For your convenience, please find a downloadable document listing SPTH course offerings (.pdf) for Fall 2021 and Winter 2022.
Calendar Year
Term
Course #
Course Title
2024
SU
gs/spth 6001A
Directed Readings
Instructional Format: DIRD
2024
Y
gs/spth 6001A
Directed Readings
Instructional Format: DIRD
2025
WS
gs/spth 6001M
Directed Readings
Instructional Format: DIRD
2024
F
gs/spth 6028A
Histories and Theories of Nationalism
TBA
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): G. Kernerman
2024
F
gs/spth 6043A
Contemporary Topics in Social Theory
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): P. Walsh
2025
W
gs/spth 6043M
Contemporary Topics in Social Theory
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): H. Park
2024
Y
gs/spth 6100A
Contexts Of Victorian Science
Contexts of Victorian Science. This course focuses on nineteenth century British and European science and its social, political, cultural, and intellectual contexts. Adopting the contextualist approach to the history of science allows us to raise a series of provocative questions: in what way did all of these different contexts shape the nature of nineteenth century scientific thought? How were scientific facts socially constructed? What was it about the nineteenth century context that led many intellectuals to reject Christianity and embrace science as providing a new, privileged form of knowledge? Included among the topics to be covered are the discourse of natural theology, the politics of geological controversy, Scottish philosophy and phrenology, radical working class Lamarckianism in England during the 1830s, the plurality of worlds debate, science and gender, the professionalization of science, English scientific naturalism and German scientific materialism, the literary structure of Darwin's Origin of Species, Darwinian theory and its ideological uses, and late nineteenth century physics and psychics. This course will be of interest to students of British, European, social, and intellectual history.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): B. Lightman
2024
F
gs/spth 6105A
Master's Practicum: Major Research Paper Development
The course provides students with an opportunity to draft their proposal and their Major Research Paper (MRP) in a collective environment. It also provides them a chance to work closely with their instructor in developing the design, methodology and theoretical approach of the MRP. Third, it gives students a chance for reflexive and dialogical space for students to interact and provide feedback on each other's projects.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): J. Tremblay
2024
F
gs/spth 6106A
Social and Political Thought: Theories, Approaches, and Methods I
This course is mandatory for all first year Ph.D. students in Social and Political Thought. Normally the course will be facilitated by the GPD of SPT, and will review a diverse variety of ideas, theories, methods and research approaches.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): J. Tremblay
2025
W
gs/spth 6146M
Colonialism, Race and the Law: Sociological Implications
The objective of this course is to provide students with theoretical and methodological tools to critically examine and explore how race and processes of racialization are constituted, exercised, lived and contested in law, through law and by law. This course examines the relationship between race, colonization and the contemporary legal order. The course will address the intersections of law, modernity and liberalism in order to address the role that law plays in the constitution of racialized, gendered and classed subjects. The course will address how legal processes of racialization contribute to the politics of nation-building and to the development of national subjectivities.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): J. Ramasubramanyam
2024
F
gs/spth 6154A
Black Feminisms
An introduction to the histories, theories, concepts and praxis of Black Feminism, as produced through intersectional struggles around race, class gender and sexuality. It considers shifts in the articulation of Black feminisms across geography, culture and time, and encourages further research into the specificities of Black Canadian feminism.
Accelerating Technicity examines the concept of technology in select works of Heidegger, Marcuse, Deleuze, Simondon, Stiegler, Hayles, Virilio and Acclerationism. Using these theorists the course will grapple with Heidegger's two conflicting tendencies in technology: the dominant tendency of instrumental technology (the danger inherent in technology) and second, the tendency toward poeisis (the revealing and saving potential inherent in technology). The course is presented in blended(BLEN)format that includes in-class, on-line and print EE components: seminar presentation, seminar participation, interactive on-line discussion forum, one minute film, plus paper abstract and essay. The aim is for the student to be able to interact proficiently and seamlessly both online and in person to meet the requirements of a networked world.
Accelerating Technicity examines the concept of technology in select works of Heidegger, Marcuse, Deleuze, Simondon, Stiegler, Hayles, Virilio and Acclerationism. Using these theorists the course will grapple with Heidegger's two conflicting tendencies in technology: the dominant tendency of instrumental technology (the danger inherent in technology) and second, the tendency toward poeisis (the revealing and saving potential inherent in technology). The course is presented in blended(BLEN)format that includes in-class, on-line and print EE components: seminar presentation, seminar participation, interactive on-line discussion forum, one minute film, plus paper abstract and essay. The aim is for the student to be able to interact proficiently and seamlessly both online and in person to meet the requirements of a networked world.
Instructional Format: BLEN
Instructor(s): S. Bell
2025
W
gs/spth 6172M
Histories: Women, Genders, Sexualities
This course examines key concepts, debates, methodologies, and theoretical directions in the history of women, genders and sexualities from a transnational and intersectional perspective. It focuses on the dialogue between gender history and social history and asks how social movements have shaped the questions historians ask and how gender articulates with major analytic categories including class relations and racial formation.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): C. Wright
2024
F
gs/spth 6183A
French Post-Marxism and Radical Democratic Theory
This advanced seminar will examine the emergence, in France, of a new theory of radical democracy born of the ruthless critique of totalitarian domination and of the discovery of a politics of emancipation in the wake of the events of May 1968. Inspired by Rosa Luxemburg's alternative 'Socialism or Barbarism', the anti-totalitarian left articulates a democratic project that remains critical of liberalism while rejecting vanguardism in the name of the political capacity of 'anybody and everybody' (J. Rancière).
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): M. Breaugh
2025
W
gs/spth 6187M
Walter Benjamin and his Contemporaries
This course engages selected texts by Walter Benjamin and those of some fellow intellectuals of import for literary and cultural criticism and theory. Particular attention is paid to Benjamins thinking on history, language, criticism or critique, translation, and media.
Instructional Format: SEMR
2025
W
gs/spth 6196M
Western Thought of Empire
The course examines how empire has figured in the works of dominant seventeenth eighteenth and nineteenth century Western social and political thinkers. Issues about race, civilization, progress and modernity, and imperialism, colonialism, etc., are critically assessed discursively, ideological, sociopolitically.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): N. Persram
2024
SU
gs/spth 6197A
Politics of Utopia
Examines the politics of utopia within the realm of everyday life. It provides historically nuanced discussions on the utopian impulse, and, critically examines totalitarianism, current revivals of sacredness, and secular messianic thinking as utopian moments of contemporary significance.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): N. Canefe
2025
W
gs/spth 6230M
Contemporary Cinema and Media Theory
This course is intended as an in depth study of major theoretical schools and debates within contemporary film theory. The course is divided into three key units, each of which will focus on the historical development, methodological principles and philosophic underpinning of a specific school. This is a required course for all Critical and Historical Studies students.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): M. Thompson
2024
Y
gs/spth 6319A
Cinema and Media Studies: Key Concepts
The course will explore key concepts, texts and debates in the field of contemporary cinema and media studies. While maintaining a focus on the intellectual and material histories of cinema studies and media studies as disciplines (and their recent convergence), including epistemological and ontological fr ameworks, methodological approaches, and institutional and technological supports, the course will emphasize recent developments in cinema and media studies. Three broad areas of study will structure the course: cinema and cultural theory; national and transnational cinema; cinema and technologies of the image.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): M. Zryd
2025
W
gs/spth 6412M
Imagining Slavery and Freedom
This course engages a critical examination of Transatlantic slavery and its afterlife, and the ways in which the imagination functions in the articulation of a desired, but always elusive, Black freedom.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): C. Sharpe
2024
F
gs/spth 6414A
Cultural Studies in Education and Society
Explores research and practice at the intersection of education and cultural studies. Dynamics of production and signification, creativity and resistance are examined as contested grounds for learning within schools and informal cultural institutions.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): W. Crichlow
2024
F
gs/spth 6423A
The Alchemy Lectures-Public Engagement with Black and Indigenous Thought and Ideas
This course engages the themes of the annual Alchemy Lecture, a public model of intellectual engagement that brings together Black and Indigenous thinkers to consider the critical issues of our times. Students engage the works of these thinkers and attend the annual lecture, as well as gaining understanding of the curatorial, planning, and publication process associated with the event.
Instructional Format: SEMR
2025
W
gs/spth 6426M
Writing Black Life: Black Life Writing
This course engages a critical examination of writing by Black people in English or in translation. What does it mean to write black life? What forms does that work take? We will read short fiction, novels, poetry, essays, experimental works and theoretical writing. The majority of the works that we read will be contemporary (mid twentieth century to the present). This course wants to familiarize students with the rich and varied materials of Black writing, with form, and style and argument.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): C. Sharpe
2025
W
gs/spth 6602M
Education and Social Justice in Postmodernity
What can social justice mean in light of attempts to reconceptualize justice as an ethical and political relation to difference? This question is explored through diverse philosophical and educational writing across such themes as hospitality, promising, forgiveness, and the political uses and depiction of foreignness
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): M. DiPaolantonio
2024
F
gs/spth 6623A
Sex and Gender in Social Theory
TBA
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): S. Cavanagh
2024
F
gs/spth 6632A
Thinking Power and Violence: from Nietzsche to Agamben
About the meaning of power and violence as fundamental categories of modernity and human existence overall. The course is concerned with violence in many forms and manifestations, including: violence at the foundation of human community, conservative violence, 'divine violence,' redemptive violence, self as violence against self and other, exclusionary violence, the violence of liberal freedom and the commodity, counter-hegemonic violence, the violence of the spectacle, the violence of outsiders and gender violence.
Instructional Format: BLEN
Instructor(s): R. Latham
2024
F
gs/spth 6648A
Politics of Aesthetics
The Politics of Aesthetics develops an aesthetic framework from political and philosophical thinkers who have an aesthetic theory as part of their philosophy. These include Hegel, Kant, Heidegger, Vattimo, Badiou, Rancière and Zabala. The course is presented in blended(BLEN) format that includes in-class, on-line and print EE components: seminar presentation, seminar participation, interactive on-line discussion forum, one minute film, plus paper abstract and essay. The aim is for the student to be able to interact proficiently and seamlessly both online and in person to meet the requirements of a networked world.
Instructional Format: BLEN
Instructor(s): S. Bell
2024
F
gs/spth 6674A
Diasporas: Transnational Communities and Limits of Citizenship
This course provides a comparative inquiry about the nature of transnational communal, religious, and political identities at the age of late capitalism. It puts emphasis on critical approaches to diasporas, their variant constructions of homeland and home, and their marked effects on the politics of the post-Westphalian state and international relations.
Instructional Format: SEMR
Instructor(s): E. Tungohan
Learn More
The Graduate Program in Social & Political Thought at York is an exciting environment to pursue innovative, socially engaging, career-ready education. Contact our Graduate Program Assistant to learn more.