WGS.160 Science Activism: Gender, Race, and Power

NEW CLASS!

HASS-E
MW 9:30 - 11AM
Room 1-246

Examines the role scientists have played as activists in social movements in the US following World War II. Themes include scientific responsibility and social justice, the motivation of individual scientists, strategies for organizing, the significance of race and gender, and scientists' impact within social movements. Case studies include atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons and the nuclear freeze campaign, climate science and environmental justice, the civil rights movement, Vietnam War protests, the March 4 movement at MIT, and concerns about genetic engineering, gender equality, intersectional feminism, and student activism at MIT.
E. Bertschinger

Previous
Previous

21L.707 Problems in Cultural Interpretation: Women Reading/Women Writing

Next
Next

WGS.101 Introduction to Women's and Gender Studies