The Century of the Gene – Fall 2006

STSH 2410

 

Prof. Michael Fortun                                                                 Meeting Times: M, R 10-12

Sage 5112                                                                                    Place: Low 3112

X6598

Office Hours: M, R 4-5; also by appointment.

fortum@rpi.edu

 

This syllabus is subject to change; the most recent version (with hyperlinks) can always be found at www.rpi.edu/~fortum.

 

This course details the scientific and social history of genetics, from Darwin and Mendel to the Human Genome Project.   Special focus areas include: plant and animal breeding in the early twentieth century; eugenics movements in the U.S. and elsewhere; bacterial and fruit fly genetics; the development of molecular biology; the invention of recombinant-DNA technologies; the emergence of the biotechnology industry; the sociobiology controversies; genetics and evolutionary theory; and the Human Genome Project and contemporary genomics.

 

By the end of this course you will:

 

 

Course Requirements and Grading

 

You will be graded on a straight grading scale, i.e.: A 90-100, B 80-89, C 70-79, D 60-69

 

Your final grade will be determined as a combination of class attendance and participation, three brief in-class exams and three short writing assignments.  There is no final exam, and there is no extra credit option – there is no substitute for being present in mind and body and engaging actively with the course materials.

 

Each class session will consist of some combination of lecture, discussion of the assigned readings, and occasionally a video on that week’s topic. 

 

Class attendance and participation (20%):

 

You should attend every class, coming to each meeting with the readings you have completed along with your notes, and you should contribute regularly to class discussions.  I reserve the right to deduct points if you establish a pattern of lateness, silence or non-participation, or unexcused absence.

 

You cannot earn an A with more than 2 unexcused absences.  To get an excused absence, you must present an official university excuse or do work comparable to attendance by writing an additional reading response paper (see next section) that critically examines all readings discussed while you were absent.  No more than two excused absences will be permitted.

 

And each week, EVERYONE SHOULD submit ONE QUESTION BY MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAY, by email to me. I will try to address some of the questions (anonymously) in class, but won’t have the time or knowledge to answer all of them; the main point in any case is to RAISE the question.  As we know from science, few things are more important than being able to look at a situation and ask a good question, even if it would take an entire career to answer it.   As you do the readings, you should not have a problem coming up with something that puzzles you, confuses you, or simply makes you wonder about something.  It might be about a person, an argument made by an author, other things that were happening at a particular historical moment, or how a past event resonates with a current event or trend, or whatever else the course material made you curious about. It doesn’t have to be long, and it doesn’t have to contain exact quotes (although these are always good.) BUT YOUR EMAIL MUST DO 3 THINGS:

  1. Refer directly to one of the readings, videos, or lectures.  Your questioning should be grounded in the material (not, e.g., “I was watching South Park last night, and it was the one where Kenny was on life support, and it made me think of the Nazis and…”).
  2. Actually frame a question, and one that does not simply ask for my opinion (“Would you have pulled the plug on Kenny?”)
  3. It must be sent by MIDNIGHT WEDNESDAY.

 

These questions will not be graded, and you are NOT REQUIRED to submit one each week, but you will receive either a 0 or 1 that will count toward your class participation grade.  If you do not submit a question for a particular week, if it arrives late, or if I judge it to be a non-serious effort, you receive a zero for that week; otherwise you receive a 1, toward a possible total of 14 for the semester. Sustaining a pattern of thoughtful questions can do a lot, from making up for shyness in discussion to putting you over a borderline grade.

 

Three short writing assignments (40%): These 3-5 page essays (typed, double-spaced) are due in class as indicated in the syllabus. Email your papers to me.  Unless you have an excused absence, late papers will not be accepted and you will receive a 0.  The assignment will be distributed a week before the date it is due, or earlier when appropriate or possible.  If you have to miss class, you are responsible for getting the assignment from a friend or from the folder which will be posted on my office door.  The assignment may pertain to the course readings, videos, or related web sites; more specific guidelines and requirements will be provided for each paper.  You will be graded on both content as well as mechanics (grammar, syntax, organization, etc.).

 

Three in-class exams (40%): These brief (30-40 minutes) exams will be distributed throughout the semester as indicated in the syllabus.  They are a mix of multiple choice questions, short answers, identifications, and such. If you engage seriously with the course materials, take notes, and engage in class discussions, you should do well on the exams.  If you have to miss an exam through an excused absence, you may be given a make-up writing assignment rather than a make-up exam.

 

 

 

Academic Dishonesty Policy

 

You should read the Rensselaer Handbook of Student Rights and Responsibilities so that you understand all the acts that constitute a violation of the Institute’s academic dishonesty policy.  Plagiarism is the most frequent violation, sometimes because students are unfamiliar with what constitutes plagiarism.  You should read the brief but thorough description found at Indiana University's plagiarism page (http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html).

 

I have a policy of zero tolerance for plagiarism or any other act of academic dishonesty.  If you commit any such act, you will – at minimum – receive an F for that assignment and be subject to RPI’s judicial process.  Failure of the entire course is also within my rights as instructor.

 

TEXTS

 

The following texts should be purchased in the RPI bookstore:

Evelyn Fox Keller, The Century of the Gene

Simon Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf

Diane Paul, Controlling Human Heredity: 1865 to the present

James Watson, The Double Helix

 

WEEK 1

 

Aug 28 Introduction

               VIDEO on Darwin and evolutionary theory (Part 1)

 

Aug 31 Humans and Animals, God and Nature

VIDEO on Darwin and evolutionary theory (Part 2)

 

WEEK 2

Sep 4 No class

 

Sep 7 When Cousins Kiss: Darwin, Galton, and “Regression to the Mean”

READ:  Paul, Controlling Human Heredity, Chap. 2, “Evolutionary Anxieties,” pp. 22-39.

Simon Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 1-39

               READ: Francis Galton, The Possible Improvement of the Human Breed Under the Existing Conditions of Law and Sentiment, Nature 64 (1901), 659-665.

 

 

WEEK 3

 

Sep 11 Mendel and Pisum: Hybridizing and the Business of Breeding

 

READ:  Jan Sapp, "The Nine Lives of Gregor Mendel," at MendelWeb

Diane Paul and Barbara Kimmelman, "Mendel in America: Theory and Practice, 1900-1919", at MendelWeb

 

SKIM:   Daniel Hartl and Vitezslav Orel, "What Did Gregor Mendel Think He Discovered?", at MendelWeb

Sep 14 Morgan and Drosophila: Splitting Embryology and Genetics

 

READ: Keller, The Century of the Gene, pp. 1-20.

               Eric R. Kandel, Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia University

T.H. Morgan, "What Are 'Factors' in Mendelian Explanations?", American Breeders Association Reports 5: 365-368

 

 

WEEK 4

 

Sep 18 Genetics and Eugenics in the U.S.

 

READ: Paul, Controlling Human Heredity, Chaps. 1, 3, and 4, pp. 1-21, 40-71

 

Sep 21 Genetics and Eugenics in the U.S. (cont.)

VIDEO: Homo Sapiens 1900

 

READ   Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 40-98

 

 

WEEK 5

 

Sep 25 Genetics and Eugenics in the U.S. (cont.)

                              PAPER #1 DUE IN CLASS

 

 

Sep 28 Abyss: Racial Hygiene in Germany

 

READ:  Paul, Controlling Human Heredity, Chaps. 5-6, pp. 72-114

 

WEEK 6

 

Oct 2 Corn Girls

EXAM #1

 

READ: Barbara McClintock and the Jumping Genes

               The Barbara McClintock Papers

 

 

Oct 5    Fly Boys

 

READ: Edward B. Lewis, Thomas Hunt Morgan and his Legacy

Start reading Watson, The Double Helix)

 

 

WEEK 7

 

Oct 10 How Genetics Became Molecular (TUESDAY MEETING!!)

 

READ:  Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 99-135

               Continue reading Watson, The Double Helix

 

Oct 12 How Genetics Became Molecular

 

READ: The One Gene/One Enzyme Hypothesis

Keller, The Century of the Gene, pp. 21-87

               Brenda Maddox, "Before Watson and Crick"

 

WEEK 8

 

Oct 16

 

Oct 19 VIDEO: The Double Helix

 

READ: READ:  Rosalind Elsie Franklin: Pioneer Molecular Biologist

               Ann Piper, "Light on a Dark Lady," Trends in Biochemical Sciences 23:151-154

               Lynne Elkin, "Defending Franklin's Legacy"

               Finish Watson, The Double Helix (main text,  to p. 103)

 


[Oct 20 is last day to drop a course.]



WEEK 9

 

Oct 23 Honest Jim?

 

READ: In The Double Helix book: Mary Ellman, “The Scientist Tells” (pp. 187-191); Robert L. Sinsheimer, The Double Helix (pp. 191-194); Max Perutz, M.H.F. Wilkins, and James D. Watson, “Three Letters to the Editor of Science” (pp. 207-212); and Andre Lwoff, “Truth, Truth, What is Truth (About How the Structure of DNA Was Discovered)?” (pp. 225-234)

Brian Hayes, The Invention of the Genetic Code, American Scientist (Jan.-Feb. 1998)

 

Oct. 26 A Different Kind of Race

 

READ: Interview with Steven J. Gould

               Interview with Evelynn Hammonds

 

Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 136-168

 

WEEK 10

 

Oct 30 Sociobiology

               PAPER #2 DUE IN CLASS

 

READ:  Wikipedia entry on Sociobiology

C. George Boeree, Sociobiology

E.O. Wilson,  Science and ideology, Academic Questions 8 (1995)Tom Bethell, Against Sociobiology, First Things 109 (January 2001)

Val Dusek, SOCIOBIOLOGY SANITIZED: THE EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY AND GENIC SELECTIONISM DEBATES

 

 

Nov 2 Sociobiology (cont.)

 

 

WEEK 11

              

Nov 6 Engineering Genetic Engineering

EXAM #2

 

READ:  Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 169-208

               The Recombinant DNA Debate

Marcia Barinaga, "Asilomar revisited," Science 287:1584-1585.

               PaulBerg, "Asilomar and Recombinant DNA"

 

Nov 9    Jumpstarting the Biotech Industry

 

READ:  Sally Smith Hughes, “Making Dollars Out of DNA,” Isis 92 (2001): 541-575

 

WEEK 12

 

Nov 13The Human Genome Project

 

READ:  Leslie Roberts, "Controversial from the Start," Science 291 (5507): 1182a

Robert M. Cook-Deegan, Origins of the Human Genome Project, Risk 5 (1994).

 

Nov 16 The Human Genome Project (cont.)

 

READ:  TBA

 

WEEK 13  Case Studies in Contemporary Genetics

 

Nov 20  More or Less “Simple” Conditions

 

READ: Rayna Rapp, “Refusing Prenatal Diagnosis: The Meanings of Bioscience in a Multicultural World,” Science, Technology and Human Values 23:1 (Winter 1998): 45-70

Cystic Fibrosis: What is it?

Sickle Cell Anemia: What is it?

Huntington Disease : What is it?

 

WEEK 14

Nov 27 Less or More “Complex” Conditions

 

READ:

Joseph McInerny, Genes and Behavior: A Complex Relationship, Judicature November-December 1999  Vol 83(3)

Mark Rothstein, The Impact of Behavioral Genetics on the Law and the Courts, Judicature November-December 1999  Vol 83(3)

 

Optional Reading:

D. Wahlsten, Single Gene Influences on Brain and Behavior, Annual Review of Psychology 50 (1999):599-624

 

Nov 30 Mendel’s Dwarf

               PAPER #3 DUE IN CLASS

 

READ: Mawer, Mendel’s Dwarf, pp. 240-end

 

 

WEEK 15

 

Dec 5  Genetic Revisions

               EXAM #3

 

READ: Keller, The Century of the Gene, pp. 87-148

Steven Rose, The Biology of the Future and the Future of Biology, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 44.4 (2001):473-484.

Matt Ridley, "The Genome Changes Everything"

 

 

Dec 8 Post-Genomics: Toxicogenomics

 

READ: Kim Fortun and Mike Fortun, “Scientific Imaginaries and Ethical Plateaus in Contemporary U.S.  Toxicology,” American Anthropologist 107(1):43-54. March 2005.