Fall 2023 Comparative Literature: French GR6320 section 001

Sexualities : Medieval and Modern

Sexualities Medieval & Mo

Call Number 11135
Day & Time
Location
W 2:10pm-4:00pm
507 Philosophy Hall
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required Instructor
Instructors Eliza Zingesser
Camille A Robcis
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

In this class, we are interested in how gender and sexuality have been constructed in the past and present. The class will be divided into four units, for which our guiding questions are as follows: 1. How should one teach and write about the history of sexuality? In a time when queer people remain under threat in much of the world, including this country, is it better to look for readily identifiable queer forebears in past periods? Or should we, on the contrary, seek to avoid any kind of anachronism in looking for queerness in the past, hewing strictly to the non-normative or deviant categories labeled explicitly by past thinkers? Is there a third way? 2. How have gender and sex been constructed in the past (as a binary, a spectrum, or something else?). Are they a function of sexual ‘orientation’ (if one can even speak of such a thing before the 19th C) or the other way around? How have they been constructed recently? 3. How do social and political factors condition our sexual desires? Should the bedroom be a battleground for a political agenda, as some anti-porn feminists (and others) claim, or should we decide that sexual desires are outside the bounds of morality and/or politics? Can we interrogate the conditions surrounding our sexual desires without imposing moral norms around them? 4. What are some of the recent debates in queer theory? How do issues of race and disability intersect with gender, sex, and sexual orientation? How has the category of ‘trans’ involved a rethinking of sex and gender? Has queer theory strayed too far from sexuality?

 

Web Site Vergil
Department French
Enrollment 12 students (25 max) as of 7:06PM Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Subject Comparative Literature: French
Number GR6320
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Campus Morningside
Note instructors permission required
Section key 20233CLFR6320G001