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Campus | Haverford |
Semester | Spring 2022 |
Registration ID | FRENH312B001 |
Course Title | Adv Topics French Lit: Jugements et préjugés des Essais de Montaigne |
Credit | 1.00 |
Department | French and French Studies |
Instructor | Sedley,David |
Times and Days | F 01:30pm-04:00pm
|
Room Location | GST103 |
Additional Course Info | Class Number: 1347 This course is about Michel de Montaigne, whose fame in French is comparable to Shakespeare's in English. In any language, Montaigne is the inventor of an intellectual exercise typically assigned to college students: the essay. Montaigne wrote the very first book of "essays" as experiments in judging. He did so in order to improve the quality of his own—and his readers'—judgments. In conducting these experiments, however, he discovered cognitive, emotional, and cultural reflexes—in other words, prejudices—that preceded judgment and skewed its outcomes. In this course, we will follow the struggle between judgment and prejudice staged in Montaigne's Essais. We will thereby gain perspective on the values of essay-writing in the context of an education charged with the task of decolonizing the mind. In French.; Crosslisted: FREN and COML; Prerequisite(s): At least one 200-level course Div: III; Humanities, A: Meaning, Interpretation (Texts) (Hav: HU, A) |
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