Syllabus
 

 

The course involves close reading and active discussion, periodic postings to the class electronic forum, and the preparation of a substantial essay (15 pages) dealing with some aspect of memory and history. You prepare a draft and present a summary of your argument to the class, and you read and comment on the draft of one of your fellow students. The final version of the paper is due the last Wednesday of the block.

Because of the importance of class discussion, missing class is not an option.

 
Required Reading
Blight Race and reunion
Levi The drowned and the saved
Linenthal Preserving memory
Packet  
*Electronic posting before class
**Electronic posting after class

 
Class Sessions
Mon., Oct. 28 Defining Memory
Remembering: the mechanics
Tues., Oct. 29 Ancient
Aristotle, Plato, Phaedo (1,4,12, 15),
http://plato.evansville.edu/texts/jowett/phaedo.htm
Cicero
Wed., Oct. 30 Medieval*
Augustine, Hugh of St. Victor, Bradwardine

Thurs., Oct. 31
Paper sessions
Read Freud et al
Fri., Nov. 1 Modern
Freud, Mishkin, Mortimer (and Tim Appelzeller, "The
Anatomy of Memory", Scientific American, June 1987, 80-9,
Goelet
Paper Proposals Due
Constructing Memory
Mon., Nov. 4 Private: the Renaissance
Geary, Dati, Molho
Tues., Nov. 5 Private: modern*
Nora
Read Blight (1-2)
Wed., Nov. 6 Collective
Halbwachs, Portelli
Read Blight (3-4) (6-7 optional)
Thurs., Nov. 7 Official*
Blight: 1-5, 8-9, Epilogue (10 optional)
Fri., Nov. 8 Rescuing Memory
Levi: 1-7, Epilogue
Mon., Nov. 11
Tues., Nov. 12
Work on drafts
Drafts due Tues., p.m.
Wed., Nov. 13
Thurs., Nov. 14
Presentations
Read Linenthal
Fri., Nov. 15 Preventing oblivion*
Linenthal
Mon., Nov. 18 Politics of commemoration**
Winter ("Remembrance and Redemption")
http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/research/publications/hdm/back_issues/9winter.html
Young ("Memory and Counter-Memory")
http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/research/publications/hdm/back_issues/9young.html
Spielburg project
Tues., Nov. 19 Memory in the making
9/11
Wed., Nov. 20 Papers due