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

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Political Science 304.66 Power Professor Leonard Feldman Hunter College, Fall 2010 Mondays 5:35-8:15 pm Roosevelt House Room 204 Professor Feldman s Contact Information: Office: HW1702 Office Hours: MON 1-2 pm, THUR 4:15-5:15 pm and by appt. Email: lfeldman@hunter.cuny.edu Phone: (212) 396-6246 This seminar will be devoted to exploring rival theoretical formulations of the concept of power. What is power, and who has power? We will examine issues such as the balance between popular power and institutionalized power, the relationship between the state and economic power, ideological power and the question of false consciousness and social science debates concerning the multiple dimensions of power. Office of Accessibility Hunter College is committed to ensuring educational parity and accommodations for all students with documented disabilities and/or medical conditions. It is recommended that all students with documented disabilities (Emotional, Medical, Physical and/or Learning) consult the Office of Accessibility located in Room E1124 to secure necessary academic accommodations. For further information and assistance please call 212-772-4857, TTY 212-650-3230. Academic Integrity Any deliberate borrowing of the ideas, terms, statements, or knowledge of others without clear and specific acknowledgment of the source is intellectual theft and is called plagiarism. It is not plagiarism to borrow the ideas, terms, statements, or knowledge of others if the source is clearly and specifically acknowledged. Students who consult such critical material and wish to include some of the insights, ideas, or statements encountered must provide full citations in an appropriate form. Hunter College regards acts of academic dishonesty (e.g., plagiarism, cheating on examinations, obtaining unfair advantage, and falsification of records and official documents) as serious offenses against the values of intellectual honesty. The College is committed to enforcing the CUNY Policy on Academic Integrity and will pursue cases of academic dishonesty according to the Hunter College Academic Integrity Procedures. Texts to purchase at Shakespeare & Co.: Steven Lukes, Power: A Radical View

Hannah Arendt, On Violence James Scott, Domination and the Arts of Resistance John Gaventa, Power and Powerlessness Lisa Wedeen, Ambiguities of Domination Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish Additional articles will be posted to Blackboard. You are responsible for printing out copies and bringing them to class. Blackboard I will make extensive use of Blackboard throughout the term. Some readings (marked with an asterisk on the class schedule below) will be made available as PDF documents on the Blackboard site for our class. Review sheets, essay topics and reading questions will also be posted there for you to download. Finally, I will also make use of Blackboard s communication functions to send important email announcements to you. Thus it is very important for you to (a) check Blackboard regularly and (b) make sure that the email address that Blackboard has registered for you is an email address you check regularly. If it isn t, change your email address on Blackboard by clicking Update Email on the upper left- hand tools menu. Four Assignments/Requirements: 1. Consistent attendance and active participation in discussion (20% of grade). You are expected to bring the book and/or paper copies of the articles being discussed to seminar. Whether or not you completed a response paper for that session, you should be prepared with questions, confusions, criticisms and passages marked for discussion. 2. A 5-6 PAGE essay (20% of grade) The essay will ask you to apply two competing theories of power to a specific political conflict or cultural text such as a film (details coming soon) DUE: NOVEMBER 12 TH BY 4 PM. 3. A take-home final exam 12 Pages (35% of grade) DUE FRIDAY DECEMBER 17 TH BY 4 PM. Question will be handed out December 6 th. (A 12-15 page research paper may be substituted for the take-home final with permission of the instructor. If you elect to do a research paper, YOU MUST CONSULT WITH ME BY WEEK 6 (October 18-22 nd ), 1-2 PAGE PROSPECTUS DUE WEEK 8 (November 1 st ) AND ROUGH DRAFT DUE WEEK 12 (November 29 th ). )

Both the five page essay and the take-home final need to be uploaded to turnitin.com To do so, visit http://turnitin.com and set up an account if you do not have one already. You will enter the following course ID and password: Course ID: 3437242 Password: hegemony 4. Eight response papers (2 pages each). 25% of grade. You choose when, but: NO LATE RESPONSE PAPERS ACCEPTED NO EMAILED RESPONSE PAPERS ACCEPTED RESPONSE PAPER IS DUE AT THE BEGINNING OF SEMINAR AND MUST COVER THE READINGS FOR THAT DAY I strongly recommend you start doing these immediately. It is very easy to let this assignment slide and then be unable to complete the required 8 papers by the end of term. (We have 13 meetings and 8 response papers. So you can skip writing a response paper a maximum of 5 times. Plan accordingly.) ***********A Note About Response Papers Response papers are not simply a page or two of rambling thoughts. They should be organized, focused, thoughtful, critical, reflective, and questioning. It's best if your response paper is divided into 3 sections. First section: Summary. Provide an overview of the week's readings. What were the central arguments in the readings? If we're reading a book, what is the central thesis of the text? If we are reading multiple authors, what is the central disagreement or area of debate? (1/2 page) Second section: Critical analysis. Select one particular problem, issue, theme or argument in the readings for focused attention. Develop the author's argument, and, if appropriate, compare it to other readings. This section can include an evaluation of the reading including criticisms of any shortcomings. (1 page) Third section: Questions. In a concluding paragraph, raise one or two thoughtful questions about the readings. What issue or problem would you like to discuss further? (1/2 page) Grading: +,,

All +: A All s: B All : D Mostly with a couple : C Mostly + with a couple : A- (Failure to complete all 8 response papers will result in a deduction of 1 grade per missing response paper.) (You can do MORE than 8 response papers and I will drop the lowest grade.) SCHEDULE OF CLASSES AND READING ASSIGNMENTS I. Who Has Power? 1. 8/30 Introduction 9/6 No class: Labor Day 2. 9/13 A classic debate: corporate power and contemporary democracy Gabriel Almond, Capitalism and Democracy, PS: Political Science and Politics Ralph Miliband, The State in Capitalist Society chpts 2 and 4. II. What is Power? The three faces/dimensions of Power 3. 9/20 The First Face of Power: The Pluralist Definition Robert Dahl, The Concept of Power Dahl, A Critique of the Ruling Elite Model Dahl Who Governs pp. 223-245 Lukes, Power pp. 1-5, 14-19 4. 9/27 The Second Face of Power: The Mobilization of Bias Peter Bachrach and Morton S. Baratz, Two Faces of Power Bachrach and Baratz Decisions and Nondecisions: An Analytical Framework Bachrach and Baratz, Power and Its Two Faces Revisited Lukes, Power, pp. 20-25 5. 10/4 The Third Face of Power: Hegemony Lukes, pp. 25-29 Gaventa, Power and Powerlessness, Preface, chpts 1-4 (In class: Matewan ) III. Exploring Hegemony: Thick versus Thin Theories of Ideological hegemony 10/11: NO CLASS, Columbus Day

6. 10/18 A thick theory of hegemony Gaventa, Power and Powerlessness, chpts 6,7 and 10. (In class: Matewan, finish) 7. 10/25 A thin theory of hegemony James Scott, Domination and the Arts of Resistance Lukes, pp. 124-134 IV. Beyond the three faces of power? 8. 11/1 Disciplinary Power Peter Digeser, The Fourth Face of Power Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish 9. 11/8 Disciplinary Power, cont d Foucault, Discipline and Punish finish. Charles Taylor, Foucault on Freedom and Truth Paper assignment due 11/12 by 4 pm. V. Power and the State 10. 11/15 Capitalism, Subjectivity and the Modern Liberal State Althusser, Ideology and Ideological State Apparatus Butler, Psychic Life of Power, excerpt 11. 11/22 Consent to Authoritarianism Wedeen, Ambiguities of Domination 12. 11/29 Power and State Punishment Kaufman-Osborn, From Noose to Needle chpts 3 and 7. VI. Popular Power 13. 12/6 Redefining power: Hannah Arendt, On Violence 14. 12/13 Power of the People Jason Frank, Constituent Moments, excerpt Take-home final due Friday December 17th