Global Culture War Syllabus
Global Culture War Syllabus
Global Culture War Syllabus
TA Instructors:
Amy Wilson
[email protected]
Required Readings
K. Tsianina Lomawaima, They Called It Prairie Light: The Story of Chilocco Indian School (Lincoln,
NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1995).
Kelly Lytle Hernández, City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los
Angeles, 1771-1965 (Chapel Hill, NC: UNC Press, 2017).
Ellen D. Wu, The Color of Success: Asian Americans and the Origins of the Model Minority
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015).
Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Classroom Wars: Language, Sex, and the Making of Modern Political
Culture (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2017).
Course Assignments
Students will complete five short essays throughout the semester. Prompts for each essay
can be found in our NYU Classes page under the “Resources” tab, select folder titled “Essay
Prompts.” Each paper will count as 15% of the final grade—together they are worth 75%.
Class Participation
• All participants in the course are expected to be in class and on time, read regularly
and participate actively in the course during discussion and during TA breakout
sessions. Class participation is graded and consists of 25% of your final grade. In
addition, you are expected to schedule a one-on-one appointment with your TA
during the course of the semester. (TAs will have more information on these
meetings.) Class participation will be graded in two main areas: attendance and active
participation in class (lecture class and breakout session), i.e. does it seem like you
have done the reading? Make a point about something you found interesting in the
reading. Or make connections between different readings. I understand that some
people are shy in a large gathering. I ask that you still push through that shyness, and
use this opportunity to share your thoughts with myself and your classmates. If you
need to miss a class, please send an email to your TA in advance.
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• The five short papers will be graded on the following criteria:
o Does the paper have a clear thesis/argument?
o Does the student use evidence from the book to support their argument (not
just summarize data)?
o Is the paper clear and well written?
If you insist on taking notes on a laptop but are found surfing the internet, messaging, or
viewing unrelated materials to the syllabus during class, I or any TA will deduct 5% of your
grade. Additionally, it goes without saying (but I’ll say it anyway) that there is to be absolutely
no texting during class time.
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Important Take-Aways From this Syllabus
• Attend: If you miss a class. Do not email the Professor (aka me) asking: “Did
I miss anything important?” “Can I come to your office hours to make up
what I missed?” or any variation of these questions. Make a friend in the class,
and ask politely if they can share notes with you. And most importantly, don’t
miss class. Office hours are for expanding or clarifying ideas you’ve already
learned when you were in class.
• Speak: If you have come across something in the readings that excites you,
puzzles you, or confuses you, bring it up in class during discussion. Studies
show the more you engage in active speaking during appropriate times in
class, the more you will retain what you are learning. Take class discussion
seriously, like an assignment and chime in, do not let your peers shoulder the
load for you.
• Read: Always come to class prepared by having read all course materials
required for that class meeting. It is your responsibility to obtain all required
books. Do not email the professor: “where can I get the book?”
Any student attending NYU who needs an accommodation due to chronic, psychological,
visual, hearing, mobility and/or learning disability, should register with the Moses Center for
Students with Disabilities at 212.998.4980, 726 Broadway, 2 floor, www.nyu.edu/csd.
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Course Schedule
Monday
• Read K. Tsianina Lomawaima, They Called it Prairie Light, Chapters 1-2.
• Organization of TA groups.
Wednesday
• Lomawaima, They Called it Prairie Light, Chapters 3-4.
Monday – Breakout Session 1: Meet with TA’s in discussion groups to review expectations
for the course, for writing, and preparing for your first essay assignment.
• Lomawaima, They Called it Prairie Light, Chapter 5.
Wednesday
• Lomawaima, They Called it Prairie Light, Chapter 6-Epilogue.
Essay #1 due Friday, September 20. Upload through “Assignments” tab on NYU
Classes.
Monday
• Kelly Lytle Hernández, City of Inmates, Intro-Chapter 1.
Wednesday
• Hernández, City of Inmates, Chapters 2-3.
Monday
• Hernández, City of Inmates, Chapter 4-5.
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Wednesday
• Natalia Molina, “Deportations in the Urban Landscape.” (Found under “Resources”
in NYU Classes)
Wednesday
• Ellen D. Wu, The Color of Success, Intro-Chapter 1.
Monday
• Wu, The Color of Success, Chapter 2.
Wednesday
• Wu, The Color of Success, Chapter 3.
Monday
• Wu, The Color of Success, Chapter 4.
Wednesday
• Wu, The Color of Success, Chapter 5.
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Week 10 (Nov 4/6) – Racial Liberalism and Global Wars
Wednesday
• Wu, The Color of Success, Chapters 7-Epilogue.
Monday
• Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, Classroom Wars, Intro-Chapter 1.
Wednesday
• Petrzela, Classroom Wars, Chapter 2.
Monday
• Petrzela, Classroom Wars, Chapter 3.
Wednesday
• Watch and discuss in class, Fear and Learning at Hoover Elementary, Dir. Laura Angelica
Simon.
Monday
• Petrzela, Classroom Wars, Chapter 5.
Wednesday – Special Guest Lecture: Dr. Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, The New School
• Petrzela, Classroom Wars, Chapters 6-7.
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Week 15 (Dec 9/11) – Pillars of the Global Culture Wars