Gndr g101 - Ctw - Syllabus
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Indiana University
Department of Gender Studies
GNDR G101 – Gender, Culture and Society
Cierra Olivia Thomas-Williams Email: [email protected]
Memorial Hall West – Room 214
Office Hours: Mondays, 3:00 PM -5:00 PM and by appointment
E-Reserve URL: http://ereserves.indiana.edu/eres/coursepage.aspx?cid=6505E-Reserve Password: gender
Course Description
Gender, Culture & Society provides an introduction to the interdisciplinary study of gender - the social creation and cultural representation of femininity and masculinity - by examining relevant beliefs, practices, debates and political struggles. Readings and class discussions consider how people of different races, ethnicities, classes and nationalities in various historical periods have assumed gendered identities.
Your Obligations
This course serves multiple functions. On the one hand it is intended to introduce you to the literature and analytic methodologies of a specific area of intellectual inquiry—in this case, gender studies. On the other hand, it is also meant to serve as an occasion for you to begin refine a more general set of skills, including your ability to read carefully, write persuasively, and express your thoughts and opinions in language that is sufficiently nuanced and precise to communicate their depth and complexity. Thus, regardless of how you feel about a particular day’s reading, or a given writing assignment, there’s always something to be learned from coming to class and participating in discussion. To that end you are obligated first and foremost to show up—physically and intellectually—and to be prepared when you do. You must attend class regularly, do the assigned reading, turn your written work in on time, and actively participate in discussions even if doing so feels a little awkward or uncomfortable. Your instructor is fully committed to doing their part to create a classroom environment in which thoughtful, respectful debate is the norm. In the end, though, it is your responsibility to use this class to practice making yourself heard in the context of an ongoing conversation that should be engaging, rigorous and fun.
Beyond these very simple obligations, you will also be required to complete a take home midterm examination, a take home and final examination, and several in-class presentations the specific instructions for which will be provided at appropriate points throughout the semester.
Required Texts
The following texts are required and are available for purchase at Boxcar Books which is located just around the corner from the Bloomington Bagel Company at 408 East 6th Street. All other readings are available for download in .pdf from IU E-Reserves.
Bernard Lefkowitz. Our Guys. New York: Vintage, 1998. ISBN: 0375702695
Ariel Levy. Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture. New York: Free Press, 2006. ISBN: 0743284283
Toni Morrison. Sula. New York: Vintage, 2004. ISBN: 1400033438
Virginia Woolf. A Room of One's Own. New York: Harvest, 1989. ISBN: 0156787334
Detailed Course Schedule
NB: Readings marked with a are available online through IU E-Reserves.
Date Description
MO January 12 Introductions and Course Overview
What is Gender and How Does One Study It?
WE January14 Pink and Blue Exercise
FR January 16 Judith Lorber, “Night to His Day: The Social Construction of Gender” in Paradoxes of Gender (New Haven: Yale University Press, 13-36.
Critical Terms Presentation Assignment Distributed in Class
MO January 19 NO Class Meeting – MLK Day
WE January 21 Simone de Beauvoir, Selection from “Childhood,” The Second Sex (New York: Vintage, 1989 [1952]), 267.
FR January 23 Sigmund Freud, “Some Psychological Consequences of the Anatomical Differences Between the Sexes,” in The Masculinity Studies Reader (New York: Blackwell Publishing, 2002), 14-20.
MO January 26 Simone de Beauvoir, “Childhood,” The Second Sex (New York: Vintage, 1989 [1952]), 267-327.
WE January 28 Critical Terms Presentations
FR January 30 Critical Terms Presentations
Gender, Democracy and Formal Equality
MO February 2 National Assembly of France, Déclaration des droits de l'Homme et du citoyen [Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen] [1789]
Olympe de Gouges, Déclaration des Droits de la Femme et de la Citoyenne [Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citzen] [1791]
Declaration of Independence [1776]
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, et al., “Declaration of Sentiments” [1848]
WE February 4 Angela Davis, “The Anti-Slavery Movement and the Birth of Women’s Rights” and “Class and Race in the Early Women’s Rights Campaign,” in Women, Race and Class. (New York: Vintage, 1983), 30-69.
FR February 6 Alice Paul, “The Lucretia Mott Amendment” [1923]
MO February 9 Movie: One Woman, One Vote
WE February 11 Movie: One Woman, One Vote
FR February 13 Discussion of One Woman, One Vote
Gender, Labor, and Women’s Work
MO February 16 Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (New York: Harcourt, 1989), 3-40.
WE February 18 Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (New York: Harcourt, 1989), 41-114.
FR February 20 Dorothy Sue Cobble, “Halving the Double Day” New Labor Forum 12(3): 63-72. Fall 2003.
Gender, Race and Intimacy
MO February 23 Patricia Hill Collins, “Black Women’s Love Relationships,” and “Black Women and Motherhood” in Black Feminist Thought (New York: Routledge, 2000), 161-215.
WE February 25 Toni Morrison, Sula, Part One
FR February 27 Toni Morrison, Sula, Part Two
MO March 2 Review Session – Midterm Exam Distributed in Class
WE March 4 TBA – Mini Unit
FR March 6 TBA – Mini Unit
MO March 9 NO CLASS MEETING – Midterm exam due no later than 4 PM.
WE March 11 TBA – Mini Unit
FR March 13 TBA – Mini Unit
MO March 16 NO CLASS MEETING – Spring Recess
WE March 18 NO CLASS MEETING – Spring Recess
FR March 20 NO CLASS MEETING – Spring Recess
Gender and “Tradition”: Marriage and the Family
MO March 23 John Demos, A Little Commonwealth: Family Life in Plymouth Colony. New York: Oxford University Press, 60-99.
Anthony Rotundo “Marriage” in American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era (New York: Basic Books, 1993), 129-166.
WE March 25 Stephanie Coontz, “The Way We Wish We Were: Defining the Family Crisis,” “’Leave It To Beaver’ and ‘Ozzie and Harriet’: American Families in the 1950s,” in The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap (New York: Basic Books, 1992), 8-41.
FR March 27 Betty Friedan, “The Happy Housewife Heroine,” The Feminine Mystique (New York: Norton, 2001), 33-68.
What’s So Radical About Feminism?
MO March 30 Robin Morgan, et al. “HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS,” in Sisterhood is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings From the Women’s Liberation Movement (New York: Vintage, 1970), passim.NOW (National Organization for Women)
“NOW Bill of Rights,” 512-513.
SCUM (Society for Cutting Up Men)
“SCUM Manifesto,” 514-519.
New York Radical Women
“Principles,” 520.
No More Miss America!
“No More Miss America!,” 521-524.
Women Against Daddy Warbucks
“Our Statement,” 530.
The Feminists “Women: Do You Know the Facts About Marriage?” 536-537.
WITCH Leaflets, 538-553.
WE April 1 Gloria Steinem, “If Men Could Menstruate,” in Outrageous
Acts and Everyday Rebellions, Second Edition (New York: Owl Books, 1995), 366-369.
FR April 3 Susan Douglas, “ERA as Catfight” in Where the Girls Are: Growing up Female With the Mass Media (New York: Three Rivers Press, 1994), 221-244.
“The Equal Rights Amendment” [1972]
ERA Debate Assignment Distributed in Class
Masculinity, the Male Body and the Exercise of Power
MO April 6 Susan Bordo, “What Is a Phallus” in The Male Body: A New Look at Men in Public and Private (New York: FSG, 1999), 84-104.
WE April 8 Toby Miller, “The First Penis Impeached,” in Our Monica, Ourselves (New York: New York University Press, 2001) 116-135.
FR April 10 Bernard Lefkowitz, Our Guys, xi-109
MO April 13 Bernard Lefkowitz, Our Guys, 121-341
WE April 15 Bernard Lefkowitz, Our Guys, 345-502
FR April 17 Michael Kimmel, “Men, Masculinity, and the Rape Culture” in Transforming a Rape Culture, Revised Edition (Minneapolis: Milkweed Editions, 2005), 139-157.
The Female Body, Sexual Liberation and the Politics of Representation
MO April 20 Barbara Ehrenreich, “Playboy Joins the Battle of the Sexes,” in The Hearts of Men: American Dreams and the Flight From Commitment (New York: Anchor Books, 1987) 42-51.
Catherine MacKinnon, “’More Than Simply a Magazine’: Playboy’s Money,” in Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988), 134-145.
WE April 22 Ariel Levy, Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture (New York: Free Press, 2005), 1-117.
FR April 24 Ariel Levy, Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture (New York: Free Press, 2005), 118-212.
Course Wrap Up
MO April 27 ERA Debate
WE April 29 Review Session – Final Exam Distributed in Class
FR April 30 Student Evaluations and Course Wrap Up Discussion
WE May 6 Final exam due no later than 3 PM
Grading and Evaluation
Quality grades will be determined using the following formula as a guideline:
Attendance 10% OngoingParticipation 10% OngoingCritical Terms Presentation 10% Due January 28 or 30Take Home Midterm Examination 25% Due March 9ERA Debate Presentation 10% Due April 27Take Home Final Examination 35% Due May 6
To reiterate: this formula will be used as a guideline. Minor adjustments may be made to final grades in instances where a student who is initially poorly prepared shows an obvious and consistent commitment to improving their skills over the course of the semester. Similarly, there are circumstances under which a student may satisfy all of the requirements for the course in a formal sense, but demonstrate blatant disregard for their responsibilities as a student in other ways. For example, a student who submits all the required writing assignments for the course but chooses to miss class regularly simply because he or she is willing to sacrifice their attendance and participation grade is demonstrating both personal irresponsibility and contempt for the integrity of their own education. In such cases it is perfectly reasonable to adjust their final grade downward accordingly to ensure that that their permanent academic record reflects this lack of commitment to the collective enterprise of the course.
Please note too that you will be required to submit an electronic version of all written assignments for this course to turnitin.com. Instructions for how to do this will be provided at the appropriate time.
Other Provisions
1. ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED! Everyone will probably have some conflict and need to miss one or two class meetings at some point this semester. That’s understandable and shouldn’t effect your final grade very much. That’s also quite different, though, than missing three, four or five weeks worth of classes over the course of a fifteen week semester. Such behavior will effect your final grade.
2. In order to receive a grade for your work this semester you must complete all of the assignments for the course. Remember, attendance and participation are required and they will be evaluated using a graded scale just like any other assignment.
3. Any request for an extension or incomplete must be approved in advance of the established deadline. Such requests will be granted rarely, and at the instructions discretion.
4. Academic dishonesty of any kind will not be tolerated. If you have any questions about what qualifies as academic dishonesty, ask for necessary clarification sooner rather than later. Pursuant to the Indiana University Code
of Student Rights instances of academic or personal misconduct will be reported to the appropriate offices on campus and may result in formal academic sanctions including automatic failure or the assignment, failure of the course, or any of the other penalties outlined in the University Code. A word to the wise: plagiarism is much more trouble than it’s worth.
5. Matters related to grading will not be discussed over email—period. If you have questions or concerns regarding a grade please arrange to come in and speak with your instructor in person.
6. Some people feel less comfortable speaking in public than others, and your instructor will be more than willing to work with you if you feel that any aspect of this method of evaluation will place you at a serious disadvantage. It is incumbent upon you, however, to make an effort to let your instructor know that you need additional help in order to meet the challenges of the course. Nothing that that you are being asked to do is unreasonable, but that doesn't mean that any of it is particularly easy either. We therefore have a responsibility to one another to work together to ensure that you have every opportunity to get as much out of this course as possible. For example, students with special needs, including documented learning disabilities, should be sure to speak with the instructor at the beginning of the term so that arrangements can be made to provide you with the additional support that you deserve.