Friday, November 12, 2010

11/12

Hi everyone,
For the blog post this week, please respond to the two questions below. (And include a mention of which essays from the class readings this semester are informing your answers to the questions).
1) Do photographers of persons who are victims have a special (perhaps ethical) obligation to get out from behind the camera and become directly involved in promoting the comfort or safety of a victimized person whom they photograph?

2) Do photographers or their editors have an ethical responsibility to publicly inform viewers that a photo has been modified digitally or altered with Photoshop?

Friday, November 5, 2010

11/5

Greetings,
For the blog entry this weekend: post a link to an altered photo; explain what has been altered in the photo, what the purpose of this alteration is, and argue whether or not the alteration is benign or poses an ethical problem.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

10/30

Hi everyone,
For the blog entry this weekend, please write and post an approximately 10 word summary of the 100 word text that is on the back of the handout I distributed last time in class. Best, Paul Holchak

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

10/13

Hi All,
Here are suggested topics for the research paper:

Research Paper Topics

(1) How does one define children's right to privacy? (Search "right to privacy children," examine and assess different views.)

(2) Explain the nature and appeal of superheroes by tracing changes in the popularity of one or more superheroes over time. How do changes in the popularity and character of superheroes relate to shifts that have occurred in social attitudes and values from one decade to the next?

(3) Question number 1 on page 686-Argue for or against the assertion that visual and verbal material should be held to the same standards of evidence in journalism.

(4) Question 1 on page 366 under “Writing” relates to the He/She series of photos by Nancy Burson on pages 360-365. What cultural assumptions does androgyny challenge? (Research, select, analyze and discuss representative reactions to unconventional examples of gender identity in the U.S.)

(5) Question 2 under “Writing” on page 269. Dorothy Allison writes that “art should surprise and astonish, and hopefully make you think something you had not thought until you saw it” (paragraph 1). Choose several pieces of art-a visual image, an essay, or some other works- that surprised and astonished you and use them to support or refute Allison’s claim about what art should do. If you disagree with Allison, make sure you start with your own definition of the purpose of art.

(6) How does wearing a uniform change behavior? Discuss the nature of uniforms and their impact on those who wear them. (Research the history and rationale for using uniforms in certain institutions, for example, the NYC fire, police, U.S. military services or in case studies of schools that have required uniforms.)

(7) Question 2 under “Writing” on page 302. “Use Bill McKibben’s information to calculate the amount of carbon dioxide that has been released in the atmosphere by you” or your friends, then argue why awareness of these calculations should or should not prompt changes of lifestyle and consumption patterns. Is awareness of a social problem enough to create social change?

(8) Question 2 under “Writing” on page 626 about privacy.

(9) Question number 2 on page 686, agree or disagree with the ethical rules that Michael Stephens proposes for the use of digitally manipulated photos.

Public Affairs questions-

(10) A controversial method for extracting natural gas that is called hydraulic fracturing (or “fracking” for short) has been used for a number of years in Wyoming where its critics charge that “fracking” contaminates drinking water. Relatively soon, fracking is set to begin in upstate New York including some areas not far from the reservoirs from which New York City draws its drinking water. Should hydraulic fracturing be the subject to further environmental regulation or further study before it begins in New York state? Here’s a link to get started http://www.csmonitor.com/Environment/2010/0913/Fracking-for-natural-gas-EPA-hearings-bring-protests

(11) Explain what the Supreme Court’s decision was, in the case known as Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, and take a position on what its likely effects will be on campaign finance and on future elections. Here’s a link http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703699204575016942930090152.html
(12) Is criticism of the size of Wall Street bonuses that were paid out in 2009 justified? Are the bonuses defensible? Here’s a link http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN2324181420100223

(13) New financial reforms were signed into law in 2010 that created a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which Elizabeth Warren, a Harvard professor of law, has been appointed to manage. Explain the different points of view about what it is that the Bureau will do then take a position on whether creating the Bureau was a good idea.

(14) Define an economic bubble by discussing the dot.com bubble in the U.S. of the late 1990’s and the South Sea Bubble of the 1720’s in England. Then research the causes and remedies for the recent real estate bubble in the U.S.

(15) Describe the economic stimulus that was enacted by Congress in 2009 and argue whether or not it has worked.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

10/05

Hi all,
Just a reminder, the deadline for submitting essay two was moved to Tuesday, October 12th. Also, over the weekend please select one or more images from the textbook and put up a post commenting on the meaning, questions raised, the way the artist is using his or her medium or some other aspect of the picture(s) that you find significant. Best, Paul Holchak

Thursday, September 30, 2010

9/30/10

Hi everyone,
I'd like you to work on your draft for essay two over this weekend. Please bring three copies of it with you to class Tuesday for peer review. On reflection, I've decided not to give a blog assignment over this weekend because I would like you to focus your time on writing the draft of essay number two. See you Tuesday. Best, Paul Holchak

Friday, September 24, 2010

essay two topics

Hi everyone,
Here are the topics for essay two:

(1)
Present your own view of how family members relate to one another during the holidays. To support your argument discuss elements of one or both of the following: “The First Thanksgiving” by Sarah Vowell, “Fish Cheeks” by Amy Tan or your own holiday experiences.

(2)
Agree or disagree with the position taken about photography in one or more of the following: Susan Sonntag’s “On Photography,” James Nachtwey’s“Ground Zero,” or Ethan Canin’s “Vivian, Fort Barnwell.”

(3)
Explain what makes childhood, youth (or, if you wish, innocence) important for the way of seeing explored by one or more of the following texts: “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, “Ode to an Orange” by Larry Woiwode, “Vivian, Fort Barnwell” by Ethan Canin or “The Streets Change, But Memories Endure” by Kenji Jasper.

(4)
Develop an argument in which you agree or disagree with David Guterson’s criticism of planned communties in “No Place Like Home”.

(5)
Define and explain how memory adds or subtracts to the meaning that things have for the writer in one or more of the following: “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, “Ode to an Orange” by Larry Woiwode, “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, “The Streets Change, But Memories Endure” by Kenji Jasper or “Vivian, Fort Barnwell” by Ethan Canin.

(6)
In paragraph nine of “Homeplace,” Scott Russell Sanders writes that “many of the worst abuses” in this hemisphere have come about through “the habit of our industry and commerce…to force identical schemes onto differing locales”. In paragraph nineteen, Sanders gives an example of this practice near where he lives. Think about why Sanders considers the practice to be a form of abuse. (Specifically, what or who does he imply is being abused?) Then, based on your own observations, think of an example in which a franchise or corporation has established the same store floor plan, or same product lines, advertising campaigns or… to do business in different communities. Do you agree or disagree with Sanders that this corporate practice is a problem? What difference does it make if businesses approach one community in the same way that they approach another? If there is a leveling effect, in which places lose their authentic character, and, if so, why is this a bad thing? What benefits do national chains offer a community? The point (your thesis) is to agree or disagree with Sanders that the proliferation of national chains is one of “the worst abuses” of industry or commerce.

(7)
Compare and contrast Guterson’s criticism of suburbia to Sanders’s criticism of the corporate practice of selling the same products in stores that look the same in different communities. Are the planning principles, mechanisms of control or social consequences that each writer criticizes similar or different? What are some of the possible explanations for these similarities or differences? Discuss relevant examples of the practices that these writers dislike and use the examples to identify what Guterson and Sanders agree on and what they disagree about.

(8)
Compare and contrast ideas of what home is and what it is not in two of the following: “At Home. For Now” by Richard Ford, “The Streets Change, But Memories Endure” by Kenji Jasper, “Homeplace” by Scott Russell Sanders or David Guterson’s “No Place Like Home”.

(9)
Argue for the relative importance or unimportance of things that are invisible (including things that are seen indirectly or indistinctly) for our experience of the visible world. In your argument, be specific about what sort of invisible things you are discussing. To help you be specific about this, refer to and discuss the significance of relevant points and passages from one or two of the following texts: “The Streets Change, But Memories Endure” by Kenji Jasper, “The Little Store” by Eudora Welty, “Seeing” by Annie Dillard, or “A Matter of Scale” by K.C. Cole.

Two other suggestions are the topics given as number 1 and number 2 under the section labeled “Writing” on page 269 of the textbook.

Monday, September 20, 2010

blog for Tuesday, 9/21

Hi everyone,
As discussed in our last class, please post the concluding paragraph of essay one as your blog entry this time. Best, Paul Holchak

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

September 8th

Hi all,
As we discussed in class on Thursday, your first blog assignment is to post the introductory paragraph from your draft for essay one. The post should be up by the morning of Thursday September 16th when we meet next. Until then...all the best,
Paul Holchak

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Welcome to the Fall semester

Hi everyone and welcome to the blog site. It was a pleasure meeting with you Thursday evening. I wanted to offer a reminder that you need to bring our book, Seeing and Writing 4, with you to class on Tuesday as we will be using it in our discussion. In fact, plan generally on bringing Seeing and Writing to each of our class meetings because we will use it in class as we discuss the readings together.

As noted on Thursday evening, your first assignment is to learn how to post a comment on this blog. Here are some pointers on getting started
Below this window, you will see the word "COMMENTS".
Click on it. Next, click in the new window that opens and type a few strokes then go below the window to where it says "select profile". When you move the cursor to "select profile", you get a drop down menu. From this drop down menu, select "google account". After selecting "google account", go over to the box labeled "post comment" and click on it. Since you are not signed in yet, you should get a prompt explaining that to complete the post requires a Google account. If you already have a google email account, sign in with it and proceed to post a comment to our blog. If you do not have a google email account yet, click the prompt to create one, proceed to create the account and then post a comment on our blog. I hope these instructions are of some help. You may need to improvise with them a little, and there is probably a way to do this that involves fewer steps that some of you will discover. We'll talk about it next class. Bring up any questions that you have then. See you soon, Paul Holchak