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Author Archives: Paul Fess
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Introduction Blog Post Assignment
Take some time to introduce yourself. What are your interests? What is your major? What kinds of things do you like to read and write? Include pictures or other multimedia elements if you want to.
Newsletter Week 11
Hi all,
As I was grading the last blog post assignment, I noticed many of you are behind in the work for the course. This has been a trying semester, and it has likely gotten more challenging for you as the coronavirus numbers creep up and New York has faced and continues to face more cancelations and closures, most notably the closure of public schools.
You can finish the course despite these challenges, and as we enter the end of the semester, I want to make the workload lighter to help you do this.
In the final weeks of the semester, I would like you to focus on four areas:
- Finish any incomplete work
- Complete Paper 2 by 12/04
- Short response to the DuBois reading. For this assignment, I would like you to revise and expand your response to question #1 on Blog Post 8.You should expand your response to this question to about 400-500 words. The new due date for this assignment is 12/07. Upload your response to Blackboard.
- Optional: revise Paper 1 for a better grade. (Upload your new draft to Blackboard in Assignments “Optional Paper Revision.”)
Finally, I would like to schedule a meeting with each of you individually. Please go to this Google Doc and sign up for one 15-minute time slot. (If you cannot find a time to fit your schedule please email me and we can work something out.)
Let me know if you have any questions.
All best,
PF
Week 10 Newsletter
Hi all,
Many of you have likely heard that cases of the virus are growing rapidly and people are discussing various kinds of closures including the possibility that the school system will close again. I know that many of you are greatly impacted by these measures because they affect your jobs and your family members.
I want you to know that I am here to work with you. We are very close to the end of the semester, and I would really hate to see you not complete the course because of new coronavirus measures. Please let me know if there is any way I can help if you are struggling. We should be heartened that there has been progress made with vaccines, and I would love it if you emerged from this crisis well on your way to completing your degree despite the challenges we’ve been presented with this year.
Please contact me if you need to catch up on assignments or if you are confused about the upcoming work. I’ve also scaled back the reading a bit to help with the work load.
Don’t forget to review the second paper assignment.
Completed Work
- Part 1:
- Read: They Say/I Say, “Chapter 6: Planting a Naysayer in Your Text”
- Watch: Screencast
- Part 2:
- Listen: Ways of Hearing, “Episode 5: Power”
- Respond: Blog post #7
Upcoming Work
- Read: The Souls of Black Folk, “The Sorrow Songs,” by W.E.B. DuBois
- Listen: Du Bois “Sorrow Songs” playlist
- Respond: Blog Post #8
Blog Post #8
- According to Du Bois, what is the significance of what he calls the “sorrow songs” to African-American history and culture?
- Which of the songs featured in this chapter us the most significant, in your opinion, and why? (Check out the Spotify playlist if you are not familiar with them.)
Week 9 Newsletter
Hi All
We are now in the last third of what has been a semester of very hard work coupled with juggling new challenges we couldn’t have imagined facing a year ago. I hope you have had a chance to catch your breath a bit last week before the final push.
General Announcements & Events
- I have finished grading the essays. Please let me know if you’d like to revise yours for a better grade.
- I have also posted the assignment for Paper 2
Upcoming Work
- Part 1:
- Part 2:
- Listen: Ways of Hearing, “Episode 5: Power”
- Respond: Blog post #7
Paper 2
Blog Post #7
At the beginning of the “Power” episode, Damon Krukowski asserts, “the marginal-the rejected-the repressed-is whatever the powerful have decided is of no use at the moment.” He goes on to ask, “But might it [the marginal-the rejected-the repressed] not be a key to alternate approaches-to art, to society-to power itself?” (“Marginalized” is an adjective that describes a person, group, or concept that is treated as insignificant or peripheral.) What is he trying to get at with this question? How does music indicate the differences between the powerful and the marginalized?
Week 7 Newsletter
Hi all,
I have started grading your papers, and you should be seeing your grades in Blackboard soon. You can find a video that shows you how to check your feedback in Blackboard in the tutorial videos section of the site. You do have the opportunity to revise your paper, but this is not required. Keep in mind that the course syllabus contains a revision policy. Please follow these steps if you would like to revise your paper.
General Announcements and Events
- Registration for Fall II and Spring I is open!
- You will find information about an upcoming film event on the Events & Opportunities section of the site. Writing about this event could be a possible opportunity to earn bonus points. Contact me if you’re interested.
Completed Work
-
- Part 1:
- Part 2:
- Listen: Ways of Hearing, “Episode 2: Space” (This link will take you to the homepage for the entire show. For this week, you only need to listen to “Episode 2: Space.” You can also find this podcast on other platforms such as Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc.)
- Read: “The Soundscape” by R. Murray Schafer
- Watch: Screencast
- Respond: Blog post #5
- Optional Listening:
- Below you will find a list of some clips and one essay that deal with the ways the coronavirus pandemic has changed the soundscape of NYC. These are optional.
- The sounds of pandemic New York:
- “We clap because we care: New Yorkers applaud coronavirus frontline workers”
- “Jimi Hendrix tribute during NYC’s 7 o’clock cheer”
- “Alone in the City of Sirens,” The New Republic, April 10, 2020
- “Blue Angels and Thunderbirds flyover New York City to Honor Frontline Workers”
- “Missing Sounds of New York: An Auditory Love Letter to New Yorkers,” New York Public Library
Upcoming work
- Listen:
- Read:
- “How A.S.M.R. Became a Sensation” New York Times April 4 2019 by Jamie Lauren Keiles
- Watch:
- Respond: