MIT: Independent Activities Period: IAP

IAP 2016 Activities by Sponsor - Science, Technology, and Society

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Designing Your Life

Gabriella Jordan, David Mindell

Enrollment: Limited: Advance sign-up required
Attendance: Participants must attend all sessions

This course (formerly called "Living an Extraordinary Life") provides an exciting, eye-opening, and thoroughly useful inquiry into what it takes to live an extraordinary life, on your own terms. This course addresses what it takes to succeed, and to be proud of your life and happy in it. You will tackle career satisfaction, money, your body, vices, your relationship to yourself. Address your own life and how you live it and learn from it. An inquisitive nature and willingness to face the truth are required.

Web: http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/311-span-classhighlightlivingspan-span-classhighlightanspan-span-classhighlightextraordinaryspan-lifemit

Sponsor(s): Science, Technology, and Society
Contact: Diane Olsen, diane@handelgroup.com


Designing Your Life

Jan/11 Mon 10:00AM-01:00PM E51-151
Jan/12 Tue 05:00PM-07:30PM E51-151
Jan/13 Wed 10:00AM-01:00PM E51-151
Jan/14 Thu 05:30PM-07:30PM E51-151
Jan/15 Fri 10:00AM-01:00PM E51-151

Hard at Work: Film Portrayals of Gender, Social Mobility, and Economic Insecurity in the 1970s

Renee Blackburn

Enrollment: Unlimited: Advance sign-up required
Sign-up by 01/28
Attendance: Participants welcome at individual sessions

How do we define 1970s America? Is it through watching dancing disco lovers at Studio 54? Is it through hearing Richard Nixon’s resignation speech? Is it through seeing the long lines of cars lining up at gas stations during the oil crisis? This four-film series brings to light the issues of gender, economic instability, and social mobility in the United States during that period. Each film provides an insight into the social and cultural America of the 1970s, pulling us through the decade’s insecurities, instabilities, and changes, only to emerge on the other side in a different decade with different views on gender, race, class and society.

 

During each session, we will watch a film and leave time afterward for an optional discussion. Additonally, there will be OPTIONAL, supplemental readings that accompany the films, if you're interested in reading more!

 

Find more details and sign up at: http://hardatworkinthe70s.weebly.com/

Sponsor(s): Science, Technology, and Society, Women's and Gender Studies
Contact: Renee Blackburn, RMBLACK@MIT.EDU


Film: Easy Rider

Jan/19 Tue 05:00PM-08:00PM 66-148

From Amazon: Two hippie bikers set out to discover "the real America" and wind up taking the ultimate bad trip. 


Film: Taxi Driver

Jan/20 Wed 05:00PM-08:00PM 66-148

From IMDB: A mentally unstable Vietnam war veteran works as a night-time taxi driver in New York City where the perceived decadence and sleaze feeds his urge for violent action, attempting to save a preadolescent prostitute in the process.


Film: Saturday Night Fever

Jan/26 Tue 05:00PM-08:00PM 66-148

From IMDB: A Brooklyn teenager feels his only chance to succeed is as the king of the disco floor. His carefree youth and weekend dancing help him to forget the reality of his bleak life.


Film: Nine to Five

Jan/27 Wed 05:00PM-08:00PM 66-148

From IMDB: Three female employees of a sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot find a way to turn the tables on him.