PULSE Council Seminar
Fr. Joseph Flanagan, SJPL293.01: Culture and Social Structures I David McMenamin
Fall 2001 Tuesdays 4:30 - 6:00ish
This course is one in the four semester cycle of courses designed for members of the Boston College PULSE Council. In this course we attempt to lay a foundation for understanding contemporary ways in which people choose to structure -- literally and figuratively (or perhaps better, symbolically) -- the way they live together. Our study centers on questions about how our cultural and social structures are the concrete expression of what we value, of the things we consider meaningful and important.
The texts we have chosen to guide us in this pursuit will lead us to raise these questions in a way that will direct our focus from some general principles and ideas to somewhat more specifically western, particularly North American ways of creating these cultural and social structures.
As the late Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Thomas P. O'Neill, the distinguished Boston College alumnus whose name adorns our library, was fond of saying: "All politics is local." No doubt he derived that from his reading of Aristotle's Ethics, a book with which most of you are familiar. Understanding that as a sort of underlying theme of all four semesters of the Council class, we hope to look closely at the origins and development of some of the guiding themes and ideas that ground those local politics, the structuring of the culture in which we find ourselves today.
Accordingly, we have selected texts from what might appear to be a broad range of disciplines. As usual for this seminar, some may initially appear to have little to do with what you think of when you hear the word "philosophy." They all, however, have a great deal to do with what you might need to think about when trying to answer such questions as: "What does it mean to be part of a culture?" "Is there a philosophy behind what it means to be a citizen of a particular country?" or "What does it mean to be a member of a particular society?"
We trust you will keep such questions in mind as we go through the semester and as you fulfill each of the course requirements.
Requirements:
1) Faithful attendance and preparation for each class meeting.
2) One or two short in-class presentations.
3) An individual mid-semester "conversation" about what we have been reading.
4) A grueling, nerve-wracking, angst-inducing, group oral final exam.
Book list:
Christian Norberg-Schulz, Genius Loci.
Leo Marx, The Machine in the Garden
Michael Kammen, People of Paradox
The Bible, Selections to be determined
Patrick Byrne, "Paradigms of Justice and Love" (Handout)
Reading Assignments:
September 4 -- Introduction
September 11 -- Genius Loci, Chapters 1 - 3.
September 18 -- Genius Loci, Chapters 4 - 6.
September 25 -- Genius Loci, Chapters 7 & 8.
October 2 -- The Machine in the Garden, Chapters I & II
October 9 -- The Machine in the Garden, Chapters III & IV
October 16 -- The Machine in the Garden, Chapters V & VI
October 23 -- People of Paradox; Part One.
October 30 -- People of Paradox; Part Two.
November 6 -- People of Paradox; Part Three.
November 13 -- The Acts of the Apostles
November 20 -- The Acts of the Apostles (if anything remains to be said about it) and "Paradigms of Justice and Love," by Pat Byrne
November 27 -- "Paradigms of Justice and Love."
December 4 -- "The Grand Synthesis"
December 11 – Study Day
December 18 -- Final Exam