PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
206
Section ID
PSCI183206
Meeting times
F 0200PM-0300PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 316
Instructors
KAKU, ARCHANA
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
205
Section ID
PSCI183205
Meeting times
F 1200PM-0100PM
Meeting location
CASTER BUILDING A19
Instructors
HANLEY, DANIELLE
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
204
Section ID
PSCI183204
Meeting times
M 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
EDUCATION BUILDING 114
Instructors
SHILS, NATHANIEL
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
203
Section ID
PSCI183203
Meeting times
M 0100PM-0200PM
Meeting location
EDUCATION BUILDING 008
Instructors
SHILS, NATHANIEL
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
202
Section ID
PSCI183202
Meeting times
F 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 316
Instructors
KAKU, ARCHANA
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
201
Section ID
PSCI183201
Meeting times
M 0200PM-0300PM
Meeting location
CASTER BUILDING A19
Instructors
SHILS, NATHANIEL
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI183 - AMERICAN POLIT THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
001
Section ID
PSCI183001
Meeting times
TR 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
ANNENBERG SCHOOL 110
Instructors
NORTON, ANNE
Description
Whether America begins with the Puritans and the Mayflower Compact, or with the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution, it is founded in resistance to empire. In the generations between, Americans have desired, dreaded and debated empire. This course will focus on empire and imperialism in American political thought. We will read primary texts addressing empire: from the departure and dissent of the Puritans, and Burke's Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies, to twentieth and twenty-first century debates over America's role in the world. These texts will include political pamphlets and speeches, poetry, novels, policy papers and film.
Course number only
183
Use local description
No

PSCI181 - MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
PSCI181 - MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
601
Section ID
PSCI181601
Meeting times
R 0500PM-0800PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 306
Instructors
KOUTNIK, GREGORY
Description
This course will provide an overview of major figures and themes of modern political thought. We will focus on themes and questions pertinent to political theory in the modern era, particularly focusing on the relationship of the individual to community, society, and state. Although the emergence of the individual as a central moral, political, and conceptual category arguably began in earlier eras, it is in the seventeenth century that it takes firm hold in defining the state, political institutions, moral thinking, and social relations. The centrality of "the individual" has created difficulties, even paradoxes, for community and social relations, and political theorists have struggled to reconicle those throughout the modern era. We will consider the political forms that emerged out of those struggles, as well as the changed and distinctly "modern" conceptualizations of political theory such as freedom, responsibilty, justice, rights and obligations, as central categories for organizing moral and political life.
Course number only
181
Use local description
No

PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH

Status
O
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
203
Section ID
PSCI180203
Meeting times
R 0300PM-0400PM
Meeting location
MCNEIL BUILDING 169
Instructors
SALGADO, ISAAC
Description
Through reading texts of Plato (Socrates), Aristotle, Augustine and Aquinas, the student encounters a range of political ideas deeply challenging to--and possibly corrosive of--today's dominant democratic liberalism. Can classical and medieval thinking offer insight into modern impasses in political morality? Is such ancient thinking plausible, useful, or dangerous?
Course number only
180
Use local description
No

PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH

Status
C
Activity
REC
Title (text only)
PSCI180 - ANCIENT POLITICAL THOUGH
Term
2017A
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
202
Section ID
PSCI180202
Meeting times
R 0130PM-0230PM
Meeting location
WILLIAMS HALL 4
Instructors
SALGADO, ISAAC
Description
Through reading texts of Plato (Socrates), Aristotle, Augustine and Aquinas, the student encounters a range of political ideas deeply challenging to--and possibly corrosive of--today's dominant democratic liberalism. Can classical and medieval thinking offer insight into modern impasses in political morality? Is such ancient thinking plausible, useful, or dangerous?
Course number only
180
Use local description
No