COMM 3000: Issues in Communication: Rhetorics of Public and Personal Memory
3 Credit Hours
Restricted to students with 57-180 credits (Juniors or Seniors)
May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours on different issues
Recommended prerequisites: COMM 1210 and COMM 1600
This course explores the rhetoric of public and personal memory with particular attention paid to violent and traumatic memories. The course will be oriented around three distinct nodes: memory as rhetorically constructed; how public memory is intertwined with personal memory; rhetorics of repair and reconciliation.
First, a rhetorical perspective highlights how the past is not simply given but rather is constructed, framed, selected, performed, disseminated and received. This course will do a deep dive into the memories that are recognized as “public” and, conversely, those memories that are “forgotten,” either by being erased outright or else distorted for public consumption. Second, public and collective memories also often shape personal memories. Therefore, this course will also examine how personal memories in turn are constructed and are inextricably intertwined with public memories. Finally, this course will then turn to questions of how we ought to respond to histories of violence and trauma. What are the tensions between truth and justice, détente and reconciliation? What forms of repair have been advanced to engage with the past? This course will prove helpful to students in thinking deeply and collectively about history, violence, conflict, community, leadership, teamwork and reconciliation.
Learning Objectives
- Describe what’s at stake in the study of public memory;
- Identify and apply theoretical approaches to the study of public memory;
- Demonstrate how personal memory is intertwined with social structures through evocative, richly observed prose;
- Critically evaluate manifestations of public memory such as memorials, monuments and museums.
In this course, you will
Partake in an experiential learning activity where you will visit a museum, monument or memorial and reflect on collective memory;
Be assigned a peer with whom you will explore the challenges as well as opportunities for coming to terms with the past;
Participate in a group project in which you will be invited to creatively design a public memory project;
Be given an opportunity to interview your family members and friends to learn about your history.
Omedi Ochieng
Dr. Omedi Ochieng specializes in rhetorical theory and criticism. He is the author of two books: "Groundwork for the Practice of the Good Life: Politics and Ethics at the Intersection of North Atlantic and African Philosophy" (Routledge: 2017) and "The Intellectual Imagination: Knowledge and Aesthetics in North Atlantic and African Philosophy" (University of Notre Dame Press: 2018). He has over a decade of experience teaching at many institutions of higher education across three continents (Africa, Europe and North America). Above all, he appreciates the opportunity to share ideas and learn from his students and colleagues.