14 contemporary plays by 14 American playwrights

Description

14 diverse playwrights and subjects. The diversity is only natural because the most exciting theater is often (not always!) about the most urgent issues in the world it reflects. Works exploring race and gender are prominent, for instance, because racism and sexism remain prominent. It’s a theater that is often more directly engaged in unpacking large-scale social issues than we at first expected. But it’s also a collection marked by imaginative boldness.

In this SDG, we get to know each playwright shortly and discuss one of his/her plays-in most cases one that made him/her known in the theater world.

Weekly Topics

  1.  The Designated Mourner 2000, Wallace Shawn 

  2. Topdog/Underdog 2001, Suzan-lori parks 2002 Pulitzer

  3. Proof 2001, David Auburn 2001 Pulitzer

  4. Anna in the Tropics 2003, Nilo Cruz 2003 Pulitzer

  5. Eurydice 2006, Sarah Ruhl

  6. Yellow Face 2007, David Henry Hwang 2008 Obie

  7.  August: Osage County 2007, Tracy Letts 2008 Pulitzer and Tony

  8. Ruined 2008, Lynn Nottage 2009 Pulitzer and Obie winner

  9. Clybourne Park 2010, Bruce Norris 2011 Pulitzer 20 Tony for. Best play

  10. The Realistic Joneses 2012, Will Eno 2015 Drama Desk

  11. The Flick 2013, Annie Baker. 2014 Pulitzer 

  12. An Octoroon 2014, Brandon Jacobs-Jenkins 2014 Obie

  13. The Humans 2015, Stephen Karam 2016 Tony award 

  14. The Wolves 2016, Sarah DeLappe 2017 Pulitzer finalist 2017 Obie

Abstract Expressionism: The Art Revolution that was Born in America

Description

Abstract Expressionism was a revolution in the history of art, especially modern art.  Abstract Expressionism was the first major art movement that evolved out of the American experience.  Previously, the art world was centered in Europe, and American artists followed and adapted the trends that crossed the ocean.  With the rise of Totalitarianism in the 1930’s and the beginning of WWII, American artists felt emboldened to transcend European influence, and to develop a movement that reflected their own nation, experience and emotions. This evolution thrust America for the first time in history to the forefront of the arts, where the American life experience became the ground for new artistic expression.  Because many of the Abstract Expressionist artists were refugees from Europe, they brought with them the history of modernism  and reformed it into something new when they joined up with the art community of New York.

This SDG will follow the birth of Abstract Expressionism from the art background of European refugee's to the “Wall Street Crash” and the formation of the “WPA Federal Arts Project,” which led to the birth of "The New York School".  The New York School included painters, poets, musicians and sculptors who bonded together to form a community in the face of societal hardship.  During the mid-1940’s, Abstract Expressionism found a second home in San Francisco, and “The San Francisco School” was formed.  Both of these schools, perhaps better known as collectives, rocked the artistic world, and art has never looked back.  The American worlds of music, sculpture and poetry were also influenced by the changing times and embraced the Abstract Expressionist Movement, creating a cultural shift that we are still seeing today.  

Everything about the process of painting, music, sculpture and poetry changed!  Paint could now be dripped, thrown, poured, stained or carved into.  Music could be atonal, rhythmic or neither.  Sculpture need not be figurative or representational; and poetry could express the dissonance of human life.  So, the rules could change with the intention of the artist.  Expression was valued over perfection, vitality was more meaningful than finish, fluctuation was more interesting than repose.  The unknown was the subject, and the individual was the gateway to this unknown, inner world.

Weekly Topics

Week 1.  INTRODUCTION:  The foundation and history of Abstract Expressionism; the changing methodologies for interpreting meaning and the desire to extinguish the object.  Clement Greenberg and Peggy Guggenheim's impact on Abstract Expressionist seen through the lens of sexism, financial gain and racism.  We will begin our art exploration with Janet Sobel and Hedda Sterne.

THE ACTION PAINTERS:

Week 2.   Jackson Pollock.

Week 3.  Willhelm De Kooning

Week 4.   Lee Krasner

Week 5.   Norman Lewis

Week 6.   Joan Mitchell

THE SCULPTORS:

Week 7.   Louise Nevelson and David Smith

THE COLOR-FIELD PAINTERS:

Week 8.   Mark Rothko + Morton Feldman

Week 9.   Helen Frankenthaler

Week 10.  Clifford Still

Week 11.  Alma Thomas

Week 12.  Hans Hofman

Week 13.  Perle Fine - action & color field

THE POETS:    

Week 14.   Barbara Guest and Frank O'Hara

The music of Abstrtact Expressionism will be played at the beginning of each class.  John Cage, Morton Feldman, Miles Davis

Bibliography

CORE TEXT:  ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM, ANN EDEN GIBSON - author

This book is available used at a reasonable price from Amazon, Abebooks or Better World Books.

The artwork and discussion material is readily available on-line and each weeks discussion leader will disseminate their material, two weeks ahead of their class.  On-line links will also be disseminated for additional readings, videos, movies or cool stuff.

ADDITIONAL READING MATERIAL:

Abstract Expressionism: Themes & Movements - Katy Siegel

New York School Painters & Poets - Jenni Quilter

The Collected Poems of Barbara Guest - Wesleyan Poetry Series

The Women of Abstract Expressionism - Denver Art Museum

Procession: The Art of Norman Lewis - University of California Press

The Conservative Sensibility

Description

James Madison was the visionary who crafted the classical political framework of individual liberty, economic dynamism, based on a strict interpretation of the Constitution. When was the founders’ philosophy abandoned? Was it after the Civil War; or during the Woodrow Wilson Administration? This SDG is not designed to reconcile any particular problem or philosophy, but to discuss the enduring questions concerning the proper scope and intellectual competence of government. There is no better authority commenting on the current state of American Politics than George F. Will to build the case that the true classical Conservatism has always been in America’s best interest.

THE CORE BOOK IS ONLY MEANT TO BE A COMMON BASIS FROM WHICH TO START - NOT THE BOUNDARY FOR THE SDG.

Weekly Topics

Week one:  History of ‘conservative’ political theory in the US

  • Chapter 1 page 1 – 31

  • History of Political Philosophy, edited by Strauss and Cropsey

Week two: History of ‘progressive’ political theory in the US

  • Chapter 2 pages 32 – 101

  • The Progressive Movement and the Transformation of American Politics

  • Schambra and West, 2007

  • Progressive and Conservative Constitutionalism, West, Georgetown University Law Center, 1990 

Week three: Congressional duty to supervise 

  • Chapter 3 pages 102 -147

  • The Rise and Fall of the Separation of Powers, Calabresi, Berghausen & Albertson, Northwestern University School of Law, 2012.

  • Executive Power in American Institutional Development, Whittlingon and Carpenter, Perspectives on Politics, 2003 

Week four: Judicial Activism vs. Judicial Restraint

  • Chapter 4 pages 148 – 215

  • Constitutional Conservatism and American Conservatism, O’Neil, American Conservatism, 2016

  • The Constitutional Duty to Supervise, Metzger, Yale Law Journal, 2015

Week five: How best to minimize economic inequality?

  • Chapter 5 pages 216 – 298

  • The Inequity of the Progressive Income Tax, Hagpian, Hoover Institution, 2011.

  • The Consequences of Conservative Economic Policy, Hersh, Ettlinger and Pruss, Center for American Progress, 2010.

Week six:  How do we define the success of a society? Can politics change society?

  • Chapter 6 Pages 299 – 351

  • Reconsidering Culture and Poverty, Small, Harding and Lamont, Harvard University 2010

Week seven: The role of education in defending against forgetfulness

  • Chapter 7 pages 352 – 404

  • What is the purpose of education? 2012

Week eight:  Does everyone want democracy? How political philosophy drives foreign policy

  • Chapter 8 pages 405 – 456

  • Alexander Hamilton and American Foreign Policy, Holloway, Heritage Foundation, 2015

Week nine: Conservatism and religion

  • Chapter 9 Pages 457 -511

  • The Tragedy of Compassionate Conservatism, Pilbeam, Cambridge University, 2010

  • History of Inherent Contradictions: The Origins and End of American Conservatism, Kurth, American Conservatism, 2016.

Week ten: Is conservatism, as George Will knew it, dead?

  • Chapter 10 Pages 512 -538

  • Comprehending conservatism: a new framework for analysis, 

  • Muller, Journal of Political Ideologies October 2006

  • Conflict, Fusion or Coexistence? The Complexity of Contemporary American Conservatism, Zumbrunnen and Gangle, 2007.

Bibliography

The Conservative Sensibility, George F. Will, Hachette Books 2019

All listed articles to be distributed as PDFs.

The Quixotic History of Chemistry

Description

From a historical perspective, chemistry is probably the most neglected science.  In this SDG we will attempt to make up for that deficit.  We will explore the fascinating history of chemistry from its earliest philosophical roots and technical knowledge during the Greek period, through the Medieval alchemists attempting to produce gold, the early chemists (as we now think of the science) through the brilliant chemist Dmitri Mendeleyev, the creator of the Periodic Table.  Along the way, we will encounter numerous scientists and pseudo-scientists (known and not so well known), their interesting lives, their success and missteps along with an understanding of the derivation of the words that make up chemistry.  Definitely geared to the non-scientist, our engaging core book provides an easy to read 2,500 year history of chemistry.  At the conclusion of the SDG you should have a better knowledge and appreciation as to how chemistry got to where it is today.

Weekly Topics

  1. The Greeks and the beginning of Alchemy (Chapters 1 and 2)    

  2. The Dark Ages and Medieval times, Paracelsus  (Chapters 3 and 4)

  3. Copernicus, Bruno, Galileo, Descartes and Bacon (Chapters 5 and 6)

  4. Boyle, Newton, Van Helmont, and Scheele (Chapters 7 and 8)

  5. Phlogiston and the work of Becher, Stahl, Priestley, Cavendish and Lavoisier(Chapters 9 and 10)

  6. Dalton and the Atom, Chemistry in the late 18th and early 19th Century (Chapters 11 and 12)

  7. Mendeleyev and the development of the PeriodicTable (Chapters 13 and 14)

Bibliography

Strathern, Paul, Mendeleyev's Dream:  The Quest for the Elements, Thomas Dunne Books, 2001 

Additional Reading

Scerri, Eric, The Periodic Table:  Its story and Its Significance, 2nd Edition, Oxford University Press, 2019

From Darwin's Branched Tree to a Tangled Tree

Description

Darwin presented the evolution of life as branched like a tree. This idea has been upended by evolutionary biology through studying  life’s diversity and relatedness at the molecular level using DNA sequences. This reexamination of the history of all life has replaced Darwin's branching tree with a much more complex maze of branches.

In The Tangled Tree: A Radical New History of Life, David Quammen weaves together the stories of scientists and their genetic discoveries as they built a new view of the history of life that shows that DNA can be passed not between individuals but between species.

According to one reviewer, the book is “A masterful history of a new field of molecular biology . . . . [An] impressive account of perhaps the most unheralded scientific revolution of the 20th century. . . . A consistently engaging collection of vivid portraits of brilliant, driven, quarrelsome scientists in the process of dramatically altering the fundamentals of evolution, illuminated by the author's insightful commentary.” 

The book is well-written and the SDG should be a joy for those who are interested in new developments in evolutionary biology.

Weekly Topics

Week one- The Greeks and the beginning of Alchemy

Week two -The Dark Ages and Medieval times, Paracelsus

Week three - Copernicus, Bruno, Galileo, Descartes and Bacon

Week four - Boyle, Newton, Van Helmont, and Scheele

Week five - Phlogiston and the work of Becher, Stahl, Priestley, Cavendish and Lavoisier

Week six - Dalton and the Atom, Chemistry in the late 18th and early 19th Century

Week seven - Mendeleyev and the development of the PeriodicTable

Bibliography

Strathern, Paul, Mendeleyev's Dream:  The Quest for the Elements, Thomas Dunne Books, 2001 

Additional Reading

Scerri, Eric, The Periodic Table:  Its story and Its Significance, 2nd Edition, Oxford University Press, 2019

Leonardo at 500

Description

In the vast long history of “the arts”, one person stands out as the model of “The Renaissance Man”.  Leonardo da Vinci was a remarkable person of multiple interests and talents, as well as never ending ideas.  He was a sculptor, a painter, a scientist, a  designer of war machinery, a designer of fantastic celebrations, and a person who was always studying and recording his new ideas in journals which continue to amaze us. He was fascinated with the flight of birds, working toward the end goal of creating the possibility of flight for man. He was involved politically in the conflicts of his time, even as he created beautiful paintings and yet left other important commissions unfinished.      

At this point in human history, 500 years after his death, his art work and his ideas are still relevant and inspiring to us.

The Louvre museum in Paris, is a great repository of paintings and sculpture, where you will see a progression of wall signs and arrows directing you to arguably the world’s most famous painting:  Mona Lisa, a small painting by Leonardo. Arriving there you will see a huge crowd of people with their backs to the painting trying to take “selfies of themselves with the painting. However, in this SDG, you will learn that three other paintings by Leonardo, shown in the same room, are even more important than Mona Lisa. Be ready for an abundance of fascinating ideas as you study this intriguing man.

Weekly Topics

I THE BIRTH AND CHILDHOOD OF LEONARDO 1452-1464

II APPRENTICESHIP IN FLORENCE 1464-1482 AT THE WORKSHOP OF ANDREA DEL VERROCCHIO

III THE SFORZA COURT 1482-1499  SEVENTEEN YEARS IN MILAN

IV RETURN TO FLORENCE 1500-1506

V THE AFFAIRS OF WAR 1502-1506 SEERVICE TO CESARE BORGIA

VI RETURN TO MILAN 1506-1513

VII ROMAN HOLIDAY 1513-1516 THREE YEARS WITH GIOVANNI DE’ MEDICI

VIII IN THE FRENCH ROYAL COURT

IX AN OVERVIEW OF LEONARDO’S NOTEBOOK; A CLOSER STUDY OF HIS PAINTINGS

X COMPARING LEONARDO TO HIS CONTEMPONARIES.  

Bibliography

MAIN TEXT.   THE SDGWILL MOST CLOSELY FOLLOW THIS BOOK.

WALTER ISAACSON, LEONARDO DA VINCI. (Available in paperback $22.)

Supplemental Background Reading:

ROSS KING,

LEONARDO AND THE LAST SUPPER

GIORGIO VASARI,

THE LIVES OF THE MOST EXCELLEN PAINTERS, SCULPTORS AND ARCHITECTS

FRANK ZOLLNER,

LEONARDO DA VINCI: THE COMPLETE PAINTINGS

or other art brooks about Leonardo

TOBY LESTER,

DA VINCI’S GHOST: GENIUS, OBESSSION, AND HOW

LEONARDO CREATED THE WORLD IN HIS OWN IMAGE

JEAN-PIERRE ISBOUTS AND CHRISTOPHER HEATH BROWN, 

THE DA VINCI LEGACY

LAURO MARTINES, 

APRIL BLOOD, FLORENCE AND THE PLOT AGAINST THE MEDICI

STEPHANIE STOREY,

OIL AND MARBLE, A NOVEL OF LEONARDO AND MICHELANGELO

(light reading, but interesting as a picture of the times)

J. H. PLUMB

THE  ITALIAN RENAISSANCE

JOHN HOOPER

THE ITALIANS

TIM PARKS

MEDICI MONEY, BANKING, METAPHYSICS,  AND ART IN 15TH CENTURY FLORENCE 

WILLIAM E. WALLACE,

MICHELANGELO: THE ARTIST, THE MAN, AND HIS TIMES 

ROSS KING

MICHELANGELO AND THE POPE;S CEILING

BRUNELLESCHI’S DOME: HOW A RENAISSANCE GENIUS

REINVENTED ARCHITECTURE

Our Inner Ape

Description

This SDG takes its title from that of our core book by primatologist Frand de Waal.  This is science at its enjoyable best.  We learn about ourselves from looking in the mirror of our cousins’ eyes. De Waal writes about cooperation, conflict resolution, deception, altruism, fairness, and the evolutionary origins of morality.  He’s the director of the Yerkes National Primate Research Center at Emory University in Georgia.  He  has spent years observing and interacting on a daily basis with both bonobos and chimpanzees, our two closest relatives.  He provides us many anecdotes and insights from those years of personal involvement.

Weekly Topics

Week 1.  Apes in the Family   This topic will concern the evolutionary origins and relatedness of the different species of apes, including humans.  Behavior as well as physical characteristics are examined. 

 Week 2    Power     Dominance and submission and the formation of social  hierarchies are the topic.

 Week 3. Sex    Will look at the role of sex, not just for reproduction, but also  it’s roll in bonding and social hierarchies.

Week 4    Violence    This week will study the role of violence in primate societies.  Chimpanzees and bonobos are contrasted with each other and with humans. 

 Week 5.   Kindness     The role of kindness, empathy, and food sharing in  facilitating social bonding in  primate species and humans is the focus this week.

 Week 6    The Bipolar Ape    This chapter  title refers to humans and their innate bipolarity.  Humans are both aggressive and kind, prone to both fairness and deception.  The roots of human bipolarity are explored in an evolutionary context. 

 Week 7    This week we will explore how de Waal’s research and ideas have been accepted or rejected by others.  De Waal has been influential in his long career.  He has attacked the long prevalent view of humans as killer apes.  He nuances it, emphasizing both the  empathic and violent sides of our nature.  Other researchers readily adopt many of de Waal’s ideas and concepts. A case in point would be Steven Pinker. 

Bibliography

Our Inner Ape  by Franz de Waal, 2006

The Fight for the Soul of Quantum Physics

Description

When we hear the words "Quantum Physics" many of us I mmediately change the subject.  It just seems too obscure and difficult to comprehend. Yet, every day we rely on quantum physics for it allowed scientists to create what powers our world:  the silicon transistors and LEDs in you smartphones; nuclear reactors; the lasers that scan your food in the supermarket. Although you may not realize it, the development of quantum physics is one of science's greatest achievements and made our modern life possible. 

Most of us will never understand the mathematics that is foundation of quantum physics. If you ask a room full of physicists to explain quantum physics, you may start a street fight; even they find it confusing and weird. That does not meant that we aren't curious about it and interested in understanding it. 

Adam Becker gives us such an opportunity. His book, What is Real?: The Unfinished Quest For the Meaning of Quantum Physics, sketches the historical development of quantum mechanics and introduces us to the fascinating story of how physicists have tried (and fought with one another) to explain this area of physics. Perhaps the most famous brawl of all was the debate between Einstein and Bohr where Bohr's "Copenhagen interpretation" carried the day. That did not, however, silence the debate, and Becker introduces us to a fascinating cast of rebels who have dared to challenge the Copenhagen interpretation ever since. Becker places this story in the context the interactions between physics, politics, and culture throughout the 20th century. 

Becker's monograph is highly readable and accessible to scientists and non-scientists alike. He explains the concepts, including  Schrödinger’s infamous cat, that have divided physicists in understandable language that does not require familiarity with quantum physics.  This should be a fascinating SDG for PLATO members.

Weekly Topics

Week 1 - A Measure of All Things

Week 2 - Something Rotten in the Eigenstate of Denmark

Week 3 - Street Brawl

Week 4 - Copenhagen in Manhattan

Week 5 - Physics in Exile 

Week 6 - It Came from Another World 

Week 7 - The Most Profound Discovery of Science

Week 8 - More Things in Heaven and Earth 

Week 9 - Reality Underground

Week 10 - Quantum Spring

Week 11 - Copenhagen versus the Universe

Week 12 - Outrageous Fortune 

Bibliography

Adam Becker, What is Real?: The Unfinished Quest For the Meaning of Quantum Physics, 2018. 

The World is Getting Better: Factfulness and Enlightenment Now

Description

From watching, listening to, and reading about the daily news, it is easy to conclude that the world is going to hell in a handbasket.  But it isn’t.  The purpose of this S/DG is to show that the first part of its title, The World is Getting Better, is true by studying the information presented in the two books in the second part its title: Factfulness and Enlightenment Now.

The subtitle of Hans Rosling’s Factfulness is Ten Reasons We’re Wrong About the World—and Why Things Are Better Than You Think.  He calls the reasons Instincts that we all have and devotes a chapter to each.  The ten are The Gap Instinct, The Negativity Instinct, The Straight Line Instinct, The Fear Instinct, The Size Instinct, The Generalization Instinct, The Destiny Instinct, The Single Perspective Instinct, The Blame Instinct, and The Urgency Instinct.  In each chapter Rosling shows us how following that instinct can lead us to think incorrectly about the world, with many examples.  

As the title of the book implies, Rosling gives us facts that show us that we must put aside these instincts—and that we will then see that the world is indeed getting better.  In the chapter on The Negativity Instinct, for one, Rosling presents sixteen graphs on Bad Things Decreasing, including Children Dying, Plane Crash Deaths, and HIV Infections, as well as sixteen more on Good Things Increasing, including Girls in School, Immunization, and Democracy.

Rosling, working with his son, Ola Rosling, and his daughter-in-law, Anna Rosling Rönnlund, has developed unique ways of presenting data that make it easy for the reader to understand the essence of the numbers and ideas involved.

The subtitle of Steven Pinker’s Enlightenment Now is The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress.  The new book is a logical continuation of his well-received 2011 book, The Better Angels of Our Nature.  

Enlightenment Now is divided into three unequal parts.  After a brief discussion on what Enlightenment is, the heart of the book is seventeen chapters on Progress in which Pinker shows, with great amounts of data displayed in dozens of charts and graphs along with extensive commentary, the gains that have been made over the years.  The titles of chapters five through sixteen are, Life, Health, Sustenance, Wealth, Inequality, The Environment, Peace, Safety, Terrorism, Democracy, Equal Rights, and Knowledge.

The book concludes with substantial chapters, separately, on Reason, Science, and Humanism.

Do not worry that books with such emphasis on facts will not give us ample basis for discussion.  Just looking at the chapter titles of each book should reassure you that we will have plenty to talk about.

The books are complementary.  Although they often present similar data and come to similar conclusions, the commentary and methods of display are so different that you will find both valuable.

Both books were published in 2018, ensuring that the data they present are up to date.  Together the two books are about seven hundred pages.

About The Better Angels of Our Nature, Bill Gates said, “One of the most important books I’ve read—not just this year, but ever.”  He has topped that assessment with what he says about Enlightenment Now, calling it, “My new favorite book of all time.”  And he likes Factfulness just about as well, calling it, “One of the most important books I’ve ever read—an indispensable guide to thinking clearly about the world.”

Weekly Topics

The first five weeks are from Factfulness.
1.  Introduction and Chapter 1
2.  Chapters 2 and 3
3.  Chapters 4 and 5
4.  Chapters 6, 7, and 8
5.  Chapters 9, 10, and 11.

The final nine weeks are from Enlightenment Now.
6.  Chapters 1 through 4
7.  Chapters 5 through 8
8.  Chapters 9 and 10
9.  Chapters 11, 12, and 13
10.  Chapters 14, 15, and 16
11.  Chapters 17 and 18
12.  Chapters 19 and 20
13.  Chapters 21 and 22
14.  Chapter 23.

Bibliography

Factfulness.  Hans Rosling with Ola Rosling and Anna Rosling Ronnlund.  2018

Enlightment Now.  Steven Pinker.  2018.