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The second crucial component for Modeling Interdisciplinary
Inquiry is a seminar run collaboratively by the postdoctoral
fellows in the spring semester. That collaboration will be
enriched by the multiple conversations among postdoctoral
fellows and by their colloquy with mentors and other faculty
involved in the postdoctoral program. The aim of the Theory
and Methods seminar is to raise questions and address problems
that face all of us involved in interdisciplinary research
and teaching. These questions will rise out of particular
research problems and teaching experiences, but our aim is
to generalize these issues so that the postdoctoral fellows
and our own graduate students might join together in addressing
such problems as the evolution of academic disciplines or
the nature of historical methods. Core readings in theory
and methods provide some of the common ground for each seminar;
but discussion of current and on-going projects will allow
the interrogation of such widely shared concerns as the nature
of evidence, the problems of language in a post-deconstructive
world, and the role of theory in guiding empirical research.
Our own experience in the Theory and Methods seminars of the
Literature & History Program, the American Culture Studies
Program, the Women and Gender Studies Program, and in the
Mellon Dissertation Seminars, which have balanced theoretical
discussion with case study, is valuable in guiding the initial
formation of the Theory and Methods Seminar for the Modeling
Interdisciplinary Inquiry. Inevitably this seminar will take
on a life of its own informed by the research interests and
teaching experience of the individual members of the seminar.
Running
such a seminar is a challenging and important experience for
the postdoctoral fellows and invaluable for our own graduate
students who join in this effort. There has been much discussion
of the role of theory in contemporary literary and cultural
studies programs both on this campus and in other universities,
and there have been individual efforts to join in that discussion
-- in German, in Literature & History, and in Women and
Gender Studies -- but there has been no sustained effort at
Washington University to have our graduate students address
the issues of theory and method as a group and across the
humanities and the social sciences. The Theory and Methods
Seminar will provide such an occasion both for the postdoctoral
fellows and for our own graduate students and faculty.
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