Possibly to be accompanied by brief weekly writing assignments
One paper (short, less than five pages) due near the end of the semester
To be graded Pass/No Pass
Weekly schedule (tentative):
Week 1 (Jan 29-Feb 2):
a) Introduction, definitions.
b) Our most provocative experiences with science fiction.
Week 2 (Feb 5-Feb 9):
a) Discuss Brin's Star Wars/Star Trek article;
Is Brin right that SW promotes a fascistic worldview, and ST an egalitarian one?
And, larger issue: Does sci-fi affect our political views? How?
Elitism and populism in science fiction; who is more privileged?
b) Discuss Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness;
how do gender and biology affect culture and politics?
Week 3 (Feb 12-Feb 16):
a) The Left Hand of Darkness; "The Other" as way to understand the self
b) Discuss Willis, "Even the Queen." What health inventions could substantially
change power distribution?
Week 4 (Feb 20-Feb 23):
a) Discuss Vonnegut's "Harrison Bergeron." What laws and norms privilege
the weak, as Ayn Rand would have feared?
b) Discuss Kress's "The Mountain to Mohammed." What laws and norms condemn the weak?
What science fiction have you read that does so covertly?
Week 5 (Feb 26-March 2):
a) Discuss Card's Ender's Game; what will childhood be? What is childhood?
What rights do children have? What rights would they have under a
military government?
b) Ender's Game: Threat of "The Other" forces earth into uneasy planetary alliance.
Plausible? Is fascism ever justifiable?
Week 6 (March 5-9):
a) Discuss Stephenson's Snow Crash. Defining cyberpunk. How does technology
affect the ability to govern? What about nanotechnology?
b) _Snow Crash_. What is the future of the nation-state?
Week 7 (March 12-March 16):
a) Snow Crash. When is violence appropriate to resolve conflicts?
How could the nature of violence change?
b) Discuss Stephenson's Snow Crash and The Diamond Age. Open discussion on
cyberpunk and government. Is anarchism or government more viable given technology?
Week 8 (March 19-March 23):
a) Diamond Age. How is international relations like family or
personal relationships? How would interplanetary relations work? What would affect it?
b) Diamond Age. How can technology change education? Why is The Primer effective?
Week 9 (April 2-April 6):
a) Discuss Asimov, "The Fun They
Had" and page from "Jokester". How
will education change? What sort of population and politics will this produce? And what
skills and worldviews will be most useful in the near future?
b) Discuss Morrow, "City of Truth." What one taboo or value, if strengthened or
destroyed, would most change power distribution?
Week 10 (April 9-April 13):
a) "City of Truth." Norms control us; what norms are necessary?
Which are disappearing?
b) Discuss Rebetez-Cortes, "The New Prehistory." Where is the individual privileged over
the group, and where is the opposite?
Week 11 (April 16-April 20):
a) Discuss Allen, "The Public Hating." In the sci-fi genre,
irrationality and mob rule seem the greatest threat--why?
b) Discuss "The Matrix" as political. What is "The System?" Does the film espouse anarchy?
a)
"The Matrix" as religious. What do the elements of Buddhism and
Christianity mean in terms of empowerment for the individual?
b) Discuss Bringsvaerd's "Codemus." Institutions could make us dependent on them.
Why can't Codemus escape, though Neo does?
Week 13 (April 30-May 4):
a) Discuss Asimov's "The Evitable Conflict." Pro or con: If robots were
benevolent and smarter than us, we would be justified in turning over
government to them. Is scientific expertise the basis of authority?
Robots in general. Data (Star Trek) vs. HAL ("2001"). Who has power over new forms of life?