Undergraduate students should not just study political theory. They
should theorize. Writing-intensive political theory courses can help them
do so sooner. By preparing an original political vision, a utopia or a
dystopia, throughout the course of the semester, students read and compare
the texts of the course against their own emerging texts and move into
more critical and systematic political analysis. As a political theorist,
my focus is not so much on utopias or dystopias as a subject of study
per se, but on tapping into the creative freedom, critical
distance, and hard-hitting insights of these traditions while teaching
writing. I take seriously Berlin's above-stated concern for the
“place and mode of operation” conveyed to the student through
the process of learning to write. Visionary writing accelerates
students' appreciation of the complexity of another's theory,
but also of their own standpoint and capacity for agency and judgment.Khristina Haddad is assistant professor,
department of political science, Moravian College. She teaches a
writing-intensive course on visionary political writing and is affiliated
with German Studies and Women's Studies. Her research interests
include politics of time and temporality, Hannah Arendt, political action,
fear, feminist theory, women's studies, and, in particular, the
politics of women's health.I
am greatly indebted to friends and colleagues who helped me along at
various stages including (in alphabetical order) Robert Humanick, Eleanor
Linn, Bob Mayer, Karla Morales, Laurie Naranch, Gary Olson, Miguelina
Ortiz, Martha Reid, Joanna Vecchiarelli Scott, Lyman Tower Sargent, Joel
Wingard, and Elizabeth Wingrove. Thanks go also to all those whose
dedicated work inspires student writers and teachers of writing at the
Gayle Morris Sweetland Writing Center at the University of Michigan, to
helpful commentators at the Society for Utopian Studies' Annual
Meeting in Toronto, to two anonymous reviewers at PS, and to
three groups of students who shared their visions with me.