2024-2025 Catalog

CSLC 130 Truth, Trust, and Propaganda: Postmodern Theory and the Practice of Dissent

Do we live in the era of post-truth? Is everything just another piece of propaganda? Whom do we trust and why? 

Postmodern theory offers us powerful resources to criticize and take down the houses of totalizing ideologies, but many of its most important conceptual tools have been co-opted and are now used to oppress. Postmodern propaganda corrodes the relationships of trust that connect us, and makes us feel isolated and powerless. It taps into our fears and phobias to destroy not only the reality around us, but also our humanity. The organized lies of the 21st century aim to confuse and disorient, but also (and this is where the greatest danger lies) make us cynical. Several philosophers and writers from Eastern and Central Europe, who had first-hand experience of Western European “demi-Orientalism,” Russia’s imperialism, and Soviet totalitarianism, offer an antidote to this postmodern condition. 

 

In this course we will read French theorists such as Deleuze and Derrida and their counterparts from Eastern and Central Europe: Havel, Miłosz, Mamardashvili, Venclova, and others. Several other philosophers and writers—such as Plato, Arendt, Kundera, Orwell, Klemperer, and Platonov—will help us think about truth, trust, and propaganda.

Credits

4 units

Core Requirements Met

  • Global Connections