Imagination in Politics TW: 3:00-5:00, W: 3:00-5:00 or by appointment Course Description

Similar documents
Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

Foucault: Bodies in Politics Course Description

Course Description. Course objectives

On Violence Hannah Arendt Download Raiisa

\ The Origins of Totalitarianism

Political Ideas from the Early Modern Age to the Digital Revolution

Advanced Master in Legal Sciences / Master in European and Global Law

University of Connecticut, Storrs Spring POLS2998: Contemporary Political Theory Course Syllabus. I. Overview

The Topos of the Crisis of the West in Postwar German Thought

Phil 183 Topics in Continental Philosophy

AS Spring 2017 History of Modern Germany Monday/Wednesday 1:30 2:45 Hanno Balz

Hitler s Fatal Gamble Comparing Totalitarianism and Democracy

Dictators and Publics

AEAJ/AHIST 436 Fascism: Japan and Beyond

POLS 3000 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY

Women and Revolution: Rosa Luxemburg, Raya Dunayevskaya and Hannah Arendt Alhelí Alvarado- Díaz

University of St. Thomas Rome Core Program - Fall Semester 2016

Office Hours: Tuesday 4:30 6:30 Office Hours: Wednesday 4:30 6:00. Popular Culture, Art, and Autocracy Autumn 2015

Spring 2016, 10:00-10:50 am, Humanities 125 Dr. N Vavra

Required Materials The following textbooks will be made available at the bookstore:

CIEE Global Institute Berlin

On Violence Hannah Arendt War Historian

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

PHIL 455: Advanced Philosophy of Law

The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions Since the Seventeenth Century History 102 Spring T, Th, 1:00pm-2:15pm Professor Suzanne Kaufman

Sociology 3410: Early Sociological Theory Fall, Class Location: RB 2044 Office: Ryan Building 2034

Teaching Totalitarianism

Hannah Arendt ( )

WEST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE - POPP POLITICAL SCIENCE 001 THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES

Class Times: TTH 2:00-3:30 Meeting Place: PAR 203

Contemporary European Politics Political Science 136 Tufts University Spring Semester, 2011 Monday and Wednesday, 1:30-2:45

INTL NATIONALISM AND CITIZENSHIP IN EUROPE

PHL 370: PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION (Fall 2012) TR 1:40-2:55 Linfield Hall 234

HIEU 171/271: Democracy and Dictatorship in 20 th Century Germany

PLSI 200: Intro American Politics and Government Spring Class Meeting: W 4:10pm 6:55 pm HUM 133

Introduction to Comparative Government

Fall 2018, Weds. 6-9 PM, Clow 224 Office: Sage Hall 4622 Office Hours: MW 10:20-11:30 Phone: (920) Political Film

History : Western Civilization II Fall 2013, 4:00-4:50 pm, Hellems 201 Dr. Nancy Vavra

"Modern Europe, "

History : European History Since 1600: Empire, Revolution and Global War: Spring 2017, 10:00-10:50 am, Humanities 125 Dr N Vavra

Old and New Europe, 1914 to the Present

H509: Fascism in Europe,

S C H O E N C O N S U L T I N G

Sociology 3410: Early Sociological Theory

The Graduate Center of the City University of New York History Department Hist Literature of Modern Europe II Thursdays 4:15-6:15

INTA 2220: Government and Politics of Western Europe

Introduction to Political Thought POLS (CRN 21155), Spring 2019 MW 2:00-3: Maybank Hall Instructor: David Hinton

UCEAP London Spring 2017 Program in Global Cities Urban Realities Elective Course

GOVT-353: Political Theory and the Global Order. Craig French Department of Government, Georgetown University Fall 2009

ON TORTURE, I: State Violence and Brutality, & Totalitarianism

Terence Ball, Richard Dagger, and Daniel I. O Neill, Ideals and Ideologies: A Reader, 10th Edition (Routledge, August 2016), ISBN:

Introduction to International Studies

South Portland, Maine Title: World History Since 1500 Catalog Number: HIST 125

Western Civilization II: 1500 to the Present

HISTORY SYLLABUS (FALL 2005) HISTORY OF MODERN GERMANY Instructor Michael Hayse

American Government I GOVT 2301 Collin College, Spring Creek

Brock University Department of Political Science. 3P04: Politics, Law, and Justice Fall 2011

HUMANITIES 2590 The Making of the Modern World: Renaissance to the Present

Professor Parker Hevron Roosevelt Hall, 107 Chapman University 1 University Drive Orange, CA 92866

Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Office: Garrison Office Hours: WF 9-10:00, and by appointment Telephone:

HIS The World of the Twentieth Century ( )

Schmitt, Strauss, Arendt

I. The Rise of Totalitarianism. A. Totalitarianism Defined

Israeli Politics and the Arab Spring

Universitatea Alexandru Ioan Cuzaˮ, Iași. Facultatea de Istorie. Universitatea Montpellier Paul Valery IIIˮ

Department of Political Science Fall, Political Science 306 Contemporary Democratic Theory Peter Breiner

Tennessee Consortium For International Studies Syllabus Outline. World History 1120

Modern Europe, : Writing Intensive Section

PLSC 104 AMERICAN GOVERNMENT CREDITS: 3.0

IDH 3931, Honors Seminar Crisis and Conflict in Modern Europe Fall 2017

WEST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE POLITICAL SCIENCE 001 THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES:

Instructor: Kaarin Michaelsen. "Modern Europe, "

2302: 2006 TR: 12:30-1:45PM (CBW

Human Rights: International Dimensions

Required Texts Coursepacket at Rapid Copy, Basement of Business Administration Bldg.

Confronting the Powers of Empire and Shaping of the Church. Andrew Foster-Connors

Political Science 0300 Comparative Politics Fall 2004 (05-1)

Fascism Rises in Europe Close Read

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY CANTON, NEW YORK COURSE OUTLINE HIST 320 -TWENTIETH-CENTURY

PS 506, Spring 2015: Deception and Politics. Monday/Wednesday 2:30-3:45, 5231 Social Science

Programme Specification

SYLLABUS European History of the 20 th Century Prof. Dr Almudena González del Valle

Fall 2017 McGill University. Dr. Mark A. Wolfgram Office: TBD Phone: TBD Office Hours: MW 11:15-12:15pm

Political Theory 1438 FALL, 2018

1920s: Rise of Dictators

Lakehead University Contemporary Political Thought (2012) POLI-4513-FA T 11:30-2:30 Ryan Building 2026

Syllabus: Sociology 001 Intro to Sociology Fall 2012

Political Science Power Professor Leonard Feldman. Hunter College, Fall 2010 Mondays 5:35-8:15 pm Roosevelt House Room 204

Two 1 20 sessions per week (Tuesdays & Thursdays, 2:20-3:35 p.m.)

CONTEMPORARY SOCIETIES AND CULTURES: FOUNDATIONS OF THE STATE AND SOCIETY

The Futile Search for Stability

Fritz Bauer Institut Geschichte und Wirkung des Holocaust

ECO 171S: Hayek and the Austrian Tradition Syllabus

Hannah Arendt in the 21st Century: A Global Discourse

Junior Colloquium: Liberalism and Its Discontents Tuesdays and Thursdays 10:20-11:40a Spring 2016 CSS 371

Public Administration

New Paltz Central School District Global History and Geography 10

History of Modern Germany,

ARLT 100g: The Holocaust: The Politics of Representation

Transcription:

POSC 276 Imagination in Politics Fall 2018 Class Hours: TTH: 10:10-11:55 Classroom: Weitz 230 Professor: Mihaela Czobor-Lupp Office: Willis 418 Office Hours: TW: 3:00-5:00, W: 3:00-5:00 or by appointment Course Description We think of imagination as belonging to the realm of art. However, can imagination be so narrowly confined? It has been argued that imagination is intrinsic to the very possibility of thinking, to the way individuals constitute their moral self and identity, and to the constitution of the public realm. The question this course asks is: What is the relationship that imagination has/can have with the larger field of human affairs? In the attempt to answer this question, we will explore in this course the role that imagination can play in politics and in the making of the moral judgments that are needed to guide human affairs. We will see that, on the one hand, liberals are right. Imagination can be held responsible for the success of extreme ideologies, such as racism and tribal nationalism and, in extremis, for mass murder politics. On the other hand, we will see that a politics that is true to the values of freedom and democracy requires a benign public employment of imagination, which increases the autonomy of the individuals. We will explore these different perspectives on imagination through a conversation with Hannah Arendt, a Jewish German philosopher, who immigrated to the United States in 1941. First, we will read Arendt s work on the origins of totalitarianism and try to understand how ideological imagination can becloud so much judgment and lead to the horrors of Stalinism and Nazism. We will also explore Arendt s view of totalitarianism: the elements that favored its crystallization, the forms it took in the European politics of the 19 th and the 20 th centuries, as well as its structural components: its forms of mobilization and organization. Second, we will go more in depth and focus on one of the participants to the orchestration of mass murder politics that Nazism made possible, Adolf Eichmann. The intention is to understand how Eichmann was capable of committing so much (banal) evil, as the orchestrator of the Final Solution (the extermination of Jews in Europe). Eichmann s case will provide the framework for trying to understand the challenges that modern individuals face in developing their moral conscience. What we need to comprehend is that moral conscience and the ability to think and judge in ways that allow individuals to distinguish between right and wrong cannot be developed in the absence of a specific form of imagination; an activity where, obviously, Eichmann failed. Third, we will read some pieces that Arendt wrote on the work of different writers, such as Lessing, Kafka, and Heine. We will also read the works of these artists because they are wonderful and because we want to develop our own interpretation of them, so that we can 1

engage Arendt s views critically. We will wrap up the class by reading a novel written by a Jewish Romanian writer, Mihail Sebastian, who witnessed the rise of fascism in Romania. We will also read some fragments from Sebastian s Journal: 1935-1944. The intention is to understand several facets of the role that imagination can play in politics, as an antidote to totalitarianism and to the moral blindness of its perpetrators. This last section will be prefaced by a short introduction to the role culture and art play for Arendt in the human condition, both in politics and in the acts of thinking and judgment. Course objectives In Arendt s view, totalitarianism is the most unexpected event that shattered the foundations of modern politics, as well as the conceptual tools to think about politics and understand it. Thus, the first objective is to understand her notion of totalitarianism, both as a movement and as a political regime; The second objective is to explore the relationship that Arendt theorizes between imagination and politics, particularly, the public ambiguity of imagination, the fact that this can enhance freedom as it can very well undermine it, thus serving projects of domination and mass murder politics; The third objective is to understand how imagination is central to the act of thinking and to the formation of moral conscience, thus playing a central role in the prevention of evil; The fourth objective is to grasp the meaning of Arendt s controversial idea of the banality of evil that she used to describe Adolf Eichmann, the orchestrator of the extermination of the Jews during the Nazi regime in the interwar Germany; The fifth objective is to understand how story-telling, as practiced by several modern artists, can enhance the moral and public powers of imagination. Last but not least, the final objective is to become better readers, thinkers, speakers, and writers. Achieving the Course Objectives: We will learn about all these issues and try to reach our course objecitves by carefully and closely reading different parts from the following books: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, A Harvest/HBJ Book, 1975, 1979, ISBN: 9780156701532; Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, Penguin Books, 2006, ISBN: 9780143039881; 2

Hannah Arendt, Reflections on Literature and Culture, Stanford University Press, 2007, ISBN: 9780804744997; Hannah Arendt, The Life of the Mind, Thinking, A Harvest Book, 1977, 1978, ISBN: 9780156519922; Hannah Arendt, The Jewish Writings, Schocken Books, 2007, ISBN: 9780805211948; Hannah Arendt, Men in Dark Times, A Harvest Book, Harcourt Brace & Company, 1993, 1994, ISBN: 9780156588904; Hannah Arendt, Essays in Understanding: 1930-1954, Schocken Books, 1994, ISBN: 9780805211863; Hannah Arendt, Responsibility and Judgment, New York: Schocken Books, 2003, ISBN: 9780805211624 The Portable Hannah Arendt, edited with an introduction by Peter Baehr, Penguin Books, 2003, ISBN: 9780142437568 We will also watch two movies: Leni Riefenstahl, Triumph of the Will and Margarethe von Trotta, Hannah Arendt Schedule of the screenings that will take place at the Gould Library: 9/22/2018 Sat 7:15 PM Library 305 Triumph of the Will 9/23/2018 Sun 7:30 PM Library 305 Triumph of the Will 10/6/2018 Sat 7:15 PM Library 305 Hannah Arendt 10/7/2018 Sun 7:15 PM Library 305 Hannah Arendt Course Requirements: 1. Two short (four page) essays: Topic for the first essay: a) In Arendt s view, totalitarianism governs through ideology and terror. Explain why this is the case and also show what public employment of imagination facilitates the use of total terror and ideology. Do you think that Arendt s analysis of totalitarianism can still help us to understand contemporary political phenomena and developments? Justify your answer. (The essay is due on October 14 by 10 PM) (20%) Topic for the second essay: b) Arendt thinks that imagination is central to the act of thinking. Explain why this is the case and, particularly, why imagination is central to the development of moral conscience. Moreover, do you agree with Arendt that Eichmann, as someone who lacked imagination and thus was incapable of thinking, was just a bureaucrat 3

doing his duty or do you think that, in order to be able to do what Eichmann did, one needs to really be a fanatic who fervently believes in the leading ideology? (The essay is due on November 5 by 10 PM) (20%) 2. Class presentations (in connection with the movies and the novels, plays, and short stories that we will be reading in our class) (15%) You can choose one of the two movies. You can also choose Kafka s Castle, Lessing s Nathan the Wise, Arendt s piece, The Jew as a Pariah: A Hidden Tradition, or Sebastian s For Two Thousand Years and the fragments from his Journal. The assignment requires you to present the main ideas of the artistic work, as well as to situate it within a larger context (of the artist s work and of his historical time) and then lead class discussion in ways that show how the artistic work helps us understand Arendt s ideas about the political role of imagination. 3. Final Take Home Exam (35%) The exam will be posted on Moodle on November 17 at 10 AM and will be email to mlupp@carleton.edu no later than November 18 at 5 PM. 4. Active and informed class participation: This includes: (i) attending classes; (ii) doing the readings for the day; and (iii) in class assignments that will test your degree of familiarization with and understanding of the reading that you were requested to prepare for the current day (10%). What is Expected from the Students? Students will be expected to read, think, form arguments and counter-arguments, understand the fundamental concepts, and participate (in a critical and creative manner) in class discussion. That means that students must keep up in their reading assignments and attend class regularly. Students must be fully prepared at all times to discuss the arguments and concepts from the previous readings. The best students will be knowledgeable, critical but balanced in their critical assessments, and will develop coherent and sound arguments that they can defend in their essays, in their exams, and in class discussion. Academic dishonesty: "All assignments, quizzes, and exams must be done on your own. Note that academic dishonesty includes not only cheating, fabrication, and plagiarism, but also includes helping other students commit acts of academic dishonesty by allowing them to obtain copies of your work. You are allowed to use the Web for reference purposes, but you may not copy material from any website or any other source without proper citations. In short, all submitted work must be your own. 4

Cases of academic dishonesty will be dealt with strictly. Each such case will be referred to the Academic Standing Committee via the Associate Dean of Students or the Associate Dean of the College. A formal finding of responsibility can result in disciplinary sanctions ranging from a censure and a warning to permanent dismissal in the case of repeated and serious offenses. The academic penalty for a finding of responsibility can range from a grade of zero in the specific assignment to an F in this course." SCHEDULE OF CLASSES AND READINGS: Why imagination? September 11: Why imagination in politics? Who was Hannah Arendt? Reading: Hannah Arendt, What Remains? The Language Remains : A Conversation with Günter Gauss (Moodle) September 13: Imagination in human life: political dangers and promises Readings: George Kateb, The Adequacy of the Canon, Hannah Arendt, Thinking, 69-92, and Understanding and Politics (The Difficulties of Understanding) (Moodle) Ideological Imagination: Antisemitism, Imperialism, Nationalism, and Totalitarianism September 18: Anti-Semitism Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Preface to the First Edition, Antisemitism as an Outrage to Common Sense, The Jews and Society, and The Dreyfus Affair September 20: Imperialism and racism Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Race-Thinking Before Racism and Race and Bureaucracy September 25: Imperialism and tribal nationalism Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Continental Imperialism: The Pan- Movements and The Decline of the Nation-State and the End of the Rights of Man September 27: Propaganda and organization Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, The Totalitarian Movement Discussion of Leni Riefenstahl s movie, The Triumph of the Will October 2: Total domination Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Totalitarianism in Power 5

October 4: Ideology and terror Readings: Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, Ideology and Terror: A Novel Form of Government and Hannah Arendt, On the Nature of Totalitarianism: An Essay in Understanding (Moodle) Moral Judgment, Politics, and Imagination October 9: Eichmann in Jerusalem Reading: Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, pages 3-151 October 11: The Banality of Evil Reading: Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem, pages 151-280 Discussion of Margarethe von Trotta s movie, Hannah Arendt October 16: Where did Eichmann Fail? Thinking and Imagination Reading: Hannah Arendt, Some Questions of Moral Philosophy and The Life of the Mind, Thinking, pages 166-193 (Moodle) No class on October 18! Artists and Politics October 23: The human condition and the role of culture in politics Readings: Hannah Arendt, Labor, Work, Action (Moodle) and Culture and Politics in Reflections on Literature October 25: Pariahs and the power of their imagination Reading: Hannah Arendt, The Jew as a Pariah: A Hidden Tradition in Reflections on Literature and Culture October 30: The power of Kafka s imagination Readings: Hannah Arendt, Franz Kafka, Appreciated Anew, and Franz Kafka, The Castle November 1: The power of imagination in dark times Readings: Hannah Arendt, On Humanity in Dark Times: Thoughts about Lessing (Moodle) and Lessing, Nathan the Wise (Moodle) 6

November 6: The power of imagination of dark times Readings: Mihail Sebastian, For Two Thousand Years, Parts One and Two and Mihaela Czobor- Lupp, Being Jewish in Interwar Romania: From Pariah s Isolation to Resistance (The Case of Mihail Sebastian) (Moodle) November 8: The Power of Imagination in Dark Times Reading: Mihail Sebastian, For Two Thousand Years, Parts Three, Four, Five, and Six and Journal selections (Moodle) November 13: Final Reflections and Discussion: How shall we understand the political and moral role of imagination? 7