Introduction |
1 | Defining "Development" | |
Part 1: The Colonial Legacy: The Gendered Precedents of Development |
2 | The Colonial Legacy | |
3 | The Colonial Legacy (cont.) | |
4 | Colonial Images of "Native" Women and Men | |
5 | Film: First Contact
Colonial Transformations of Gender | |
6 | Women, Tradition and Modernism | |
7 | Socialism and Post-Colonialism | |
8 | Socialism and Post-Colonialism (cont.) | |
9 | Film: Joe Leahy's Neighbors | Paper due |
Part 2: The Rise of Development Theory |
10 | Rise of Development Theory | |
11 | Critics from within the Economic Frame | |
Part 3: Development and Daily Life |
12 | Film: Our Friends at the Bank | |
13 | Development and Daily Life | |
14 | Development and Daily Life (cont.) | |
15 | Development and Bureaucracy | |
16 | Knowledge and the Environment | |
17 | The Complexities of Activism | |
18 | Film: Black Harvest | Paper due (5-7 pages) |
Part 4: Further into Daily Life: The Politics of Poverty outside the Development Frame |
19 | The Politics of Wage Labor | |
20 | Drawing the Line Between First and Third Worlds? | |
21 | Issues of Health
Guest Speaker: Erica James | |
22 | Issues of Health (cont.) | |
23 | Film: Celso and Cora | |
24 | Thinking More About Gender | |
25 | Thinking More About Gender (cont.) | |
| | Final paper due (2 Essay Questions; 8-10 Pages Total) |