Sunday, December 14, 2008

Fanon 2 p.m. Discussion Review

So, a request for Fanon notes inspired me to figure out a way to post the Fanon discussion last week onto the blog. At first, I thought posting audio to the blog would be utterly impossible because there was all this jargon involved about embedding, widgets, hosting, showing link fields, and enclosures. Yikes, I thought. But alas, I tried and herein I offer you, the disciples of theory, Mike's 2 p.m. discussion on Fanon, for your hearing pleasure. Just click on the title to this post to access and plug in the following info:

Email/User Name: benzium2000@yahoo.com
Password: theoryrocks

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Questions about the Final

For those of you who didn't get a chance to go to the final review session(s) or for those who need additional clarification(s) about the final in general, please feel free to post questions or comments. There are so many people who have given amazingly good ideas in the review sessions; certainly a similar shared wealth of insightfulness generated on the blog will help us all, a blog community for itself.

Lenin Meets the Simpsons



Soviet Union - video powered by Metacafe

"Must crush capitalism. Errr."

Monday, December 8, 2008

Mike's Office Hours This Week

Tues: 5:10 to ? (sign-up), 364 Barrows
Wed: 3:10 to ? (sign up), Milano
Thurs: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., 420 Barrows
Fri: 1-2, drop-in, Milano

Friday, December 5, 2008

From Burawoy:

Dear All, The two review sessions will, be held in 3 LeConte

Thursday, December 11, 2008, 3.30-5.00p.m.
Friday, December 12, 2008, 3.30p.m.-5.00p.m.

THERE WILL BE NO LECTURE, BRING QUESTIONS
Michael Burawoy

Thursday, December 4, 2008

SNL: A War of Position Interception.

Huffington: A War of Position Move?

BUSA-Sponsored Study Group Meeting

The Berkeley Undergraduate Sociology Association will sponsor a study group meeting to discuss the SOC 101A Final on Tuesday, Dec. 9 from 6-7 p.m. in Barrows 420. If you attended the SOC 101A Midterm group meeting earlier this semester, you'd probably attest that more than 50 minds brooding over an exam equals some really good ideas.