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WS 150: Women's Experiences in Global Perspective
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
(GEN. ED. #9 AND #10) An interdisciplinary examination of women's status and activism worldwide including regional and local comparisons and the roles of government, nongovernmental, and international organizations in shaping women's experiences. Fall and spring semesters. Fran ois.
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WS 150 - Women's Experiences in Global Perspective
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WS 180: Gender And Public Policy: a Washington Seminar
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
An off-campus experience that provides students with a firsthand look at the policy-making process at the federal level. Faculty lectures supplemented by guest presentations by women judges, lobbyists, regulatory board members, congressional leaders, and government agency representatives. Policy briefings and site visits are an integral part of the seminar. Prerequisites: preliminary application and interview. First-year students are eligible to apply. January intersession. Brown, Githens.
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WS 180 - Gender And Public Policy: a Washington Seminar
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WS 192: Politics For Every Woman
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
Designed primarily for non-majors interested in enhancing their political awareness and skills as citizens and women. Relates traditional political concepts to practical politics for women in their many roles. Topics include the development of the concept of sisterhood and its relationship to political life and women's identity; issues such as rape, health care, equal rights, consumer affairs, welfare, and day care; avenues for political activity such as volunteer associations and women's organizations; political campaigns; direct and indirect action techniques for political change; alternatives to radical feminism. Guest speakers, field trips, films. Spring semester. Offered 2008-09. Githens.
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WS 192 - Politics For Every Woman
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WS 217: Latin American Women Voices: Argentina And Uruguay
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
(GEN. ED. #9 AND #10) A detailed introduction to the role of different women's groups in Argentina and Uruguay as protagonists of social movements. Personal narratives, fiction, film, history, and political activism will provide the framework for examining women's participation in the human rights and social movements. Prerequisite course to the three-week intensive study abroad during the January intersession in Argentina and Uruguay. Prerequisite: sophomore standing or permission of the instructor. Spring semester. Department. Variable. Offered 2008-09 and alternate years.
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WS 217 - Latin American Women Voices: Argentina And Uruguay
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WS 221: Representations of Female Identity: Post- Colonial Perspectives
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
Drawing on specific socioeconomic, historical, and cultural contexts and using the framework of gender construction in post colonial feminist analysis, this course focuses on the representation of female identity by selected contemporary men and women writers in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Some of the writers included are: Tahar ben Jelloun (Morocco), Nurrudin Farah (Somalia), Chinua Achebe (Nigeria), Jacques Roumain (Haiti), Gabriel Garcia Marquez (Colombia), Diamela Eltit (Chile), Bessie Head (Botswana). Prerequisites:WS 100 or 150, or permission of the instructor. Fall semester. Fran ois. Offered 2009-10 and alternate years.
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WS 221 - Representations of Female Identity: Post- Colonial Perspectives
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WS 222: Women And Literature
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
(GEN. ED. #9 AND #10) Topic for 2009-10 will be posted in the registration booklet. Spring semester. 2009-10 and alternate years. Department.
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WS 222 - Women And Literature
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WS 224: is There Life Beyond The Looking Glass Gender, Identity, And Race in Caribbean Culture
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
An interdisciplinary examination of women, their families, and society in Caribbean culture. Emphasis is given to the process of representation and self-portraiture of women in the works of contemporary Caribbean women writers, including Jean Rhys, Simone Schwarz-Bart, Merle Hodge, Ana Lydia Vega, Michelle Cliff, Edwidge Danticat, and Jamaica Kincaid, as well as to the themes of colonialism, resistance, migration, and exile. Prerequisite:WS 100, 150, or sophomore standing. Fall semester. Fran ois. Offered 2008-09 and alternate years.
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WS 224 - is There Life Beyond The Looking Glass Gender, Identity, And Race in Caribbean Culture
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WS 225: Women And Sexuality
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
An interdisciplinary examination of theories of women's sexuality and their impact on specific 19th- and 20th-century sociopolitical movements and issues like voluntary motherhood, prostitution, white slavery, social purity, transsexualism, and sexual preference. Prerequisite:WS 100 or 150, or sophomore standing. Fall semester. Offered 2008-09 and alternate years.
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WS 225 - Women And Sexuality
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WS 226: Women, Peace, And Protest: Latin American Women And The Search For Social Justice
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
(LAM 226) Examination of women's participation in the human rights, social, and economic movements. Focus on understanding if, why, and under what circumstances gender becomes a central force in the development of these movements.We will address three questions: Has the involvement of women helped to define the human rights movement in Latin America To what extent have feminist theory and theories of the state accounted for the nature of women's protest How and why were women instrumental in the political process that led from authoritarian to democratic rule in their countries This course focuses primarily (but not exclusively) on women's movements in the southern cone countries: Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Brazil. Prerequisite: sophomore standing. Spring semester. Fran ois. Offered 2009-10 and alternate years.
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WS 226 - Women, Peace, And Protest: Latin American Women And The Search For Social Justice
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WS 227: Becoming Visible: The Metamorphosis of Modern Woman
3.00 Credits
Goucher College
This interdisciplinary course examines how American women interpreted changes occurring in their lives during the transition from Victorianism to the Jazz Age and how these women responded to social changes through activism in suffrage, birth control, and peace and racial justice movements. Analysis of primary and secondary sources, exploration of implications of the work of Addam, Chopin, Cooper, Gilman, Hurston, Sanger,Wells, andWharton for contemporary issues. Prerequisites:WS 100, or 150, or sophomore standing. Spring semester. Fran ois. Offered 2008-09 and alternate years.
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WS 227 - Becoming Visible: The Metamorphosis of Modern Woman
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