DSOC 2030

DSOC 2030

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2018-2019.

In this course we will look at garbage, or waste, as a lens for thinking about consumption, value, inequality, and marginalization at home and around the globe. One definition of waste is matter that has no value. As such, waste is a powerful signifier. What we throw out tells us something about ourselves and the societies we live in. Waste has the capacity to mark people and places, to shape subjectivities, and to contribute to the marginalization of occupational groups and affected communities. But people also have the capacity to transform waste and to find new and creative uses for discarded objects, infusing them with value once again. Waste is good to think with when exploring a broad range of sociological themes.

When Offered Fall.

Course Attribute (CU-CEL, CU-SBY)

Outcomes
  • Think critically about the relationship between consumption, waste, and the social construction of value and how this shapes waste practices over time and in different sites.
  • Articulate ways in which the circulation of waste both maps and reinforces social inequalities and contributes to marginalization.
  • Better understand the life cycles of particular kinds of material objects and the effects of these forms of waste on human health, the environment, and local ecologies.
  • Critically examine your own consumption and waste practices, guided by your experiences in the class of keeping a waste diary and completing a series of exercises organized around it.
  • Demonstrate the acquisition of social science research skills gained by conducting observations and writing them up.
  • Identify and think imaginatively about ways you and others might eliminate waste or creatively re-use it.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi:
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Choose one lecture and one field studies.

  • 3 Credits Graded

  • 17617 DSOC 2030   LEC 001

  • This course is scheduled to accommodate several field trips during class time.

  • 17618 DSOC 2030   FLD 801