07:20 PM to 10:00 PM M
Online
Section Information for Fall 2020
Do artifacts have politics? asked Langdon Winner. This reading seminar believes that they do, and it asks just what politics they have. Students will explore some general approaches to the interrelationship of state power and technology, and then read scholarship about specific technologies shaped by the state. The main emphasis will be Europe and the United States in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and the course is intended to serve students with a general interest in those periods as well as those with particular interest in politics or technology.
View 1 Other Section of this Course in this Semester »
Credits: 3
Enrollment limited to students with a class of Advanced to Candidacy, Graduate, Junior Plus, Non-Degree or Senior Plus.
Enrollment is limited to Graduate, Non-Degree or Undergraduate level students.
Students in a Non-Degree Undergraduate degree may not enroll.
The University Catalog is the authoritative source for information on courses. The Schedule of Classes is the authoritative source for information on classes scheduled for this semester. See the Schedule for the most up-to-date information and see Patriot web to register for classes.