FGSS 6675

FGSS 6675

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2022-2023. Courses of Study 2022-2023 is scheduled to publish mid-June.

How have epidemics and pandemics changed social worlds and created new futures? How is colonization political and microbial? What will it take to repair human-animal-environmental relations when they can be pathologized as sources of contagion? By examining American colonization of the Philippines, One Health in contemporary Vietnam, and other ethnographic and historical examples, the course shows how interventions that took place in the wake of epidemics have had profound societal and planetary impacts. This course ultimately argues that pandemics are never just about a singular bacterium or virus. Instead, pandemics and epidemics reveal deeper social inequalities, interact with profound cultural and historical relations, and both create and foreclose different kinds of futures. For longer description and instructor bio visit the Society for the Humanities website.

When Offered Fall.

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: graduate students.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  • 17675 FGSS 6675   SEM 101

    • T
    • Aug 22 - Dec 5, 2022
    • Parrenas, J

  • Instruction Mode: In Person