I’m going to be really honest when
I say I had no idea what I was getting my self into when I decided to join this
class. I can say it’s partially because of the unnecessarily difficult
registration process with Science Po and partially because I like jumping head
first into academics without knowing much about it, but I had no idea what this
class was going to be about. The title
“War and Peace: the Making of” greatly intrigued my international relations
brain. I was assuming, based off the title, (and we all know never judge a book
by it’s title, but yet I judge my classes by their titles…) that this would be
a prescriptive International relations class discussing the different
classifications for war and peace and how we can achieve those classifications. This was not quite what I found on that first
day of class. But that is for all the better; because this class is unlike many
of the classes I have, and probably will ever, take. At George Washington
University (my home institution) we approach international relations with
practical, real world approach. This
class was very much out of my comfort zone and sometimes significantly over my
head in its focus on more theoretical, philosophical takes on IR topics. But it
is classes like this that are the reason I chose to study abroad in the first
place, to get a new, different view on my studies of choice.
I’ll
be the first to admit that my understanding of philosophic themes extends no
further than the one philosophy class I took in high school, so reading our
first two readings on Tolstoy and Foucault was quite the experience for me. But
these first readings blew me away; Tolstoy and Foucault opened up a whole new
way of thinking about everything I have been studying in university. To think
about history, and mankind as something that is essentially constantly at war
with itself, and to shift my classification of history from great men to trends
was completely new to me. And then to top this off with Foucault’s idea of
power, my way of thinking had been totally blown off course. When I apply this new way of thinking to the
previous things I have learned in my International Relations courses it has
been eye opening the different levels of understanding I can gain. At the same
time as this course I was taking a course on the Ethics of War, and a course on
U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration and it was really
interesting to discuss the same actions, for example drone warfare, in three
different lights; from a philosophical, anthropological stand point, from a
ethical, legal standpoint, and from a practical, policy standpoint. Taking this class has allowed me to be able
to question actions from a whole different point of view.
From a practical standpoint, in
regards to the functionality of the class, I enjoyed the way it was set up. I
wished many times that there been a way to overview the reading before we did
them, or wrote our essays after the discussion, but this is only because I had
troubles understanding the readings. This is obviously not the point of the
essays, as they we’re supposed to evaluate our own comprehension of the
readings, so I understand the limited guidance. To me the discussions we’re
incredibly interesting, but as I was not confidant in my understanding of the
texts I did not feel comfortable speaking up many times. I think this could be remedied with a forced
question set up, similar to Collin’s (sorry I peeked at everyone’s
essays). Overall I think the class was
really interesting, and very much worth taking. I even thought the reading
amount wasn’t that bad either. I learned a lot, but the most valuable thing I
learned was a new way of viewing information.
It is through many lenses that you can get the whole picture.
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