FYS484
Making Sense: The Social Significance of Sensory Perception
Anthropology
BC
Subject code
FYS
Course Number
484
Department(s)
Instructor(s)
J. Rubin
Course Long Title
Making Sense: The Social Significance of Sensory Perception
Description
How do our senses help us to order and organize our world? How are our senses themselves ordered and organized? In what ways might our senses be intertwined with the world in which we live? This course considers these questions in a range of different contexts, and it challenges students to think about the senses as socially and culturally constructed pathways between bodies and worlds. In doing so, this course directs attention to the politics of the senses: how worlds of perception and experience are opened for us, closed to us, and shaped by forces beyond our immediate control.
Modes of Inquiry
Analysis and Critique [AC], Historical and Social Inquiry [HS]
Writing Credit
W1
Class Restriction
Exclude Sophomores, Exclude Juniors, Exclude Seniors