Political Science 2026/282: Rhetoric and Political Thought Winter 2018 Thursdays 10-12, TC 24

Similar documents
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Faculty of Arts and Science & School of Graduate Studies Department of Political Science

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY Department of Political Studies POLS 350 History of Political Thought 1990/91 Fall/Winter

Texts and Ideas: Democracy, Knowledge, and Equality. Professor Melissa Schwartzberg

Political Science 103 Spring, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

POL 190B: Democratic Theory Spring 2017 Room: Shiffman Humanities Ctr 125 W, 2:00 4:50 PM

The Pnyx, Athens. Do not read your précis during the oral presentation. You must speak extemporaneously to the class.

Political Science 103 Fall, 2015 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

GOVT / PHIL 206A WI: Political Theory Spring 2014 Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays 9:20-10:20 A.M. Hepburn Hall Room 011

Course Description. Course objectives

Texts & Ideas: Mixed Constitutions CORE-UA Tuesday/Thursday, 2:00-3:15 PM Location: Meyer 121

History of Western Political Thought

Required Texts. Course Requirements

POSC 6100 Political Philosophy

POL 10a: Introduction to Political Theory Spring 2017 Room: Golding 101 T, Th 2:00 3:20 PM

Louisiana State University

GREAT POLITICAL THINKERS

University of Texas Gov 314 (38580)/CTI 303 (33895)

Thursday 9-11, Manning Clarke Centre, Theatre 6 (Bldg. 26a)

Political Science 150: Introduction to Political Thought. Spring 2019 Maybank Hall 207 MWF, 8:00-8:50 am

Course Outline. LAWS 2105D Social Justice and Human Rights

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

CURRICULUM VITAE. TEACHING EXPERIENCE: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Tulane University, New Orleans.

The College of William & Mary Visiting Assistant Professor of Government

Instructor: Margaret Kohn. Fall, Thursday, Office Hours: Thursday 1:00-2:00 (SS3118)

Problems in Contemporary Democratic Theory

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

PS 502: The Moral Foundations of Democracy Syllabus

CURRICULUM VITAE DEVIN STAUFFER. Department of Government The University of Texas at Austin Austin TX

Books The Lockean Commonwealth. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2009

GOV 312P (38645) Constitutional Principles: Core Texts

Political Science 423 DEMOCRATIC THEORY. Thursdays, 3:30 6:30 pm, Foster 305. Patchen Markell University of Chicago Spring 2000

Public Opinion and Democratic Theory

Philosophy 3013E THOMISTIC PHILOSOPHY II. Thursday (1:30 4:30 PM) St. Peter s Seminary, Room 108

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Faculty of Arts and Science & School of Graduate Studies Department of Political Science

School of Law, Governance & Citizenship. Ambedkar University Delhi. Course Outline

Carleton University Winter 2014 Department of Political Science

ENG 259A: Rhetoric and Democracy / TR 2:00-3:15

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

POLS 3000 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY

PH/PS 202: History of Western Political Thought II

POLITICAL SCIENCE 2410 PHILOSOPHY 2210

Poli MWF: 2:30-3: Hodges Hall Instructor: Mr. Alex D. Cole Office Hours - MWF 12:30-2:15 - Stubbs 324

POLS 235: Equality and Justice

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

Instructor: James Stoner (Garwood Visiting Professor & Fellow ) 440 Robertson Hall [tel: (609) ]

Sharon Gill. PHI 335: The Individual and Society. Approved by Undergraduate Council 2/1/2011. Prof. David Bradshaw Office: Patterson 1405

Choose one question from each section to answer in the time allotted.

Choose one question from each section to answer in the time allotted.

Grading & Best Practices

PHIL : Social and Political Philosophy , Term 1: M/W/F: 12-1pm in DMP 301 Instructor: Kelin Emmett

POS 103, Introduction to Political Theory Peter Breiner

GE 21A: History of Social Thought Fall 2004 Professors Rogers Brubaker, Vincent Pecora, Russell Jacoby, and Kirstie McClure

Philosophy 221/Political Science 221 Philosophical Foundations of the American Revolution

CHAPMAN UNIVERSITY University Honors Program One University Drive Orange, CA (714) COURSE SYLLABUS

Instructor: Prof. Pasquale Pasquino

Republicanism and the Good Society PLSC 4369

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

Leadership and the Humanities-Fall 2013

History 421: The Intellectual and Cultural History of the Enlightenment

Jane Mansbridge, Adams Professor, KSG Semester: Spring 2009 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:10 2:30 p.m.

Summer 2017 PSCI Modern Political Thought

Department of Politics Office: Room 303 Fall 2016 Office hours: Wed. 10:30-11:30

PS 209, Spring 2016: Introduction to Political Theory. Tuesday/Thursday 11:00-12:15, 19 Ingraham Hall

Great Political Theories V.2: A Comprehensive Selection Of The Crucial Ideas In Political Philosophy From The French Revolution To Modern Times

Democratic Theory. Wednesdays, 3:30-6:00pm Room: 1115 BSB

PLSC 118B, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS

Academic Positions Department of Political Science, Portland State University Visiting Assistant Professor from Sept. 2018

Theory Comprehensive January 2015

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

DEGREES IN HIGHER EDUCATION M.A.,

[UPDATED JULY 2017] University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia Sesquicentenary Fellow in Government and International Relations,

The Social Contract Class Syllabus

Honors World History Harkness Seminars and Homework for Unit 4 Chapters 16 and and Documents

Gov 10: Foundations of Political Theory

International Relations Theory

SPORT & POLITICS: CLASSICAL FOUNDATIONS TO MODERN SPORT & SOCIETY

Spring 2011 Unique # GOV 312P Constitutional Principles: Core Texts America s Founding Principles

City University of Hong Kong

Warm Up Review: Mr. Cegielski s Presentation of Origins of American Government

Political Theory. Political theorist Hannah Arendt, born in Germany in 1906, fled to France in 1933 when the Nazis came to power.

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

What is a constitution? Do all democracies have them? Does a constitution protect citizens rights?

George Mason University HIST 100: History of Western Civilization Spring Term 2013

B DEMOCRACY: A READER. Edited by Ricardo Blaug and John Schwarzmantel EDINBURGH UNIVERSITY PRESS

Curriculum Vitae Frederick G. Whelan

SYLLABUS Philosophy 234a1: Wealth, Ethics, and Liberty Spring 2012 semester

ENROLLMENT, WRITTEN WORK, AND REQUIREMENTS:

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Enlightenment Philosophy

Political Science The Political Theory of Capitalism Fall 2015

MODERN POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY (Autumn Term, 2014)

The Enlightenment. The Age of Reason

PLSC 118A, THE MORAL FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICS

IS303 Origins of Political Economy

The Enlightenment & Democratic Revolutions. Enlightenment Ideas help bring about the American & French Revolutions

ENROLLMENT, WRITTEN WORK, AND REQUIREMENTS:

Democratic Theory 1 Trevor Latimer Office Hours: TBA Contact Info: Goals & Objectives. Office Hours. Midterm Course Evaluation

Popular Sovereignty in Historical Perspective

! contact is preferred

Transcription:

Political Science 2026/282: Rhetoric and Political Thought Winter 2018 Thursdays 10-12, TC 24 Prof. T. Shanks Office Hours: Political Science Department Sidney Smith 3118 torrey.shanks@utoronto.ca Thursdays 1-2:30 This course will explore the relationship between politics, rhetoric, and philosophy. Where rhetoric is integral for democratic practice, it has often been viewed with suspicion in the history of political thought. What is the quarrel between rhetoric and philosophy on the nature of politics? Why is rhetoric seen by some as powerful, even dangerous? How have political thinkers used rhetoric for their own purposes? Is there a productive relationship between rhetoric and politics, and democracy in particular? Readings will focus on primary texts from ancient and modern thinkers of politics, law, and rhetoric. Required Texts J. L. Austin, How to Do Things with Words (Harvard University Press) Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (Hackett) Plato, The Apology and Related Dialogues (Broadview) Plato, Gorgias, tr. Donald J. Zeyl (Hackett) Plato, Phaedrus, tr. Alexander Nehamas (Hackett) Course Requirements This course will run as a research seminar. All students will complete a final paper and actively participate every week by listening and contributing to class discussion. You will submit three response papers that raise questions for class discussion on weeks (sign up in advance). Consider carefully if you will have the time and background to complete this course. It is assumed that students will be familiar with the major texts of the history of political thought, such as Plato and the social contract tradition. To be prepared for class discussion, you will need to read all assigned texts very carefully, take notes, and select passages for discussion. Arrive in class on time and prepared to comment, raise questions and respond to other students. Response Papers 20% Three 1-2 page papers (approximately 500 words) on the week s assigned reading. Raise questions for class discussion that are relevant to the major themes of the course. Due on Wednesdays at 5:00 pm by email to torrey.shanks@utoronto.ca. Participation 20% Final Paper 45%; Proposal 10%; Presentation 5% Graduates: 15-20 page paper; Undergraduates: 12 page paper Proposal: approximately 3 pages, including references Deadlines: Proposal (approx.. 3 pages): March 8; Paper: April 5 1

Schedule of Readings, Topics, and Assignments January 4 Rhetoric, Democracy, Philosophy: A Difficult Relationship o Hannah Arendt, Truth and Politics Between Past and Future o Tom Conley, Rhetoric in the European Tradition (University of Chicago) o Benedetto Fontana, Cary J. Nederman, and Gary Remer, eds., Talking Democracy (Pennsylvania State University) o George Orwell, Politics and the English Language I. Rhetoric and Political Philosophy: Ancient Quarrels January 11 Plato, Gorgias Plato, Republic (selections) o Gorgias, Encomium of Helen o George T. Kennedy, A New History of Classical Rhetoric (Princeton) o Josiah Ober, Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens (Princeton) o Josiah Ober, Political Dissent in Democratic Athens (Princeton) January 18 Plato, Phaedrus Plato, Apology o Peter Euben, ed., Athenian Political Thought and the Reconstruction of American Democracy (Cornell) o S. Sara Monoson, Plato s Democratic Entanglements (Princeton) January 25 Cicero, On the Orator (selections): http://go.utlib.ca/cat/10602924 Aristotle, Rhetoric (selections) ** o Joy Connolly, The State of Speech (Princeton) o Daniel Kapust, Republicanism, Rhetoric, and Roman Political Thought (Cambridge) o Neal Wood, Cicero s Social and Political Thought (University of California) 2

II. Rhetoric and the Modern State February 1 Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (selections) David Johnson, The Rhetoric of Leviathan (Princeton) Victoria Kahn, Wayward Contracts: The Crisis of Political Obligation, 1640-1674 (Princeton) James Martel, Subverting Leviathan: Reading Thomas Hobbes as a Radical Democrat (Columbia) Quentin Skinner, Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes (Cambridge) February 8 John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (selections) John Locke, The Second Treatise of Government, chs. 1, 7-8, 14, 19 ** o Doulgas Casson, Liberating Judgment: Fanatics, Skeptics, and John Locke s Politics of Probability (Princeton) o Hannah Dawson, Locke, Language, and Early-Modern Philosophy (Cambridge) o Kirstie McClure, Cato s retreat: fabula, historia, and the question of constitutionalism in Mr Locke s anonymous Essay on Government. In Reading, Society, and Politics in Early Modern England, Kevin M. Sharpe and Steven N. Zwicker, eds. (Cambridge): 317-350. o Torrey Shanks, Authority Figures: Rhetoric and Experience in John Locke s Political Thought (Penn State University Press, 2014) o Brian Vickers and Nancy S. Struever, Rhetoric and the Pursuit of Truth: Language Change in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Papers read at a Clark Library Seminar, 8 March 1980 (UCLA: William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 1985) o William Walker, Locke, Literary Criticism and Philosophy (Cambridge) Feb15 Giambattista Vico, Selected Writings (selections) ** Ernesto Grassi, Rhetoric as Philosophy ** o David L. Marshall, Vico and the Transformation of Early Modern Rhetoric (Cambridge University Press, 2010) o Ernesto Grassi, The Priority of Common Sense and Imagination: Vico s Philosophical Relevance Today. Social Research 43 (1976) 3

Mar 1 Jean Jacques Rousseau, On the Origin of Languages, chs. 1-12, 20** The Social Contract, I. 6-8, II. 1-4 ** Discourse on Inequality, Part 1 especially ** The Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789) ** The Declaration of Independence (1776) ** Olympe de Gouges, The Declaration of the Rights of Woman (1791) ** Jay Fliegelman, Declaring Independence (selections) ** o Rousseau, Discourse on the Arts and Sciences o Arash Abizadeh, Banishing the Particular: Rousseau on Rhetoric, Patrie, and the Passions, Political Theory 29 (2001) o Danielle Allen, Our Declaration (Liveright) o Christopher Kelly, To Persuade with Convincing: The Melodious Language of Rousseau s Legislator, American Journal of Political Science 31 (1987) o Jean Starobinski, Eloquence and Liberty, Journal of the History of Ideas 38 (1977) o Elizabeth Wingrove, Rousseau s Republican Romance (Princeton) III. Mar 8 The Afterlives of Rhetoric J. L. Austin, How to Do Things with Words Proposals due Mar 15 Jacques Derrida, Signature, Event, Context ** Friedrich Nietzsche, On Truth and Lies in an Extra-moral Sense (1873) ** o Paul de Man, Epistemology of Metaphor, Critical Inquiry o Jacques Derrida, Declarations of Independence, New Political Science 7, 1 (1986): 7-15 o Terry Eagleton, A Small History of Rhetoric, Walter Benjamin or Towards a Revolutionary Criticism o Bonnie Honig, Declarations of Independence: Arendt and Derrida on the Problem of Founding a Republic, APSR 85, 1 (1991): 97-113 Mar 22 Mar 29 Presentations Either: Mary Beard, Women and Power; OR Bryan Garsten, Saving Persuasion, Introduction; AND Nancy Struever, Rhetoric, Modality, Modernity, ch. 1 Presentations April 5: Paper due by email 4

Course Policies Blackboard: Blackboard will be used for course announcements, readings and other materials. Check it at least once a week for new information or announcements. Accessibility: The University of Toronto is committed to accessibility. If you require accommodation or have any accessibility concerns, visit http://www.studentlife.utoronto.ca/as as soon as possible. Academic Integrity and Turnitin.com Any case of suspected plagiarism will be referred to the Dean of Academic Integrity. Penalties for plagiarism usually range from failure on the assignment to failure in the course and repeat offenses can lead to expulsion. More information about plagiarism can be found at http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/advice/using-sources/how-not-to-plagiarize. Normally, students will be required to submit their course essays to Turnitin.com for a review of textual similarity and detection of possible plagiarism. In doing so, students will allow their essays to be included as source documents in the Turnitin.com reference database, where they will be used solely for the purpose of detecting plagiarism. The terms that apply to the University s use of the Turnitin.com service are described on the Turnitin.com web site. Disruptive Behavior No student may engage in conduct that disrupts or impedes the ability of the instructors to teach and/or students to learn. This includes, but is not limited to making loud or distracting noise, visually distracting students or instructors, repeatedly leaving and entering the classroom, persisting in speaking without being recognized, or resorting to physical threats or personal insults. Late or Missed Assignments Late response papers will not be accepted. There will be no opportunity to reschedule presentations. Late final papers will be penalized 5% for every day (24 hours) after the deadline they are received; no papers will be accepted more than one week late. If there are extenuating circumstances backed up by documented evidence, speak with me as soon as possible. 5