FALL
2007 HONORS COURSES
HONR 268M The University as a
Cultural Institution
Monday/Wednesday 12:00-1:15 p.m.
Dr. Sheri Parks, American Studies Department
Why are you here? What is the fit between historically
constructed universities and the people in them? As producers and gateways
to knowledge, universities have become powerful cultural locations,
affecting many aspects of American life from political thought to real
estate. As the U.S. has moved from a manufacturing economy to an information
economy, universities have assumed even greater cultural roles. This
course is in direct response to students’ questions about the cultural
assumptions and roles of universities and is designed to help them move
through the university as knowledgeable cultural participants. The topics
we will explore include the connections with issues of race, gender,
social class, religion, athletes, think tanks, motives and community
gentrification. Students will be evaluated according to class participation
and several types of writing assignments. Students will keep personal
journals, design, conduct and write up several ethnographic interviews
of their fellow students and complete a final project.
Readings include:
Adrianne Kezar et al. (ed.), Higher Education and the Public Good
Authur Levine, Where Fear and Hope Collide: A Portrait of Today’s College
Student
Naomi Schaeffer Riley, God on the Quad: How Religious Colleges and the
Missionary Generation are Changing America
CORE: Humanities (HO) and Diversity (D)