For this assignment, students are to revise their essays based on the comments they received from their conference. For this revision, students are to pay careful attention the kinds of arguments they are putting forth and how they are supporting those arguments with support from the various texts we have read this session. Students will also want to ensure that they are providing adequate analysis of difficult passages, key terms, and ideas from the essays we have read thus far in the course.
This assignment must be typed, double-spaced, stapled and in accordance with a standard documentation style such as MLA or Chicago style.
Your revised essay is due at the beginning of class on July 12th (please note the schedule change).
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Essay I
Essay
1
Over the past few weeks, we have discussed several
themes surrounding ideas of modernism, postmodernism, ideology, imagination, space,
and utopias. For this first major
assignment, students will compose an essay in which they explore some of the
ideas we have been discussing in class, respond to them, and explain why they respond
to them as they do.
To begin this essay, students will go back to their
blog comments, the blog comments of their peers, and their class notes and
explore some of the major issues that have arisen from our discussions, both
online and face-to-face. You will want to
explore your own comments and trace the themes, questions, ideas, and issues
that interest you the most. Take notes
in a way that seems useful to you, making sure to underline and keep track of
important ideas from your own writing, your peers’ writing, and the published
writers we have read and discussed in class.
Use past writing as a way to begin this essay and expand upon ideas you
have explored in previous blogs.
In developing a focus for your essay, you may want
to draw upon my questions on the blog as a starting point for writing, but
remember that this essay assignment is ultimately about pursuing your own
critical questions and engaging your own interests and ideas. Regardless of the scope of your essay, you
must bring the writers we have been exploring in this course into some sort of “conversation,”
meaning that I expect you to draw from several authors in order to bring
complexity, nuance, and support to your own ideas.
To help you develop your essay, students will post a
rough draft of their essay to the course blog by Tuesday at 5:00 pm. Before class on Friday, students will read
through all of their peers’ essays and write a 100-250 word response and
assessment for revision to each of their peers’ papers. Do not write this assessment on the blog, but
bring your assessment to class for discussion. Also, bring copies of your peers' essays by either printing them out or having access to them on a laptop or tablet.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Harvey and Tschumi
Your blog comments will be due on Thursday, June 20th by 10 am. You may draw from these questions for your posts, or develop your own response to the readings.
- On page
43 Harvey provides a list from Ihab Hassan’s schema of some of the dichotomies
that define the difference between modernism and postmodernism. What are some
of the terms that Harvey explores in depth?
In what ways does he explore these characteristics of postmodernism and
how does he approach the term from several angles? What do you think of his analysis of these
terms and the examples he provides? Choose
one of the terms he does not explore in depth and examine the ways in which
this term is a part of our zeitgeist
(or “spirit of the age”).
- Harvey
and Tschumi provide sharp critiques of “so-called” postmodern
architecture. What are their critiques
and how do they compare to other critiques we have read from Tafuri and
Jameson?
- Harvey
references the demolition of the Pruitt-Igloe housing development (a housing
development similar to Ballymun and based on Le Corbusier’s principles) as a
useful demarcation for the “end” of modernism.
Using Harvey’s chapter as a critical lens, in what ways is Bolger’s play
reflective of postmodern ideas, philosophies, and attitudes?
- Compare Tschumi’s ideas of “limits” in architecture to some of the ideas put forth in Harvey’s essay (for instance, what might be the relationship to Tschumi’s ideas and those of Barthes and jouissance or Derrida and deconstructionism?). Given our current exploration into ideology and imagination, how would you respond to Tschumi’s “Theory of Architectural Disjunction”?
Sunday, June 9, 2013
From These Green Heights
Your blog comments will
be due on Thursday, June 13th by 10:00 am. Blog comments should be roughly
250-500 words in length and contain at least one quote from the text. You
may use the questions below for inspiration or develop your own response to the readings if you
wish.
1) On page 39 of From
These Green Heights, Christy says, “This isn’t how Ballymun was meant to
be,” to which Dessie replies, “But it’s the way it is.” In what ways is this exchange, and others
like it in the play, reflective of Tafuri’s critique of modernism? How would Jameson respond to the sense of
hopelessness that pervades the play?
2) What are the effects of space, particularly the kinds
of spaces that Ballymun creates, on these characters? How does this space produce particular
demarcations of class? How does the idea
of the “neighborhood” change for these characters? In what alternative forms is it
reproduced?
3) In many ways, Ballymun reflects the Irish government’s
desire to “modernize” Irish citizens in the wake of British colonial rule. In spite of this modernization, Bolger’s play
is full of ghosts and references to ghosts.
In what ways do these spectres disrupt Le Corbusier’s ideology of order
and the total rejection of the “chaos” of urban life?
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