SOC 327(F) Violence, Terrorism, and Collective Healing (Same as Asian Studies 327)*
What do terrorism and violence mean and how do we think of its perpetrators? This course will investigate the concepts of terror and violence, and how they can be made
into collectively recognized and remembered events. Participants will engage with
relevant works in order to question and debate what terrorism and violence mean and
how these concepts are addressed by various disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. Further, this course will investigate how representations of terrorism and
violence are connected to the themes of: securing political power, collective resistance,
community, and international power relations. Crucially, the course seeks to enable
participants to critically reflect upon the publicly available perspectives on terrorism
and violence. The course will encourage the interpretation, discussion, and writing on
the following themes: `tradition' and religion; militancy and nationalism; public spaces
and resistance; the role of emotions in violent movements; community, gender and
collective recovery; and memory, orchestrating public panic, and war. Our materials
combine analytical, historical, theoretical and literary texts, and films; all of these
speak to the themes of this course and its participants will be encouraged to interpret,
critique, and connect the existing arguments made in the course materials.
Format: seminar. Requirements: full participation and attendance in class; two oral
presentations; one 4-page response paper; one paper topic proposal; and a term paper.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 19 (expected: 15). Open to non-majors. Preference
will be given to Anthropology and Sociology majors. This course is part of the Critical Reasoning and Analytical Skills Initiative.
Hour: VALIANI