Requirements | Percentages |
---|---|
Attendance and participation | 10% |
Written work | 60% |
Exam | 15% |
Oral presentations/reports | 15% |
Topics covered in this course are available in the calendar below.
The core goals of the course are:
Each year we pick a unifying theme for the spring course. This year's theme is "Permission and Prohibition." The title was given to us by a previous Concourse student, who told us that this was a traditional Islamic view. If something was not explicitly forbidden, it was implicitly permitted. We will explore this theme in several ways:
This is a HASS-CI (Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Communication Intensive) course. Like other communications-intensive courses in the humanities, arts, and social sciences, it allows students to produce 20 pages of polished writing in four assignments, with one required revision. It also offers a variety of possibilities for oral expression, through presentations of written work, student-led discussion, and oral reports. The class has a low enrollment that ensures maximum attention to written and oral communication.
Please see assignments for detailed instructions for the written work.
Each student will give two oral reports, format (i.e. single or team presentation) depending on class enrollment. The first (10 minutes maximum) will initiate discussion in a recitation by presenting information about the day's reading, discussion questions, illustrations as appropriate, and a brief handout, including a bibliography. The handout will be submitted for a grade. The second presentation takes place during the class in Ses #24 when the research papers are due and will summarize your thesis and main points. You will submit it as an abstract, attached to your research paper.
You are expected to be in Lecture and Recitation. Part of your grade will be based on class participation (see below).
The final for this course will consist of take-home essays on topics tied closely to the texts that you are reading.
For the final grade, you will be evaluated on the basis of:
Requirements | Percentages |
---|---|
Attendance and participation | 10% |
Written work | 60% |
Exam | 15% |
Oral presentations/reports | 15% |
For any use or distribution of these materials, please cite as follows:
Jeremy Wolfe and Wyn Kelley, course materials for SP.322 Prohibition and Permission, Spring 2007. MIT OpenCourseWare (http://ocw.mit.edu), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Downloaded on [DD Month YYYY].
SES # | TOPICS | KEY DATES |
---|---|---|
1 | Introduction: On course themes and writing expectations | |
2 | Eating: Hunger, taste, and smell | |
3 | Disgust | |
4-7 | Bible | Essay one due in Ses #7 |
8-9 | Mary Rowlandson | |
10-13 | Melville, Typee | Revision of essay one due in Ses #10 |
14 | Library research workshop | Essay two due |
15-18 | Kafka | |
19-23 | Shakespeare, Twelfth Night | Topics and research summaries due in Ses #22 Conferences in Ses #22 |
24 | Reports on research papers | Essay three due |
25-26 | Desai, Fasting, Feasting | |
27 | Conclusion |