管家婆免费开奖大全

From Nutella to Nintendo: 管家婆免费开奖大全 course delves into history of everyday consumer items

Photo of Nutella on a spoon
A second-year history course offered over the summer semester at 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga asks students to research a single product 鈥 like Nutella 鈥 to better understand how capitalist ideas apply to objects they use every day (photo via Freepik)

A summer history course at 管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga is challenging students to consider how everyday products fit into capitalist culture.

The History of Capitalism is a second-year history course taught by sessional instructor Dan Guadagnolo over the summer semester. He takes a creative approach to the class鈥檚 term project, asking students to research a single product to better understand how capitalist ideas 鈥 like production, labour and the commodity chain 鈥 apply to an object they use every day.

鈥淚n recent years, history departments have developed 鈥榦bject-based classes鈥 where students write local histories through found objects in their communities," Guadagnolo says. "In this course, students were tasked with picking a commodity with a personal and intimate connection to their lives, and then writing their own history through it.鈥

Historical studies student Celeste Tyndall, who took the course during the spring semester, focused on Nutella, the popular chocolate-hazelnut spread that was an essential part of her mother鈥檚 childhood. 

鈥淢y mom is Italian and remembers being teased as a child for bringing a chocolate sandwich to school,鈥 Tyndall says. 鈥淚 wanted to talk about how Nutella was part of the Italian immigration identity, and how it changed to become a global product. I learned that Nutella carries a lot of meaning for different people, from the way the product is marketed as a nostalgic product to individual feelings about the product.

鈥淩eading personal testimonials was the most interesting part of the project. Nutella is a big piece of people鈥檚 identity.鈥

Tyndall鈥檚 classmates, meantime, studied the histories of vegan Dr. Martens shoes; Fiji Water, a 2011 Nintendo Game Boy and the Yamaha guitar a student played in his church group.  

鈥淔or many students, this might be their first big research project,鈥 Guadagnolo says. 鈥淭his assignment really gets them to think about these commodities 鈥 which constitute part of who we are, and in the most intimate way 鈥  and how little we know about them and the history contained in them. This helps them to locate themselves in capitalism, not just as a huge concept but in the mundane choices they make every day.鈥

The student historians created and answered 30 specific questions about their chosen commodity, considering and identifying materials used to make the products, as well as different labour regimes and how something that might have started as a small family business grew into a global brand and commodity. 

鈥淭his was the most challenging part of the project because of the research that went into it, but it鈥檚 also the part I鈥檓 most proud of,鈥 says Tyndall, whose research on Nutella ranged from environmental impact data to fan testimonials.

鈥淪o much information doesn鈥檛 make the final cut. This course showed the research process in a realistic way 鈥 we had to find our own directions, and choose what story we wanted to tell.鈥

鈥淲hen you are a historian, you can learn a lot about a tiny sliver of the universe,鈥 Guadagnolo says. 鈥淚 want to help students understand the debates and tensions we're facing today in contemporary economics, and address larger questions about capitalism and society.鈥

Tyndall, who is going into her third year of undergraduate studies in the fall, says the course taught her important lessons about the research process.

鈥淭his was my first major research project that wasn鈥檛 a traditional essay,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 could see how real research in the field of history might take you in a lot of directions, and what being a historian could lead to.鈥

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管家婆免费开奖大全 Mississauga