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CRTSD-1500-1: FiCS: Amends

Fall 2024

Subject: Critical Studies
Type: Seminar
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Level: Undergraduate

Campus: San Francisco
Course Dates: August 28, 2024 — December 10, 2024
Meetings: Thu 4:00-07:00PM, (Future) Main Bldg - 102 B
Instructor: Rebekah Edwards

Units: 3.0
Enrolled: 16/16 Waitlist

Description:

What does it mean to make amends? To amend a fire, or to amend the soil means to add something to it that strengthens it. To amend a book or a law means to correct errors found within it, or to modify, revise, or alter it. Older uses of “amend” were closer to what we now speak of as “mending”—that is, to repair, or fix; or to repurpose and alter something for a new use. In medical contexts to amend is to heal or to mitigate symptoms. Often when we speak of amends we are talking about acts taken to rectify or atone for a wrong that was done, either by oneself, one’s community, one’s ancestors, or one’s nation. As artists, we may ask: how and when does our making become a form of amends?In this class, we will develop our critical thinking skills by exploring the multiple connotations, metaphors, histories, and applications of amends. We will turn to the work of artists, theorists, scientists, farmers, healers, activists, and spiritual practitioners and discuss practices of making amends (such as mending and repurposing; individual apologies or atonement practices in different spiritual contexts; soil amending, river restoration, or community gardens) and different social and political movements focused on amends (such as Restorative and Transformative Justice, Reparations, and Land Back.) We will study how amends are practiced at an individual, collective, and global scale and consider how these practices might offer useful metaphors and strategies for our own lives and creative praxis.Through close reading and active response to cultural texts and phenomena drawn from multiple disciplines and reflecting diverse perspectives, we will work with a transdisciplinary methodology reading across and between different disciplines, projects, and movements looking for useful juxtapositions that help us develop our critical capacities. Foundations in Critical Studies introduces critical thinking skills essential to college-level work in the humanities and sciences. Students develop their critical capacities through close reading and active response to cultural texts and phenomena drawn from multiple disciplines and reflecting diverse perspectives on major themes or topics in contemporary life.

Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:

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