Course Syllabus

Instructor: Ann Anagnost (anagnost@uw.edu)

Place and Time: MEB 242, T, Th, 2:30-4:20 pm

Office Hours: After class T and Th. We can also set up an individual meeting on Zoom. 

Useful Links:

Anth 489 Updates and Volunteer Signups

Google Doc for Study Abroad Updates Link

Info Session for Study Abroad Zoom Recording Link (Oct 19)

Recipe Corner
Sourdough Slack Dough Bread
Gluten Free Sourdough Bread
How to make pasta with a rolling pin

 

COURSE SYLLABUS

Class Format:

Given that we live in a time of uncertainty with respect to COVID, the current plan is to meet in person. However, I acknowledge the possibility that I or my students may need to quarantine due to having symptoms or because we have been exposed to the virus. For this reason, I will be running zoom during the class meetings for students to attend remotely and these class sessions will be recorded and made available on the canvas website. You will find the links for attending the zoom meetings in real time on the Zoom menu on the left side. I will post the zoom recording links on the class schedule below within 24 hours of the class session. In the (hopefully) unlikely event that I am unable to attend class, I will send a class email asap so students will know that the class will be on zoom.

Needless to say, we will be following University regulations regarding masking. I will be using a voice projection microphone, if need be, to mitigate the muffling effect of speaking through a mask. Student feedback will be important to make sure this is working, so don't be afraid to speak out. This includes any difficulties students participating at home may be having with the sound qualities of the zoom recording.

Please do not attend in-person if you are experiencing symptoms. If you are aware you have been exposed please stay home and attend on zoom, even if you are not experiencing symptoms. The zoom recordings should ensure that you are not missing out on class presentations and discussions.

I have endeavored to make this website as simple as possible by making course resources one-click away. So this home page should be the place to go for access to the Discussion Boards, Powerpoints, Zoom recordings, readings, videos, and assignment drop boxes. I will be using the class email list to send updates and reminders for paper due dates, so please keep an eye out for those emails. If you find that a link does not work or if you have other feedback on how the home page is working for you, please do not hesitate to let me know.

Course Themes

At the beginning of remote learning last year, I added a new unit to this class called “Nurturing Life in a Time of Pandemic.” Even as we transition back to on-campus learning, we continue to face significant challenges in our food systems due to the pandemic. In the "after times" of COVID, much of the infrastructure of our every day lives has dramatically changed, in some instances these changes may be long lasting. I have therefore decided to retain this special focus on the lessons we can learn to help us in our present circumstances. The tricky balance I am trying to strike here is how to face the challenges of a society rapidly being overwhelmed by the scope and scale of the pandemic, without being overwhelmed ourselves. I don’t want to make the course too heavy, but rather to open up some hopeful spaces for thinking how things could be otherwise and hopefully to imagine a practical politics to achieve it.

In light of this, we will begin by looking at two current discussions in the humanities: (a) the politics of care and (b) broken worlds thinking to start us thinking about these issues in relation to our food systems.

Politics of Care: Never has a crisis more clearly revealed the dangers of a lack of universal healthcare for the public health. The COVID virus transcends all boundaries: race, class, nation, age, while also revealing the fragile infrastructure of our health care systems and a failure of an organized governmental response at the federal level that affects poor people more dramatically. What should be our desired model for care in this instance? And how do we endeavor in ways large and small to advocate for it? Our first reading “Radical Care for Uncertain Times” will address these questions.

Broken Worlds Thinking: Our second reading will introduce us to a critical querying of the importance of maintenance and repair in a neoliberal culture focused, perhaps too insistently, on innovation and capital accumulation at the expense of sustainability and resilience. The pandemic has revealed the hidden truths of how the industrial food system relies on unsustainable structures of production and distribution, that also lead to inequities to food access. What work-arounds and new directions emerge from the moment of crisis? 

Main Course: The third reading on food and the good life will then lead us into the central focus of the course on food as an embodied aspect of culture. We will be exploring the intersection of anthropological writings about food culture and the senses, and other topics such as food and identity, food and memory, the power of food to make community, and food as a means to construct ethical selfhood. But throughout, we will also continue to focus on how our explorations might be  a resource to nurture ourselves and others in need in a time of pandemic. What lessons can we learn to help us in our current situation?

Course Requirements.

Each set of readings will have its corresponding discussion board on Canvas where students can post a short reading response , about one paragraph, that will be submitted prior to class to generate class discussion. A prompt will be provided, although you need not necessarily be limited by the prompt question. These responses can be highly personal, but please be aware that you are publishing them to the class. The reading responses are low stakes assignments and are ungraded but they count for points indicating completion of the assignment. To be given full credit for this assignment, you must address some aspect of the reading by identifying a passage from the reading as the jumping off point for your comment. This is good practice for how to engage with the readings in the short essay assignments that are the graded portion of the course. There are altogether 16 reading sets for this course and each student is responsible for writing briefs for 10 of them, so you have some flexibility in choosing which readings to respond to. However, all students are expected to complete the readings for all sessions and be ready to discuss them in class.

The graded assignments will take the form of mini-essays (three pages in length, 750-800 words) written in response to a prompt. These mini essays will be graded on how well the writing responds to the prompt and demonstrates thoughtful processing in terms of making connections with the readings and other course materials.

The mini-essays will take the form of a writing genre called the “familiar essay.” These essays can be highly personal in connecting to your own experience but they must open up to larger questions that we are developing in this class. This means that they should demonstrate active engagement with the readings and other materials. In other words, the mode of writing is a hybrid between personal (and the use of the personal pronoun) and more formal academic writing with in-text citation of the readings. I will be assigning examples of creative food writing to inspire you to do your best writing. 

W Credit Option:

For students wishing to receive optional Writing Credit for this course, you should revise two of the three papers in response to feedback from  the Writing Center at Odegaard (Links to an external site.), or from a peer review partner.

The peer review process will take place on our "paper workshop" days. This is an opportunity for you ask questions about the assignment and/or exchange papers with a peer review partner in class.

Both the first draft and final copy should be uploaded on Canvas. The final copy may be uploaded as an attachment to the first document. Please identify "first draft" and "second draft" as part of the document name.

You will need to prompt me at the end of the quarter that you are requesting the W credit option. I will be sending out an email to remind you near the end of quarter. 

Hands-on Activities with Food

Originally this class included four group cooking activities in the Husky Den Kitchen. These activities were closely tied to the course readings and discussions for the class. We cooked a meal together that reflected the "food views" of four of the cultures we read about. Much to my regret, this will not be possible this quarter due to restrictions imposed by university COVID policies. But the menu plans are integrated into the course schedule in hopes that some of you would be interested in trying them out at home.  I welcome your including commentaries on your cooking activities as supplementary material to your responses to the discussion prompts and mini-essays. Recipes and photos are also welcome as add-on elements to your written work.

Point Breakdown

Discussion Briefs (10 out of 16  20 points (2 points each, ungraded, partial credit for late work)
Mini-Essays 75 points (25 points each, graded)
Class Participation 5 points

Total: 100 points

Grades will NOT be calculated according to the Canvas Grade Sheet, but as follows: total number of points multiplied by 4 and divided by 100 to convert to the 4.0 scale. If there is a decimal remainder of .5 or higher, it will be rounded up.

Course Materials:
All of the shorter readings are available as hyperlinks on the class schedule below. You will also find a link to the discussion board for that day on the schedule. The Powerpoints will be added as we go. I usually post them in late morning before class in case you wish to use them as a platform for note taking. 

The assigned books are all available as e-books) through the UW Library Portal and a link is provided for each. We will be readings significant portions of the four books listed below and the library has a license for unlimited users, so online access should not be a problem. The pandemic has presented us with an economic shock as well as a public health challenge, so I have endeavored to make costs for this course as minimal as possible. 

Books:

David Sutton, Remembrance of Repasts: An Anthropology of Food and Memory.

Carol Counihan, Around the Tuscan Table: Food, Family, and Gender in Twentieth-Century Florence.

Judith Farquhar, Appetites: Food and Sex in Post-Socialist China.

Judith Farquhar and Qicheng Zhang, Ten Thousand Things: Nurturing Life in Contemporary Beijing.

ANTH 489 Service Learning Opportunity:

If you are interested in getting out of the classroom and getting your hands dirty you are welcome to sign up for 2 additional credit hours of service learning in Anth 489: Anthropology Practicum.  I am a gardener at the Picardo Farm Community Garden (located on 25th Ave NE about two miles north of campus near to Dahl Playing Field and on the 372 bus route) and I have arranged with Alexandria Soleil, our volunteer coordinator, to set up opportunities for student volunteering. Most of the activities for fall will be harvesting, gleaning, making compost, and preparing the gardens for winter. You can help with the Giving Garden (growing food for local food banks), tending the common areas of the garden (including the communal orchard and herb garden), aiding elderly gardeners who may need a little help . There is also a children's garden where volunteer hours are always needed. It would be best to put your hours in earlier rather than later, as the garden tasks will be fewer as we get into colder weather.

If the Picardo location is not convenient, you can also volunteer at the UW Student Farm (volunteer information) or the University Food Bank (volunteer information). If you elect one of these options, please send me an email and cc it to the volunteer coordinator to link us together.

Practicing the COVID guidelines is obligatory (social distancing, masking, hand washing, remaining out of doors, sitting out if you have been exposed to someone with COVID or are feeling symptoms).

Students would need to commit to 20 hours of volunteer work for 2 credits and turn in a short essay (3-5 pages) documenting their learning at the end of the quarter. I will be posting updates to the student volunteers about work parties at Picardo. I live close by and can also help direct student volunteers according to a schedule that works for everyone. So if you are not available during the work parties, I may be able to fill the gap. 

 

 

Class Schedule

 

Thursday, 9/30

Introduction

Zoom Recording

 

 

Tuesday, 10/5

The Politics of Care

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Breakout Session Google Doc

Zoom Recording

Reading Assignment:

Hobart and Kneese

José Andrés

Seattle Kitchen Collective

Recommended:

Video: Tarik Abdullah of Feed The People 

News Article: Silvia Federici and Reclaiming the Commons 

Thursday, 10/7

Broken World Thinking

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Breakout Session Google Doc

Zoom Recording

 

Reading Assignment:

Jackson

Chronicle of Higher Education

Recommended:

McKibben "The Cuba Diet"

Solnit  "Detroit Arcadia"

Research report: Food Sovereignty in a Time of Pandemic

News Article: How COVID may change our food system.

 

Tuesday, 10/12

Food and the Ethical Self

Discussion Board(due before class)

Powerpoint

Breakout Session Google Doc

Zoom Recording

Reading Assignment:

Farquhar, “Food, Eating, and the Good Life.”

Thursday, 10/14

An Anthropology of the Senses

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

No Google Doc for Today

Zoom Recording

Reading Assignment:

David Sutton (Introduction: A Proustian Anthropology) (pp. 1-18)

Slater (excerpts)

Tuesday, 10/19

The Art of Food Writing and the Familiar Essay

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint 

Breakout Session Google Doc

Zoom Recording

Reading Assignment:

MFK Fisher

Wizenberg

Gannon

Thomas

Thursday, 10/21

Food and Social Connection

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

 

Reading Assignment:

Feld

Tuesday, 10/26

Food and Memory

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

No Google Doc for Today

 

Reading Assignment:

Proust

Seremetakis

Viewing Assignment:

Film: Ratatouille (short clip)

Thursday, 10/28

"The Displacing Foods of Modern Commerce"

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

Breakout Session Google Doc

Reading Assignment:

Weismantel

Haden

Tuesday, 11/2

Food and Identity

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

 

Optional Kitchen Activity:

Soul Food Dinner

Reading Assignment:

Rouse and Hoskins

Klindienst

Viewing Assignment:

Film: Soul Food Junkies 

Film Transcript

Recommended:

Heirloom Collard Project

Michael Twitty's Southern Discomfort Tours

Thursday, 11/4

La Cucina Povera (The Cuisine of Poverty)

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Reading Assignment:

Counihan (Chapters 1-3)

Tuesday, 11/9

First Essay Workshop. You are welcome to bring your questions about the assignment.  If you wish to do the Peer Review Option this is an opportunity for you to exchange your papers with a peer review partner and get some feedback.

Due Date: Midnight Wednesday, November 10. Submit here.

Zoom Recording

 

Thursday,

11/11

Veteran's Day Holiday (No Class)

 

Tuesday, 11/16

Slow Food

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

 

Optional Kitchen Activity: Tuscan Bean Stew and Polenta

Reading Assignment:

Leitch

Viewing Assignment:

Film: Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat (first episode on Netflix)

Thursday, 11/18

Terroir, Constructions of Place, and the Mediterranean Diet

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

 

Reading Assignment:

Trubek

Iglesias López

NYT article: The Island Where People Forget to Die

Viewing Assignment:

Film: Soup over Bethlehem

Tuesday, 11/23

A Proustian Anthropology in Island Greece

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

Breakout Session Google Doc

 

Reading Assignment:

Sutton, "The Ritual and the Everyday" and "Remembered Gifts, Forgotten Commodities" (pp. 19-71)

Thursday, 11/25

Thanksgiving Day Holiday (No Class)

 

Tuesday, 11/30

Second Essay Workshop. You are welcome to bring your questions about the assignment.  If you wish to do the Peer Review Option this is an opportunity for you to exchange your papers with a peer review partner and get some feedback.

Due Date: Midnight Wednesday, December 1. Submit here.

 

Thursday, 12/2

Learning Cooking

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

Breakout Session Google Doc

 

Optional Kitchen Activity: Lentil Soup and Sourdough Bread

Reading Assignment:

Sutton, "Doing/Reading Cooking" (pp 125-158)

 

Tuesday, 12/7

A Politics of the Senses

Discussion Board (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording: I had a fail for the recording, so unfortunately only the ppt is available.

 

Reading Assignment:

Farquhar, Appetites (Lei Feng, Tireless Servant of the People pp. 37-46) and (Excess and Deficiency pp. 121-166)

Thursday, 12/9

To Live

Discussion Board  (due before class)

Powerpoint

Zoom Recording

Optional Kitchen Activity: Chinese Dumplings

 

Third Essay Workshop. This will take place in class in the second hour. You are welcome to bring your questions about the assignment.  If you wish to do the Peer Review Option this is an opportunity for you to exchange your papers with a peer review partner and get some feedback.

Due Date: Midnight Monday, December 13. Submit here.

Reading Assignment:

Farquhar and Zhang, Ten Thousand Things (How to Live pp. 125-167)

Viewing Assignment:

Film: Sunrise Over Tiananmen Square

 

 

Course Summary:

Date Details Due