SOC457 CULTURE, IDENTITY &POST-COLONIAL THEOR

Course Code:2320457
METU Credit (Theoretical-Laboratory hours/week):3 (3.00 - 0.00)
ECTS Credit:6.0
Department:Sociology
Language of Instruction:English
Level of Study:Undergraduate
Course Coordinator:Assist.Prof.Dr BARIŞ MÜCEN
Offered Semester:Fall or Spring Semesters.

Course Objectives

At the end of this course, students will comprehend the limits of essentialist ways of thinking in the formations of identities in modern world.


Course Content

This course will focus on the strategies by which demarcations between self and other and corollary distinctions between First World-Third World, West-East and masculine-feminine are deployed in various cultural and political discourses. The emergent and contested dimensions of modern, gendered, national and cultural identities will be examined through post-colonial theorists such as Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Homi Bhabha, Edward Said, Frantz Fanon.


Course Learning Outcomes

Student, who passed the course satisfactorily will be able to:

- make sense of the history of global inequalities to understand the present world.

- discuss the limits of understanding the social worlds through the categories such as east/west, first world/third world, modern/traditional.

- point out the limits of the Eurocentric formations of the analytical concepts that have been influential in sociological studies.


Program Outcomes Matrix

Level of Contribution
#Program Outcomes0123
1To correlate sociology and other social sciences
2To interpret knowledge produced by society from a sociological perspective
3To renew and improve their accumulation by following up-to-date publications and research programs in their fields
4To be open to occupational novelties in order to understand social change
5To produce original solutions within and outside the discipline and in interdisciplinary levels
6To know and implement the ethics of sociological research
7To be aware of social, environmental, and economic effects in the areas where sociological approaches are appropriated
8To use and transfer the accumulation of sociological knowledge in an interdisciplinary way
9To understand social structures and dynamics by correlating the past, the present and the future
10To connect social theories of knowledge and social practices

0: No Contribution 1: Little Contribution 2: Partial Contribution 3: Full Contribution