Philosophy 310 - SEM:RECENT & CONTEMPORARY PHI
Spring
2013
01
4.00
Nalini Bhushan
T 01:00-02:50
Smith College
38879-S13
DEWEY 104
nbhushan@smith.edu
Topics course. What does it mean to be a cosmopolitan person -- a global citizen? Can one simultaneously construct one's identity in terms of one's nationality, gender, ethnicity and/or other more local forms of community and be truly cosmopolitan? If so, how? If not, which is the better approach? Is there one distinctive way of being cosmopolitan, or might there be varieties of cosmopolitanism arising in different cultural contexts, for instance, under colonial rule or conditions of exile? Is it self-evidently true that being a cosmopolitan person is a good thing, for an individual or a society? What are some of its challenges? We will read essays by Kant, Mill, Nussbaum, Rawls, Rorty, Naipaul, Said, Tagore, Gandhi, Appiah and others with a view to examining and assessing different answers that have been proposed to these and related questions.
Topic: Cosmopolitanism. Instructor Permission. Not open to first-years, sophomores