Central to our era is the gradual movement of all the world’s regions toward a uniform standard of economic and political development.

FREE
This course includes
Hours of videos

138 years, 10 months

Units & Quizzes

5

Unlimited Lifetime access
Access on mobile app
Certificate of Completion

In this class we will read a variety of recent narratives that partake of, dissent from, or contribute to this story, ranging from novels and poems to World Bank and IMF statements and National Geographic reports. We will seek to understand the many motives and voices – sometimes congruent, sometimes clashing – that are currently engaged in producing accounts of people in the developing world: their hardships, laughter, and courage, and how they help themselves and are helped by outsiders who may or may not have philanthropic motives. Readings will include literature by J. G. Ballard, Jamaica Kincaid, Rohinton Mistry, and John le Carré, as well as policy documents, newspaper and magazine articles, and the Web sites of a variety of trade and development commissions and organizations.

Course Currilcum

  • Introduction to Theories of Development Unlimited
  • Introduction to the World Bank and IMF Unlimited
  • Notes on Realism (and Georg Luckacs) Unlimited
  • Postmodernism: Notes Towards Some Definitions Unlimited
  • Introduction to Postcolonialism Unlimited