Week One (Jan 17) - Introductions & Overview

Questions for discussion
  • What does it mean to study space and place?
  • What is mobility and what is its relationship to human/cultural geography? 
  • What is the relationship between cultural studies and cultural geography?
  • Chris Carlsson on 'Ghost Streets and Disembodied Workers' in San Francisco.

Week Two (Jan 24) - Thinking Space & Place


Rodolfo Edwards, Impossible Maps #14
Readings for today:
For further reading and research:
  • Murray Foreman, "Space Matters: Hip Hop and the Spatial Perspective," in The 'Hood Comes First: Race, Space, and Place in Rap and Hip-Hop (Wesleyan University Press), pp. 1-35. 
  • Doreen Massey, excerpt from For Space (pp. 1-15). 
  • Andrew Merrifield, "Place and Space: A Lefebvrian Reconciliation," Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, New Series, Vol. 18, No. 4 (1993), pp. 516-531.
  • Denise L. Lawrence and Setha M. Low, "The Built Environment And Spatial Form," Annual Review of Anthropology, Vol. 19 (1990): 453-505.

Week Three (Jan 31) - Urban Space, Part I: Becoming Modern


Assignments for today
For further reading and research

Week Four (Feb 7) Urban Space, Part II: Spectacles and Situationists


Le Corbusier, Ville Contemporaine 'A Contemporary City for Three Million Inhabitants' (1922)
Assignments for today
For further reading and research
Related media

    Week Five (Feb 14) - 'Home' and Domestic Space

    Jessica Rodrigue, 'Family Photos' (2007)
    Readings for today
    • Lynn Spigel "The Home Theater," in Make Room For TV: Television and the Family Ideal in Postwar America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992).
    • Setha M. Low, "The Edge and the Center: Gated Communities and the Discourse of Urban Fear," American Anthropologist, Vol. 103, No. 1 (2001): 45-58.
    • Samantha Barbas, "Just Like Home: 'Home Cooking' and the Domestication of the American Restaurant," Gastronomica, Vol 2, No. 4 (2002): 43-52.
    • Click HERE for a zip file of the above readings. 
    For further reading & research:

      Week Six (Feb 21) - Landscapes, 'Nature', and 'The Country'

      Painting by Bob 'Afro' Ross
      Readings for today
      For further reading and research:
      • Wolfgang Schivelbusch, "Railroad Space and Railroad Time," in The Railway Journey: The Industrialization and Perception of Time and Space (University of California Press, 1987).
      • David Nye, "Technology, Nature, and American Origin Stories," Environmental History, Vol. 8, Issue 1.
      • William Rollins, "Reflections on the Spare Tire: SUVs and Postmodern Environmental Consciousness," Environmental History, Vol. 11, No. 4 (2006).
      • William Beinart and Katie McKeown, "Wildlife Media and Representations of Africa, 1950s to the 1970s," Environmental History, Vol. 14, No. 3 (2009).
      • Christy Rodgers, "Bugs as Cultural Icons," LiP Magazine, No. 7, pp. 16-21.
      • Finis Dunaway, "Seeing Global Warming: Contemporary Art and the Fate of the Planet," Environmental History, Vol. 14, No. 1 (2009).
      • Mark Stoll, "Milton in Yosemite: Paradise Lost and the National Parks Idea," Environmental History, Vol. 13, No. 2 (2008).
      • Joan M. Schwartz, "Photographic Reflections: Nature, Landscape, and the Environment," Environmental History, Vol. 12, No. 4 (2007).
      • Katherine Ledford, "'Singularly Place in Scenes So Cultivated': The Frontier, the Myth of Westward Progress, and a Backwoods in the Mountain South," ATQ: 19th Century American Literature and Culture, Vol. 18, No. 3 (2004), pp. 205-222.

        Week Seven (Feb 28) - Tourism & Tourist Spaces

        'South of the Border' photo by Rubén Ortiz Torres
        Readings for today
        • Nicole King, chapters 2 & 3 in Sombreros and Motorcycles in a Newer South: The Politics of Aesthetics in South Carolina's Tourism Industry (University of Mississippi Press, 2012). 
        • John Urry, chapter one in The Tourist Gaze (London: Sage, 2002).
        For further reading and research

          Week Eight (March 6) - NO CLASS

          Cultural Studies Colloquium - Special Date & Time
          Lawrence Grossberg, "Is There a Place for Intellectuals in the New Radicalism?"
          Hokin Lecture Hall, 4pm

          In recent essays, some notable left intellectuals (e.g. Latour, Ranciere, Hardt) have questioned the value of "critique." They seem to suggest that political acts of insurrection and experimentation displace the necessity for both analyses that might dis-cover "what's going on," and various projects of education. In this presentation, leading Cultural Studies scholar Larry Grossberg seeks to do three things: first, to engage with the logics of this internecine war; second, to place this event into a geneology of 20th century, anti-capitalist intellectual formations; and third, to put forth cultural studies as a unique formation that offers a vision of countercultural, counter-hegemonic politics.

          Lawrence Grossberg is the Morris Davis Distinguished Professor of Communication Studies and Cultural Studies; Adjunct Distinguished Professor of Anthropology; and Director of the University Program in Cultural Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

          This lecture is co-sponsored by a mini-grant from the Critical Encounters initiative at Columbia College Chicago.

          Week Nine (March 13) - Public Space?

          Assignments for today
          • Benjamin Shepard and Greg Smithsimon, The Beach Beneath the Streets, Part One: Repression (pp. 1-90).
          • CHICAGO ORGANIZATION REPORTS.  Click here for a description of the assignment (it is also linked under 'Course Documents' in the menu above).
          For further reading and research

            Week Ten (March 20) - Gentrification


            Readings for today
             For further reading and research

            Week Twelve (April 3) - Appropriating Space/Forging Community



            Readings for today:
            • Shepard and Smithsimon, The Beach Beneath the Streets, Part Two: Resistance.
            In-class Screening:


            For further reading and research:

            Week Thirteen (April 10) - Carceral Spaces

            Image by Andalusia Knoll
            Readings for today
            For further reading and research

            Week Fourteen (April 17) - Maps & The Politics of Cartography


            Assignments for today
            For further reading/research on maps & mapping

            Week Fifteen (April 24) - Empires & Diasporas


            Readings for today
            Media







            For further reading and research

            Week Sixteen (May Day) - Last day of class

            • PRESENTATIONS ARE TODAY!  Your presentation is part of your final paper grade, so make sure you prepare something that is informative, clear, concise (5-7 min), and well-rehearsed.
            • FINAL PAPERS ARE DUE SATURDAY, MAY 6

            BONUS READINGS - Navigating Space(s)



            Readings for today:
            For further reading and research:

            BONUS READINGS - (Military) Occupied Palestine



            Readings for today:
            For further reading & research:
            Maps:
            Media:

            BONUS READINGS - Spaces of Consumption

            Mall of the Americas
            Readings
            For further reading and research

            BONUS READINGS: Suburbia


            Readings for today:
            Multimedia:
            For further reading and research:

            BONUS READINGS: Imaginative Geographies



            Readings:
            For further reading & research: