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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Specific content changes from semester to semester and may be suggested by faculty or student interest, for example, World Drama, Contemporary Drama, Experimental Theatre/Performance Art, or theatre defined by geography, language, or playwright. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Fall Semester (odd numbered years beginning fall, 2009) In this course, dramas by Moliere, Racine, Schiller, Goldoni, Gozzi, Lope da Vega, Calderon, Gorki, Gogol, Beaumarchais, Hugo, and other well-known European playwrights will be read, discussed and performed. Historical staging and acting conventions of the scripts will be highlighted. Prerequisites: WRT102, WRT202 and THE254. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Spring Semester (even numbered years beginning spring, 2010) This course will consist of readings, discussions and dvd viewings of important works from India, China, Japan and Indonesia along with practice in kabuki and noh movement, music and mask work. Connections of non-western theater's acting and staging conventions with contemporary Western avant-garde theater will be made. Prerequisites: Wrt102, WRT202 and THE254 3 credit hours.
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60.00 Credits
The purpose of an internship is to give students training and work experience in appropriate professional theatres. Responsibilities are determined by the supervisor(s) of the sponsoring theatre and by the Director of Theatre. Students are required to complete an internship application, must have earned more than 60 credits with a minimum 2.5 cumulative grade point average, and must spend a stipulated minimum of hours on site. 1-3 credit hours.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
An opportunity for the student who wishes to undertake a well-defined research project. While the student conducts work under the guidance of a faculty member of his or her own choosing, the project is carried out in an independent manner without regular class meetings. Effective independent study is characterized by a reduction in formal instruction and an increase in the individual student's responsibility and initiative in the learning process. 1-3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
An interdisciplinary introduction to the major theories, themes, methodologies, and issues of women's and gender studies. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADRII.
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3.00 Credits
In WGS210 students explore the nature of optimum physical and emotional health, as well as strategies for achieving and maintaining it. They explore common illnesses and health problems in terms of symptoms and management, and address environmental and societal factors that influence women's health. The values and assumptions underlying the western medical paradigm are compared and contrasted with those upon which selected non-Wester medical systems are based. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Examines the economic, social, and political movements that have affected family life, family adjustments, and organization. Prerequisite: SOC100 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADRII. wgs238/PHL238 Race, Gender, and Sexuality This course serves as an interdisciplinary introduction to theories of race, gender, and sexual identity, their themes, methodologies, and issues. Possible topics include gender and sex roles; racism, sexism and hetero-sexism; concepts of beauty; racial and sexual stereotypes; social issues such as affirmative action, violence, racial and sexual harassment, and pornography. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADR I
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the variation of punishment and patterns in female criminality vs. male criminality across age, class, and race. This course will also review the strengths and weaknesses of theories of crime as applied to women and explores the occupational segregation by gender in criminal justice professions. Prerequisite: CJA101. 3 credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course will analyze military conflict from the perspective of gender. The experience of women will be the focus of the course, but the course will also examine how gendered concepts related to being male and female play a role in the making of war. Students will analyze the effects of war on women's status and will examine the impact of war on gender roles and the relationship between men and women. Course content will be drawn from major world conflicts, including WWI and WWII, as well as post-World War II regional and national conflicts. 3 credit hours. Satisfies ADR II.
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