May 17, 2024  
2014-2015 Academic Catalog 
    
2014-2015 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Search


 

 

General Literary Studies

  
  • GLS 291 - Perspectives in 20th-Century Central and Eastern European Literature

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    See RES 291 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
  
  • GLS 303 - Studies in Drama I

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    See THD 303 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available.
  
  • GLS 304 - Studies in Drama II

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    See THD 304 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available.
  
  • GLS 346 - Studies in Modern Prose

    4 credits (Fall)
    See ENG 346 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
  
  • GLS 349 - Medieval Literature

    4 credits (Fall)
    See ENG 349 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.

German

  
  • GRM 101 - Introductory German

    5 credits (Fall)
    Acquisition of German language skills through listening, speaking, reading, and study of grammar. Students will develop communication skills such as the ability to talk about themselves and their interests. Practice of oral skills with a native German-speaking assistant.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 102 - Continuing German

    5 credits (Spring)
    Continuation and completion of oral-aural study of grammatical structures. Increased emphasis on developing oral fluency. Introduction to the literature and culture of Germany through reading and analysis of modern short stories and expository prose. Practice of oral skills with a native German-speaking assistant.

    Prerequisite: GRM 101 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 121 - Accelerated German

    5 credits (Spring)
    Intensive oral/aural study of German and focus on developing proficiency. This course is the equivalent of   and GRM 102 . Designed for students who want to progress quickly in their German. Not open to students who have taken GRM 102 .

    Prerequisite: Placement by department, based on previous exposure to German or prior study of another foreign language.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 212 - German Conversation

    1 credits (Fall and Spring)
    Focus on development of conversation skills. Discussion based on a variety of cultural topics. May be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite: GRM 102 .
    Note: Does not count toward major. S/D/F only.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 221 - Intermediate German I

    4 credits (Fall)
    Review of selected topics in German grammar, accompanied and followed by continued practice in speaking, reading, and writing.

    Prerequisite: GRM 102 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 222 - Intermediate German II

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Reading and discussion of literary works of intermediate difficulty. Reading content designed to acquaint students with important aspects of recent German culture and to develop skill in the analysis and comprehension of modern German prose.

    Prerequisite: GRM 221 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 227 - Topics in German Literature in Translation

    4 credits (Spring)
    Cross-listed as: GLS 227 . Texts selected from a wide variety of literary (and some nonliterary) texts by German-speaking authors. Readings and discussion in English. May be repeated once for credit when content changes. For current course content please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Michaels
  
  • GRM 233 - Frames of Reference: Topics in German Cinema from 1920 to the Present

    4 credits (Fall)
    Cross-listed as: GLS 233 . Readings and discussions in English. Seminal readings from film theory combined with a survey of German cinema from its inception to the present. Variable thematic concerns include the aesthetics of power, the real and the imaginary, representations of subjectivity, and the construction of national identity. German majors write in German.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Reynolds
  
  • GRM 302 - Core Seminar I: From Culture to Nation

    4 credits (Fall)
    Conducted in German. Study of German literature, history, and culture from 1750 to 1871 through literary and historical texts, documentaries, and films.

    Prerequisite: GRM 222 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 303 - Core Seminar II: German Identity Through Wars and Reconciliations

    4 credits (Spring)
    Conducted in German. Study of German literature, history, and culture from 1871 to the present through literary and historical texts, documentaries, and films.

    Prerequisite: GRM 222 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 310 - Topics in German Language and Culture

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Advanced language course with special emphasis on oral and written proficiency in German. Pertinent cultural and sociopolitical issues of German-speaking countries are used as a basis for short essays and discussions. Predominantly non-literary texts are chosen.

    Prerequisite: GRM 222 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 331 - The German Cultural Heritage: From Tacitus to Goethe

    4 credits
    Conducted in German. An introduction to German culture from the Germanic tribes to the Enlightenment. Topics to be examined include political organizations, gender issues, and religion, with readings from the pre-middle ages, the medieval period, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, and the Storm and Stress movement. All readings in modern German.

    Prerequisite: GRM 302  and GRM 303 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Barber
  
  • GRM 343 - Cultural and Intellectual Revolution from Classicism Through Realism

    4 credits
    Conducted in German. A study of literature and thought from the late 18th century through 1880. Literary texts will be placed within the philosophical, historical, and socio-linguistic context. Variable topics.

    Prerequisite: GRM 302  and GRM 303 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Byrd
  
  • GRM 350 - Contested Subjects: German Culture from the Avant-Garde to Postmodernism

    4 credits
    Conducted in German. An exploration of German-speaking identities through their formulations and contestations in literature, architecture, cinema, music, cabaret, and political culture. Tracing the artistic epochs from Naturalism to Postmodernism, the course will examine ideologies of self and Other as they relate to ethnicity, race, class, gender, and geography.

    Prerequisite: GRM 302  and GRM 303 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Reynolds
  
  • GRM 354 - The Turbulent Century: Literature and Culture in 20th-Century Germany

    4 credits
    Conducted in German. A study of responses in literary and other texts to historical, political, and social events such as World War I, the Weimar Republic, World War II, postwar reconstruction, the German Democratic Republic, and unification. Variable topics.

    Prerequisite: GRM 302  and GRM 303 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Michaels
  
  • GRM 372 - Recent Trends in German Literature

    1 or 2 credits (Spring)
    Close reading and analysis of recent German works from a contemporary cultural perspective. Conducted by the German writer in residence. All readings and discussion in German. May be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite: GRM 302 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRM 495 - Advanced Seminar in German Studies

    4 credits (Spring)
    Critical reading and close analysis of selected texts in German literature and culture for students with a solid background in the study of German. Topics vary, and texts include both primary and secondary sources. Course may be repeated once for credit when content changes.

    Prerequisite: Senior standing or special permission for third-year students.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Staff

Global Development Studies

  
  • GDS 111 - Introduction to Global Development Studies

    4 credits (Fall and Spring)
    This course adopts an interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of contemporary issues in the economic development of less-developed countries. Course reviews the leading theories of economic, political, and social change that have been adopted by anthropologists, economists, and political scientists, and considers how these theories have shaped past and current debate on the definition and goals of the development process. Course compares and contrasts the approaches adopted by international institutions and alternative development organizations to the “practice” of development.

    Prerequisite: One course in Anthropology, or Economics, or Political Science, or Sociology. ECN 111  is strongly recommended.
    Instructor: Brottem, Roper
  
  • GDS 154 - Natural Hazards and Disasters

    4 credits (Spring)
    See ENV 154 .

  
  • GDS 251 - Water, Development, and the Environment

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: ENV 251 . This course explores international water issues, focusing on the environmental, social, economic, and political implications of water scarcity. Emphasis will be on three interrelated topics: water scarcity as a constraint on development; water scarcity as a source of domestic and international conflict; and, in particular, the environmental implications of water supply projects and their social and economic consequences. Water management policy and the implications of changing climate on regional water availability will also be considered.

    Prerequisite: Second-year standing.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: P. Jacobson
  
  • GDS 261 - Climate Change, Development and the Environment

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: ENV 261 . This course introduces the basic science of climate change, focusing on the environmental, social, economic, and political implications of such change, as well as the institutions and associated policies engaged in negotiating a response, both locally and globally. Students will conduct in-depth examinations of key regions and ecosystems exemplifying how climate change is closely intertwined with development and natural resource management. The difficulties of predicting regional shifts in climate will be considered, along with the challenges associated with defining policy in the face of uncertainty.

    Prerequisite: Second-year standing.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: P. Jacobson
  
  • GDS 346 - Sustainable Development in the Modern World System

    4 credits (Spring)
    Interdisciplinary social science examination of theories and issues concerning “sustainable development.” Historical consideration of the goals of development along with how and why the concept of sustainability became prevalent in the dominant discourse, and the contested meanings applied to this concept. Focus then given to several key issues (varying by year) at the boundary of economic/social development, natural resource management, and environmental degradation (such as population growth, agrarian reform, international environmental treaties, climate change, deforestation, agribusiness, tourism, etc.). Can count as anthropology seminar when taught by Roper.

    Prerequisite: GDS 111  and ANT 238 ECN 230 ECN 233 ECN 240 EDU 217 POL 251 POL 257 POL 259 SOC 220 SOC 240 , or SST 230 .
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Roper

Greek

  
  • GRE 101 - Elementary Greek

    5 credits (Fall)
    The fundamentals of ancient Greek inflection, grammar, syntax, and literary style, based on simplified readings from Attic prose and poetry.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Hughes
  
  • GRE 222 - Intermediate Greek

    5 credits (Spring)
    Continuation of GRE 101 . Review of forms and grammar. Introduction to a range of Greek poetic and prose literature, with selected short readings from Homer, lyric poetry, Herodotus, Sophocles, Euripides, Plato, and the Christian Scriptures.

    Prerequisite: GRE 101 .
    Instructor: Hughes
  
  • GRE 301 - Homer

    4 credits (Spring)
    Reading of selected passages from the Iliad, the Odyssey, or both epics; special readings in archaeological and critical background.

    Prerequisite: GRE 222  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRE 302 - Plato

    4 credits (Fall)
    Readings from one or more of Plato’s dialogues with attention to language, literary features, and philosophy.

    Prerequisite: GRE 222  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: J. Cummins
  
  • GRE 303 - Greek Drama

    4 credits (Spring)
    Reading of two plays with study of literary form, the myths, and relevant social, religious, and philosophical issues.

    Prerequisite: GRE 222  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • GRE 304 - Greek Prose Writers

    4 credits (Fall)
    Reading and study of related works of one or more Greek prose writers, excluding Plato. Possibly to include history (Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon), philosophy (Aristotle), oratory (Andocides, Lysias, Demosthenes), or epigraphy.

    Prerequisite: GRE 222  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: M. Cummins, Hughes
  
  • GRE 305 - Greek Poetry

    4 credits (Fall)
    Readings in Greek poetry, excluding Homer and drama. Possibly to include Archaic lyric and elegiac poets (e.g., Sappho, Archilochus, Solon), Pindar and Bacchylides, or the Hellenistic poets (Apollonius, Theocritus, Callimachus). Introduction to Greek metrics and literary dialects. Emphasis on close reading and critical analysis of the texts.

    Prerequisite: GRE 222  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Hughes
  
  • GRE 387 - Individual Reading

    2 or 4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Supervised readings designed to fit special needs of students — for example, those who wish to develop facility in reading New Testament Greek.

    Prerequisite: At least one reading course in Greek and permission of instructor.
    Instructor: Staff

History

  
  • HIS 31x - Advanced Studies in American History

    4 credits (Fall and Spring)
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 32x - Advanced Studies in Latin America and the United States

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 33x - Advanced Studies in Western European and British History

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 34x - Advanced Studies in Russian History

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 35x - Advanced Studies in Historiography and Ancient History

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 36x - Advanced Studies in African & Middle-Eastern History

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 37x - Advanced Studies in Asian History

    4 credits
    In any academic year, students may choose from among six to eight 300-level seminar courses.  For current course descriptions, prerequisites, and instructors, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

  
  • HIS 100 - Making History

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Introduces students to historical analysis and argumentation. Individual sections focus on different topics and time periods. In all sections, students will investigate a range of sources, methods, and approaches that historians use to interpret the past. Required of all majors and appropriate for all students. For current course content, please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • HIS 201 - Colonial Latin America

    4 credits (Spring)
    A general survey of Latin American history from the Columbian encounter through independence. The course will focus on the patterns of European conquest and colonization, the complexity of race relations in the region, and the problems of colonial administration.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Silva
  
  • HIS 202 - Modern Latin America

    4 credits (Fall)
    A general survey of Latin American history from independence to the present day. The course will focus on problems of political instability, economic development, and the role of the United States in the region.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Silva
  
  • HIS 204 - Radical Movements in 20th-Century Latin America

    4 credits
    During the 20th century, Latin America has witnessed both peaceful leftist mobilizations and violent revolutions. All of these movements aimed at redressing inequalities and creating more just societies. This course will consider several of these movements in comparative perspective.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Silva
  
  • HIS 212 - Democracy in America, 1789–1848

    4 credits (Fall)
    Examines the tensions caused by the simultaneous development of political democracy in the United States and the demands for rights by those who continued to be excluded from various forms of power. Topics include: the creation of party politics, reform movements, economic growth, class conflict, expansionism, race, slavery, gender, and material culture.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Purcell
  
  • HIS 214 - The American Civil War and Reconstruction

    4 credits (Spring)
    Surveys the causes, progress, and consequences of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Examines American history from the mid-1840s through the late 1870s with a focus on race, politics, economics, gender, and military conflict to uncover how and why the United States tore itself apart, whether the fundamental conflicts of the war were solved by Reconstruction, and why the Civil War has occupied such an important place in American history and imagination.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Purcell
  
  • HIS 220 - U.S. Environmental History

    4 credits (Spring)
    This course examines some of the central issues and debates in American environmental history, ranging from the era of pre-contact to the present day. Key topics will include: the shifting patterns of land use and resource management among Native American and settler communities; the ecological transformations wrought by commercial agriculture and industrial capitalism; the evolution of environmental policy; and the changing ways in which people have conceptualized and interacted with the natural world around them.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Guenther
  
  • HIS 222 - The History of Women in the United States

    4 credits (Spring)
    Examines basic themes and issues that have dominated the lives of women in the United States since the colonial period. Focuses on the interaction of economics and ideology; relationships between production, reproduction, and sexuality in defining women’s status; development of female culture and feminism; and the role of race, class, and ethnicity in shaping women’s experiences.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Lewis
  
  • HIS 225 - Native American History, 1491–1865

    4 credits (Fall)
    This course offers a social, environmental, political, and cultural history of early America from the perspectives of Native Americans. From the point of view of Native Americans, we will examine many familiar topics, such as European exploration of North America, the founding of European colonies, warfare among European powers, slavery, and the American Revolution.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Lacson
  
  • HIS 227 - African American History

    4 credits (Spring)
    A survey of the African American experience in slavery and freedom, with a primary emphasis on the struggle for racial justice and equality since the Civil War. Assignments stress primary sources as well as scholarly studies, films, and recordings.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Lacson
  
  • HIS 229 - American Economic History

    4 credits
    See ECN 229 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
  
  • HIS 233 - Medieval Europe, 500–1350

    4 credits (Fall)
    Explores the interplay between institutions (such as the church, monarchy, and lordship), economic trends, and society in Western Europe between 500 A.D. and 1350 A.D. While providing a general survey of the Middle Ages, this course will focus particular attention on the institutions and practices by which order and justice were maintained after the fall of the Roman Empire, the ways in which Christianity shaped and was shaped by post-Roman society, how the ideas of “Europe” and “Christendom” evolved, and how members of ethnically and religiously mixed communities achieved a modus vivendi. Option of doing some reading in French, Latin, and Spanish.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • HIS 234 - Early Modern Europe 1350-1650

    4 credits (Spring)
    Before 1350, it is arguable that “Europeans” did not exist. This course scrutinizes the historical forces that turned a geographical location into a powerful idea. We will explore the impact of the renaissance, the religious reformations and destruction of “Christendom” after 1517, the increased contact with Asia, Africa, and the Americas, and the development of new technologies and scientific methods. Did these movements merely create Europe’s sense of its cultural superiority, or did they provide real commercial and military advantages in the century that followed?

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing. Option of doing some reading in French, Latin, or German.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Pollnitz
  
  • HIS 235 - Britain in the Modern World I, 1550–1815

    4 credits (Fall)
    This course examines how modern British political institutions, social and economic structures, and cultural identities developed in a global context. Special attention will be given to the evolving relationship between metropolitan society and overseas expansion. From 1550 to 1815.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Guenther, Pollnitz
  
  • HIS 236 - Britain in the Modern World II, 1815–present

    4 credits (Spring)
    This course examines how modern British political institutions, social and economic structures, and cultural identities developed in a global context. Special attention will be given to the evolving relationship between metropolitan society and overseas expansion. From 1815 to present.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Prevost
  
  • HIS 237 - The Spectacle of Modern France

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Beginning with a detailed analysis of the French Revolution as the foundation for the making of modern France, this course concentrates thereafter on pivotal issues including transnational relationships with countries like Germany, Algeria, and the United States; consumerism and urban spectacle; the lure of bohemia and the fin-de-siècle crisis of bourgeois values; the interplay of so-called elite and mass cultures; and the collapse and recovery of democratic institutions in the twentieth century. We highlight perspectives of class, race, and gender and focus upon the power of culture and ideas in shaping the French nation.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Maynard
  
  • HIS 238 - The Making of Modern Germany

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    This course traces the rise of the modern German nation from the accession of Frederick the Great through the Cold War. We examine the gradual decline of Habsburg dominance; the ascent of a powerful economic, military, and intellectual “Germany” dominated by Prussia by 1870; the rupture of World War I and the ensuing radicalism of the Weimar Republic; the rise and fall of the Third Reich; and Germany’s recovery from the catastrophes of the early twentieth century. We address the role of geography, culture, and ethnicity in the construction of national identity and the ongoing interplay between politics and culture.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Maynard
  
  • HIS 239 - Tyrants and Tunesmiths: Opera, Politics, and Society in Modern Europe

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    This course examines the complex relationship between operatic production and political power in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in several national contexts including France, Germany, Italy, and the Soviet Union. We consider specific interactions among composers, politicians, and institutions and seek to understand how such engagements shaped both the works themselves and the political and social realities around them in the processes of inception, performance, and reception.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Maynard
  
  • HIS 241 - Origins of Modern Russia

    4 credits (Fall)
    Focusing upon the medieval origins of early East Slavic societies and the formation of the Muscovite state and Russian Empire, this course examines the political, economic, and social components of pre-revolutionary Russia from the 10th through the 19th centuries. The dynamics of ethnicity, the multiple forms of state-building, and the role of gender, class, and ideology receive special attention.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing. Option of doing some work in Russian.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Cohn
  
  • HIS 242 - The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union

    4 credits (Spring)
    Examines the rise and fall of the Soviet Union, from the appearance of the revolutionary movement in the 19th century to the collapse of the U.S.S.R. in 1991. Key topics will include the origins of the revolution, the workings of the Stalinist dictatorship, the push to create a “New Soviet Man,” the reforms of Nikita Khrushchev, and the causes of the 1991 collapse. Option of doing some work in Russian.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Cohn
  
  • HIS 244 - Ivan and Fritz Go to War: World War II on the Eastern Front

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    This course examines the war between Nazi Germany and the Stalinist U.S.S.R. along World War II’s Eastern Front. Although it will include an overview of the war’s main military events, it will focus on the conflict’s social and political significance. Major themes will include the experiences of the troops, the political working of each wartime regime, the reasons for the unusually high level of brutality, the war’s relationship to the Holocaust, and the Soviet myth of the war.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Cohn
  
  • HIS 255 - History of Ancient Greece

    4 credits (Fall)
    See CLS 255 .

    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: M. Cummins (Classics)
  
  • HIS 257 - The Roman Republic

    4 credits (Fall)
    See CLS 257 .

    Note: Not offered every year.
  
  • HIS 258 - The Roman Empire

    4 credits (Fall)
    See CLS 258 .

  
  • HIS 261 - Southern Africa

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    An introduction to the 10-country region, with an emphasis on the Republic of South Africa. Regional geography along with culture and politics are principal themes, including the rise and fall of the South African apartheid state.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Prevost, Drake
  
  • HIS 262 - Modern Africa from the Sahara to the Zambezi

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    An introduction to West, Central, and East Africa during the colonial and post-colonial periods, focusing on the local, regional, and international dynamics of state-building, social and economic change, religious transformation, cultural identity, nationalism, and globalization.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option Available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Prevost
  
  • HIS 266 - History of the Modern Middle East

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    This course charts the development of the modern Middle East, exploring the contestations, negotiations, and exclusions that characterize the transformation of life in the region from 1798 through today.   We will guide our exploration with pointed questions: How did the nation become an organizing principle for collective life? How did capitalism take root? How did secularism become a question of concern? How, for whom, and to what effect did modernity become a specific concern in the region?

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Elfenbein
  
  • HIS 267 - Islam in the Modern Era

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: REL 267 . This course explores Islamic traditions during the modern period (post-1800), focusing especially on the way that modern colonialism and imperialism transformed life in Muslim communities in South Asia and the Middle East. We will explore this general issue through more specific topics such as historical change in Islamic legal traditions and in the place of religion in economic and political life in Muslim communities.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100 REL 101 REL 102 REL 103 REL 104  or second-year standing.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Elfenbein
  
  • HIS 268 - Islam and Gender

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: REL 268 . This course explores Islamic discourses about wo/men and gender in Islam, focusing attention on the processes by which the Muslim community has articulated and policed gender-specific ideals over time, particularly as they relate to: community identity, conceptions of cultural authenticity, the interpretation of the foundational sources of Islam and legal traditions. We will give significant attention to these issues as they pertain to 19th and 20th century debates about “re-forming” Muslim women.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100 , REL 101 REL 102 REL 103 REL 104  or second-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Elfenbein
  
  • HIS 271 - Imperial Collisions in the Asia-Pacific

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    This course is intended to introduce students to the modern history of East Asia. We will focus primarily on empire, or the construction of large-scale political, economic, and military structures through which human populations and other resources of statecraft were mobilized in the service of expansionist agendas throughout the modern age. Case studies will focus on the Qing empire, the British and French empires, the Empire of Great Japan, and Cold War-era Pacific alliances. In the latter case, we will also debate whether empire or imperial systems have survived into the present day - a question with important consequences for how we think about our own relationship to earlier historical moments. Finally, this course will address the relationship between national revolutions and anti-imperial agendas, as well as recent (and some not-so-recent) events which have shaped East Asia’s contemporary economic resurgence.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Johnson
  
  • HIS 275 - China’s Revolutions

    4 credits (Fall)
    Revolutions taking place in 1911, 1927, 1949 have massively impacted the evolution of state-society relationships in China today. Each week, we will examine the forces which pushed forward China’s revolutionary process, the obstacles which revolution encountered, and the inequalities it created and re-created. Through close reading of primary documents we will answer questions such as - What does revolution mean? How can this concept be meaningfully applied to China? What are its contemporary legacies?

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Johnson
  
  • HIS 277 - China’s Rise

    4 credits (Spring)
    In 1949, Mao Zedong declared that “the Chinese people have stood up.” Twenty years later, Mao’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution brought China’s people to the precipice of disaster. Fast forward another twenty years, and China has once again “stood up” in the international community. How can we account for these changes? By focusing on foreign policy, political economy, and lived experience, this course addresses and evaluates China’s rise to great power status.

    Prerequisite: HIS 100  or second-year standing.
    Instructor: Johnson
  
  • HIS 499 - Mentored Advanced Project

    2 or 4 credits
    A history MAP allows students to undertake advanced research and produce original knowledge on a topic of historical significance, and often follows work begun in a 300-level history seminar. To have their projects approved, students must demonstrate that they are already familiar with the most important scholarly works published in their proposed field of inquiry and identify the primary source base that will comprise the core of their research. MAP proposals, which must be submitted to the history department chair at least one week before they are due at the Office of the Registrar, should include an essay of 1,200–1,500 words to explain the historical problem to be investigated and the questions left open by existing research in the field, a bibliography detailed enough to demonstrate that the project is feasible, and the final form the project will take. With permission, the 499 may be used to fulfill the second 300-level requirement for the major, provided supervision takes place under a different professor than the student worked with in the other 300-level seminar, and the results are presented satisfactorily to a colloquium of students and faculty.

    Prerequisite: See additional information on Mentored Advanced Projects.  
    Instructor: Staff

Humanities

  
  • HUM 101 - Humanities I: The Ancient Greek World

    4 credits (Fall and Spring)
    A foundation for further study in the liberal arts, developing skills of critical reading, writing, and imaginative thinking through the study of selected works from ancient Greece. Readings include Homeric epic, tragic drama, Platonic dialogues, Thucydides’ History and Aristotle’s Poetics.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • HUM 102 - Humanities II: Roman and Early Christian Culture

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Major works of Roman and early Christian culture, exploring private and public paths to happiness from Cicero’s ideal commonwealth to the City of God. Readings include Virgil’s Aeneid, Stoic and Epicurean philosophy, satire and drama, Christian scripture, St. Augustine, and Boethius. Emphasis on close reading, discussion, and short essay assignments.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • HUM 131 - China’s Ancient World

    4 credits
    Cross-listed as: SST 131 . An introduction to China’s classic texts of philosophy, religion, history, and literature, from the Yin-Zhou period (ca. 18th c. B.C. to ca. 5th c. B.C.) through the Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.). Traditional Chinese cosmology, morals, ethics, and institutions examined; also the various means (philosophical, historical, literary, and musical) of expressing these aspects of traditional Chinese culture.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Cook
  
  • HUM 140 - Medieval and Renaissance Culture: 1100–1650

    4 credits (Spring)
    Cross-listed as: SST 140 . This interdisciplinary course explores European culture and the social and political forces that shaped it between 1100 and 1650, paying special attention to feudalism and the Crusades, the intellectual efflorescence of the 12th and 13th centuries, the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the advent of the Scientific Revolution. In our exploration of medieval and Renaissance culture we will draw on art, science, literature, political theory, philosophy and theology, music, the writings of mystics, and advice manuals for heads of households and would-be courtiers.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • HUM 251 - Theoretical Approaches to Children’s and Young Adult Literature

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: GLS 251 . This course takes a theoretical approach to canonical and contemporary children’s literature. Content is variable, but may include The Young Adult Problem Novel, Dystopian Fiction for the Young Adult Reader, and Constructions of Race, Slavery, Class and Gender in Children’s and Young Adult Literature. For current course content please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

    Prerequisite: A course in English or another course in literature.
    Instructor: Staff

Humanities - Interdisciplinary

  
  • HUM 350 - Freedom and Authority: The Control of Reproduction

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: SCI 350  and SST 350 . How do social, biological, and cultural constraints affect decisions about reproduction? How do social institutions set and enforce the boundaries of what is possible and permissible? How do practices of reproduction generate meaning for human existence? This seminar examines conflicts between the freedom of the individual to make decisions about reproduction and the internal and external authorities of biology, evolution, the family, the state, health care systems, criminal justice systems, and religious hierarchies.

    Prerequisite: Third-year or senior standing and completion of a four-credit course at the 200 level or above creditable to a major in the division of registration.
    Note: Not offered every year
    Instructor: Staff

Humanities - Media or Cultural Studies

  
  • HUM 185 - Film Analysis, Theory & Criticism

    4 credits (Fall and Spring)
    This writing-intensive course examines foundational concepts and methodologies in Cinema Studies, introducing students to a number of theoretical approaches central to the study of film, including semiotics, psychoanalysis, and Cultural Studies.  Our focus is not film appreciation but rather the analysis of film as a language and “reading” film texts for their meanings.  Since film is a system of representation, the study of gender, sexuality, race and class will be crucial to our interpretive practice throughout. 

    Prerequisite: One course in English, Gender, Women’s, and Sexuality Studies, American Studies, Philosophy, or Art History.
    Instructor: Geller
  
  • HUM 213 - Media and the Middle East

    4 credits (Fall)
    Cross-listed as: SST 213 . This course will explore representations of the Middle East in the Western and Middle-Eastern media. It will adopt a comparative approach and will use theoretical readings and case studies to examine the diverse ways in which news can be viewed as a cultural product.

    Prerequisite: Second-year standing.
    Instructor: Youssef
  
  • HUM 290 - Film Genres

    4 credits (Spring)
    This course will examine the theory, criticism, and history of film genre. We will take a comparative approach, analyzing the stylistic and narrative conventions of specific genres, and their relationship to culture, race, sexuality, gender and national identity. We will discuss various film genres, including the musical, screwball comedy, melodrama, and film noir. The objective of this course is to explore the question of genre through a range of theoretical rubrics (structuralism, psychoanalysis, feminism and ideological criticism) to address both the social implications and aesthetic properties of cinema. This course requires weekly screenings (usually two films per week) along with the assigned class reading.

    Prerequisite: HUM 185  (previously offered as HUM 211).
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Geller
  
  • HUM 365 - Studies in Film Theory

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    An intensive examination of important film scholars, movements, and/or theoretical concepts in Film Studies. An advanced-level, variable-topic course that explores film theory and the wide range of critical theories informing film criticism. Possible topics include queer theory, feminist film criticism, aesthetics, theories of space and place, film historiography, postmodernism, psychoanalysis, deconstruction, performance, affect, political economy, genre, poststructuralism, globalization, critical race theory, etc. May be repeated when content changes. For current course content please see the variable topic course listing below or search the online live schedule of courses.

    Prerequisite: HUM 185  and third-year standing.
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Geller

Japanese

  
  • JPN 101 - Beginning Japanese I

    5 credits (Fall)
    An introductory course that teaches the skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Instructional emphasis is laid on both linguistic aspects (pronunciation, vocabulary, and structures) and on sociocultural strategies in communication. Students learn both Japanese syllabaries and are introduced to kanji.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: Schimmel
  
  • JPN 102 - Beginning Japanese II

    5 credits (Spring)
    A continuation of Beginning Japanese I, emphasizing the skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Instructional emphasis is laid on both linguistic aspects (pronunciation, vocabulary, and structures) and on sociocultural strategies in communication. Students will have learned at least 100 kanji by the end of the course.

    Prerequisite: JPN 101 .
    Instructor: Schimmel
  
  • JPN 211 - Practicum in Chinese/Japanese Calligraphy

    1 credits
    Cross-listed as: CHI 211 . Guided practice in the different styles of Chinese character writing. Recommended for students in Chinese and JPN 102  and above. Does not count toward Chinese major. May be repeated for credit with the permission of instructor. (A maximum of eight practicum credits may count toward graduation.)

    Prerequisite: CHI 101  or JPN 101 , or permission of instructor.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • JPN 221 - Intermediate Japanese I

    4 credits (Fall)
    Reinforcement and expansion of Japanese grammar and communicative competence for students who have previously studied Japanese. Students will gain advancement in the four skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing.

    Prerequisite: JPN 102 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Onishi
  
  • JPN 222 - Intermediate Japanese II

    4 credits (Spring)
    Further reinforcement and expansion of Japanese grammar and communicative competence, and advancement in the four skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Students will have learned at least 300 kanji by the end of the course.

    Prerequisite: JPN 221 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • JPN 279 - Modern Japanese Fiction and Film

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Cross-listed as: GLS 279 . This course considers Japanese fiction and films that depict Japan from the mid-19th century through the present day. The work of some major authors and film directors will be introduced to examine Japanese culture and society, as well as the characteristics that are unique to Japanese fiction and film. Readings and discussions in English.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Note: Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Schimmel
  
  • JPN 331 - Advanced Japanese I

    4 credits (Fall)
    This course is for those students who have finished Intermediate Japanese II or an equivalent course. An integrated approach will be taken by the instructor so students will be able to develop both their speaking and writing skills in Japanese.

    Prerequisite: JPN 222 .
    Instructor: Schimmel
  
  • JPN 332 - Advanced Japanese II

    4 credits (Spring)
    This course is for those students who have finished Advanced Japanese I or an equivalent course. An integrated approach will be taken by the instructor so students will be able to develop both their speaking and writing skills in Japanese.

    Prerequisite: JPN 331 .
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • JPN 387 - Individual Reading

    2 or 4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Designed to satisfy needs and interests of majors who have otherwise exhausted departmental language offerings.

    Prerequisite: Permission of instructor and department chair.
    Instructor: Staff

Latin

  
  • LAT 103 - Elementary Latin

    5 credits (Fall)
    The fundamentals of Latin forms and sentence structure, based on sentences and connected reading from classical Latin literature.

    Prerequisite: None.
    Instructor: M. Cummins, Mercado
  
  • LAT 222 - Intermediate Latin

    5 credits (Spring)
    Continuation of LAT 103 . Readings in classical Latin prose and poetry, with review and composition as needed in order to attain a reading knowledge of Latin.

    Prerequisite: LAT 103 .
    Instructor: M. Cummins, Mercado
  
  • LAT 225 - Reading Latin

    4 credits (Fall)
    An intermediate course that can function as a continuation of LAT 222  or as a review class for students with substantial prior work in Latin at the secondary or collegiate level. Review of fundamentals with an emphasis on reading and interpreting a variety of texts.

    Prerequisite: LAT 222 , or at least two years of secondary-school Latin.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • LAT 318 - Roman Satire

    4 credits (Fall)
    Readings in Lucretius, Horace, and Juvenal: the poetry of criticism and wit. Roman originality, Epicurean and Stoic stances in this complex and chameleonic genre, the interplay of moral voice and sense of humor, relations between philosophy and satire, rhetoric, and poetry.

    Prerequisite: LAT 222 , or LAT 225  and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Staff
  
  • LAT 320 - Cicero

    4 credits (Fall or Spring)
    Readings from Cicero’s speeches, essays, or letters, with special attention to language, subject matter, rhetoric, literary artistry in general, and historical setting.

    Prerequisite: LAT 222  or LAT 225 , and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: J. Cummins
  
  • LAT 323 - Vergil

    4 credits (Spring)
    Readings in the Eclogues, the Georgics, and the Aeneid; the development of Vergilian poetic technique; the civilized and national epic as a new form and its influence on Roman and later cultures; the pastoral tradition, Greek literary precedents.

    Prerequisite: LAT 222  or LAT 225 , and HUM 101 .
    Note: Plus-2 option available. Not offered every year.
    Instructor: Mercado
 

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