Critical Social Inquiry 0275 - Hopes and Fears: Religion, Gender, and Possessions from the Middle Ages to the Pilgrims
Hopes and Fears
Spring
2020
1
4.00
James Wald
10:30AM-11:50AM W;10:30AM-11:50AM F
Hampshire College
331500
Franklin Patterson Hall 104;Franklin Patterson Hall 104
jjwSS@hampshire.edu
What can the hopes and fears of a given society tell us about it and ourselves? Did the gravest "sins" in old Europe and the North American colonies involve food, money, or sex? Among the hallmarks of modernity were the rise of new social formations (classes) and the commercialization of daily activities and relations. Did traditional institutions and belief systems hamper or facilitate the changes? What roles did religious and national contexts play? Did the increase in the sheer number of "things" change the way people thought? What changes did the family and private life undergo? At the heart of the course is the concept of culture as a process through which individuals and groups struggle to shape and make sense of their social institutions and daily lives. A core course in history, the social sciences, and cultural studies.
Writing and Research Students are expected to spend at least six to eight hours a week of preparation and work outside of class time.