ILRIC 7390
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - January 11, 2024 7:32PM EST
- Course Catalog - January 11, 2024 7:07PM EST
Classes
ILRIC 7390
Course Description
Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2023-2024. Courses of Study 2023-2024 is scheduled to publish mid-June.
This course is an exploration of agrarian political economy that holds "culture" and cultural theory at its core. It begins with a close reading of Williams's (1973) The Country and the City, which attends to the imaginative and material uses of agrarian space (including the people that inhabit that space) over time. We will also think through Williams's political economy, its influences, and his broader theories on work, politics, society, and agrarian life. Williams's analytical model holds work and productivism, affect and aesthetics, and political economy in the frame together. A cultural theory-inspired agrarian studies follows on from this tradition, drawing from anthropology, geography, history, and beyond to further explore the relationships between production and consumption, extraction and accumulation, labor and leisure.
When Offered Fall or Spring.
Regular Academic Session.
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Credits and Grading Basis
3 Credits GradeNoAud(Letter grades only (no audit))
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Class Number & Section Details
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Meeting Pattern
- T Ives Hall 103
- Aug 21 - Dec 4, 2023
Instructors
Besky, S
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Additional Information
Instruction Mode: In Person
This course is an exploration of agrarian political economy that holds “culture” and cultural theory at its core. It begins with a close reading of Williams’s (1973) The Country and the City, which attends to the imaginative and material uses of agrarian space (including the people that inhabit that space) over time. We will also think through Williams’s political economy, its influences, and his broader theories work, politics, society, and agrarian life. Williams’s analytical model holds work and productivism, affect and aesthetics, and political economy in the frame together. A cultural theory-inspired agrarian studies follows on from this tradition, drawing from anthropology, geography, history, and beyond to further explore the relationships between production and consumption, extraction and accumulation, labor and leisure.
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