MC202: AN INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC AFFAIRS Section 001: 12:40pm 334A Section 007: 3:00pm 334A Spring 2008

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1 MC202: AN INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC AFFAIRS Section 001: 12:40pm 334A Section 007: 3:00pm 334A Spring 2008 Professor Rita Kiki Edozie rkedozie@msu.edu http://www.msu.edu/~rkedozie/ Course Summary: Excerpt from General Syllabus MC 202 focuses on national identity and how national identity relates to individual rights and identities and group identities. We begin by looking at some of the central theoretical understandings of how national identities are constituted and constructed. We then turn to a look at religion in the United States, in a book that uses economic analogies to argue that religious diversity in the United States in the context of religious freedom is a matter of individuals seeking out diverse options in the religious market. But lectures will also ask whether many Americans implicitly assume that some religious traditions, but not others, are in some way part of the national identity. Following that part of the course is a short segment which also asks how racial identity has intersected with national identity in the U.S., a segment which also introduces new theoretical questions about how group identities and individual rights intersect. We pursue this focus in multiple contexts, including by looking at race in the United States, the relationship between Hindus and Muslims in India, regional, religious and ethnic identities in Nigeria, and European Muslim minorities. The course ends, then, by asking whether transnational identities are sustainable and whether they are desirable in relation to national identities and state loyalties. We finish then with a discussion of whether promoting cosmopolitan loyalties is feasible and different ways to think about whether it would be desirable.

Teaching/Learning Format 2 What is the Purpose of Sections?: The purpose of all MC202 sections is to provide a forum for discussing important issues in public affairs. Here, we will also reinforce for you the variety of intellectual tools both theoretical and empirical for analyzing our contemporary dilemmas and arriving at sound judgments on public policy. MC202 is multi-disciplinary disciplinary, emphasizing the interdependence of social, political, economic, and cultural factors in understanding public affairs. Also, it is comparative. While beginning from a consideration of the United States and the challenges it faces in both domestic and foreign affairs, we emphasize the need to develop a comparative and global perspective for a full understanding of public affairs. What s more, we develop your cognitive and oral/written communication skills. The section will foster these skills more integrally, focusing on skills in the critical reading and analysis of texts, clear writing, articulate speaking, and attentive listening. How will Professor Edozie teach? Your professor me- while having a PhD in political science and more than 10 years of teaching and research experience is in MC202 merely part of a multi-disciplinary teaching team scheduled between general lectures and small section session seminars. The best way to learn in this section is to let her act as a facilitator of knowledge emanating from multiple general lectures and cross-disciplinary reading sources. She will precept the course s content and knowledge for you, synthesizing main themes and complex topics as well as integrating detailed disciplinary interpretations to provide thematic meaning for our public affairs theses. How will you learn? As well, we will learn using a student-centered, collaborative learning environment in which you as student can act as a facilitator (preceptor) of your own knowledge too. Participation in preceptor and roundtable session is required for your 20% session assignment. But attendance and participation are key. I will assess the regularity and extant quality of your participation in these assignments. Assessment sment 20% (Section Only) Each assignment must be documented by submitting a report after scheduled signed- up session (see format in endnote below and posted in Angel) 1 1.Preceptor: Lectures at least 2 participations- 1 before midpoint 2 after 5% 2.Preceptor: Readings at least 3 participations 1 before midpoint 2 after- 5% 3.Panelist: Roundtables: at least 3-1before midpoint 2 after 5% 4.Attendance: Full attendance with excused absences only 5% (a five is full attendance, full participation at every session, including unsolicited,,, and qualitative participation) Office Hours: 364 North Case Hall M, W 1:50pm 2:50pm - Walk In T,Th 11:00 pm 3:00pm By Appointment When I m Available

3 CALENDAR OF EVENTS INTRODUCTION & TOPIC 1 THEORIZING ABOUT NATIONAL IDENTITIES Monday, January 7 Introduction to MC 202 Section Methodologies (Precepting general lectures and readings; and roundtable collaborations) Wednesday, January 9 Professor Preceptor Lecture: Nationalism and the Invention of Tradition Readings: 1. Lloyd I. Rudolph and Susanne Hoeber Rudolph, AIntroduction@ from The Modernity of Tradition: Political Development in India (Univ. of Chicago Press, 1967), pp. 3-14. 2. Anthony D. Smith, National Identity (London: Penguin, 1991), pp. 1-28. 3. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origins and Spread of Nationalism, revised edition (London and New York: Verso, 1991), pp. 5-7 TOPIC 2: RELIGION IN THE US- AS NATIONAL IDENTITY Monday, January 14 Professor & Professor Lecture: Economic Views of Religion: An Introduction to Finke & Stark Students Reading: Finke & Stark, The Churching of America, chapters 2 and 3. Wednesday, January 16 Lecture: Religious Vitality in a Religious Free Market Reading: Finke & Stark, The Churching of America, chap. 4-5. Monday, January 21 No classes. Martin Luther, King, Jr. Day. Wednesday, January 23 Roundtable Discussion: Debate-- --Why Religion in the U.S. Will Remain Diverse

4 Reading: Finke & Stark, The Churching of America, chap. 6-7. Googled Article?? Monday, January 28 Roundtable Discussion: Debate--- Wither Church and State? Pluralism or Dominant Culture? Reading: Joseph Richard Preville, AConstitutional Quarrels: Roman Catholics, Jews, and the Aftermath of Lemon v. Kurtzman,@ Catholic Historical Review 78, no. 2 (1992):217-231 Googled Article??? TOPIC 3: RACE AND NATIONAL IDENTITY IN THE UNITED STATES Wednesday, January 30 Professor and Student Preceptor Professor Lecture: Individual Rights and Group Identities: Race in the United States. Students Readings: 1. Tamar Jacoby, The Beginning of the End of Race, pp. 171-181 in Racial Liberalism and the Politics of Urban America, ed. Curtis Stokes and Theresa Meléndez (East Lansing, Mich.: Michigan State University Press, 2003). 2. Katya Gibel Azoulay, AInterpreting the Census: The Elasticity of Whiteness and the Depoliticization of Race,@ pp. 155-170 in Racial Liberalism and the Politics of Urban America. SESSION RESCHEDULED TO A FRIDAY EVENING WEEK OF FEBRUARY 15 GUEST SPEAKER JOINT SECTIONAL SESSION - TBA Monday, February 4 No class Lecture: Liberalism and Racial Discrimination. Reading: David Carroll Cochran, ALiberal Political Theory=s Multicultural Blind Spot and Race in the United States,@ pp. 51-74 in Racial Liberalism and the Politics of Urban America. TOPIC 4 SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS BASES OF NATIONAL IDENTITY DENTITY: INDIA SESSION CANCELLED Wednesday, February 6 No class PAPER ASSIGNMENT/OPTION 1 ON RELIGION AND RACE IN THE UNITED STATES IS DUE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8 IN MY MAILBOX

5 Monday, February 11 Professor Lecture: History and Nation: Indian Identity in a Postcolonial World Students Reading: Sunil Khilnani, The Idea of India, pp. 1-60. Wednesday, February 13 Reading: Khilnani, The Idea of India, pp. 61-106. Lecture: Prof. Kiki Edozie, Postcolonial Economic Nationalism and Indian Identity Monday, February 18 Viewing a Movie: Indian Movie (?) Reading: Arjun Appadurai, Spectral Housing and Urban Cleansing: Notes on Millenial Mumbai Public Culture 12(2000):627-651. Lecture: Urban India, Communal Violence, and the Politicization of Communal Identities Wednesday, February 20 Roundtable Discussion: Commentary Are There Alternatives to Liberalism in Multi-National States Like India? Reading: Khilnani, The Idea of India, pp. 150-208. Googled Article??? Monday, February 25 Midterm Review: Looking Back: Nations, Liberal States, and Cultural Dominance Wednesday, February 27 No Class Monday, March 10 [Week of March 3 rd - 7 th : Spring Break.] Roundtable Discussion Debate Is There a Role for Religion in Politics? Lecture: Religion in the 2008 U.S. election. Googled Article??

6 TOPIC 5: SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS BASES OF NATIONAL IDENTITY DENTITY: NIGERIA Wednesday, March 12 Professor Lecture: Liberalism and Nigeria Students Reading John Boyle Ejobowah, Competing Claims to Recognition in the Nigerian Public Sphere, Introduction and chap. 1-2. Monday, March 17 Reading: Ejobowah, Competing Claims to Recognition in the Nigerian Public Sphere, chap. 3-4. Lecture: Dealing with Difference: Money, Representation, and Federalism Wednesday, March 19 Reading: Ejobowah, Competing Claims to Recognition in the Nigerian Public Sphere, chap. 5-7. Lecture: Federalism and Nigeria Monday, March 24 Roundtable Discussion: Debate-- Are There Alternatives to Liberalism in Multi-national States Like Nigeria? Lecture: This is Nollywood! Googled Article??? SECOND PAPER/OPTION 2 ON INDIA/NIGERIA- ASSIGNMENT DUE TUESDAY, MARCH 25 TH IN MY MAILBOX TOPIC 6: TRANSCENDING NATIONAL IDENTITY DENTITY? BUILDING THE EUROPEAN UNION ON A SECULAR FOUNDATION AND A COMMON POLITICAL ECONOMY Wednesday, March 26 Professor: Lecture: What is Europe? Students: Reading: James A. Caporaso, The European Union, Chapter 1 and Chapter 2.

7 Monday, March 31 Lecture: Multiple Societies in a Transnational Organization Reading: Caporaso, The European Union, chap. 3. Wednesday, April 2 Roundtable Discussion: Debate: Can Europe Ever Become a Nation-State? The Appeal of the EU and Tensions Within Reading: Caporaso, The European Union, chap. 4 and Conclusion. Googled Article?? Monday, April 7 TOPIC 7: ISLAMIC AND IMMIGRANT IDENTITY IN EUROPE Professor: Lecture: Muslims in Europe Students: Reading: Jørgen Nielsen, Muslims in Western Europe, 3 rd edition (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004), chapter 10, European Muslims in a New Europe?,@ pp. 153-174. Wednesday, April 9 Lecture: The European Muslim Minority: A Case Study of the Netherlands Readings: 1. Jocelyne Cesari, When Islam and Democracy Meet: Muslims in Europe and in the United States (New York and Hampshire, England: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), chapter 2, AIslam as Stigma,@ pp. 21-42. 2. Thijl Sunier and Mira van Kuijeren, AIslam in the Netherlands,@ pp. 144-157 in Muslims in the West: From Sojourners to Citizens, ed. Yvonne Yazbeck Haddad (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2002). 3. Christopher Caldwell, ADaughter of the Enlightenment,@ New York Times Magazine, April 3, 2005, pp. 26-31. Monday, April 14 Roundtable Discussion Debate-- Denmark Cartoons Religious Hate-speech or Freedom of Expression? European Muslims in a post-9/11 World Readings: 1. Ervin Staub, APreventing Violence and Terrorism and Promoting Positive

8 Relations between Dutch and Muslim Communities in Amsterdam,@ Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology 13, no. 3 (2007):1-28. 2. Jeroen de Lange, AThe Impact of the Staub Model on Policy Making in Amsterdam regarding Polarization and Radicalization,@ Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology 13, no. 3 (2007):361-364. Googled Article?? TOPIC 8: TRANSCENDING NATIONAL IDENTITY DENTITY? THE DEBATE OVER COSMOPOLITANISM Wednesday, April 16 Professor Lecture: Cosmopolitanism and/or Patriotism Students Reading: Martha Nussbaum, For Love of Country?, pp. ix-17, 30-37, 72-77, 111-118. Monday, April 21 Roundtable Discussion Debate Should We Extend Our Identity Nationally or Universally? Is Cosmopolitanism Possible? Is it Desirable? Reading: Martha Nussbaum, For Love of Country?, pp. 21-29, 66-71, 78-84, 131-144. Recommended additional reading: Kwame Anthony Appiah, AThe Case for Contamination,@ New York Times Magazine, January 1, 2006, pp. 30-37, 52. Googled Article Wednesday, April 23 Final Review: Looking Back and Looking Ahead ENDNOTES: HOW TO ASSIGNMENT GUIDELINES 1 HOW DO I PRESENT (AND WRITE UP) A GENERAL LECTURE? Identify the lecturers message, by taking notes on the objective or theme of the lecture Provide a summary by present key details that the lecturer uses to support the lecture theme- do so in list form. Provide analysis by considering at least two ways that the lecture theme helps us to understand the sub-topic of the course. Provide analysis by considering one way that the lecture theme helps us to understand the course s overall theme/objective Submit your hand-written notes to Professor Edozie at the end of the class session Please present your write-up according to the format above; please write legibly and don t forget to include your name.

9 HOW DO I PRESENT (AND TYPE UP) A READING? Identify reading type journal article, book chapter/s, What is the reading s thesis/objective/main theme Present at least two-three supporting details that the author uses to support his/her reading objective/theme/thesis. How does this thesis/objective/main theme relate to course s objective and/or sub-topic? Provide your own commentary on the reading e.g. do you identify the author s point of view? Do you agree or disagree with this POV. (If this is a mere descriptive reading, this will be non-applicable). Submit your singly-spaced, spaced, one page typed-up reading report to Professor Edozie at the end of the class session Please present your write-up according to the format above; please write legibly and don t forget to include your name. HOW DO I PRESENT (AND TYPE UP) MY ROUNDTABLE? Consider the roundtable topic, and respond to it my writing up a two to three sentence argumentative response/position. You must draw upon at least one of the following knowledge sources to articulate your argument: a) general lecture, b) one sub-topic assigned reading. Then, reinforce your argument by identifying an online article through a Google search. You must state how the googled article supports your roundtable commentary/argument/position. Submit your singly-spaced, spaced, two page, typed-up reading report to Professor Edozie at the end of the class session Please present your write-up according to the format above; please write legibly and don t forget to include your name