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Course Info for POLS - 235 - 90, Summer 2024
Class number: 1010 Title: Colonization and the Canon Department: Political Science
Career: Undergraduate Component: Lecture Session: Second Quarter
Instructor's Permission Required: No Grading Basis: Regular Units: 1.00
Enrollment limited to 15 Current enrollment: 8 Available seats: 7
Start date: Monday, June 24, 2024 End date: Friday, July 26, 2024 Mode of Instruction: Remote
Schedule: TR: 2:00PM-5:15PM, N/A Instructor(s): Salgado, Gabriel
Prerequisite(s): This course is not open to seniors.
Distribution Requirement: Meets Social Sciences Requirement
Course Description:
What impact have conquest and colonization had on modern political thought? How did European thinkers describe Indigenous peoples, and how did they deploy the figure of "the native" in their works? In this course, we will take a critical approach to canonical thinkers such Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau by focusing on how they approached issues of colonialism and Indigeneity. Drawing on contemporary scholarship, we will explore how prominent issues in modern political thought (including theories of freedom, the social contract, natural law, progress, and individual rights) look different from vantage points outside of Europe.