Difference between revisions of "Philosophy of Italian Culture"
From Alfino
Jump to navigationJump to searchm |
|||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
* Student Information Form [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1f4EVCG_-TYOihOU-zrZfFWDwVXcFa5bryGgfXbJvUvc/viewform?usp=send_form] | * Student Information Form [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1f4EVCG_-TYOihOU-zrZfFWDwVXcFa5bryGgfXbJvUvc/viewform?usp=send_form] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
===Geertz=== | ===Geertz=== |
Revision as of 01:20, 14 January 2015
General Resources
- Course Information
- Course Reading Schedule
- Assignments for Grading Schemes
- In-class Notes
- Study Questions
All Posts
Google Forms for Assignments
- Student Information Form [1]
Geertz
- Example of how Geertz is being used in contemporary scholarship [2]
- Anthropology, Inc and the Coolhunt: Here's an article that a student in a related class found on how anthropology is being used today for market research. Very interesting for developing your intuitions on ethnography [3]. It reminded me of an older piece by Malcolm Gladwell that is somewhat famous: The Coolhunt [4]
Italian History Links
- Good illustrated narration of the effect of the Congress of Vienna. [5]
- Bas-relief du Palazzo degi Uffici (EUR, Rome) - referred to in Pugliese. Note image of Mussolini at bottom center.
- Timeline from class Feb 4
- Megan Trudell, Gramsci: The Turin Years, International Socialism, 9 April 07.
- Glossary Terms: Economism, Hegemony, Historical Bloc
- Political Philosophy/Social Philosophy: J. S. Mill and Karl Marx -- Mill and Mazzini knew each other and had similar political views (great paper topic here). These notes might help you locate Mill, Mazzini, and Marx on the standard political spectrum.
- World War 1: The breakdown of capitalism
- Chapter 22: Gramsci - theory of hegemony, civil society, an revolution
- Timeglider timeline on Italian History, needs work. [6]