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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Through viewing popular Hollywood films, we will analyze femininity across the life span. Critical thinking and cultural analysis will be practiced as we study heroines, working girls, motherhood, brides, cheerleaders, and old women on screen.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Selected works by African women writers. (Also listed as FLIT 215.)
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. History, writings, and impact of mystics, including but not limited to, Hildergard of Bingen, Saint Clare of Assisi, Julian of Norwich, Saint Catherine of Siena, Saint Catherine of Genoa, and Saint Teresa of Avila.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Use variety of sources to explore how race, class, ethnicity, sex and gender impact lives of diverse Appalachian women, including protrayal of women, stereotypes, impact of stereotypes, and how women construct their own identities.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. To examine the cultural diversities in the definition of women's roles and status, to investigate women's access to education, health, income, credit and technology, and to study women's contributions in ThirdWorld development.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Studies tribal oral tradition and its continuing existence in prose, myths, poetry, and stories. The works of contemporary Native American women writers will be studied and discussed as an outgrowth of this tradition.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Does gender make a difference in the aging process? This course examines the female experience of growing older. Lecture, discussion, review of literature, with focus on selected works of literature and the creative arts.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Explores the exclusion of women from leadership in institutions of religion, the nature of the development of theology and spirituality that has disavowed the contributions of women, diversity of religious experience, writings of feminist theologians.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Explores current feminist theory through works by diverse scholars, focusing on questions of essentialism, difference, sexuality, bodies, language, power, economic and ecological justice, intersections of race, class and gender, and global social justice struggles.
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3.00 Credits
3 Hr. Gender violence has implications for all members of society. This course will examine violence in the lives of women across the lifespan. Etiology, theories, effects, and prevention modalities will be evaluated.
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