Bilinda Straight; 1020
& 3062 Moore Hall
Email:
Bilinda.Straight@wmich.edu
Web page:
http://homepages.wmich.edu~bstraigh
In Person Office
Hours: Tuesdays & Thursdays 1:45-2:45 p.m.
Online office hours
(email answered): Mon-Thurs mornings
Class Meets: Tuesdays/Thursdays
12:30-1:45 pm, 4209 Dunbar Hall
GWS 4010: Foundations Feminist Theory
Catalog Description: An investigation of various texts historically significant in
the development of feminist concepts and theories. Includes texts from the past
as well as the present. General Education: This course fulfills the requirements for P2: Baccalaureate
Level Writing, Upper Division Course.
Course Goals and Objectives: This course aims to provide a theoretical foundation in
gender and women’s studies. After this course students will be able to:
·
Critically analyze
gender as a social construct specific to specific cultural contexts and
historical moments
·
Demonstrate
understanding of historical representations of gender’s intersection with race,
class, and sexuality in multiple cultural contexts
·
Demonstrate
sensitivity to diversity and inclusion
·
Demonstrate
effective and appropriate written communication abilities through discussion
board and final research essay.
Required books: Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global
Perspectives. Edited by Carole R. McCann and Seung-Kyung Kim. Fourth
Edition. Routledge. Additional readings are in D2L.
Grading (see Grading Key
for quantitative equivalents of letter grades)
Attendance/Participation 15%
Presentation 15%
Discussion
Board 40%
Research
Essay 30%
Attendance/Participation
(15% of grade)
Your presence and participation are essential to the quality of the experience for
others as well as yourself. Your attendance grade will be based on the number
of days you are absent, calculated as points missed on a one-hundred percent
scale. Participation will weigh in here but no one will be penalized for
shyness.
Presentation (15%
of grade)
Students will work individually or in pairs to prepare a 7- to
10-minute presentation on one day’s readings. Presentations will occur at the
start of class and will set the tone for the discussion. You are encouraged to
offer critical questions about the readings and supplementary information from
well supported sources.
Electronic
Discussion Board (40% of grade)
This is a writing-intensive course. Each week, you will write a 100
minimum word abstract on each reading, which you will post to the D2L
Discussion Board. Additionally, you will post a 150 minimum word comment to another
student’s post that engages with at least one of their abstracts. Your
abstracts should summarize main points, refer to the specific author of each
course reading you are discussing, and raise at least one question for consideration.
It should be very clear to me that you’ve read the material. DUE DATE: Each Monday, 11:59 p.m. for all
of that week’s readings.
Research Essay (30%
of grade)
Students will design a research question based on the course readings
and will draw upon at least 5 course readings and 5 outside sources to address
the question in the form of a research essay with thesis statement, supporting
paragraphs, in-text citations, and bibliography. Use Chicago Manual of Style
for Social Sciences, author/date (https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide/citation-guide-2.html).
A rough draft of essay will be due 1 month before the end of the semester, per the due date posted in the course schedule.
Format: 10-15 pages, double-spaced, 12-point Times Roman font, 1-inch
margins.
We will meet during the final exam period for clarifying questions and
discussion but typed final essays must be uploaded to the course Dropbox by
11:59 p.m. the day of the exam.
Academic Honesty:
Students
are responsible for making themselves aware of and understanding the University
policies and procedures that pertain to Academic Honesty. These policies
include cheating, fabrication, falsification and forgery, multiple submission,
plagiarism, complicity and computer misuse. The academic policies addressing
Student Rights and Responsibilities can be found in the Undergraduate Catalog
at http://catalog.wmich.edu/content.php?catoid=24&navoid=974
and the Graduate Catalog at http://catalog.wmich.edu/content.php?catoid=25&navoid=1030.
If
there is reason to believe you have been involved in academic dishonesty, you
will be referred to the Office of Student Conduct. You will be given the
opportunity to review the charge(s) and if you believe you are not responsible,
you will have the opportunity for a hearing. You should consult with your
instructor if you are uncertain about an issue of academic honesty prior to the
submission of an assignment or test.
Definition of
Plagiarism:
Plagiarism
is the use of someone else’s language, ideas, or other material without making
the source(s) evident in situations where there is a legitimate expectation of
original work. Plagiarism does not occur when efforts to promptly identify
sources by making source use apparent to the audience of the submitted material
are obvious. Plagiarism may not necessarily include mistakes in citation style.
A legitimate expectation of original work exists for numerous circumstances,
including (but not limited to): scholarly writing, technical presentations and
papers, conference presentations and papers, online discussion postings, grant
proposals, patents, book and other manuscripts, theses and dissertations, class
assignments, artistic works, computer code, algorithms, and other creative
works. This definition applies to the entire WMU community, which includes all
faculty; students; staff; visiting faculty, scholars, and administrators; and
any other person governed by the academic research and other policies of the
university.
The Right to a
Harassment-free environment:
Students
and instructors are responsible for making themselves aware of and abiding by
the “Western Michigan University Sexual and Gender-Based Harassment and
Violence, Intimate Partner Violence, and Stalking Policy and Procedures”
related to prohibited sexual misconduct under Title IX, the Clery Act and the
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) and Campus Safe. Under this policy,
responsible employees (including instructors) are required to report claims of
sexual misconduct to the Title IX Coordinator or designee (located in the
Office of Institutional Equity). Responsible employees are not confidential
resources. For a complete list of resources and more information about the
policy see www.wmich.edu/sexualmisconduct.
In
addition, students are encouraged to access the Code of Conduct, as well as
resources and general academic policies on such issues as diversity, religious
observance, and student disabilities:
· Office of Student
Conduct www.wmich.edu/conduct
· Division of
Student Affairs www.wmich.edu/students/diversity
· Registrar’s Office
http://www.wmich.edu/registrar/calendars/interfaith
· Disability
Services for Students www.wmich.edu/disabilityservices.”
Students with
Disabilities:
Both in compliance with and
in the spirit of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), we would like to
work with you if you have a disability that will impact the work in this
course. If you have a documented disability and wish to discuss reasonable
academic accommodations, please contact your instructor in a timely fashion.
Accommodations are not retroactive; they begin after notification. You may also
contact the Office of Disability Services for Students at 269-387-2116 (or at
wmich.edu/disabilityservices).
Classroom Policies
for a Productive Learning Environment:
Electronic devices: Electronic devices are not allowed in the classroom
at any time – this includes
phones, tablets, and laptops. You are encouraged to take notes with pen and
paper. Exceptions to this policy are limited to students with accommodations
allowing electronic devices for documented disabilities. Students who violate
this policy will lose attendance/participation points for the day. After 2
violations, students will be reported to the Office of Student Conduct with
penalties that may include removal from the class.
Course Readings by Module – see Course Schedule
for Module due dates
Module 0: Introduction to Course
Note on Structure of Module Reading
Schedule: All readings must be read and discussed
by each Monday night (11:59 pm) before class per the Electronic Discussion
Board assignment requirements. However, most of the time, we will discuss the
first half (the first 2 when there are 4) of the week’s readings on Tuesday and
the 2nd half on Thursday. Readings are ordered in the schedule below
with that in mind.
Part 1. Historical Contexts
Module 1: From the Metropole: Pre-Nineteenth
Century Anglo-European ‘Feminisms’
Karen Offen. 1988. A Comparative Historical
Approach. SIGNS 14(1): 119-157.
Cynthia B. Bryson. 1998. Mary Astell:
Defender of the “Disembodied Mind.” Hypatia 13(4): 40-62.
Harriet Guest. 2002. Bluestocking
Feminism. Huntington Library Quarterly 65(1/2): 59-80.
Jane Abray. 1975. Feminism in the French
Revolution. The American Historical Review 80(1): 43-62.
Module 2: Race and Colonial Boundaries
Jennifer L. Morgan. 1997. “Some Could
Suckle over Their Shoulder”: Male Travelers, Female Bodies, and the Gendering
of Racial Ideology, 1500-1770. The William and Mary Quarterly 54(1): 167-192.
Londa Schiebinger. 2013. Medical
Experimentation and Race in the Eighteenth-century Atlantic World. Social
History of Medicine 26(3): 364-382.
Anne McClintock. 1995. Imperial Leather:
Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest. Pp. 1-36.
Stoler, Ann Laura. 2001. Tense and Tender
Ties: The Politics of Comparison in North American History and (Post) Colonial
Studies. The Journal of American History 88(3): 829-865.
Module 3: Incommensurate Feminisms
Sojourner Truth. 1851. ‘Ain’t I a
Woman’/’I am a Woman’s Rights’ Speech. Sojourner Truth Project.
https://www.thesojournertruthproject.com/compare-the-speeches/
Oyèrónké Oyēwùmí. 1998. De-Confounding
Gender: Feminist Theorizing and Western Culture, a Comment on Hawkesworth’s
“Confounding Gender”. SIGNS 23(4): 1049-1062.
Audre Lorde. 1984. The Master’s Tools
Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House. P. 190 in Sister Outsider: Essays and
Speeches. Crossing Press.
Gayatri Spivak. 1985 (reprinted 2010).
Can the Subaltern Speak? [Originally printed in the journal Wedge, 1985] Pp.
23-64 Reprinted in Can the Subaltern Speak? Reflections on the History of an
Idea (Rosalind C. Morris, editor). Columbia University Press.
Part 2: Feminist Times and Spaces
Module 4: Introduction & Feminist
Movements
Carole McCann and Seung-Kyung Kim. 2017.
Introduction: Theorizing Feminist Times and Spaces. Pp. 11-30 in Feminist
Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives. Routledge. [For the rest of this
syllabus, readings in Feminist Theory Reader will be abbreviated as in FTR.]
Linda Nicholson. 2010. Feminism in
“Waves”: Useful Metaphor or Not? Pp. 43-50 in FTR.
Becky Thompson. 2002. Multiracial
Feminism: Recasting the Chronology of Second Wave Feminism. Pp. 51-62 in FTR.
Amrita Basu. 2000. Globalization of the
Local/Global: Mapping Transnational Women’s Movements. Pp. 63-71 in FTR.
Module 5: Local Identities and Politics:
Poetry
Muriel Rukeyser. 1968. The Poem as Mask.
P. 88 in FTR. [poem]
T.V. Reed. 2005. The Poetical is the
Political: Feminist Poetry and the Poetics of Women’s Rights. Pp. 89-102 in
FTR.
Audre Lorde. 1973-1978. Selected Poems.
Adrienne Rich. 1972-1976. Selected Poems.
Module 6: Local Identities and Politics: Essays
Elizabeth Martinez. 1972. La Chicana. Pp.
112-114 in FTR.
The Combahee River Collective. 1977. A
Black Feminist Statement. Pp. 115-121 in FTR.
Cheryl Clarke. 1981. Lesbianism: An Act
of Resistance. Pp. 128-135 in FTR.
Kathy Miriam. 2005. Stopping the Traffic
in Women: Power, Agency, and Abolition in Feminist Debates Over
Sex-Trafficking. Pp. 136-149 in FTR.
Emi Koyama. 2001. The Transfeminist
Manifesto. Pp. 150-160 in FTR.
Part 3: Theorizing Intersecting Identities
Module 7: Intersectionality
Carole McCann and Seung-Kyung Kim. 2017.
Introduction to Theorizing Intersecting Identities. Pp. 163-179 in FTR.
From Patriarchy to Intersectionality: A
Transnational Feminist Assessment of How Far We’ve Really Come. Pp. 204-212 in
FTR.
Oyèrónké Oyēwùmí. 1999. Multiculturalism
or Multibodism: On the Impossible Intersections of Race and Gender in American
White Feminist and Black Nationalist Discourses. The Western Journal of Black
Studies 23(3): 182-189.
Chandra Talpade Mohanty. 1988. Under
Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses. Feminist Review 30:
61-88.
Module 8: Social Processes/Configuring
Differences, Part 1
Heidi Hartmann. 1981. The Unhappy
Marriage of Marxism and Feminism: Towards a More Progressive Union. Pp. 214-228
in FTR.
Rhacel Salazar Parreñas. 2001. Servants
of Globalization: Women, Migration, and Domestic Work. Pp. 229-244 in FTR.
Nawar Al-Hassan Golley. 2004. Is Feminism
Relevant to Arab Women? Third World Quarterly 25(3): 521-536.
Asha Nadkarni. 2014. Introduction:
Eugenic Feminism and the Problem of National Development. Pp. 1-32 in Eugenic
Feminism: Reproductive Nationalism in the United States and India. University
of Minnesota Press.
Module 9: Module 8: Social
Processes/Configuring Differences, Part 2
Andrea Smith. 2006. Heteropatriarchy and
the Three Pillars of White Supremacy: Rethinking Women of Color Organizing. Pp.
273-281 in FTR.
Monique Wittig. 1981. One is Not Born a
Woman. Pp. 282-287 in FTR.
June Jordan. 1985. Report from the
Bahamas. Pp. 304-312 in FTR.
Minnie Bruce Pratt. 1983. Identity, Skin,
Blood, Heart. Pp. 313-319 in FTR.
Audre Lorde. 1988. I Am Your Sister:
Black Women Organizing Across Sexualities. Pp. 320-324 in FTR.
Lionel Cantú Jr. with Eithne Luibhéid and
Alexandra Minna Stern. 2005. Well Founded Fear: Political Asylum and the
Boundaries of Sexual Identity in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands. Pp. 325-334 in
FTR.
Obioma Nnaemeka. 2001. Foreword: Locating
Feminisms/Feminists. Pp. 347-350 in FTR.
Part 4: Theorizing Feminist Knowledge and Agency
Module 10: Standpoints and Situational
Knowledge
Carole McCann and Seung-Kyung Kim. 2017.
Introduction to Theorizing Feminist Knowledge and Agency. Pp. 353-365 in FTR.
Nancy Hartsock. 1983. The Feminist
Standpoint: Toward a Specifically Feminist Historical Materialism. Pp. 368-383
in FTR.
Patricia Hill Collins. 1990. Defining
Black Feminist Thought. Pp. 384-400 in FTR.
Chandra Talpade Mohanty. 2003. “Under
Western Eyes” Revisited: Anticapitalist Struggles. Pp. 401-418 in FTR.
Cathy J. Cohen. 1997. Punks, Bulldaggers,
and Welfare Queens: The Radical Potential of Queer Politics? Pp. 419-435 in
FTR.
Module 11: Subject Formation and
Peformativity
Donna Haraway. 1988. Situated Knowledges:
The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Pp.
440-451 in FTR.
Angela Saini. 2017. Introduction. Pp.
1-12; Ch. 4, The Missing Five Ounces of the Female Brain. Pp. 74-95; and Ch. 5,
Women’s Work. Pp. 96-119 in Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong – and the New
Research That’s Rewriting the Story. Beacon Press.
Sandra Lee Bartky. 1990. Foucault,
Femininity, and the Modernization of Patriarchal Power. Pp. 466-480 in FTR.
Arleen B. Dallery. 1989. The Politics of Writing (The) Body:
Éccriture Féminine. Pp. 52-67 in Gender/body/knowledge: feminist
reconstructions of being and knowing (edited by Alison M. Jaggar and Susan R.
Bordo). Rutgers.
Judith Butler. 1988. Performative Acts
and Gender Constitution: An Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory. Pp.
481-492 in FTR.
PART 5: Imagine Otherwise/Solidarity Reconsidered
Module 12: Solidarity Reconsidered
Paula M.L. Moya. 2001. Chicana Feminism
and Postmodernist Theory. Pp. 558-575 in FTR.
Na-Young Lee. 2014. The Korean Women’s
Movement of Japanese Military “Comfort Women”: Navigating Between Nationalism
and Feminism. Pp. 576-585 in FTR.
Eileen Boris and Rhacel Salazar Parreñas.
2010. Intimate Labors: Cultures, Technologies, and the Politics of Care –
“Introduction.” Pp. 586-593 in FTR.
Barbara Ellen Smith. 2004. De-Gradations
of Whiteness: Appalachia and the Complexities of Race. Journal of Appalachian
Studies 10(1/2): 38-57.
John Edwin Mason. 2018. These Photos Will
Change the Way You Think About Race in Coal Country. [Photo Journalism – not an
article.] Yes! Magazine. March 15, 2018. https://www.yesmagazine.org/peace-justice/these-photos-will-change-the-way-you-think-about-race-in-coal-country-20180315
Jasbir K. Puar. “I Would Rather Be a
Cyborg than a Goddess”: Becoming Intersectional in Assemblage Theory. Pp.
594-607 in FTR.
Viviane Namaste. 2009. Undoing Theory:
The “Transgender Question” and the Epistemic Violence of Anglo-American
Feminist Theory. Pp. 608-621 in FTR.
Module 13: Currents
Paulla Ebron and Anna Tsing. 2017.
Feminism and the Anthropocene: Assessing the Field through Recent Books.
Feminist Studies 43(3): 658-683.
Janisse Ray. 1999. Ecology of a Cracker
Childhood. Milkweed Editions. Pp. 3-12.
Rhaisa Kameela Williams. 2016. Toward a
Theorization of Black Maternal Grief as Analytic. Transforming Anthropology
24(1): 17-30.
Angela Garcia. 2014. The Promise: On the
Morality of the Marginal and the Illicit. Ethos 42(1): 51-64.