STSC3017 - Biology and Society

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Biology and Society
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC3017401
Course number integer
3017
Meeting times
TR 3:30 PM-4:59 PM
Meeting location
LLAB 109
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Melissa Charenko
Description
From environmental crises to medical advancements and global food shortages, biology and the life sciences are implicated in some of our most pressing social issues. By looking at these issues, this course scrutinizes how developments in biology have shaped, and are shaped by, society. In the first unit, we’ll look at how institutions and technologies influence the modern life sciences, including the role of universities, public health departments, and museums in the development of biology. In the second unit, we’ll explore areas of biology that have raised controversies about regulation and access, including issues ranging from health to the environment. In the third unit, we’ll examine how scientists and the public invoke biological facts when addressing what it means to be human (or of a particular race, gender, ability, etc.).
Course number only
3017
Cross listings
HSOC3017401
Use local description
No

STSC2421 - Manufacturing Minds: From Babbage to ChatGPT

Status
X
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Manufacturing Minds: From Babbage to ChatGPT
Term
2024C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC2421401
Course number integer
2421
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
David E Dunning
Description
When asked to tell its own history, ChatGPT answers literally, describing (vaguely of course) its own training data set. When pressed to describe the longer history of “technology like you,” it mentions early computer science, programs that played chess or solved math problems, before naming deep learning algorithms and big data as the key breakthroughs. This lineage is not untrue, but it ignores the wider context in which individuals and organizations have come to pursue this strange dream of crafting an intelligent object. As an uncannily lucid conversation partner who freely performs all manner of textual tasks, ChatGPT participates in a longstanding tension in the history of information technology between the goals of manufacturing minds and making mindless clerical workers. In this course we historicize that tension in three domains—calculation, knowledge work, and games—all of which directly inform our efforts to imagine what ChatGPT and its ilk might be. Throughout, we will attend to the ways machinery shaped specific tasks’ construction in relation to gender, race, and class identities. We will see how technologies often imagined as disembodied are always material, interacting with human bodies and physical environments.
Course number only
2421
Cross listings
HSOC2421401
Use local description
No

STSC2317 - Slavery and Disease: Medical Knowledge in the Atlantic World

Status
X
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Slavery and Disease: Medical Knowledge in the Atlantic World
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC2317401
Course number integer
2317
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Description
How did the development of Atlantic World slave societies give rise to new knowledge about bodies, health and disease, race, and medical therapeutics? In this course we explore the relationship between slavery and disease and its impact upon European, Native American, and African descended populations in the Americas during the era of early contact to the early nineteenth century. We pay special attention to slavery’s economic, environmental, and human costs, as we investigate the development of the medical profession and the acquisition of formal and informal medical knowledge in this epoch. Beyond that, we will investigate how perceptions of disease susceptibility and overall experiences with specific illnesses proceeded along raced and gendered lines. Topics we cover include the exchange of ideas about health and healing, responses to epidemics, the racialization of disease, slavery and commerce as conduits of disease.
Course number only
2317
Cross listings
HSOC2317401
Use local description
No

STSC2227 - Trauma and Healing in Historical Perspective

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Trauma and Healing in Historical Perspective
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC2227401
Course number integer
2227
Meeting times
T 3:30 PM-6:29 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 3N6
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Angelica Barbara Clayton
Description
This course considers the diverse range of theories and topics related to trauma in the 20th and 21st centuries, looking to understand how trauma has been mobilized at different moments in history for political, social, and personal ends. The point of the course is not to simply support or deny trauma as an interpretive framework for human pain and suffering, but instead to look critically at how it emerged as an object of study for medical and scientific circles and the benefits and ramifications of those biomedical frameworks that were felt at the time and stay with us into the present. We also consider how trauma has been taken up by actors outside of medicine and science, including popular media, fiction and activist communities. Using frameworks from feminist science studies, disability studies, black studies and queer studies, alongside more traditional histories of psychiatry, medicine and technology, students think about such diverse topics as sexual violence, racial violence, domestic and familial abuse, theories of psychological development, memory and trust, citizenship, the criminal justice system, the effects of our environments, intergenerational effects of violence, embodiment, biomedical models of risk and disease and narratives of the self. At the heart of this course is an interest in how we should understand humans’ capacity to harm and be harmed by one another, and how we can attend to the enduring effects of inequality and structural violence while remaining firmly grounded in the day-to-day lived, felt realities of violence and interpersonal harm.
Course number only
2227
Cross listings
HSOC2227401
Use local description
No

STSC2146 - Science and Technology in Modern East Asia

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Science and Technology in Modern East Asia
Term
2024C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC2146401
Course number integer
2146
Meeting times
MW 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Meeting location
BENN 138
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
John Kanbayashi
Description
Technology from East Asia is ubiquitous in everyday life in the 21st century. You may be reading these very words on a device designed or assembled in Japan, China, South Korea, or Taiwan. The region, now a global center of research and innovation, contains some of the modern world’s most impressive technological and scientific achievements. It also exhibits some of the most distressing—from mass facial recognition surveillance in China to nuclear disaster in Japan. This course explores how this state of affairs has taken shape from the 19th century through the present. Topics include industrialization, military technology, science and the rise of nationalism, the proliferation of consumer electronics, and environmental engineering in a warming world.
Course number only
2146
Cross listings
EALC2502401
Use local description
No

STSC1880 - Environment and Society

Status
X
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
Environment and Society
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
001
Section ID
STSC1880001
Course number integer
1880
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
John Kanbayashi
Description
This course examines contemporary environmental issues such as energy, waste, pollution, health, population, biodiversity and climate through a historical and critical lens. All of these issues have important material, natural and technical aspects; they are also inextricably entangled with human history and culture. To understand the nature of this entanglement, the course will introduce key concepts and theoretical frameworks from science and technology studies and the environmental humanities and social sciences.
Course number only
1880
Fulfills
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No

STSC1600 - The Information Age

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
403
Title (text only)
The Information Age
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
403
Section ID
STSC1600403
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
F 1:45 PM-2:44 PM
Meeting location
JAFF 104
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Jina Hyun
Description
We are said to live in an “information age.” Information technologies have been credited with ushering in an era of unprecedented information creation, collection, storage, and communication. We experience the impact of this firsthand: these technologies increasingly pervade our homes, our workplaces, our schools, our most private spaces. But what exactly do we mean when we speak of the information age? When and how did it come into being? What developments—social, economic, political, or technological—made the digital world possible? How do these fit in the longer history of technology and society? And how is all this different from earlier eras? In this course, we explore these questions by looking to the history of information, information technologies, and information sciences, a history that long predates the digital computer. Although, at the center of our story will be the development of new information technologies—from the printing press and the telegraph to the computer and of course the Internet—our focus will not primarily be on machines, but on people and how individuals conceptualized, contributed to, made sense of, and dealt with the many transformational changes that have shaped the contours of our modern digital world. We will explore forms of identity, knowledge, and community that have emerged within this information age. Our goal will be to deepen historical perspectives and build analytical tools to critically evaluate the role of information in our increasingly digital world today.
Course number only
1600
Cross listings
SOCI2951403
Fulfills
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No

STSC1600 - The Information Age

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
402
Title (text only)
The Information Age
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
402
Section ID
STSC1600402
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
F 12:00 PM-12:59 PM
Meeting location
JAFF 104
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Jina Hyun
Description
We are said to live in an “information age.” Information technologies have been credited with ushering in an era of unprecedented information creation, collection, storage, and communication. We experience the impact of this firsthand: these technologies increasingly pervade our homes, our workplaces, our schools, our most private spaces. But what exactly do we mean when we speak of the information age? When and how did it come into being? What developments—social, economic, political, or technological—made the digital world possible? How do these fit in the longer history of technology and society? And how is all this different from earlier eras? In this course, we explore these questions by looking to the history of information, information technologies, and information sciences, a history that long predates the digital computer. Although, at the center of our story will be the development of new information technologies—from the printing press and the telegraph to the computer and of course the Internet—our focus will not primarily be on machines, but on people and how individuals conceptualized, contributed to, made sense of, and dealt with the many transformational changes that have shaped the contours of our modern digital world. We will explore forms of identity, knowledge, and community that have emerged within this information age. Our goal will be to deepen historical perspectives and build analytical tools to critically evaluate the role of information in our increasingly digital world today.
Course number only
1600
Cross listings
SOCI2951402
Fulfills
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No

STSC1600 - The Information Age

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
The Information Age
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
401
Section ID
STSC1600401
Course number integer
1600
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:14 AM
Meeting location
FAGN 216
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Zehra Hashmi
Description
We are said to live in an “information age.” Information technologies have been credited with ushering in an era of unprecedented information creation, collection, storage, and communication. We experience the impact of this firsthand: these technologies increasingly pervade our homes, our workplaces, our schools, our most private spaces. But what exactly do we mean when we speak of the information age? When and how did it come into being? What developments—social, economic, political, or technological—made the digital world possible? How do these fit in the longer history of technology and society? And how is all this different from earlier eras? In this course, we explore these questions by looking to the history of information, information technologies, and information sciences, a history that long predates the digital computer. Although, at the center of our story will be the development of new information technologies—from the printing press and the telegraph to the computer and of course the Internet—our focus will not primarily be on machines, but on people and how individuals conceptualized, contributed to, made sense of, and dealt with the many transformational changes that have shaped the contours of our modern digital world. We will explore forms of identity, knowledge, and community that have emerged within this information age. Our goal will be to deepen historical perspectives and build analytical tools to critically evaluate the role of information in our increasingly digital world today.
Course number only
1600
Cross listings
SOCI2951401
Fulfills
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No

STSC1120 - Science Technology and War

Status
A
Activity
REC
Section number integer
403
Title (text only)
Science Technology and War
Term
2024C
Subject area
STSC
Section number only
403
Section ID
STSC1120403
Course number integer
1120
Meeting times
F 1:45 PM-2:44 PM
Meeting location
WILL 307
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Nooshin Sadeghsamimi
Description
In this survey we explore the relationships between technical knowledge and warin the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. We attend particularly to the centrality of bodily injury in the history of war. Topics include changing interpretations of the machine gun as inhumane or acceptable; the cult of the battleship; banned weaponry; submarines and masculinity; industrialized war and total war; trench warfare and mental breakdown; the atomic bomb and Cold War; chemical warfare in Viet Nam; and "television war" in the 1990s.
Course number only
1120
Cross listings
HSOC1120403
Fulfills
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No