ENROLL Course Search
Your search for courses for 22/SP and with code: FFSTSOCSCI found 3 courses.
EUST 159.00 "The Age of Isms" - Ideals, Ideas and Ideologies in Modern Europe 6 credits
Closed: Size: 30, Registered: 25, Waitlist: 0
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9:50am11:00am | 9:50am11:00am | 9:40am10:40am |
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"Ideology" is perhaps one of the most-used (and overused) terms of modern political life. This course will introduce students to important political ideologies and traditions of modern Europe and their role in the development of political systems and institutional practices from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. We will read central texts by conservatives, liberals, socialists, anarchists and nationalists while also considering ideological outliers such as Fascism and Green Political Thought. In addition the course will introduce students to the different ways in which ideas can be studied systematically and the methodologies available.
FREN 255.07 Paris Program: Islam in France: Historical Approaches and Current Debates 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 9, Waitlist: 0
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In this course, students will explore the historical, cultural, social, and religious traces of Islam as they have been woven over time into the modern fabric of French society. Through images drawn from film, photography, television, and museum displays, they will discover the important role this cultural contact zone has played in the French experience. The course will take advantage of the resources of the city of Paris and will include excursions to museums as well as cultural and religious centers.
Prerequisite: French 204 or the equivalent and participation in Paris OCS program
Participation in Carleton OCS Paris Program
POSC 329.00 Reinventing Humanism: A Dialogue with Tzvetan Todorov 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 7, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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Humanism is today severely criticized for reducing humanity to Western culture and history and for its aggressive control and destruction of the non-human. Concomitantly, the history of the twentieth century reveals a growing totalitarian and anti-humanistic tendency in (post)modern societies and their politics, to replace individual agency, freedom, and responsibility with systemic solutions. The course explores, through a dialogue with the work of the French thinker, Tzvetan Todorov, how being human could be reinvented today in ways that avoid the moral and political pitfalls of the previous humanistic tradition, without devaluing, in the process, the idea of a shared humanity.
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