Northern Arizona University
Departmant of History, Spring 2004
Instructor: Dr. Sanjam Ahluwalia
Office: LA 232
Phone # : 3-8709
Office Hours: TTH12:30 - 1:30, and by appointment
E-mail: Sanjam.Ahluwalia@nau.edu
Class Meetings: LA 321; TTH 11.10-12.25
IMPORTANT:
Please look at the "Northern Arizona University Policy Statements" and
the "Classroom Management Statement" at the back of this documentbefore
reading the syllabus.
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This course is designed to introduce students to themes within women's history in Asia. This is a liberal studies class bearing the thematic focus "Valuing the Diversity of Human Experience." It is in the "Cultural Understanding," distribution block. This course will address several of the essential skills which are features of the liberal studies program, including critical readings, critical and creative thinking, ethical reasoning, effective writing and oral communication.
Covering a wide chronological
time frame and large geographical areas, we will use gender as a lens to
examine the past. While privileging gender as an analytical category, we
will simultaneously explore how gender identities were inflected by politics
of race, class, caste, community, religion, and nation, in different parts
of Asia--primarily India, China, and Afghanistan. This course will also
reflect upon current debates within women's history to familiarize us with
some of the issues and problems that arise in re-writing the past from
a gendered perspective. To facilitate our understanding of the varied historical
experiences of Indian, Chinese, and Afghani women this course will use
materials drawn from primary documents, academic writings, autobiography,
fiction, and films.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
By the end of the course
students will demonstrate their understanding of the complex historical
roles of women within Asian histories by writing critical commentaries
on primary documents, films and works of fiction. In essay exams for the
Mid-term and the Finals, they will indicate their ability to critically
examine the past from a gendered perspective and identify the tools employed
by women's historians to reconstruct the past. This course will also enable
students to develop effective speaking and writing skills through class
participation and various writing assignments
COURSE STRUCTURE:
The class will be a combination
of lectures and discussions, with expectations of increasing student participation
and performance. Students should feel free to speak their minds, but not
at the expense of others' opinions and beliefs
TEXTBOOK AND REQUIRED MATERIALS
1. Barbara N. Ramusack and Sharon Sievers, Restoring Women to History: Asia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999. REQUIRED.
2. Rokeya S. Hossain, Sultana's Dream. New York, Feminist Press, 1988. REQUIRED.
3. S. Mehta, ed., Women
for Afghan Women. New York: Palgrave, 2002. REQUIRED.
A set of REQUIRED or other
RECOMMENDED readings will also be placed on reserve at the Cline library.
COURSE SCHEDULE: SUBJECT TO MODIFICATION
January 13: Course Introduction
January15-20: Introduction
to Women's History in Asia and Issues within Women's History:
We will discuss some of the significant debates within the field of women's
history and trace how the field has evolved during the last two or three
decades. We will examine some of the difficulties historians encounter
in retrieving women's voices from the past. In seeking to understand the
theoretical concerns underlying women's history, we will identify ways
in which historians have undertaken to address some of these in their specific
works, especially within Asian women's history.
Readings: Restoring
Women, "Introduction," xvii-li; "Introduction," Recasting
Women: Essays in Colonial History, eds., Kumkum Sangari and Sudesh
Vaid. This essay will be available on E-reserve in the Cline library.
January 20 : Class
discussion of Sangari and Vaid article.
January 22 : Introductory lecture on India.
Chronological handout.
January
27: Prescriptive Literature and Gendered Representations: We will
critically examine selections from prescriptive literature to identify
gendered roles assigned within Indian society. We will also watch parts
of a dramatized version of the Indian epic, Mahabharata,
directed by Peter Brooks. The reading material will be selected from the
web and students are expected to get a print out from the web site that
will be indicated in the previous class.
Readings: Restoring Women, 15-35; Women Writing in India, 65-70 and
Web Readings:
Selections from Laws of Manu;
Selections from the Qur'an;
Selections fromArthashastra;
and Kamasutra. .
January 29: Expressions of Women's Agency: Within the devotional traditions of Bhakti and Sufism in Medieval India, women found a platform for expressing their agency through poetry and sainthood. We will read some of the poetry written by women during this period to identify subversive expressions by women articulated within patriarchal structures.
Readings: Restoring
Women, 35-40; Selections from Women
Writing in India, 82-87, 89-94.
February 3-10: Reform
and Recasting: This week we will examine how the various reform movements
in colonial India sought to recast Indian women as symbols and repositories
of Indian tradition. We will also watch the film Home
and the World.
Reading: Restoring Women, 41-53. Women Writing in India, 145-186; 221-235, 340-352.
Sangeeta Ray, "Woman as Nation
and a Nation as Women: Tagore's The Home and the World and Hossain's
Sultana's
Dream," in Ray, Engendering
India: Women and Nation in Colonial and Postcolonial Narratives
90-125; 175-180. Ray's article will be available on e-reserve in Cline
library.
February 12: Class
discussion of readings.
February 17: Nation and
Its Women: We will discuss the role of Indian nationalism both in allowing
and limiting women's participation in public sphere politics. We will study
the writings of male reformers and national leaders such as Gandhi to examine
how nationalism sought to recast gender roles, which in the ultimate analysis
did not allow women the freedom of expression promised with swaraj,
national independence.
Readings: Restoring
Women, 56-65; Selections from Mahatma Gandhi's writings. A selection
from Gandhi's writings will be handed out in class. Madhu Kishwar, "Gandhi
on Women,"Economic and Political
Weekly 20 (October 5 & 12): 1691-1702, 1753-1758; Urvashi Butalia,
"Abducted and Widowed Women: Questions of Sexuality and Citizenship During
Partition,"in Meenakshi Thapan, ed., Embodiment:
Essays on Gender and Identity (New Delhi: Oxford University Press,
1997): 90-106. These articles will be placed on e-reserve in Cline library.
February 19: Class
discussion of Gandhi's writings, Madhu Kishwar, and Urvashi Butalia articles.
February 24: Mid Term
Review.
February 26: Mid-Term
Exam!! PLEASE REMEMBER TO BRING BLUE BOOKS!!
March 2: Dangerous Alliances:
Women and Religious Fundamentalism: We will examine how Hindu and Muslim
fundamentalism have sought to represent women's issues, and why some women
have embraced the sectarian ideology espoused by these groups.
Readings:
Paola Bacchetta, "Militant Hindu Nationalist Women Re-Imagine Themselves:
Notes on Mechanisms of Expansion/Adjustment," Journal
of Women's History, Vol 10, no.4, (Winter, 1999): 125-47; Zoya Hasan,
"Minority Identity, State Policy and Political Process," in ed., Zoya Hasan, Forging
Identities: Gender, Communities and the State, 59-73. Articles will
be available on e-reserve in the Cline library.
March 4-9: Film Earth.
March 11: Class discussion
on assigned reading from March 2nd and Earth.
March 16-18 SPRING
BREAK!
March
23: Paper due in class!
March 23: Introductory lecture on Chinese history
Chronological handouts.
March 25: Prescriptive
Literature and Gender Roles: We will examine traditions of Confucianism
and Buddhism to determine the traditional roles assigned to women in China.
Readings: Restoring
Women, 166-184.
March 30: Women as Repositories
of Tradition: We will review Pan Chao's essay "Lesson's For Women,"
to assess the representations of women as repositories of culture and tradition
within Chinese society.
Readings: Restoring
Women, 188- 193; Pan Chao, "Lesson's For Women." Copies of the essay
will be given out in class. Zhang Zhen, "Congratulations, it's a Girl!,"in Some
of Us. Film, Small
Happiness.
April 1: Patriarchal Mutilations:
Practice of Foot-binding in Seventeenth Century China: We will critically
examine the socio-cultural practice of foot-binding that sought to control
female mobility and sexuality in parts of China. In seeking to evaluate
this practice, emphasis will be laid on its historical specificity and
the ways in which Chinese women perpetuated, subverted, and rejected the
practice. In trying to understand cultural practices in parts of Asia,
this course strongly discourages orientalist tendencies of exoticing or
essentializing these cultures, instead it stresses the importance of a
nuanced analysis which is sensitive to issues of differences and complexities
within Asian histories.
Readings: Dorothy
Ko, "Talent, Virtue, and Beauty: Rewriting Womanhood," in her book,Teachers
of the Inner Chambers: Women and Culture in Seventeenth Century China
(California: Stanford University Press, 1994): 143-176. Article on e-reserve
in Cline Library.
April
6: Institution of Marriage: Concubines as the "Other" Woman within Chinese
Household: We will examine the institution of marriage during the Sung
period to understand the different roles assigned to Chinese women within
the patriarchal Chinese family. In particular we will seek to understand
the roles and status of concubines within the Chinese household during
the Sung dynasty.
Readings: Patricia
B. Ebrey, "Concubines," in The
Inner Quarters: Marriage and the Lives of Chinese Women in the Sung Period
( Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993): 217-234; 289-291.
April 8 : Lost Promises
or Dreams Fulfilled: Women and the Chinese Revolution: We will evaluate
the effects of the Chinese Revolution on women's lives, to see if gender
inequalities were addressed by the revolution. We will also examine the
involvement of women revolutionaries such as Ch'iu Chin and Ding Ling at
different moments in the history of the revolutionary period in China.
Readings: Restoring Women, 206-218; Primary Source: Selections from Mao Tse-tung, "Little Red Book;" Ch'iu Chin, "An Address to Two Hundred Million Fellow Country Women;" Ding Ling, "Thoughts on March 8." These readings will be handed out in class.
April 13: Cultural Revolution and Politics of Gender . We will critically evaluate the dominant characterization of the cultural revolutionary period (1966-76) one which witnessed "gender erasure." Feminist historians have challenged this representation of this period of Chinese history.
Readings: Yanmei Wei,
"Gender and Identity in Mao's China," in Some
of Us; Emily Honig, "Maoist Mappings of Gender: Reassessing the
Red Guards," in Susan Brownell and Jeffrey Wasserstrom, eds., Chinese
Femininities/ Chinese Masculinities: A Reader (Berkeley: University
of California Press, 2002): 255-268. This article will be placed on e-reserve
in Cline Library.
April
15: In class short essay.
April 20: Introductory
lecture on Afghanistan
April 22: Afghan Nationalism
and Women: We will critically review the roles assigned to women by
Afghan nationalist leaders in the early 20th century.
Readings: Valentine Moghadam, "Nationalist Agendas and Women's Rights: Conflicts in Afghanistan in the Twentieth Century." This article will be placed on e-reserve in Cline library.
April 27: Afghani Women
as Agents of Resistance: In this concluding section we will contrast
the dominant western representations of Afghani women as victims with the
life story of Zoya, a member of the Revolutionary Association of the Women
of Afghanistan (RAWA). We will also reflect upon differences within feminist
understandings determined by specific historical and geographical contexts
to appreciate the many nuances of women's experiences across time and space.
Readings:
TBA selections from Mehta ed.,Women
for Afghan Women.
April 29: Class discussion
and second review paper due!
COURSE REQUIREMENTS:
You are expected to engage with weekly readings carefully and critically and participate actively in class discussions. This class will also require use of internet resources.
Review Papers: You will be expected to write short critical responses to academic articles, works of fiction, primary documents, and films.
Mid-Term Exam: There will be an in-class mid-term exam. The format of which will be discussed in class.
Short
Essay Question: In class short essay questions.
ASSESSMENT OF OUTCOME:
The course will use differenttypes of instruments to assess students achievement of the learning objectives. The TWO review papers ( 20% each and 40% of the total course grade) will help students to appreciate the complex issues addressed by historiography on Asian women. This part of the course requirement will also help prepare students to effectively communicate their ideas through prose and will strengthen their writing skills. Mid-term exam (30%) and Short Essay questions (20%) together will provide students an opportunity to demonstrate their critical thinking and reasoning skills through testing their ability to make connections between historical events in different settings. Class participation (10%) will train students to articulate their own ideas clearly and promote ethical reasoning through debate and intellectual interaction with fellow class-mates and the instructor.
LEARNING PORTFOLIO:
The short written response
papers on readings, films, and novels could be added to the students learning
portfolios to effectively demonstrate their critical thinking and effective
writing skills acquired through this course.
COURSE GRADES:
Grades for the course will be calculated in the following way:
Class Discussion and Particiaption10%;
Review Papers 40%; Mid-term Exam 30%, and Short Essay Questions Exam 20%.
TOTAL FOR COURSE 100%
The grading scale for the course will be as follows:
90%+ = A; 80 - 89%= B; 70-79%=
C;
60-69%= D; below 60%= F.
COURSE POLICIES:
ALL WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE IN CLASS.
PLEASE
NOTE: I do not give extensions, incompletes, or make-up exams, except
in cases allowed for by University Policy.
Plagiarism or other forms of academic dishonesty
will not be tolerated in any of the assignments, and will result in failing
the course. Please consult the section on "Academic Integrity" in the NAU
Policy Statements appended to this syllabus for further details. IT
IS THE STUDENTS' RESPONSIBILITY TO FAMILIARIZE HERSELF/HIMSELF WITH THESE
MATTERS AS DEFINED BY THE UNIVERSITY.
ATTENDANCE AND PUNCTUALITY:
While I will not take regular roll, frequent
and repeated absence and/or lack of punctuality could effect your grade.
As pointed out above
10% of your class grade will depend on participation in the various class
discussions assigned in the syllabus.
Whatever your reasons for arriving late or missing a class, it is YOUR
RESPONSIBILITY to arrange to meet or call a classmate and find out what
happened in that class.
COURSE POLICIES
ALL WRITTEN ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE IN CLASS.