ASOB16016U Critical Reading and Re-analysis
Mandatory course at 4th semester at BA Sociology
The course uses the award-winning ethnography, In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio, by Philippe Bourgois to provide us with a journey into an American urban ghetto known as Spanish Harlem. He brings us into the world of Puerto Rican drug dealers and helps us get to know them, their families, friends and customers.
We learn the details of their lives as children, their time at
school, at home, their love, anger and work. We hear about how they
feel about their lives. We become witnesses of the violence done to
themselves, the community and society. Through all of these
layers, we see their humanity and the making of marginality in the
United States. This journey provides us with context to compare
marginality across place, including Europe.
The class will use short articles and chapters from other scholars
to help us explore the nature of marginality, regimes of urban
marginality across different places, and related issues; such as
the process of integration and control, inclusion and exclusion,
ghettos and anti-ghettos, the state, metropolis and the symbolic,
social and physical making of marginality.
Knowledge:
Understand and reflect on classic, modern and contemporary trends in sociological theory.
Evaluate the relevance of these in relation to analysis of contemporary and/or social theoretical analytical problems.
Skills:
Discuss how contemporary sociological theory marks continuity with or breaks from classic sociology.
Discuss and analyse some major traditions of classical and contemporary sociological theory in relation to the selected theme of marginality.
Competences:
Formulate significant problems related to the evolution of sociological theory.
Relate in an insightful manner to the links between theoretical and empirical data.
Bourgois, Philippe. In search of respect:
Selling crack in El Barrio. Vol. 10.
Cambridge University Press, 2003.
Wacquant, Loïc. Urban outcasts:
A comparative sociology of advanced marginality.
Polity, 2008.
There will be additional articles posted on
Absalon.
- Category
- Hours
- Course Preparation
- 91
- Exam Preparation
- 37
- Lectures
- 28
- Preparation
- 50
- Total
- 206
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Course participationActive Participation will consist of: course participation, group discussion, class discussion and class exercises during the course.
- Exam registration requirements
Sociology students must be enrolled under BSc Curriculum 2016 to take this exam.
Credit students must be at bachelor level.
- Marking scale
- passed/not passed
- Censorship form
- No external censorship
- Exam period
Find more information on your study page at KUnet.
Exchange students and danish full degree guest students please see the homepage of Sociology; http://www.soc.ku.dk/english/education/exams/ and http://www.soc.ku.dk/uddannelser/meritstuderende/eksamen/- Re-exam
At re-exam, the form of examination is the same as ordinary exam.
If the form of examination is ”active attendance” the re-examination form is always “free written take-home essay”.
Criteria for exam assesment
Please see the learning outcome
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- ASOB16016U
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Level
- BachelorBachelor choice
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Spring
- Schedule
- See timetable
- Course capacity
- Vejl. 100 personer
- Study board
- Department of Sociology, Study Council
Contracting department
- Department of Sociology
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Social Sciences
Course Coordinators
- Charlotte Baarts (cba@soc.ku.dk)