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EDITORIAL |
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Momentos de reflexión y
agrdecimiento en el fin de un año intenso
Honor
a quien honor merece: Este 2007 se nos va y debemos ser agradecidos.
Agradecemos pues, amig@ lector@, que sigas nuestro devenir por este
Tercer Planeta. Enkidu Magazine nació como una alternativa real
para quienes gustamos de informarnos, para quienes tenemos tiempo
para reflexionar, averiguar y, lo más importante, tomar deciones
que puedan mejorar un poco, día con día, los problemas que nos
afectan a tod@s los seres que habitamos este mundo...
más
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[10.11.2007]: Momentos
de reflexión, diálogo y intercambio global constante: Democracia,
Ciudadania, Derechos Humanos, Nuevos libros, obras de teatro y
actividades académicas
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Enkidu
International Society for Cultural History and Cultural Studies (CHICS)
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| Instructions for proposing a course at
the Academy for the Study of Aids in Culture
The Academy for the Study of Aids in
Culture in Mexico City offers academic courses on post-graduate and
doctorate levels in cooperation with public universities in Mexico and
abroad. The Academy offers courses in the Humanities and Social Sciences
focusing on cultural responses to AIDS in different cultures and societies
across a wide range of perspectives. Students who sign up for a course, receive
academic credit at their home institutions and the Academy functions as a
resource center for public universities in Mexico and other
countries.
The Academy does not have permanent faculty
positions, but international scholars who have presented papers at any of
the Aids in Culture conferences will be invited to propose courses of a
duration of 4 weeks, 8 weeks or 12 weeks.
The first courses will start in October
2007.
1. Proposing a Course:
Scholars from any university or academic
institution anywhere in the world, are welcome to submit an application to teach
one or several courses at the Academy for the Study of Aids in Culture as
Invited Scholar.
These course proposals should include
information about:
A. the course title and a one paragraph
course description describing course content and teaching methods. This
will be used in publicizing and attracting students to your course and the
program.
B. the academic level of the course
C. A syllabus of the course(s), including
information on
a. an outline of courses' subject matter
b. student assignments
c. textbooks or other needed materials
d. evaluation procedures
D. the type of student that would be
attracted to the course, such as required academic background, major etc.
E. a statement of interest on serving as
the on-site faculty coordinator and ombudsmann (optional - One
faculty member per semester will serve as faculty coordinator and
ombudsmann, and will spend the entire semester on site.)
2. Scheduling Considerations:
Each semester is divided into three teaching
blocks of four weeks each. The Spring/Summer Semester starts every year on
the Monday following 25 February and the Autumn Semester starts every year
on the Monday following 25 September. Faculty should identify those teaching periods
in which they are available for assignment and fill out the information
requested on the application form
3. Faculty Development:
Attach a description of how you plan to
utilize your stay as invited scholar at the Academy for the Study of Aids
in Culture for your own professional
development.
4. Curriculum Vitae:
Attach a current curriculum vitae
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| Course Acceptance
Considerations
There are a number of factors that come
into consideration in the selection of courses for the Academy.
Is the subject matter and the approach of
the course appropriate for the center? All submissions must, of course,
fit under the theme of Aids in Culture, which the center defines as a
broad theoretical outlook on disparate themes and phenomena utilizing a
multidisciplinary approach and a comparative methodology. Courses
should take a multidisciplinary approach, and they must be comparative in
nature.
Do the subject of the course and the
discipline of the instructor fit well with other courses offered in the
same semester and block? The center tries to offer courses from a wide
range of disciplines each semester.
Does the course fit into our teaching
schedule? Unfortunately, we sometimes get a lot of course proposals for
some blocks and rather few for others. We must offer a good selection of
courses in each block. If we think that your course is a good one, but you
have proposed to teach it in a very full block, we may ask you if you are
available at another time.
From which institution or country do you
come? We try to offer our students a variety of options concerning their
classes and instructors, and we like to offer a mix of
institutions/nationalities for each of the blocks.
In order to help prospective faculty tailor
their proposals to fit our needs, the Board of Directors has created a
framework guide. Proposals do not have to fall under these broad
categories-indeed, your proposal may spark new ways of conceptualizing
Aids in Culture, but these are categories that in the past have attracted
academics and students to our different activities. You should consider the following as a framework for considering the
ways in which your proposal may fit within our programme, not as a strict
set of requirements. If you are in any doubt, contact our academic
coordinator for more guidance.
Fields of academic inquiry that could fall
under this category include:
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AIDS and
Cultural Texts: Power and Representation.
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Representations
of AIDS in art, movies, music, poetry, religion and literature from
the 1980s until today.
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Silences and
taboos in discourses on HIV/AIDS.
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Aesthetic
responses to the challenge. Rituals, customs, and fetishism.
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Cultural
practices that influence the spread of HIV/AIDS
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AIDS and
collective and individual identities: Race, Class, Gender etc
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AIDS and
Politics, Lobbying and Activism: Power, Representation and Activism.
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Constructions
and reconstructions of AIDS in political, faith and ideology based
discourse, legal issues and policy making throughout the world: Who
has the authority to speak and who is silenced?
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AIDS and
theory: Cultural Studies, Queer Studies, Religious Studies, History,
Anthropology, Sociology, Literary Studies and all related
disciplines. How do we theorize and analyse experiences and the
meaning of illness?
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The
‚significance’ of AIDS for individuals and communities; the
cultural factors influencing our perceptions of health and illness
experiences.
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AIDS and
psychosocial affects and effects. Cultures of silence.
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Indigenous
knowledge and responses to AIDS
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Stories and
Histories about AIDS
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AIDS and
Oral History
Course
proposals will be
considered on related themes and topics from a wide range of
perspectives. Interdisciplinary perspectives are especially welcome
since all these topics in themselves stretch across several disciplines:
history, literary studies, linguistics, psychology, political sciences,
pedagogy, ethnology, anthropology, sociology...
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