DRAFT

Gender, Politics, and Nationalism, MIT Graduate Consortium in WomenÕs Studies

Spring 2007 – Thursdays, 5:30 to 8:30 PM (MIT Campus, building/room TBA)

Elora Chowdhury (Elora.chowdhury@umb.edu, 617.287.6764)

Rhonda Frederick (frederir@bc.edu, 617.552.3717)

OFFICE HOURS: Thursdays, 3:30 to 4:30, LOCATION

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

This course investigates the myriad ways religion, race/color, and the ÒideaÓ of woman shape womenÕs lives within national and transnational contexts. Specifically, ÒGender, Politics, and NationalismÓ explores the contested relationship between women and the nation-state as the latter is informed by religious and racial/color politics in South Asia and the Caribbean. This course examines how religious- and racially-informed gender identities intersect with national ones in the emergence of social movements in South Asia and theories about nation-state and citizenship formation in the Caribbean. To achieve these ends, the course explores the uses to which nations put gender as they define and practice religiosity, citizenship, and political perspectives; at the same time, our course highlights the complex ways that nationalist politics has created opportunities for womenÕs activism while simultaneously undermining their autonomy. We aim to understand the many negotiations, compromises, and concessions women enter into with dominant nationalisms to shape their political agendas and negotiate ÒwomanÕsÓ symbolic uses and womenÕs Ònon-symbolicÓ realities.

 

This course will be conducted as a seminar and is divided into an introduction and three thematic modules.  In MODULE ONE, ÒColonialism, Nationalism, and the Woman Question,Ó we examine debates around anti-colonial and nationalist movements, ideas, and theories. We investigate how nationalist movements and discourses imagine and construct national identities in specific gendered, sexual, and raced terms over time and space. In using gender and race as analytic lenses to re-evaluate nationalist politics, we seek to understand how masculine, feminine, and racial ideals are constantly reworked to project images of strong, healthy, virile, and morally pure nations.  MODULE TWO, ÒRethinking Theories of Nationalism,Ó builds upon Module One through an examination of how nationalist discourses imagine and construct identities in specific historical, classed, religious, and community terms.  Finally, MODULE THREE, ÒGlobalization, Development, Citizenship,Ó challenges any hegemonic understanding of globalizationÕs equalizing effects by investigating new alliances, complexities, formations of power, and womenÕs agency enabled and disabled by them.

 

Questions to consider:

  1. What are the competing narrations of nationhood?  How do systems of power determine how these different narrations are categorized?
  2. Why has the intersection of gender and nation been a particularly pertinent one for feminism and for understanding how gender functions within theories of emergent nation-states?
  3. How can we complicate the binary of feminism as oppositional to or restitutive of nationalist agendas?
  4. Is the ÒnationÓ an adequate vehicle through which to envision and realize gender-just societies in national and transnational contexts?

 


COURSE REQUIREMENTS

Attendance:  Since the work of this seminar depends upon engaged class discussion, attendance is mandatory.  Attendance will be taken at the beginning of each class and late arrivals will be recorded.  Each student must come to each class on time and prepared with the required reading and/or writing assignment.  If, due to extreme circumstances, you must miss two consecutive weeks of class (2 classes), you should seriously consider withdrawing from the course.  Excessive absence (a total of 3 or more unexcused absences) will result in a failing grade.  As per university guidelines, we can only excuse absences accompanied by a note from your dean or your doctor.

 

Class Participation/Position Papers: Your final grade for the course will reflect your engaged participation in class (or lack thereof), therefore each student is responsible for completing the assigned readings, taking detailed reading and class notes, and sharing her/his insights discovered in our required readings.  In-class discussion will be greatly enabled by position papers prepared for each class; these 2-page papers, required for February 8th through the end of the semester, should describe the arguments of each assigned text and offer your critique of them, supported by connections you make between their arguments.  In addition to revealing varied interpretations of course materials, enthusiastic verbal and written class participation can provide material for informed and thoughtful essays.

 

Weekly Discussant: Every week (except for the first one), a discussant will be responsible for that weekÕs readings.  This responsibility entails using your thorough understanding of each required text to lead the class through critical discourse with the material.  Discussants may find it useful to prepare several questions that provoke conversation about our readingsÕ theses and key points.  Students will be asked to select a week on the first day of class.  (PLEASE NOTE: the number of presenters per week will depend upon the total number of students enrolled in the class.)

 

Writing (PLEASE NOTE: no late writing or emailed assignments will be accepted):

Module Response Papers (MRPs) – see course schedule for MRP due dates.

Each student must write one response paper (5 to 7 type-written pages) for each course module.  In these, you must:

á       Create a thesis that identifies and explores a theme/issue (or themes/issues) in the given module

á       Use required readings, class discussion, and your own analyses to support your thesis about the module

These short assignments, as well as the final essay, should employ Chicago Manual of Style format.

 

Final Paper – Conference Paper or Article-length Essay

While you may choose your own topic/thesis for this essay, final essays must examine a theme (or module) of the course, an issue raised in lecture/class discussion, or an issue in your own analyses.  This research essay must draw on at least two supplemental sources in addition to your primary source. Finally, this essay should be considered a conference paper and thus contain no more than 10 pages.  If your primary area of study is Caribbean, Post-colonial, South Asian, or WomenÕs Studies, you may choose to write one article-length essay (25-30 pages); no MRPs are required if you choose to write an article-length essay.  Proposals for the article-length essay are due mid-semester and must include a description of your thesis; citation, quotation, and brief discussion of relevant quotations; and an annotated bibliography that describes sources to be used.

 

Grading:

MRPs                                      35%                 Article Proposal                       30%

Conf. Paper                             40%                 Article                                      45%

Particip./Position Pprs.            25%                 Particip./Position Pprs.            25%

                                                100%                                                               100%

 

REQUIRED READINGS (Books will be available at É; articles and selected chapters will be provided by É)  Please be aware that some readings may be added or revised throughout the semester.

 

Books

 

Articles/Selected Chapters


Articles/Selected Chapters (continued)


Articles/Selected Chapters (continued)

 

Films

 

Website

 


(Strongly) Recommended Readings (relevant module[s] in parentheses)

 

 


COURSE SCHEDULE

 

Course Overview and Introduction

February 1st

 

Module One: Colonialism, Nationalism, and the Woman Question

February 8th

 

February 15th

 

February 22nd

 

March 1st

 

Module Two: Rethinking Theories of Nationalism

March 8th (March 5-9, 2006 Boston College Spring Break)

 


March 15th

 

March 22nd (DATES, 2006 UMass, Boston Spring Break)

 

 

March 29th

 

Module Three: Globalization, Development, Citizenship

April 5th (March 5-9, 2006 Boston College Easter Break)

 

April 12th

 

April 19th

 

April 26th

 

May 3rd

 

May 10th

 

DATE

Final Essay Due