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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
While human industry/technology creates enormous material prosperity, it can result in devastating environmental damage. This course analyzes the moral values, consequences and duties implied in relationships between human beings, animals and ecological systems, while seeking out new and ethical approaches. Cross-listed with PHIL 4250/5250 and HUMN 5250.
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3.00 Credits
Analyzes the social, political, legal, and psychological aspects of violence against women and addresses: definitions of the problem, demographics, survivors, perpetrators, children who witness, bystanders, strategies and tactics of abuse and survival, along with strategies for prevention, intervention, treatment and social change.
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3.00 Credits
How did cities develop and what were the buildings that filled these spaces? Posing this question initially, this course takes a case-study approach to surveying the concerns confronting different cultures as they developed their urban environments sociologically, anthropologically, architecturally and spatially. Cross listed with HUMN 5520.
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3.00 Credits
Investigates theories that address the construction of self and how that construction is constrained by culture, politics, society and historical moment.
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3.00 Credits
Traces the influences of philosophy, psychology, and art in the English, French, and German-speaking worlds in the early twentieth century. This intellectual history is extended to broader cultural and political contexts. Key period is between 1910 and 1968, when modernity’s key aspirations and tensions became explicit. Cross-listed with HUMN 5550 and PHIL 5550.
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3.00 Credits
Nature of religion and methods of studying it. Cross-listed with HUMN 5600, PHIL 4600, 5600, RLST 4060, and 5060.
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3.00 Credits
Explores modernity as a historical epoch and a theoretical space, looking at the commentaries and reflections of influential 20th century thinkers including Adorno, Arendt, Levinas, Merleau-Ponty, Habermas and Foucault. Examines how the theoretical inclinations of modernity were influenced by politics, art, literature and culture. Cross-listed with HUMN 5650 and PHIL 5650.
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3.00 Credits
Studies sexuality, gender and identity representation from classical antiquity through the present in the visual arts. Uses the literature of visuality, feminism, race and queer theory. Explores representations of femininity, masculinity and androgyny and their reinforcement and challenge to gender-identity norms. Cross listed with HUMN 5720.
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3.00 Credits
Explores debates about psyche and body, mind and world, self and others, and consciousness and nature. Examines the philosophical questions related to those debates that arise within theories of perception, affect and cognition offered by influential psychological models. Cross-listed with HUMN 5750, PHIL 5755.
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3.00 Credits
Designed to help current and future professionals in the nonprofit sector understand the social, political, and economic context and mechanics of pursuing grants, government contracts, and other funding for nonprofit organizations. Cross-listed with PSCI 5830.
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