Here is the press release:
"John Jay Online Brings History Alive: First-ever MOOC on the Literature & Law of American Slavery Opens for Registration
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Biographer John Matteson to Teach Free, Eight-week Online Course
NEW
YORK CITY (August 12, 2014) – John Jay Online, the online education
department of John Jay College of Criminal Justice, today opened
registration for its first-ever MOOC (Massive Open Online Course) on the
Literature & Law of American Slavery.
This unusual and in-depth look at one of the seminal periods of
American history brings these two worlds together to paint a richly
faceted picture of the era, examining how American life today is still
haunted and shaped by slavery. The free, eight-week course will be
taught by Pulitzer Prize-winning John Matteson, Distinguished Professor
of English at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. The course begins on
Tuesday, September 30, 2014. Registration is now open at johnjayonline.com/slavery.
Professor Matteson won the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Biography for his book, Eden’s Outcasts: The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father.
Professor Matteson has designed the MOOC as an immersive experience;
students will discover what it was like to live in the troubled decades
leading up to the Civil War from one of the foremost experts on that
period.
“We
are still processing the effects of the slaveholding era today,” said
Professor Matteson. “While most of us acknowledge and understand our
history, we don’t think about, or examine, how the debate over slavery
changed American law and influenced literature. With this MOOC, we’re
taking American slavery out of the typical textbook context to explore
not just how the people who lived through it were impacted, but how it
still impacts us today.”
The MOOC will address many atypical questions about American slavery, including:
- What were the legal principles behind slavery, and what were the arguments both for and against its legality?
- How did the leading American writers of the time respond to slavery, both in fiction and in nonfiction?
- What was slavery like from the perspective of the slave, and how did African-American writers take up the war of words on the subject?
- How did the Civil War inspire the authors who lived through it and saw it firsthand?
-
Why does the institution of slavery, which was abolished in the United States in the 1860s, still matter to us today?
Students
can anticipate spending up to five hours per week in the eight-week
course, which will include video lectures, readings and discussions.
While of educational value to all those interested in the subject and
era, the MOOC will be a particularly effective way for post-graduate
candidates and those considering full-time enrollment as students to
further invest in their education.
“We’re
very proud to be able to offer the public a free course of this
caliber,” said Dr. Feng Wang, director of John Jay Online. “Even a
decade ago, this would not have been possible. Thanks to today’s
technology, anyone with an Internet connection, no matter where they
live, or what their educational level is, can participate in a rich
academic experience with classmates from around the world, taught by one
of the brightest thinkers of our time.”
Thanks for the heads up! I signed up too!
ReplyDeleteHi Meg, thanks for writing about our upcoming MOOC! We're excited to share it with your followers!
ReplyDeleteThis one sounds interesting. I'm going to check it out! Thanks.
ReplyDelete