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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Draws on film, fiction, songs, oral histories, and anthropological studies to explore the cultural expressions, lifestyles, ethical values, and sociopolitical concerns of postwar/Cold War generations of Soviet citizens. Highlighted topics: youth culture, the new consumerism, coping with the Stalinist legacy, politically dissident art and actions, the retreat into private life and nature, the rise of nationalisms. Instructor: Holmgren
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1.00 Credits
Ideas about race, culture, and identity still shape strategies for African American empowerment and securing the ideals of democracy in the United States. ''Classic'' texts from each decade of the twentieth century. Explore the location of the authors' work within its historical and political contexts. Attention given to the texture of (debates within) the African American intellectual community. Instructor: Baker
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1.00 Credits
Exploration of the visual culture(s) of medicine. The changing role of diagnostic visuality and medical imaging from various philosophical and historical perspectives. The connections between medical ways of seeing and other modes of visuality, photography, cinema, television, computer graphics. The circulation of medical images and images of medicine in popular culture as well as in professional medical cultures. Not open to students who have previously taken this course as Art History 179S. Instructor: Olson
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1.00 Credits
Selected topics in methodology, theory, or area. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Same as Cultural Anthropology 180 except instruction is provided in seminar format. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
An interdisciplinary seminar addressing topics pertaining to European culture, with special emphasis on Spain and its relationship to the rest of Europe. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
The role of sports in different cultures in the contemporary world. Dynamics of race, gender, sexuality, fantasy and desire, mythmaking and the culture of celebrity, commercial and mass media. Instructor: Starn
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1.00 Credits
Individual non-research directed study in a field of special interest on a previously approved topic, under the supervision of a faculty member, resulting in an academic product. With consent of instructor and director of undergraduate studies. One course. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
Individual research in a field of special interest under the supervision of a faculty member, the central goal of which is a substantive paper or written report containing significant analysis and interpretation of a previously approved topic. With consent of instructor and director of undergraduate studies. Instructor: Staff
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1.00 Credits
English language variation in the United States considered from a current sociolinguistic perspective. Social, regional, ethnic, gender, and stylistic-related language variation, along with models for describing and applying knowledge about language variation. Language variation focused on vernacular varieties of American English in general and on North Carolina in particular. C-L. Instructor: Butters
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