First Year Seminar 140, p. 1

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First Year Seminar 140, p. 1 FYSP 140: "Pakistan: A New Nation's Contested Identities" Fall 2010 - Mr. Fisher, Rice 314, tel. 58524/58420; michael.fisher@oberlin.edu Class Meets Tuesday-Thursday 11:00-12:15 Office Hours: Monday, Wednesday 9:00-10:50 and by appointment at a time of mutual convenience Overview Pakistan, the world's largest nuclear-armed Islamic country, emerged in 1947 from the struggle against British imperialism, intended as a pure homeland where the Muslims of India could live in a single community regardless of their regional, linguistic, or class origins. Subsequently, Pakistan's strategic geo-political location, contested physical and socio-cultural environments, and internal insurrections against a series of military dictators have led to a turbulent history including three and a half wars with India (1947, 1965, 1971, 1999) and a civil war that split Pakistan (1971). This seminar will explore how Pakistani women and men have conceived of their country from its origins to the present, using textual, visual, and aural sources created by and/or about Pakistanis. Simultaneously, we will learn how to deploy the analytical power of several liberal arts disciplines including: history, literary analysis, political science, the history of religion, and gender and environmental studies. We will also work with the library reference staff to enhance our information literacy. Each member of the seminar will participate in group discussions based on shared readings, make individualized presentations, as well as design, research, and write several cumulative papers and a longer paper on a topic particularly suited to her or his own interests. Learning Objectives: a) an introduction to the liberal arts, including: skills necessary for critical thinking, civil and persuasive discussion, and comprehensive research; information literacy in several disciplines; control over multiple disciplinary methodologies; fluency in effective scholarly writing; and engagement with powerful issues of social relevance in a global context. b) an introductory understanding of the historical processes that produced the current nation of Pakistan in his regional context of South Asia. Required texts to be purchased: Rushdie, Salman, Shame (Picador, 1983). Ring, Laura, Zenana: Everyday Peace in a Karachi Building (Indiana University Press, 2006). The Instructor will also make available (through Blackboard) various primary and secondary sources that are required reading. These total about 300 pages, so budget your print quota. Some are in Word (.doc) format, others in Acrobat (.pdf) format. Course writing requirements: 1) Write three position papers (400-500 words each). They will be discussed, with an opportunity to rewrite from the draft for a formal grade. There is a penalty of 3 points off every two hours it is late. and

First Year Seminar 140, p. 2 2) Write one 4000-5000 word research paper, with penultimate draft version submitted, on a topic to be decided through individual consultation with the instructor. Each student will present her/his paper in class. Assessment: Position Papers averaged: 30%; Research Paper: 45%; Class discussion (including individual reports) 25%. The grading is as follows: A+ 100-97; A 96-93; A- 92-90; B+ 89-87; B 86-83; B- 82-80; C+ 79-77; C 76-73; C- 72-70; D 65-69, F below 65. Honor Code: The Honor Code applies to all assignments in this course. This means that any student found cheating, plagiarizing, turning in another person s work as his/her own or otherwise violating the instructor s explicit or implicit instructions will be subject to a hearing before the Student Honor Committee. To learn more about the Code, see the Rules and Regulations Section VI A and B in Fussers or the Student Handbook. (language courtesy of Susan Colley and the Student Honor Code Committee). All requests for accommodation due to special needs will be entertained by the instructor if submitted in advance with endorsement from Ms. Boomer. Class meetings 9/7 Overview of the seminar, a Liberal Arts education, and the study of Pakistan. Before this class meeting read on Blackboard both: Shaheen, "Use of Social Networks" (Saheen-Maqsood_Ahmad.pdf, 6pp.) and Batool, "Entertainment, communication or academic use?" (Syeda_Hina_Batool.pdf, 7pp.). In our first class meeting, we will deconstruct these two articles, so be prepared to: 1) identify the author(s) by background and training; 2) identify the journal in which each article was published and that journal's intended readership; 3) summarize the thesis (main argument) of each article; 4) assess how effectively the use of evidence in support of the thesis. You need not formally write out your analyses of these four points for each article, but you should be prepared to present your analysis orally and coherently to the rest of the class. 9/9 Islam, South Asia, and British Colonial Rule and Scholarly Sources Required: read from Blackboard on Islam and Muslims in South Asia (Islam.doc, 7pp). Required: research one crucial scholarly source on Islam or Muslims in South Asia; be prepared to explain how you found that source, what are its strengths, and what are is limitations. 9/14 Women and the Idealized Muslim State Required: Hossain, "Sultana's Dream" (SultanasDream.doc, 8pp) and Willmer, "Women as Participants in the Pakistan Movement" (WillmerMAS.pdf, 18pp).

First Year Seminar 140, p. 3 Required: research the life of Begum Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain; be prepared to explain what you found, how you went about your research, and why you chose that methodology including the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology you chose. Required: analyze Willmer's article. 9/16 Muslim Politics in Undivided India and the concept of Nation-States. Required: read from Blackboard, Jinnah (Jinnah.doc, 7pp). Required: research the life of Jinnah and explain your methodology. Required: analyze Jinnah's argument(s). 9/19 (Sunday, 6:00 PM) You are all invited to a dinner at Mr. Fisher's home (241 Oak St.--from Rice/King go west one block on College St. to Cedar St., then south two blocks to Oak St.). 9/20 (by Monday noon) first 250-500 word position paper due: read and analyze any one or two of: Manto, "Toba Tek Singh" (Manto Toba Tek Singh.doc, 6pp); Manto, "The Return (Khol Do, literally "open up")" (MantoReturn.pdf, 2pp); Gilmartin, "A Magnificent Gift" (GilmartinCSSH.pdf, 22pp); Liaqat Ali Khan (Liaqat Ali Khan.doc, 4pp); Maududi (Maududi.doc, 6pp). For this position paper, you should select a topic, set out your thesis, use precise and relevant evidence to demonstrate your thesis (using foot/endnotes for direct quotations), and have a brief conclusion. You should use your analytic skills as you have done for previous readings. 9/21 Partition discussion and enhancing your reading and expository expertise. Required: read all of: Manto, Gilmartin, Liaquat Ali Khan, and Maududi (as above) For this class, read one of your colleagues' position papers and come to class prepared to discuss it in depth. 9/23 The Pakistan Movement among Muslims. Required read any two (or all three of): Oldenburg, "'A Place Insufficiently Imagined'" (Oldenburg.pdf, 23pp); Beachler, 'Politics of Genocide Scholarship: The Case of Bangladesh" (Beachler.pdf, 26 pp); Zaman, "Sectarianism in Pakistan" (Zaman_Muhammad_Qasim.pdf, 28pp). 9/23 at 4:30, special talk by Dipesh Chakrabarty, "From Civilization to Globalization: A History of Civility in Modern India" 9/24 (by Friday noon) rewritten first position paper due [N.B. turn in corrected copy of your draft submission at the same time]. 9/28 The History of Pakistan (instructor's presentation) Read: BaluchistanSAIR.doc, 7 pp. Start reading Rushdie's Shame. 9/30 No class meeting (already made up)

First Year Seminar 140, p. 4 10/5 Pakistan and Shame Required: read Rushdie's Shame through Part IV 10/6 (by Wednesday noon) second 250-500 word position paper due using as the central topic one aspect of Rushdie's Shame (you should have completed your reading the entire book). As examples of a topic, you might compare literary and historical methodologies or you might analyze Rushdie's use of gender or you might focus on any single person/character in the novel. 10/7 Pakistan and Shame Required complete reading Rushdie's Shame to end of book. Read one of your colleagues' position papers and come to class prepared to discuss it in depth. 10/8 (Friday) special Kathakali workshop-presentation 10/11 (by Monday noon) rewritten first position paper due [N.B. turn in corrected copy of your draft submission at the same time]. 10/12 Religious Education in Pakistan Read any two (or more) of: Haroon, "Rise of Deobandi Islam in the North-West Frontier Province and its Implications in Colonial India and Pakistan, 1914-96" (HAROON_SANA.pdf, 24pp); Rahman and Bukhari, "Pakistan: Religious Education and Institutions" (Rahman_Khalid.pdf, 17pp); Bano, "Beyond Politics: The Reality of a Deobandi Madrasa in Pakistan" (Bano_Masooda.pdf, 26pp); Zia, "Religion and Education in Pakistan: An Overview" (Zia_Rukhsana.pdf, 14pp); Cockroft et al, "Challenging the Myths about Madaris" (Cockroft_Anne.pdf, 8pp); McClure, "Madrasas and Pakistan's Education," (McClure_Kevin_R.pdf, 8pp). 10/14 Information Literacy Session. Meet in Mudd Library, room 113 with Reference Librarian Ms. Jennifer Starkey to prepare for your research papers. 10/14 onward: work with instructor on choosing the topic for your 4,000-5,000 word research paper). 10/19 Law, Islam, and Gender Read both: Jafar, "Women, Islam, and the State in Pakistan" (Jafar_Afshan.pdf, 21pp) and Usmani, "Islamization of Laws in Pakistan: The Case of Hudood Ordinances" (Usmani_Muhammad_Taqi.pdf, 18pp). 10/21 Class: Urban and Rural Required, any two or more of: Candland, "Workers' Organizations in Pakistan: Why No Role in Formal Politics" (CandlandLabor.pdf, 23pp), Niazi, "Rural Poverty and the Green Revolution" (NiaziGreenRev.pdf, 19pp), Martin, "Political Economy of Bonded Labour" (Martin_Nicholas.pdf, 25pp.). Required: statement of your term research paper topic and basic sources.

First Year Seminar 140, p. 5 ----------------------------------------------------- Fall Break ----------------------------------------------------- 11/2 Karachi and Discussion of Paper writing Required: KarachiSAIR.doc, 5pp. and Gayer, "Guns, Slums, and 'Yellow Devils': A Genealogy of Urban Conflicts in Karachi" (GAYER_LAURENT.pdf, 30pp). 11/3 (by Wednesday noon) third 250-500 word position paper due on a crucial aspect of Ring, Zenana, Introduction and Chapter 2. 11/4 Living in Karachi Required: Ring, Zenana, Introduction and Chapter 2. 11/4 at 4:30 Special talk by Anand Yang 11/8 (by Monday noon) rewritten third position paper due. [N.B. turn in corrected copy of your draft submission at the same time]. 11/9 Karachi and Discussion of Paper progress Required: Ring, Zenana, Chapters 3 and 4. 11/11 Anthropology in Pakistan Required: Finish Ring, Zenana, Chapter 5 and Conclusion. 11/12 (by Friday noon) Submit to instructor preliminary bibliography and paper outline or prospectus for your major paper. 11/16 Rural Pakistan (as seen by one scholar) Required, read any one of the following: Marsden, "Women, Politics and Islamism in Northern Pakistan" (MarsdenWomen.pdf, 25pp); Marsden, "Islam, Political Authority, and Emotion in Northern Pakistan" (MarsdenIslam.pdf, 40pp); Marsden, "Muslim Cosmopolitans? Transnational Life in Northern Pakistan" (MarsdenMuslimCosmopolitans.pdf, 35pp); Marsden, "Mullahs, Migrants and Murids: New Developments in the Study of Pakistan: A Review Article" (MarsdenMullahs.pdf, 25pp); Marsden, "A Tour Not So Grand: Mobile Muslims" (MarsdenMobile.pdf, 19pp). 11/18 Pakistan and India: Kashmir and Nukes Required any two of: Abbass, "A Return to Democracy" (AbbassOnDemocracy.pdf, 28pp), Sheikh, "Pakistan's Nuclear Bomb: Beyond the Non-Proliferation Regime" (Sheikh_Farzana.pdf, 20pp), Ganguly, "Nuclear Stability in South Asia," (Ganguly_Sumit.pdf, 26pp), Kapur, "Ten Years of Instability in a Nuclear South Asia," (Kapur_S._Paul.pdf, 24pp); Das, "State, Identity and Representations (Das_Runa.pdf, 24 pp.); Tkacik, "Pakistan's Nuclear Weapons Program and Implications for US National Security" (Tkacik_Michael.pdf, 43 pp).

First Year Seminar 140, p. 6 11/23 Discussion of Paper progress and Winter term 11/25 No class (Thanksgiving) 11/30 Pakistan's Recent History Full penultimate (draft) version of research paper due at the start of class 12/2 Current Contexts Required: read any one account on Blackboard of the origins or end of the rule of General Musharraf and the Presidency of Asaf Ali Zardari. 12/7 Presentation and discussion of papers (part I). 12/9 Presentation and discussion of papers (part II). 12/14 Presentation and discussion of papers (part III). 12/19 (Sunday) at 11:00AM final research paper due