Core I: Histories of the Present: Human Nature and Human Difference
With Histories of the Present, Core I faculty and students will explore the relationship between historically informed critical thinking and our engagement with contemporary issues and debates. Our investigations seek to explore the ways in which our contemporary self-understandings emerge from and express commitments and categories that are often taken as given—as so “natural” and “obvious” that they prevent us from thinking clearly about their complexities and ambiguities, and hinder us from seeing our world in other ways.
Core I takes up this task through an examination of a number of ways in which human nature and human difference are used as the bases of various modes of thought and action. The problems and issues we explore (for example, the alleged relationship between political organization and specific claims regarding a shared human nature, the appeal to human rights against the background of cultural difference, the violence directed towards certain human beings) involve values and categories such as justice, toleration, human rights, development, gender and sexual difference, race, universalism, cultural affiliation, and individualism and sociability.
Few would deny that these ideas play a central role in our contemporary self-understandings and figure prominently in apparently intractable debates about the world, whether we define that world in indigenous, local, national, or global terms. What Core I seeks to provide, in relation to such debates, is the vantage point of critical distance: the opportunity to think about and to be self-consciously mindful of the consequences of the very things it is very easy to take for granted.