • Paperback: 272 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.71 x 9.26 x 6.16
    • Publisher: Harvard University Press; (April 1, 2001)
    • ISBN: 0674005449

    Sept. 14: Jennifer Perrine (R1)

  3. Nature's Body: Gender in the Making of Modern Science by Londa Schiebinger
    • Paperback: pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.75 x 8.97 x 5.94
    • Publisher: Beacon Press; (October 1, 1995)
    • ISBN: 080708901X
    Possible Film: Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
Week 5 (Sept. 20-24)
Case Studies of Feminism and Science: Affinities between Simians, Cyborgs and Women
[top]
 

Sept. 24: Dr. Picart will be away on a professional commitment.

Key Questions:
1. What actual case studies in science illustrate gender and race bias?
2. Does the rhetoric of the “cyborg” enable a new type of politic to emerge?

Required Readings:

  1. Primate Visions: Gender, Race and Nature in the World of Modern Science by Donna Haraway
    • Paperback: 486 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.44 x 9.96 x 6.99
    • Publisher: Routledge; Reprint edition (September 1, 1990)
    • ISBN: 0415902940 ***Personal Copy on Reserves at Strozier***
  2. Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature
    by Donna J. Haraway
    • Paperback: 287 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.79 x 9.22 x 6.16
    • Publisher: Routledge; (March 1, 1991)
    • ISBN: 0415903874
Possible Film: The Alien tetralogy
Week 6 (Sept. 27-Oct. 1)
The Rhetoric and Sociology of Science: Power, Virtuality and Reality [top]
 

Key Question: How does scientific rhetoric connect to the “real,” according to Latour?

Required Readings:

  1. Pandora's Hope: Essays on the Reality of Science Studies
    by Bruno Latour
    • Paperback: 324 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.86 x 9.20 x 6.12
    • Publisher: Harvard University Press; (June 1, 1999)
    • ISBN: 067465336X

    Sept. 28: Jenny Caneen (R1)

  2. Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers Through Society by Bruno Latour
    • Paperback: 287 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.63 x 8.92 x 5.96
    • Publisher: Harvard University Press; Reprint edition (October 1, 1988)
    • ISBN: 0674792912

    Sept. 30: Jenny Caneen (R2)

Part III: The Rhetorics of The “Hard” and the “Soft” Sciences

 

Week 7 (Oct. 4-8)
Male and Female Bodies Under Scrutiny: Epistemologies and Ontologies in Relation to Gender and Sex
[top]
 

Key Question: How does rhetoric connect with the epistemologies and ontologies of sexed and gendered bodies?

Required Readings:

  1. Revealing Male Bodies by Nancy Tuana, William Cowling, Maurice Hamington, Greg Johnson, Terrance Macmullen
    • Library Binding: 352 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.11 x 9.70 x 6.46
    • Publisher: Indiana University Press; (December 1, 2001)
    • ISBN: 025333991X

    Oct. 5: Guest Lecturer: Jay King

  2. Feminism and Science: And Other Lasting Lessons I Learned in Catholic Schools NancyTuana(Editor)
    • Paperback, 272pp
    • Publisher: Indiana University Press October1990
    • ISBN: 0253205255
    ***Personal Copy on Reserves at Strozier***

    Oct. 7: Jenny Caneen (R3)

Possible Film: Terminators 1, 2 and 3

 

Week 8 (Oct. 11-15)
The "Sins" of Economics and the Transgendered Body[top]
 

 

Key Questions:
1. What kind of "work" must the rhetoric of economics do in order to authorize itself as a "science"?
2. What kind of "work" must Deirdre McCloskey's memoir enact in order to maintain her authority as the former Donald McCloskey, principal theorist on the rhetoric of economics?

Required Readings:

  1. The Rhetoric of Economics (Rhetoric of the Human Sciences) by Deirdre N. McCloskey
    • Paperback: 223 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.55 x 8.92 x 5.97
    • Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press; 2nd edition (May 1, 1998)
    • ISBN: 0299158144

    Oct. 12: Jennifer Perrine (R2)

  2. Crossing: A Memoir
    by Deirdre N. McCloskey
    • Paperback: 266 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.65 x 8.93 x 5.98
    • Publisher: University of Chicago Press; (September 1, 2000)
    • ISBN: 0226556697

    Oct. 14: Guest Lecturer: Dr. Davis Houck

Part IV: Rhetoric, the Body and the Mediated

Week 9 (Oct. 18-22)
The Rhetoric of Phenomenology
[top]
 

Key Questions:
1. What is unique to the rhetoric of phenomenology?
2. Of what value is phenomenological writing to understanding a rhetoric of the embodied experience?

Required Readings:

  1. Merleau-Ponty: Basic Writings by Thomas Baldwin, Maurice Merleau-Ponty ***Electronic Format on Reserves at Strozier***
    • Paperback, 384pp
    • Publisher: Routledge; February2004
    • ISBN: 0415315875

    Oct. 19: Guest Lecturer: Steve Armstrong

  2. America by Jean Baudrillard, Chris Turner
    • Paperback: 200 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.46 x 7.98 x 7.94
    • Publisher: Verso; Reprint edition (October 1, 1989)
    • ISBN: 0860919781

    Guest Lecturer: Dr. Donnalyn Pompper

Possible Film: Requiem for a Dream

 

Week 10 (Oct. 25-29)
Simulacra and Simulations: Real and Reel Bodies [top]
 

Key Question: What does Baudrillard’s framework have to contribute to an understanding of the body as lived and culturally encoded?

Required Readings:

  1. Passwords by Jean Baudrillard, Chris Turner (Translator)
    • Paperback: 120 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.34 x 7.64 x 7.68
    • Publisher: Verso; (November 13, 2003)
    • ISBN: 1859844634

    Oct. 26: Catherine Whitehead (R1)

  2. Simulacra and Simulation (The Body, in Theory : Histories of Cultural Materialism)
    by Jean Baudrillard, Sheila Faria Glaser
    • Paperback: 176 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.45 x 9.04 x 5.32
    • Publisher: University of Michigan Press; (December 1, 1994)
    • ISBN: 0472065211

    Oct. 28: Guest Lecturer: Susan Russell

Possible Film: The Matrix trilogy or Run, Lola, Run
   
Week 11 (Nov. 1-5)
[top]
 

Draft due by the second meeting of the week; to be submitted at Williams 405 by 12 noon. Have the person at the desk sign for, date and time the submission.


Week 12 (Nov. 8-12)
Masculinities and Femininities in Public and Private
[top]
 

Nov. 10-14: Dr. Picart will be at the NCA Conference.

Nov. 11: Veteran's Day - No Class

Key Question: How have the rhetorics of the public and the private constructed different spaces for male and female bodies?

Required Readings:

  1. The Male Body: A New Look at Men in Public and in Private
    by Susan Bordo
    • Paperback: 368 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.99 x 8.27 x 5.45
    • Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux; (June 1, 2000)
    • ISBN: 0374527326

    Nov. 9: Guest Lecturer: Jay King

  2. Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body
    by Susan Bordo
    • Paperback: ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.95 x 9.01 x 6.06
    • Publisher: University of California Press; Reprint edition (March 1, 1995)
    • ISBN: 0520088832

    Nov. 11: Catherine Whitehead (R2)

Possible Film: Kill Bill I and II

 

Week 13 (Nov. 15-19)
Virtuality and the Lived Body [top]

Nov. 15-19: Dr. Picart will be away for professional
engagements and talks on Frankenstein Films and Holocaust Films.

Key Question: How and why is "the medium the message"?

Required Readings:

  1. The Medium is the Massage (REQUIRED) by Marshall McLuhan, Quentin Fiore
    • Paperback: 160 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.53 x 7.00 x 4.20
    • Publisher: Gingko Press; (June 2001)
    • ISBN: 1584230703

    Nov. 16: Guest Lecturer: Katheryn Wright

    Supplementary Text:

  2. The Cinematic Body (Theory Out of Bounds, Vol 2)
    by Steven Shaviro
    • Paperback: 276 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.72 x 10.04 x 7.05
    • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press; (June 1, 1993)
    • ISBN: 0816622949

    Nov. 18: Shana Mason (R2)

Week 14 (Nov. 22-26)
Incarnating Moving Bodies and Images [top]
 

Nov. 25 & 26: Thanksgiving Day Break- No Class

Key Question: What is unique to Sobchack's phenomenology of the film experience?

Required Readings:

  1. The Address of the Eye: A Phenomenology of Film Experience
    by Vivian Sobchack
    • Paperback: 354 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.87 x 9.25 x 6.10
    • Publisher: Princeton University Press; (December 3, 1991)
    • ISBN: 0691008744

    Nov. 23: Jennifer Perrine (R3)

    Supplementary Text:

  2. Carnal Thoughts: Embodiment and Moving Image Culture
    by Vivian Sobchack, Univ of California Pr
    • Paperback: 320 pages
    • Publisher: University of California Press; (November 1, 2004)
    • ISBN: 0520241290

    Nov. 30: Shana Mason (R3)

Last Threaded Conversation
Possible Film: The Passion of the Christ

 

Week 15 (Nov. 29-Dec. 3)
History, Rhetoric and Media[top]
 

SIR/SUSSAI evaluations, self-evaluations on attendance and participation, and class party on Dec. 3.

Final Paper is due on the last day of class at the start of the class. No late papers will be accepted.

Key Question: How is the rhetoric of history generated through cinema, television and the media in general?

Required Readings:

  1. The Persistence of History: Cinema, Television, and the Modern Event (Afi Film Readers) by Vivian Sobchack
    • Paperback: 288 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 0.58 x 9.18 x 6.04
    • Publisher: Routledge; (March 1, 1996)
    • ISBN: 0415910846

    Nov. 5: Catherine Whitehead

Possible Film: Schindler's List and The Pianist

 

Week 16 (Dec. 6-10)
Finals Week [top]

Dec. 8-12: Dr. Picart may be away on a professional commitment.


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