Thursday, July 6, 2023

Welcome Some of Our New Fall 2023 MALAS Cohort Superstars!

 

New MALAS Seminar, Fall 2023! Queering Comics with Jess Whatcott!

LGBT 550/MALAS 600A - Queering Comics  

Professor Jess Whatcott

“Queering Comics” is an exploration of LGBTQ+ culture, ideas, aesthetics, relationships, identity, and politics through the prism of sequential art. We will use the medium of comics to explore the politics of representation, assessing both the consequences of the absence of complex queer and trans characters, and conversely the stereotypes that are reproduced when queer and trans people do appear. We will also explore how queer and trans people have practiced disidentifying with comics, teaching themselves to locate queerness even in narratives not intentionally created as queer. We will encounter creators who have used comics and graphic narratives to communicate queer ideas, express queer sexuality, and build queer community, sometimes subversively when queer identities are politically suppressed. We will evaluate the backlash against queer and trans comics, the politics of censorship, and the banning of queer visual narratives as sexually explicit content. Finally, we will celebrate the joyful struggle to continue to create and distribute queer and trans graphic narratives.  More here: https://comics.sdsu.edu/grants/neh-hsi/courses/whatcott

Jess Whatcott (they/them) is Assistant Professor of gender, women’s, and sexuality studies. Their forthcoming book from Duke University Press revisits the eugenics practice of segregation -- the mass confinement of disability in early twentieth century California. The book also connects this history to on-going reproductive and social control in today’s state institutions. Their research on eugenics, carcerality, and speculative fiction appears in Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and SocietyFeminist FormationsPolitics, Groups & IdentitiesLateral; and edited book collections. Dr. Whatcott is affiliated with the SDSU Center for Comics Studies, and you can find them at Comic Con International presenting on "Comic Justice."



New Fall 2023 Seminar with SDSU History Professor Eve Kornfeld: History 582/ MALAS 600 20th Century Intellectuals and Society

History 582/ MALAS 600A
20th Century Intellectuals and Society 
Professor Kornfeld 


How can a thinking individual act in a world of political rupture, virulent nationalism, economic crisis, lies, and violence? In a seminar format, we will explore the dramatically changing responses of 20th-century intellectuals to challenges strikingly similar to our own. Three principal postures will be examined in detail: an initial desire of intellectuals to turn inward, manifested in the development of psychology and “modernism” between 1890 and World War I; a period between the wars of social and political activism by “engaged” intellectuals; and, finally, the search by intellectuals after World War II for a synthetic stance between isolation and cooptation. We will compare formulations of these roles in a variety of disciplines, including philosophy, psychology, physics, art, architecture, music, drama, and fiction. The seminar will culminate with individual research and group presentations on intellectuals and the Cold War, and intellectuals and post-colonialism around the world in the late 20th and 21st centuries. Requirements include active participation in seminar discussions, group presentations, and an individual research paper on an intellectual of your choice from anywhere in the post-WWII world. There are no prerequisites for the seminar, beyond a willingness to read/view and discuss some of the most exciting works of the twentieth century.


Dr. Eve Kornfeld is Senate Distinguished Professor and Professor of History at San Diego State University. She earned her B.A. at Princeton University and her M.A. and Ph.D. in History at Harvard University, and has taught in Harvard’s History and Literature concentration, Princeton’s History and European Cultural Studies departments, and SDSU’s History, MALAS, Honors, and Arts Alive Collaborative programs. Her teaching and scholarship are interdisciplinary, transnational, polyphonic, and informed by post-colonial, post-structural, gender and critical race theory. Her books were published in the Bedford Series in History and Culture of St. Martin’s Press, and her articles appeared in the William and Mary Quarterly, Journal of the Early Republic, Journal of American Studies, Canadian Review of American Studies, New England Journal of History, Pennsylvania History, History Teacher, and the Journal of American Culture. She served on the governing board of the American Culture Association. She received SDSU’s Excellence in Teaching Award in the Humanities and Social Sciences in 2017, the Senate Excellence in Teaching Award in 2018, the Exceptional Service Award in the Humanities and Social Sciences in 2021, and the Darlene Shiley Honors Faculty Fellowship Award in 2023.




 


New Fall 2023 MALAS Seminar! --> SEMINAR IN DAOIST PHILOSOPHIES: PAST AND PRESENT PHIL600_MALAS600C, Sandra A. Wawrytko, Ph.D



SEMINAR IN DAOIST PHILOSOPHIES: PAST AND PRESENT

PHIL600_MALAS600C, Fall, 2023 W 2-4:45, AL 422  

Sandra A. Wawrytko, Ph.D

“a morality which encourages man to detach himself from his animal origins 

and to regard all nature as subject to him does not offer our best hopes for the future”

Joseph W. Meeker, The Comedy of Survival; Studies in Literary Ecology



Grounded in Naturalism, Daoist philosophies emphasize our deep connection with Nature in terms of the yin of Dao—the way of reality. It also questions the viability of human civilization, which estranges us from Dao and its life-affirming virtuosity. We will examine the claims and strategies of Daoist philosophers set forth over thousands of years to evaluate their potential contributions to reversing the toxic effects of yang’s “cunning intellect.”  

 

primary texts     Lao Zi, Dao De Jing; Zhuang Zi, Zhuang Zi; Sun Zi, Bing Fa (Methods of Warfare); Neo-Daoist Sun Bu-er (female master), poems; Masanobu Fukuoka, The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming

commentaries   Lao Zi and Spinoza; Daoist Metaphysics and Heidegger; Zhuang Zi and Nietzsche

applications        ecology, conflict resolution, leadership, military strategy

 

Sandra A. Wawrytko, Ph.D., (Washington University in St. Louis, Philosophy) is a Professor in the Department of Philosophy at San Diego State University; former Director of the Center for Asian and Pacific Studies (2014-2021). Research areas—Buddhist and Daoist epistemology and aesthetics in the context of neuroscience; Global Aesthetics; Globalizing Philosophy. More than thirty years teaching intensive summer classes on Buddhism at Tsung Lin University, Taiwan. Author/editor of eight books, twenty book chapters, more than thirty journal articles, with sixty-two presentations at national and international conferences. Recent publications include “Murasaki’s Epistemological Awakening: Buddhist Philosophical Roots of The Tale of Genji” (Journal of Chinese Philosophy 2022), “Lessons in Non-Dualism from World Philosophies” (Journal of World Philosophies 2021), “Murasaki Shikibu of Japan” and “Sun Bu’er of China” in Women Philosophers from Non-Western Traditions: The First Four Thousand Years (Springer, 2023).

 


Sunday, July 2, 2023

New Fall 2023 Visual Cultural Studies Seminar at SDSU with MALAS: #nakedsouls24: Comics, Animation, Psychoanalysis

ECL 157: Comics and History | MALAS 600D Naked Souls 

#nakedsouls24: Comics, Animation, Psychoanalysis

T/Th 11-12:15 GMCS 333Professor William Nericcio


old onto your hats (and iphones!) as we bravely go where no one has gone before...  Ok, so you know that’s hype: a total and spectacular exaggeration, the ravings (potentially) of a madman or a bonkers professor! But maybe, just maybe, we can actually do it?  Imagine exploring the world of comics, streaming animation, digital storytelling, and AI-designed narrative in a course with the Department of English and Comparative Literature, now known as ECL at SDSU! 

“Holy Robot Algorithms, Batman!” “Holy #nakedsouls23, Robin.” 
 

In this class, we will peruse worlds illustrated and cinematic, literary and philosophical, as we sample some of the most outrageous storytelling from the 20th and 21st centuries
.



And while we will be concerned with "history" and "comics" throughout the term, this class will not strictly be a history of comics, a survey of the evolution of men in tights and women in spandex! We are more concerned with the souls of this characters, the naked contours of what we can call the mind or the psyche!

The souls we meet will be “naked,” not naked as in the “clothing optional sense” (though there will be a little of that) but naked in the original sense of the word, that speaks ... 
“of things, ‘without the usual or customary covering,’ from Old English. Applied to qualities, actions, etc., ‘mere, pure, open to view, unconcealed,’ from c. 1200; phrase the naked truth, from early 15c...” 
For the stories we read and the characters we meet will be very much unconcealed, revealing the secrets of their lives and their souls as can only be found in Literature, comics included. 

We will learn that "Literature" is the antithesis of the world of bullshit we are presently immersed in on television and social media, where fake news and filters are the name of the game. Our naked souls will be raw, eccentric, controversial, and neurotic. The required works are still being nailed down, but will include the singular amazingness of comics and art by Rene MagritteJules FeifferArt SpiegelmanFrank Miller & David MazzucelliCarlos Fuentes, and Jason Adam Katzenstein, among others!

Saturday, July 1, 2023

New Fall 2023 MALAS Seminar! African Civilization I with Professor Taharka Adé

Unfortunately, this course was cancelled by the College of Arts and Letters Dean's Office, Friday, July 21, 2023 owing to low enrollment.


(AFRAS 520 & MALAS 600c)  AFRICAN CIVILIZATION I    

New Course open to Juniors, Seniors, and Graduate Students | Mondays 4:00-6:40 PM   

Professor Taharka Adé 

This course is an intensive investigation into the rise and fall of several major ancient African civilizations. Several civilizations will be covered, including the classical cultures of Kush, Kemet, and Axum, as well as a survey of the early history of the Sudanic empires. Emphasis will be placed on African agency, showing the evolution of the peoples, nations, and their civilizations across space and time within the long history of Africa.    


Bio:  Dr. Taharka Adé is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Africana Studies. Adé obtained both his Ph.D in Africology from Temple University. His primary research interest is the investigation of various African and African diaspora cultural phenomena and the development of methods of comparative analyses between such phenomena. Adé is the author of W.E.B. Du Bois’ Africa: Scrambling for a New Africa.    

Taharka Adé, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Department of Africana Studies Office: AL-371  O: 619.594.3888  San Diego State University | SDSU.edu  5500 Campanile Drive | San Diego, CA 92182