Teaching Women’s Rights and the Imperialist Agenda

A. Long
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Abstract

© 2015 by the board of trustees of the university of ill inois I am a graduate student studying English at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, and I recently concluded co-teaching a course called The Human Experience of War. UW-Eau Claire is a medium-size public university in the Midwest with an undergraduate enrollment just above ten thousand. As a graduate student, I had the opportunity to co-teach an undergraduate course with a collaborating professor. The course consisted of reading various works of British literature that spanned World Wars I and II. It was a 300-level literature course that was available to non-English majors and filled a GE (general education) requirement for upper-level humanities, which resulted in an eclectic mix of students with a wide array of interests, backgrounds, and majors. My official title for this class was Teaching Assistant, and my responsibilities included everything that comes with teaching a college literature course (i.e., teaching classes, responding to written work, lecturing, composing lesson plans, designing assignments/projects, etc.). The goal was to approach wartime literature from a varied perspective, reading and analyzing both canonical and popular culture texts in order to further our understanding of the experience of living IN wartime Britain. Supplementary readings from texts such as Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory were used in order to provide context and useful background information. Through the experience of teaching this course, one recurring theme that struck me as significant was the ever-present need of people to have a cause to justify their actions. It seems that people have a limitless supply of explanations and reasons for systematically destroying one another. Unfortunately, I also found that the professed reasons for going to war or promoting imperialism often had little to do with the actual motivation for such actions. Over the last few decades, the growing concern with women’s rights— domestically and across the globe—has made it the newest target of exploitation to further American imperialism, much to the detriment of women’s rights movements around the world. It is important for anyone teaching about women’s rights, globalization, or war to recognize this misappropriation of feminist issues to further the imperial agenda. Teaching Note Teaching Women’s Rights and the Imperialist Agenda
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教授妇女权利和帝国主义议程
我是一名在威斯康星大学欧克莱尔分校学习英语的研究生,我最近结束了一门名为“人类战争经历”的课程的合作教学。威斯康星大学欧克莱尔分校是中西部一所中等规模的公立大学,本科招生人数刚刚超过一万人。作为一名研究生,我有机会与一位合作教授共同教授一门本科课程。该课程包括阅读跨越第一次世界大战和第二次世界大战的各种英国文学作品。这是一门300级的文学课程,对非英语专业的学生开放,并满足了GE(通识教育)对高级人文学科的要求,这导致了学生们有着广泛的兴趣、背景和专业。我在这门课上的正式头衔是助教,我的职责包括大学文学课程的所有教学工作(即,教课、批改书面作业、讲课、撰写教案、设计作业/项目等)。我们的目标是从不同的角度来看待战时文学,阅读和分析经典和流行文化文本,以进一步理解战时英国的生活经历。为了提供上下文和有用的背景信息,我们使用了保罗·福塞尔(Paul Fussell)的《大战》和《现代记忆》等文本作为补充读物。在教授这门课程的过程中,有一个反复出现的主题给我留下了深刻的印象,那就是人们总是需要有理由为自己的行为辩护。人们似乎有无限的解释和理由来系统地摧毁彼此。不幸的是,我还发现,发动战争或推动帝国主义的公开理由往往与这些行动的实际动机无关。在过去的几十年里,对妇女权利的日益关注——无论是在国内还是在全球——使其成为美帝国主义进一步剥削的最新目标,这对全世界的妇女权利运动造成了很大的损害。对于任何教授妇女权利、全球化或战争的人来说,认识到这种对女权主义问题的滥用是为了推进帝国主义的议程,这一点很重要。讲授妇女权利和帝国主义议程
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