|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
Graeme Reid. w 1.30-3.20 So (0) Cultural and historic constructions of masculinity explored through an investigation of male bodies, sexualities, and social interactions. Multiple masculinities; the relationship between hegemonic, non-hegemonic, and subordinate masculinities.
-
3.00 Credits
Naomi Pabst. For description see under African American Studies.
-
3.00 Credits
Ron Eyerman. For description see under Sociology.
-
3.00 Credits
Graeme Reid. tth 1.30-2.20, 1 htba So (0) The social and cultural context in which the aids epidemic emerged and spread in southern Africa. How people and organizations experience, conceptualize, and respond to aids, and how aids is constructed through discourse and representation.
-
3.00 Credits
Geetanjali Singh Chanda. t 1.30-3.20 WRHu (0) Autobiography in its evolving form as literary genre, historical archive, and individual and community narrative in a changing geographical context. Women's life stories from Afghanistan, China, Cambodia, Indonesia, India, Iran, Egypt, Jordan, and Vietnam illustrate the dialectic relationship between the global and the local. What the reading and writing of autobiographies reveal about oneself and one's place in society; how it can be considered a horizontal community formation. wgss 328b/ er&m 328b, Popular Culture and Postcolonial India. Geetanjali Singh Chanda. t 1.30-3.20 WRHu (0) A study of films and literature of South Asians living, working, and directing in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Questions of commercial populism, authenticity, and postcolonial identity. wgss 337b/ clcv 214b/ hums 278b/ litr 225b/ mgrk 202b, The Poetry of C. P. Cavafy. George Syrimis. For description see under Hellenic Studies.
-
3.00 Credits
Margaret Homans. For description see under English Language & Literature.
-
3.00 Credits
Laura Wexler. w 1.30-3.20 Hu (0) Key writings on feminism from the late eighteenth century to the present. The intellectual history of feminism placed in national and transnational contexts, with emphasis on the intersecting histories of social theory, human rights, gender, and organized women's movements.
-
3.00 Credits
Naomi Pabst. For description see under African American Studies.
-
3.00 Credits
Hazel Carby For description see under African American Studies.
-
3.00 Credits
Timothy Stewart-Winter. w 3.30-5.20 Hu (0) Study of how the symbolic and lived experience of combat has framed American ideas about gender and sexuality from the early twentieth century to the present. Attention to noncombat arenas where warfare intersects with everyday life, including conscription, industrial production, marriage and child rearing, sexual subcultures, intimate and racial violence, illness and disability, veteran status, and struggles for citizenship and equality.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2024 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|