This is a class schedule from a previous term. View current class schedules
American Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
AMST 103-01 | Race in US Social Thought | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 215 | Duchess Harris | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required.* This course begins by exploring the political history of whiteness. Our point of departure will be David R. Roediger's newest text (2005), "Working Toward Whiteness, How America's Immigrants Became White: The Strange Journey from Ellis Island to the Suburbs." We will examine how "race" has been at the core of civic assimilation. We will interrogate Roediger's question, "What happens when we think of assimilation as Whitening as well as Americanizing" (pp 9-10). In other words, to become American one must "fight to be White." The core of this course will focus on post-1960 America and the Black, Brown, Red, and Yellow Power Movements. We will use autobiography and prison writings to examine the Black Power Movement; the American Indian Movement; Latino Militancy, and Asian American insurgency. We will end the course with an analysis of conservative people of color and their counterparts in the dominant culture, |
|||||||
AMST 112-01 | Intro to LGBTQ Studies | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 009 | Scott Morgensen | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 110-01.* This course introduces the fields of LGBT and queer studies by examining how sexuality, race, and nation relate in the lives of people in the United States, which we read in relation to histories of colonialism and globalization. Course materials foreground scholarship, testimony, activist art, and social movements by LGBT, two-spirited, queer people of color, and by white anti-racist LGBT and queer people. Their stories offer a template through which all students may examine how everyday life is shaped by sexuality, race, and nation - both as power relations, and as spaces for creating new identity and action. Every year. (4 credits) |
|||||||
AMST 194-01 | Race, Culture, and Social Movements: The | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 112 | Jane Rhodes | ||
*First day attendance required.* The 1960s is often considered the pivotal era for social movements in the twentieth century as the post-World War II generation pushed for social, cultural, and political change. This course will take a broad view of this period - from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s - to consider the role of race as a catalyst and agent for activism. We will consider varying aspects of the Southern civil rights movement, including grassroots organizing and projects for self-defense. The course will then consider how civil rights morphed into black power and inspired Chicano, Native American, and Asian American activism, the women's movement, and gay liberation. In particular, we will look at how these social movements shaped American and global culture, and the intersections among them. |
|||||||
AMST 194-02 | US and Global Economy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 215 | Karin San Juan | ||
*First day attendance required.* US Racial Formations and the Global Economy develops an understanding of race in the United States as a complex and contradictory social category that has been shaped and organized by the historical expansion and ongoing crisis of the global capitalist economy. As the global economy reshapes the world, racial formations in the United States transform, but they do not disappear. What freedoms are ensured in a global free market? How have the opportunities of the Global North been shaped by the hardships of the Global South? What are the alternatives to the globalization of poverty? Can globalization work under democratic and/or socialist regimes? The course may serve as one of the American Studies Department options for completion of the Certificate in Global Citizenship. No prerequisite. |
|||||||
AMST 194-04 | American Violence: A Cultural History of | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 009 | Andrea Cremer | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 194-01.* This course deconstructs the discipline of military history in order to uncover the broad social and cultural implications of societies at war. Beginning with the military conquests of central America and the Southwest, students will analyze the ways in which economic and military pressures functioned to create boundaries of social belonging and structured new ethnic identities. Readings will be drawn from primary accounts of early American wars, scholarly articles, and historical monographs. The course will progress in a chronological order through the following conflicts: De Soto's Death March, the Pueblo Revolt, the Beaver Wars, Powhatan's Revolt, the Pequot War, King Phillip's War, the French and Indian War, and the American Revolution. In addition to major military conflicts, the course will also investigate the cultural impact of slave revolts and class-based rebellions (such as Bacon's Rebellion and Shay�s Rebellion). By investigating the cult |
|||||||
AMST 222-01 | Imagining the American West | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 010 | Lynn Hudson | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 222-01.* | |||||||
AMST 250-01 | Race, Place and Space | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 112 | Karin San Juan | ||
*Cross-listed with GEOG 250-01; first day attendance required.* How do U.S. racial categories become grounded in place and space? In this seminar, we will examine race at various levels of spatial scale: from the racialization of the U.S. nation-state to U.S. cities and suburbs; and from prisons, reservations, and ethnic enclaves to the human body. As a point of departure, we will look for and analyze race and related social categories in places around the Twin Cities. By putting familiar ideas about race and ethnicity in a sociospatial framework, we will develop a specialized vocabulary for explaining how race, place, and space are connected. This course requires prior exposure to at least one of the following areas: American Studies, human geography, sociology of race/ethnicity, or urban studies. |
|||||||
AMST 294-01 | Racial Concepts/Theories | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 216 | Karin San Juan | ||
*First day attendance required.* This course explores and evaluates theories and concepts related to contemporary US racial formations. We will ask three basic questions: 1) What is �race�? 2) Where do racial differences and inequalities come from? 3) What is racial justice? Different frames will help us think about and understand race: ethnicity and assimilation; class and labor migration; gender/sexuality; and globalization/neoliberalism. Sessions will be lecture-based with active weekly discussion groups. Assignments will be writing and reading intensive. This course is designed with sophomores in mind. The introductory level AS course or its equivalent is a prerequisite. |
|||||||
AMST 294-02 | Locating US Latino Studies | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 112 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with HISP 308-01.* | |||||||
AMST 294-02 | Locating US Latino Studies | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 112 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with HISP 308-01.* | |||||||
AMST 294-03 | Native America: Contact, Conflict, Accom | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 101 | Andrea Cremer | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 294-06.* This approaches the history of indigenous North America from the Age of Exploration through the nineteenth century. The chronology of the course brings students directly into a time of traumatic and dynamic political and cultural change among Native Americans. Combining close study of European and Native American source materials, students will be challenged not only to reconstruct the narrative of early American history with a view to the experience of Native American peoples, but also will confront important historiographical problems related to source reliability, interdisciplinarity and colonial and postcolonial theory. Rather than teach events of colonial American and United States history that also include American Indian experiences, this course attempts to approach the development of diverse North American cultures and societies from the perspective of the continent�s indigenous peoples. Prior to the start of the course, students will be req |
|||||||
AMST 294-04 | Asian American History | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 05 | Peter Rachleff | ||
AMST 334-01 | Cultural Studies and the Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 205 | Leola Johnson | ||
AMST 370-01 | Understand/Confront Racism | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 243 | Kendrick Brown | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 370-01.* | |||||||
AMST 400-01 | Sr Sem: The American Dream | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 215 | Duchess Harris | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
Anthropology |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ANTH 111-01 | Cultural Anthropology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 06 | Olga Gonzalez-Castenada | ||
ANTH 111-02 | Cultural Anthropology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 06 | Jack Weatherford | ||
ANTH 112-01 | Archaeology/Human Evolution | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 06 | Sonia Patten | ||
ANTH 194-01 | Culture and the Environment | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 05 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with ENVI 194-01.* | |||||||
ANTH 230-01 | Ethnographic Interviewing | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 05 | Sonia Patten | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ANTH 239-01 | Medical Anthropology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 06 | Sonia Patten | ||
ANTH 294-02 | Ritual | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 304 | Erik Davis | ||
*Cross-listed with RELI 294-01.* | |||||||
ANTH 362-01 | Culture and Globalization | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 05 | Dianna Shandy | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 362-01* | |||||||
ANTH 364-01 | Political Anthropology | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 06 | Jack Weatherford | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 243-01.* | |||||||
ANTH 368-01 | Life Histories/Cultures/Selves | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 05 | Dianna Shandy | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ANTH 394-01 | Power/Resistance/Violence | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 05 | Olga Gonzalez-Castenada | ||
This course examines the ways in which structures of social hierarchy affect and manifest in the lives of peoples of Latin America. While considering the contributions cultural anthropology has made to the study of violence, special attention will be given to the historical experiences of political domination and marginalization as well as to contexts of armed conflict. Case studies from countries such as Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Guatemala and Brazil will allow us to explore the complex relationship between culture and power while critically assessing the concepts of violence and resistance. | |||||||
ANTH 487-01 | Hist of Anthropological Ideas | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 06 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
Art and Art History |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ART 130-01 | Drawing I | TR | 08:30 am-11:40 am | ART 123 | Amy Sands | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 130-02 | Drawing I | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 123 | Amy Sands | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 149-01 | Principles of Art | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | ART 113 | Christopher Atkins | ||
ART 160-01 | History of Art I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | ART 113 | Mireille Lee | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 160-01.* | |||||||
ART 170-01 | Chinese Art and Culture | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 170-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 194-01 | Figure Painting | MWF | 09:40 am-11:50 am | ART 128 | Christine Willcox | ||
*Permission of instructor required.* This studio art class focuses on representations of the human figure in contemporary painting. Students will learn how to paint the human figure by first drawing from the skeleton and models. Portrait painting as well as full figure painting will be taught. The class will situate figure painting as a studio practice within the context of art history and address problems of representation. Projects will focus on topics such as the psychological body, the political body and the abstracted body. Slide lectures, critiques and a gallery/museum visit will supplement studio work. Three two-hour periods per week. Next offered fall 2007. (4 credits) |
|||||||
ART 232-01 | Fibers I | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 116 | Ursula McCarty | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 234-01 | Painting I | MWF | 02:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 128 | Christine Willcox | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 235-01 | Sculpture I | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 135 | Stanton Sears | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 236-01 | Printmaking I | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 119 | Ruthann Godollei | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 237-01 | Ceramic Art I: Handbuilding | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 130 | Gary Erickson | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 238-01 | Ceramic Art I: Wheel Throwing | TR | 08:30 am-11:40 am | ART 130 | Gary Erickson | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 252-01 | Women in Art | MW | 02:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 113 | Joanna Inglot | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 263-01 | 20th Century Art | MW | 09:40 am-11:50 am | ART 113 | Joanna Inglot | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 270-01 | Art/Religion Along Silk Road | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 402 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 270-01.* | |||||||
ART 366-01 | 2-D Design | MWF | 01:10 pm-03:20 pm | Gudrun Lock | |||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 367-01 | 3-D Design | TR | 08:30 am-11:40 am | ART 135 | Stanton Sears | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 371-01 | Painting II | MWF | 12:00 pm-02:20 pm | ART 208 | Christine Willcox | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 372-01 | Sculpture II | TR | TBA | ART 135 | Stanton Sears | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 373-01 | Printmaking II | TBA | TBA | ART 119 | Ruthann Godollei | ||
ART 374-01 | Ceramic Art II | TR | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | ART 130 | Gary Erickson | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 378-01 | Fibers II | TR | 08:30 am-11:40 am | ART 116 | Ursula McCarty | ||
ART 490-08 | Art Apprenticeship | TBA | TBA | Ruthann Godollei | |||
ART 490-17 | Art Apprenticeship | TBA | TBA | Gary Erickson | |||
Asian Languages and Cultures |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ASIA 101-01 | Elementary Chinese I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 110 | Jin Stone | ||
ASIA 101-02 | Elementary Chinese I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 226 | Jin Stone | ||
ASIA 101-L1 | Elementary Chinese I Lab | W | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 228 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 101-L2 | Elementary Chinese I Lab | W | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 113 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 101-L3 | Elementary Chinese I Lab | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 111-01 | Introduction to Asian Studies | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 001 | James Laine | ||
ASIA 124-01 | Asian Religions | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 111 | Erik Davis | ||
ASIA 140-01 | Intro to East Asian Civ | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 003 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 140-01.* | |||||||
ASIA 170-01 | Chinese Art and Culture | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 170-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ASIA 203-01 | Intermediate Chinese I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 226 | Xin Yang | ||
ASIA 203-02 | Intermediate Chinese I | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 213 | Xin Yang | ||
ASIA 203-L1 | Intermediate Chinese I Lab | R | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 217 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 203-L2 | Intermediate Chinese I Lab | R | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 112 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 203-L3 | Intermediate Chinese I Lab | R | 02:30 pm-03:30 pm | STAFF | |||
ASIA 270-01 | Art/Religion Along Silk Road | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 402 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 270-01.* | |||||||
ASIA 274-01 | History of Traditional China | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 001 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 274-01.* | |||||||
ASIA 394-01 | Advanced Chinese I | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 215 | Patricia Anderson | ||
ASIA 394-L1 | Advanced Chinese I Lab | T | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 250 | Pei Zhang | ||
ASIA 394-L2 | Advanced Chinese I Lab | T | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM | Pei Zhang | ||
Biology |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
BIOL 117-01 | Women, Health, Reproduction | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 250 | Elizabeth Jansen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 164-01 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Therapeutics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 270 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
BIOL 164-L1 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Therap Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
*First Year Course lab only.* | |||||||
BIOL 165-01 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Human Disease | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 250 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
BIOL 165-L1 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Diseases Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 285 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
BIOL 165-L1 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Diseases Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 285 | Steven Sundby | ||
BIOL 165-L2 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Diseases Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 285 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
BIOL 165-L2 | Cell Biol/Gen I: Diseases Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 285 | Steven Sundby | ||
BIOL 170-01 | Biodiversity and Evolution | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | THEATR 204 | Sarah Boyer | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 170-02 | Biodiversity and Evolution | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 170 | Mary Montgomery | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
BIOL 170-L1 | Biodiversity/Evolution Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:45 am | OLRI 273 | Sarah Boyer | ||
BIOL 170-L2 | Biodiversity/Evolution Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 273 | Sarah Boyer | ||
BIOL 180-01 | Ecology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 250 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 180-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 180-L1 | Ecology Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 284 | Michael Anderson | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 180-L1; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 180-L1 | Ecology Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 180-L1; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 180-L2 | Ecology Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 180-L2; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 180-L2 | Ecology Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 284 | Michael Anderson | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 180-L2; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 205-01 | Cell Biology/Genetics II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 100 | Paul Overvoorde | ||
BIOL 205-L1 | Cell Biology/Genetics II Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 285 | Steven Sundby | ||
BIOL 205-L1 | Cell Biology/Genetics II Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 285 | Paul Overvoorde | ||
BIOL 205-L2 | Cell Biology/Genetics II Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 285 | Steven Sundby | ||
BIOL 205-L2 | Cell Biology/Genetics II Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 285 | David Matthes | ||
BIOL 351-01 | Biochemistry I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 250 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 351-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 351-L1 | Biochemistry I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 289 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 351-L1; attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
BIOL 351-L2 | Biochemistry I Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 289 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 351-L2; attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
BIOL 357-01 | Immunology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 284 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 357-L1 | Immunology Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 277 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
BIOL 367-01 | Human Physiology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 100 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 367-L1 | Human Physiology Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 367-L2 | Human Physiology Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 369-01 | Developmental Biology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 170 | Mary Montgomery | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
BIOL 369-L1 | Developmental Biology Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 264 | Mary Montgomery | ||
BIOL 394-01 | Seminar in Winter Ecology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Instructor permission required.* An advanced study of the relationships of organisms to one another and to their environment in winter. Includes behavioral, morphological and physiological adaptations and strategies for coping with the rigors of the winter season. The course will include lectures, videos, discussions, readings from the primary literature, individual projects, and an occasional field trip. Students will gain experience writing NSF format ecological research proposals. Ecology (BIOL-180) is a prerequisite. Instructor signature or on-line authorization is required for registration. |
|||||||
BIOL 394-02 | Seminar in Stem Cell Biology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 270 | David Matthes | ||
Our focus in this seminar will be on the emerging field of embryonic stem cell research in humans and mice, with a particular emphasis on stem cell biology's major discoveries, investigative methods and clinical challenges. In particular we will read articles concerning the isolation of human embryonic stem cells, RNA and protein fingerprints of stem cells, the stem cell niche and parameters of stem cell maintenance, the directed differentiation of stem cells toward particular fates, immune-privilege and immune-rejection, and laboratory and clinical studies on the efficacy of stem cell therapy. This seminar will be conducted in a journal club format in which every class member will be expected to be prepared for and participate in the discussion of one article (or two short articles) on stem cell biology research each week. Prerequisites: Cell/Gen II (BIOL205) and at least one upper division course in molecular cell biology-developmental biology, immunology, neuroscience, biochemistr | |||||||
BIOL 472-01 | Research in Molecular Biology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 287 | Paul Overvoorde | ||
*Permission of instructor required.* | |||||||
BIOL 472-L1 | Research in Molecular Biol Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 287 | Paul Overvoorde | ||
BIOL 489-01 | Biology Seminar | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 250 | Paul Overvoorde | ||
Chemistry |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CHEM 111-01 | General Chemistry I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 350 | Paul Fischer | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-02 | General Chemistry I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 350 | Stacey Stoffregen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L1 | General Chem I Lab | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 343 | Robert Rossi | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L1 | General Chem I Lab | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 343 | Stacey Stoffregen | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L2 | General Chem I Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 343 | Amy Rice | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L3 | General Chem I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 343 | Amy Rice | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L4 | General Chem I Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 343 | Stacey Stoffregen | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 111-L5 | General Chem I Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 343 | Stacey Stoffregen | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 115-01 | Accelerated General Chemistry | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 101 | Keith Kuwata | ||
*Available to new incoming freshmen only; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
CHEM 115-L1 | Accelerated General Chem Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 347 | Paul Fischer | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 194-01 | CSI Macalester | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 300 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
CHEM 211-01 | Organic Chemistry I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 150 | Rebecca Hoye | ||
CHEM 211-02 | Organic Chemistry I | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 150 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
CHEM 211-L1 | Organic Chemistry I Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:40 am | OLRI 383 | Rebecca Hoye | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 211-L2 | Organic Chemistry I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:45 pm | OLRI 383 | Stacey Stoffregen | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 211-L3 | Organic Chemistry I Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:40 am | OLRI 383 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 211-L4 | Organic Chemistry I Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:45 pm | OLRI 383 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 300-01 | Chemistry Seminar | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 350 | Rebecca Hoye | ||
CHEM 311-01 | Physical Chemistry I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 100 | Keith Kuwata | ||
CHEM 311-L1 | Physical Chemistry I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 378 | Robert Rossi | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 311-L2 | Physical Chemistry I Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 378 | Robert Rossi | ||
*Attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 351-01 | Biochemistry I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 250 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 351-01.* | |||||||
CHEM 351-L1 | Biochemistry I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 289 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 351-L1; attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 351-L2 | Biochemistry I Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 289 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 351-L2; attendance at first lab meeting required.* | |||||||
CHEM 361-01 | Advanced Organic Chemistry | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 301 | Rebecca Hoye | ||
CHEM 411-01 | Advanced Inorganic Chemistry | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 301 | Paul Fischer | ||
CHEM 411-L1 | Advanced Inorganic Chem Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:40 am | OLRI 380 | Paul Fischer | ||
Classics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CLAS 111-01 | Elementary Latin I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 011 | Joseph Rife | ||
CLAS 111-L1 | Elementary Latin I Lab | R | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | CARN 204 | Joseph Rife | ||
CLAS 113-01 | Elementary Arabic I | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 002 | Antoine Mefleh | ||
CLAS 113-02 | Elementary Arabic I | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 010 | Antoine Mefleh | ||
CLAS 115-01 | Elementary Greek I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 003 | Nanette Goldman | ||
CLAS 115-L1 | Elementary Greek I Lab | T | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | MAIN 010 | Nanette Goldman | ||
CLAS 121-01 | The Greek World | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 009 | Corby Kelly | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 121-01 and HMCS 121-01.* | |||||||
CLAS 123-01 | Introduction to Archaeology | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 010 | Joseph Rife | ||
CLAS 127-01 | Wom/Gend/Sex Greece/Rome | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 002 | Mireille Lee | ||
CLAS 127-01 | Wom/Gend/Sex Greece/Rome | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 002 | Beth Severy-Hoven | ||
CLAS 160-01 | Intro to Ancient/Medieval Art | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | ART 113 | Mireille Lee | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 160-01.* | |||||||
CLAS 194-01 | Background to Modern Mid East | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 110 | Andrew Overman | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
CLAS 231-01 | Intermediate Latin: Prose | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 011 | Beth Severy-Hoven | ||
CLAS 237-01 | Intermediate Hebrew I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | MAIN 003 | Nanette Goldman | ||
CLAS 261-01 | Intermediate Greek: Prose | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 003 | Andrew Overman | ||
CLAS 272-01 | Studies in Classical Civ: Ancient Ports | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 010 | Joseph Rife | ||
CLAS 483-01 | Advanced Reading in Latin | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 003 | Nanette Goldman | ||
CLAS 488-01 | Jr/Sr Sem: Archaeologic Ethics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 011 | Mireille Lee | ||
Cognitive and Neuroscience Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CNS 180-01 | Brain, Mind, and Behavior | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 100 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 180-01.* | |||||||
CNS 300-01 | Directed Research in CNS | TBA | TBA | Eric Wiertelak | |||
CNS 488-01 | Senior Seminar | TBA | TBA | Eric Wiertelak | |||
Computer Science |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
COMP 121-01 | Intro to Scientific Program | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 258 | Susan Fox | ||
COMP 194-01 | An Introduction to Computer Science Thro | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 256 | Susan Fox | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
COMP 194-L1 | Multi-Media Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 256 | Susan Fox | ||
*First Year Course lab only.* | |||||||
COMP 221-01 | Algorithm Design/Analysis | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 101 | Richard Molnar | ||
COMP 225-01 | Software Design/Devpt | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 245 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
COMP 325-01 | Principles of Compiler Design | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 243 | Susan Fox | ||
COMP 343-01 | Design of Computer Networks | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 245 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
Economics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ECON 108-01 | Quantitative Thinking | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | OLRI 243 | David Bressoud | ||
*Cross-listed with MATH 108-01.* | |||||||
ECON 113-01 | Financial Accounting | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 305 | Jeff Evans | ||
ECON 113-02 | Financial Accounting | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 305 | Jeff Evans | ||
ECON 119-01 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 305 | Liang Ding | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ECON 119-02 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 305 | Liang Ding | ||
ECON 119-03 | Principles of Economics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 111 | Sarah West | ||
ECON 119-04 | Principles of Economics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 226 | Lisa Giddings | ||
ECON 119-05 | Principles of Economics | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 226 | Lisa Giddings | ||
ECON 119-06 | Principles of Economics | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 226 | Lisa Giddings | ||
ECON 221-01 | Intro to Intl Economics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 304 | Raymond Robertson | ||
ECON 231-01 | Environmental Economics and Policy | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 107 | Sarah West | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 231-01.* | |||||||
ECON 256-01 | Intro to Investment Banking | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | CARN 305 | Brad England | ||
ECON 323-01 | Econ Restructuring in Lat Amer | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 304 | Raymond Robertson | ||
ECON 325-01 | China/Russia/C Eur Transition | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 05 | Gary Krueger | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 325-01.* | |||||||
ECON 353-01 | Managerial Accounting | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | CARN 304 | Jeff Evans | ||
ECON 361-01 | Intermed Microecon Analysis | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 206 | Vasant Sukhatme | ||
ECON 361-02 | Intermed Microecon Analysis | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 206 | Vasant Sukhatme | ||
ECON 371-01 | Intermed Macroecon Analysis | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 305 | Pete Ferderer | ||
ECON 371-02 | Intermed Macroecon Analysis | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 305 | Pete Ferderer | ||
ECON 381-01 | Introduction to Econometrics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 309 | Gary Krueger | ||
ECON 381-02 | Introduction to Econometrics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 309 | Gary Krueger | ||
ECON 381-L1 | Intro to Econometrics Lab | R | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | CARN 309 | Gary Krueger | ||
ECON 381-L2 | Intro to Econometrics Lab | R | 02:30 pm-03:30 pm | CARN 309 | Gary Krueger | ||
ECON 422-01 | Intl Finance Historical Persp | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 304 | Pete Ferderer | ||
ECON 426-01 | Intl Economic Development | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 206 | Vasant Sukhatme | ||
ECON 457-01 | Finance | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 107 | Liang Ding | ||
ECON 494-01 | Honors Seminar | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 304 | Raymond Robertson | ||
*Permission of instructor required.* This course is for students working on their honors thesis. The goal of this course is to facilitate and encourage progress on the honors thesis through lectures and discussion on research methods, finding data, writing, and publication. Guest speakers will supplement in-class discussion. Prereq: Permission of instructor required. |
|||||||
Educational Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
EDUC 200-01 | Experiences in Education | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 112 | Tina Kruse | ||
EDUC 220-01 | Educational Psychology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 220-01.* | |||||||
EDUC 294-01 | Educ/Globalization/Civil Scty | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 216 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
EDUC 300-01 | Education/Family/Community | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 215 | Marceline DuBose | ||
EDUC 380-01 | Education and Social Change | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 216 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
EDUC 480-01 | Urban Educ Theory/Policy | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 215 | Marceline DuBose | ||
English |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ENGL 101-01 | College Writing | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 001 | Rebecca Graham | ||
ENGL 120-01 | Intro to Creative Writing | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 002 | Don Lee | ||
ENGL 120-02 | Intro to Creative Writing | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 227 | Marlon James | ||
ENGL 120-03 | Intro to Creative Writing | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 001 | Peter Bognanni | ||
ENGL 120-04 | Intro to Creative Writing | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 105 | Ann Bauer | ||
ENGL 125-02 | Studies in Lit: Gothic | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 001 | Ayse Celikkol | ||
ENGL 130-01 | American Voices | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR 205 | Michael Cohen | ||
ENGL 135-01 | Poetry | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 002 | John Parker | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
ENGL 135-02 | Poetry | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 370 | Theresa Krier | ||
How do poems work, and what sorts of uses do they have for readers and cultures? In this course we'll address both questions, reading many poems from many centuries and many places, so that by the end of the semester you'll be able to make your way around a poem, taking pleasure in poems from far as well as near and taking pleasure in poems difficult as well as simple, very new and very old. Sometimes we'll focus on matters of craft and technique (figurative language, meters from pentameter to free verse to those antic Skeltonics, speakers, stanzas and lines, narrative); sometimes on forms and their histories (sonnets, odes, spirituals); sometimes on thematic kinds (dream poems, poems of nature), sometimes on the roles that poetry can play in different cultures and in our own. This course is for people who already love poetry and are ready to go further into it; for people who are curious about how it comes about; for people who have sidled up to it, wondering if it might be for them; |
|||||||
ENGL 280-01 | Crafts of Writing: Poetry | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 003 | Ping Wang | ||
ENGL 281-01 | Crafts of Writing: Fiction | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 001 | Don Lee | ||
ENGL 283-01 | Scriptwriting | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 001 | Peter Bognanni | ||
ENGL 294-01 | Literary Publishing | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 111 | Jeffrey Shotts | ||
ENGL 310-01 | Shakespeare: History/Tragedy | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 208 | John Parker | ||
ENGL 330-01 | The Romantic Period | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 009 | Ayse Celikkol | ||
ENGL 331-01 | British Novel in 19th Century | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 010 | Ayse Celikkol | ||
ENGL 340-01 | 20th Century British Lit | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 300 | Casey Jarrin | ||
ENGL 342-01 | Anglophone Literature | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 170 | Casey Jarrin | ||
ENGL 367-01 | Postcolonial Theory | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 404 | David Moore | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 367-01 and INTL 367-01.* | |||||||
ENGL 371-01 | 19th Century American Lit | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 011 | James Dawes | ||
ENGL 373-01 | American Lit 1945-Present | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 204 | Marlon James | ||
ENGL 374-01 | The American Novel | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 011 | Michael Cohen | ||
ENGL 394-02 | Renaissance Science/Magic | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 305 | Theresa Krier | ||
In this course we'll consider magic and science as approaches to Nature through stories, plays, poems, and prose by natural philosophers of the Renaissance, in order to discover how people of Shakespeare's time understood their place in the cosmos. We'll read Christopher Marlowe's Dr. Faustus, Shakespeare's Macbeth and The Tempest, excerpts from Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene and John Milton's Paradise Lost, at least one contemporary account of voyage, exploration and discovery. We'll read passages on occult-magical, medical, and scientific practice from practitioners of demonic magic, natural magic, medical men, and experimentors. We'll trace the legend of the ancient Egyptian magus Hermes Trismegistus, and meet the mythological sorceresses Circe and Medea. If time permits, we'll add passages and sketches from the notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci. Throughout, we'll get perspective on each of our themes by reading from the boisterous, ribald, irreve | |||||||
ENGL 405-01 | Advanced Writing Workshop | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 002 | Ping Wang | ||
Environmental Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ENVI 120-01 | Environmental Geology | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with GEOL 120-01.* | |||||||
ENVI 133-01 | Environmental Science | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 350 | Daniel Hornbach | ||
ENVI 180-01 | Ecology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 250 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 180-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 180-L1 | Ecology Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 180-L1; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 180-L2 | Ecology Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 180-L2; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 194-01 | Culture and the Environment | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 05 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with ANTH 194-01. | |||||||
ENVI 231-01 | Environmental Economics and Policy | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 107 | Sarah West | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 231-01.* | |||||||
ENVI 232-01 | People and the Environment | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 107 | William Moseley | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with GEOG 232-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 234-01 | American Environmental History | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 301 | Christopher Wells | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 234-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 234-02 | American Environmental History | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 300 | Christopher Wells | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with HIST 234-02; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 252-01 | Water and Power | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 241 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with GEOG 252-01 and POLI 252-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 345-01 | Car Country: The Automobile and the Amer | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 270 | Christopher Wells | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 345-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 477-01 | Comparative Envt/Dvpt | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 105 | William Moseley | ||
*Cross-listed with GEOG 488-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENVI 489-01 | Environmental Leadership Pract | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 270 | Roopali Phadke | ||
French and Francophone Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
FREN 101-01 | French I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 112 | Martine Sauret | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 101-L1 | French I Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 102 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 101-L2 | French I Lab | R | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 102 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 101-L3 | French I Lab | T | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 110 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 102-01 | French II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 402 | Abou Konte | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 102-L1 | French II Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 102 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 102-L2 | French II Lab | R | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 102 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 102-L3 | French II Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 110 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 194-01 | Children/Youth in Film | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 402 | Jo�lle Vitiello | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 203-01 | French III | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 111 | Fran�oise Denis | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 203-02 | French III | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 111 | Fran�oise Denis | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 203-L1 | French III Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 203-L2 | French III Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 102 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 203-L3 | French III Lab | R | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 203-L4 | French III Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 102 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 204-01 | Text, Film and Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 214 | Martine Sauret | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 204-02 | Text, Film and Media | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 112 | Abou Konte | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 204-L1 | Text, Film and Media Lab | T | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 204-L2 | Text, Film and Media Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 204-L3 | Text, Film and Media Lab | R | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 204-L4 | Text, Film and Media Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 350 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 305-01 | Advanced Expression | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 111 | Martine Sauret | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 305-L1 | Advanced Expression Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 111 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 305-L2 | Advanced Expression Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 250 | Saloua Ben Zahra | ||
FREN 305-L3 | Advanced Expression Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Sandra Vende | ||
FREN 306-01 | Intro to Literary Analysis | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 213 | Diane Brown | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 407-01 | Voix du nord | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 102 | Fran�oise Denis | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
FREN 409-01 | French and African Cinema in Dialogue | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 402 | Jo�lle Vitiello | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with HMCS 494-01.* This course has for objective to introduce students to French and African Cinema through the prism of colonial and postcolonial cinema. The course has a historical dimension (from the first Lumi�re films on, the African continent was represented; we will study how, as well as the connections between cinema and various French colonial projects). We will study the context in which cinema emerged in francophone countries in Africa and establish connections between various well-known French and African filmmakers who were in dialogue. This will be done through the study of texts and films. French filmmakers include Jean Rouch, Ren� Vautier, Jean-Luc Godard (Swiss), Chris Marker, Claire Denis, Alain Resnais. African filmmakers Ousmane Sembe, Djibril Diop Mambety, Safi Faye, Jean-Pierre Bekolo, Med Hondo, and Trinh-Minh-Ha (Vietnamese/US). We will study in particular how French filmmakers of the New Wave responded to the em |
|||||||
FREN 415-01 | Enlightenment Projects | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 212 | Diane Brown | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
Geography |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GEOG 111-01 | Human Geog of Global Issues | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 107 | Helen Hazen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 111-02 | Human Geog of Global Issues | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 107 | David Lanegran | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 112-01 | Introduction to Urban Studies | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 250 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 112-01 | Introduction to Urban Studies | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 250 | George Latimer | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 225-01 | Intro to Geog Info Systems | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 05 | Birgit Muehlenhaus | ||
*$20.00 materials fee required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 225-L1 | Intro to Geog Info Systems | M | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 108 | Birgit Muehlenhaus | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 225-L2 | Intro to Geog Info Systems | T | 09:00 am-10:00 am | CARN 108 | Birgit Muehlenhaus | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 232-01 | People and the Environment | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 107 | William Moseley | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with ENVI 232-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 241-01 | Urban Geography | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 107 | David Lanegran | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 248-01 | Political Geography | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 06 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 250-01 | Race, Place, and Space | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 112 | Karin San Juan | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 250-01; first day attendance required.* How do U.S. racial categories become grounded in place and space? In this seminar, we will examine race at various levels of spatial scale: from the racialization of the U.S. nation-state to U.S. cities and suburbs; and from prisons, reservations, and ethnic enclaves to the human body. As a point of departure, we will look for and analyze race and related social categories in places around the Twin Cities. By putting familiar ideas about race and ethnicity in a sociospatial framework, we will develop a specialized vocabulary for explaining how race, place, and space are connected. This course requires prior exposure to at least one of the following areas: American Studies, human geography, sociology of race/ethnicity, or urban studies. |
|||||||
GEOG 252-01 | Water and Power | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 241 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 252-01 and POLI 252-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 294-01 | Regional Geog of Latin Amer | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 107 | Helen Hazen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 294-02 | Gender, Place, and Culture | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 105 | Tiffany Muller | ||
*First day attendance required.* This course is intended to familiarize the student with the various topics, interests and debates within feminist geography. Over the course of the semester we will investigate how gender relations shape different spaces and places. We will also look at how we 'read' power relations by exploring the symbolic and material construction of spaces/places. Specifically the class will ask: how do gender, race, class, and sexual orientation intersect to produce differing experiences of particular places? We will approach these questions from a variety of scales, including the body, home, state, and environment. This class stresses the importance of these geographic questions to our everyday lives. The course begins by asking what feminism has to do with geography; we then discuss the tools used by feminist geographers before we explore a series of sites expanding out from the body from the local to the global. |
|||||||
GEOG 377-01 | Qualitative Research Methods | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 208 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
GEOG 488-01 | Comparative Envt/Dvpt | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 105 | William Moseley | ||
***Cross-listed with ENVI 477-01; first day attendance required.*** A concern for the relationship between nature and society has been one of the pillars of geographic inquiry, and has also been an important bridge between other disciplines. By the 1960s, this area of inquiry was referred to variously as 'human ecology' or 'cultural ecology.' Over the last decade certain forms of inquiry within this tradition have increasingly referred to themselves as 'political ecology.' The purpose of this seminar is to review major works within the traditions of cultural and political ecology; examine several areas of interest within these fields (e.g., agricultural modernization, environmental narratives, conservation, ecotourism); and explore nature-society dynamics across a range of geographical contexts. Towards the end of the course students will explore how one might begin to think in practical terms about facilitating development in marginal environments. Prerequisite: Geography 232 or p |
|||||||
Geology |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GEOL 101-01 | Dinosaurs | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 100 | Kristina Curry | ||
GEOL 120-01 | Environmental Geology | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
***First Year Course only; cross-listed with ENVI 120-01.*** | |||||||
GEOL 150-01 | Dynamic Earth/Global Change | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 150 | John Craddock | ||
GEOL 150-L1 | Dyn Earth/Global Chg Lab | M | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | OLRI 187 | Jeffrey Thole | ||
GEOL 150-L2 | Dyn Earth/Global Chg Lab | T | 01:00 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 187 | Jeffrey Thole | ||
GEOL 155-01 | History/Evolution of Earth | TR | 09:00 am-11:30 am | OLRI 187 | Raymond Rogers | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
GEOL 250-01 | Mineralogy | MWF | 08:30 am-10:30 am | OLRI 179 | Karl Wirth | ||
GEOL 260-01 | Geomorphology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
GEOL 260-L1 | Geomorphology Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
GEOL 294-01 | Scientific Field Methods | R | 08:30 am-11:40 am | OLRI 187 | Karl Wirth | ||
GEOL 394-01 | Global Tectonics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 100 | John Craddock | ||
GEOL 394-L1 | Global Tectonics Lab | TBA | TBA | John Craddock | |||
German Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GERM 101-01 | Elementary German I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 215 | David Martyn | ||
GERM 101-L1 | Elementary German I Lab | M | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 214 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 101-L2 | Elementary German I Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 112 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 101-L3 | Elementary German I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 214 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 110-01 | Accelerated Elementary German | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 212 | Kiarina Kordela | ||
GERM 110-L1 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 213 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 110-L2 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | T | 11:00 am-12:00 pm | HUM 214 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 110-L3 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | T | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | HUM 214 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 203-01 | Intermediate German I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 213 | Gisela Peters | ||
GERM 203-02 | Intermediate German I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 213 | Gisela Peters | ||
GERM 203-L1 | Intermediate German I Lab | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 112 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 203-L2 | Intermediate German I Lab | W | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 214 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 203-L3 | Intermediate German I Lab | W | 08:10 pm-09:10 pm | HUM 214 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 203-L5 | Intermediate German I Lab | R | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | HUM 214 | Johannes Henrich | ||
GERM 204-01 | Intermediate German II | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 217 | Linda Schulte-Sasse | ||
GERM 204-L1 | Intermediate German II Lab | R | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 214 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 204-L2 | Intermediate German II Lab | R | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 214 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 223-01 | Culture Comp for Study Abroad | TR | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 213 | Gisela Peters | ||
*Taught in German.* | |||||||
GERM 255-01 | German Cinema Studies: Art/Horror | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 401 | Linda Schulte-Sasse | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
GERM 305-01 | German Through the Media | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 102 | Brigetta Abel | ||
GERM 305-L1 | German Through the Media Lab | R | 09:00 am-10:00 am | HUM 213 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 305-L2 | German Through the Media Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 170 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 305-L3 | German Through the Media Lab | R | 02:10 pm-03:10 pm | HUM 102 | Christoph Kleinschmidt | ||
GERM 306-01 | Introduction to German Studies | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 214 | Rachael Huener | ||
*Taught in German.* | |||||||
GERM 360-01 | Proseminar: Literature/Madness | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 217 | David Martyn | ||
*Taught in German.* "Madness"is not just a fact of nature, but a social phenomenon that has a history, one that is reflected both in the scientific discourse on insanity (psychology and psychiatry) and in the "mad" characters and narrators who populate literature. This course will study both, reading literary texts in tandem with discursive treatments of madness from the Middle Ages to the present day. Literary readings from Hartmann von Aue's medieval epic Iwein (circa 1200) to "pop" author Rainald Goetz' debut novel Irre (1983). Requirements: three short papers; oral presentation; reading journal. |
|||||||
GERM 364-01 | The Birth of Modern Germany | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 401 | Rachael Huener | ||
*Taught in German.* | |||||||
GERM 394-01 | Darwin, Nietzsche, Freud | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 213 | David Martyn | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 394-01; taught in English; not open to first year students.* Reacting to Darwin's discovery of natural selection, Nietzsche and Freud both grappled with the question of what basis value judgments have in a world without God. The course explores their answers to this question, centering on the four domains of ethics, subjectivity, aesthetics, and theories of civilization. Topics of discussion will include: the genesis of moral values; "agency" and the loss of the subject ("there is no doer behind the deed" - Nietzsche); the split self; art and aesthetics as absolute values; art as sublimation; the deadening weight of history and civilization; the transience of culture; the death drive. Readings will include selections from the following: Darwin: The Origin of the Species and The Descent of Man; Nietzsche: The Birth of Tragedy, On the Advantages and Disadvantages of History for Life, Daybreak, The Genealogy of Morals, The Gay Science, Thus Spoke Zarat |
|||||||
GERM 394-02 | How to Re-Appropriate Dead White Men: In | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 100 | Kiarina Kordela | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 394-01; taught in English.* "How to Re-Appropriate Dead White Men: Intro to Critical Theory." This course is survey of major theoretical texts examined from the multiple perspective of both intellectual history and cultural studies, which foregrounds the ideological, social, and political function of concepts and other cultural artifacts. The focus will be on some of the central tenants of thought since the advent of modern secular capitalism in the seventeenth century, which continue to inform contemporary critical and political thought and discussions. The course will introduce students to (or further their existing knowledge in) central theories (ranging from philosophy, political theory, and linguistics to the various movements within twentieth-century critical theory, such as psychoanalysis, deconstruction, discourse theory, and theories of ideology) and methodologies involved in the analysis of theory itself, literature, film, society and politics, and |
|||||||
Hispanic and Latin American Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HISP 101-01 | Elementary Spanish I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 217 | Justin Butler | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 101-02 | Elementary Spanish I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 215 | Rosa Rull-Montoya | ||
HISP 101-03 | Elementary Spanish I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 228 | Justin Butler | ||
HISP 101-L1 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 212 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 101-L2 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 217 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 101-L3 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | R | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 212 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 101-L4 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | R | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 370 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 101-L5 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | T | 09:00 am-10:00 am | HUM 213 | STAFF | ||
HISP 102-01 | Elementary Spanish II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 216 | Leland Guyer | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 102-02 | Elementary Spanish II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 216 | Leland Guyer | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 102-L1 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 212 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 102-L2 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | T | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 350 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 102-L4 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 102 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 102-L5 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 213 | STAFF | ||
HISP 110-01 | Accel Beginning Spanish | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 227 | David Sunderland | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 110-02 | Accel Beginning Spanish | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 217 | David Sunderland | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 110-L1 | Accel Beginning Spanish Lab | TR | 09:00 am-10:00 am | HUM 215 | STAFF | ||
HISP 110-L2 | Accel Beginning Spanish Lab | TR | 12:30 pm-01:30 pm | OLRI 150 | STAFF | ||
HISP 110-L3 | Accel Beginning Spanish Lab | TR | 09:00 am-10:00 am | HUM 216 | STAFF | ||
HISP 110-L4 | Accel Beginning Spanish Lab | TR | 02:35 pm-03:35 pm | HUM 227 | STAFF | ||
HISP 111-01 | Accel Elementary Portuguese | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 216 | David Sunderland | ||
HISP 111-L1 | Accel Elem Portuguese Lab | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 112 | STAFF | ||
HISP 111-L2 | Accel Elem Portuguese Lab | T | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 217 | STAFF | ||
HISP 111-L3 | Accel Elem Portuguese Lab | R | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 217 | STAFF | ||
HISP 194-01 | Cervantes to Garcia Marquez | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 216 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
HISP 203-01 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 215 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 203-02 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 215 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 203-03 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 208 | Margaret Olsen | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 203-04 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 370 | Laura Wasenius | ||
HISP 203-L1 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 217 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 203-L2 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | T | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 212 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 203-L3 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | T | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 217 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 203-L5 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | R | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 100 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 203-L6 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | R | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 217 | Elena Gandolla | ||
HISP 203-L7 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | F | 01:00 pm-02:00 pm | HUM 113 | STAFF | ||
HISP 204-01 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 228 | Rosa Rull-Montoya | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 204-02 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 111 | Rosa Rull-Montoya | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 204-03 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 212 | Alexandra Bergmann | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 204-L1 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 214 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L2 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | T | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 170 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L3 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 102 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L4 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | R | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 112 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L5 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | R | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 243 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L6 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 217 | Romina Papini | ||
HISP 204-L7 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | F | 02:30 pm-03:30 pm | HUM 227 | STAFF | ||
HISP 220-01 | Accel Intermediate Spanish | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 213 | Susana Blanco-Iglesias | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 220-L1 | Accel Intermed Spanish Lab | TR | 10:50 am-11:50 am | STAFF | |||
HISP 220-L2 | Accel Intermed Spanish Lab | TR | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 113 | STAFF | ||
HISP 305-01 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 214 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 305-02 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 214 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 305-03 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 112 | Alexandra Bergmann | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 305-04 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 227 | Laura Wasenius | ||
HISP 307-01 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 216 | Leland Guyer | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 307-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 307-02 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 111 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 307-02; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 307-02 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 111 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 307-02; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 308-01 | Locating US Latino Studies | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 112 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with AMST 294-02.* | |||||||
HISP 308-01 | Locating US Latino Studies | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 112 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with AMST 294-02.* | |||||||
HISP 309-01 | Intro to Hispanic Linguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 216 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 309-01.* | |||||||
HISP 425-01 | Dictators, Revolutions | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 214 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HISP 437-01 | Spanish 2nd Lang Acquisition | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 270 | Susana Blanco-Iglesias | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 437-01.* | |||||||
HISP 494-01 | Superando Limites | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 227 | Margaret Olsen | ||
*First day attendance required.* In this course on 17th century Hispanic literature from both Spain and Spanish America, we will read works of various genres, including prose, drama, poetry and historiography. Students will explore - and in some cases perform - texts from both sides of the Atlantic. Above all, we will examine how authors were pushing aesthetic and societal limits of gender, ethnicity and "national" identity in their writing. We will also read some pertinent critical perspectives that will enrich our readings of the literature. The 17th century may seem a long way off, but these authors were exploring issues that are relevant to our contemporary reality. Don't be daunted by history: we are going to get into the lives of these authors and their literary characters through performance and impersonation. And remember, as the not-so-famous author Justin Butler said, "If it ain't Baroque, don't fix it!" So come ready to enjoy! Some of the texts we will be exploring includ |
|||||||
HISP 494-02 | Narratives of Independence: A Transatlan | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 404 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 494-01.* This is an interdisciplinary course focusing on the processes whereby Spanish-speaking nations have created and instituted their narratives of independence since the 1800s. By resorting to history, literature, film, and art, we will study the sociopolitical circumstances responsible for the emergence of such discourses from the nineteenth century to today. We will also analyze the use of certain textual strategies in order to legitimize a specific ideology. The course will be divided into three thematic units corresponding to seminal historical events: 1) Spain's fight against Napolean: the 'Guerra de la Independencia', or Peninsular War (1808-1814); 2) The independence of the American colonies (1808-1826); 3) The independence of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines: the Spanish-American War (1898). An integral part of the course will be the incorporation of the study away experience. Whether students have completed their semester abroad or are ab |
|||||||
History |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HIST 100-01 | Discovering World History | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 111 | Ellen Arnold | ||
We are not the first people to try to understand and change the world we live in. This introductory survey will allow us to explore how our efforts to understand the world (and our impact on the world) connect us to past societies. Past and present peoples are connected by the fact that we live in and react to the environments that surround us. Throughout time, human societies have had to find ways to survive in the world and in the process of developing advanced civilizations have learned how to control and transform the natural world. As a part of this process, these societies have also tried to explain and explore the world and the ways that people relate to it and to each other. We will cover the themes of environment, exploration, and the development of different historical world views in a wide range of regions and time periods, including early Chinese empire building, medieval world travelers, 19th-century imperialism, and modern space exploration. |
|||||||
HIST 110-01 | Intro to European History | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 002 | David Itzkowitz | ||
HIST 112-01 | The Global in the Local | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 010 | Lynn Hudson | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
HIST 112-02 | The Global in the Local | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 009 | Peter Rachleff | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
HIST 121-01 | The Greek World | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 009 | Corby Kelly | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 121-01 and HMCS 121-01.* | |||||||
HIST 140-01 | Intro to East Asian Civ | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 003 | Yue-him Tam | ||
***Cross-listed with ASIA 140.*** | |||||||
HIST 194-01 | American Violence: A Cultural History of | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 009 | Andrea Cremer | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 194-04.* This course deconstructs the discipline of military history in order to uncover the broad social and cultural implications of societies at war. Beginning with the military conquests of central America and the Southwest, students will analyze the ways in which economic and military pressures functioned to create boundaries of social belonging and structured new ethnic identities. Readings will be drawn from primary accounts of early American wars, scholarly articles, and historical monographs. The course will progress in a chronological order through the following conflicts: De Soto's Death March, the Pueblo Revolt, the Beaver Wars, Powhatan's Revolt, the Pequot War, King Phillip's War, the French and Indian War, and the American Revolution. In addition to major military conflicts, the course will also investigate the cultural impact of slave revolts and class-based rebellions (such as Bacon's Rebellion and Shay�s Rebellion). By investigating the cult |
|||||||
HIST 194-02 | African Politics in Historical Perspecti | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 150 | Paul Bjerk | ||
The rapid political, economic, and cultural transformations of the 20th century in Africa provide a rich point of departure for an exploration of politics as a field of human activity in its infinite variety. These rapid changes provide us today with glimpses into distinct worlds of thought a way that more gradual social change often masks. The techniques historians have used to unearth the past in societies defined by oral tradition reveals new ways of understanding politics in societies where the written word is usually our point of departure. Changing conceptions of gender, family, race, and religion all shape the conceptual realm where the quotidian struggle for power takes place. This course will explore political thought in Africa using both theoretical and historical analysis of the events both past and present. |
|||||||
HIST 222-01 | Imagining the American West | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 010 | Lynn Hudson | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 222-01.* | |||||||
HIST 234-01 | American Environmental History | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 301 | Christopher Wells | ||
***Cross-listed with ENVI 234-01; first day attendance required.*** | |||||||
HIST 234-02 | American Environmental History | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 300 | Christopher Wells | ||
*First Year Course only; cross-listed with ENVI 234-02; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HIST 255-01 | History/Philosophy-Socialism | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 111 | Peter Weisensel | ||
*Must also register for PHIL 255-01.* | |||||||
HIST 274-01 | History of Traditional China | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 001 | Yue-him Tam | ||
***Cross-listed with ASIA 274.*** | |||||||
HIST 294-02 | Women/Revolutionary Struggle | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 011 | Sharilyn Geistfeld | ||
HIST 294-03 | History of East African in the Second Mi | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 301 | Paul Bjerk | ||
This course traverses 1000 years of East African history illustrating both continuities of the "ongue dur�e" and the ruptures of a tumultuous 20th century. Covering the area now known as Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi, the course seeks to understand both the broad cultural connections in the region as well as the artificiality of the colonial division of territory. At the same time the course will seek to understand the power of the modern nation-states that now define the region and its people. The course seeks to define long-standing understandings of politics and society rooted in land, the body, and the family and how these metaphors appear and shape history during different eras. |
|||||||
HIST 294-04 | Medieval Hist Through Castles | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 010 | Ellen Arnold | ||
Castles are one of the most recognizable features of medieval civilization, and many different historians, archaeologists, and medievalists have studied them. In this class we will discuss castles themselves and explore why they were important in the Middle Ages. We will also talk about how different historians work with sources, theories, and material objects to reconstruct the past. For example, a historian interested in military history takes a very different approach to castles than someone interested in gender history. Through a combination of readings about castles and about historical methods, we will be able to understand more about the medieval past and to analyze approaches to reconstructing, understanding, and writing about the past. Because this course will address larger issues about historical studies, it can be useful for people interested in many different periods by providing background on how to design and prepare for research projects. |
|||||||
HIST 294-05 | Saints/Society in Middle Ages | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 010 | Ellen Arnold | ||
In the Middle Ages, religious practices and beliefs were deeply integrated into the social, political, and economic fabric of society. In this class, we will look at medieval saints in order to discuss the character and nature of medieval society. Medieval people interacted with saints (both living and dead) in fascinating and unique ways. We will discuss the earliest desert saints who shaped ideas of Christian holiness, crusading-era ideas about the power of saintly intervention in worldly conflict, and medieval ideas about miracles, death, and redemption. We will survey the full span of the Middle Ages, from the waning of the Roman Empire to the beginnings of the Protestant Reformation. We will read, discuss, and write about medieval biographies of saints and also books and articles by historians who use those biographies to understand medieval culture and society. This class can be an introduction to medieval history for students who have not taken medieval courses an |
|||||||
HIST 294-06 | Native America: Contact, Conflict, Accom | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 101 | Andrea Cremer | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 294-03.* This approaches the history of indigenous North America from the Age of Exploration through the nineteenth century. The chronology of the course brings students directly into a time of traumatic and dynamic political and cultural change among Native Americans. Combining close study of European and Native American source materials, students will be challenged not only to reconstruct the narrative of early American history with a view to the experience of Native American peoples, but also will confront important historiographical problems related to source reliability, interdisciplinarity and colonial and postcolonial theory. Rather than teach events of colonial American and United States history that also include American Indian experiences, this course attempts to approach the development of diverse North American cultures and societies from the perspective of the continent�s indigenous peoples. Prior to the start of the course, students will be req |
|||||||
HIST 294-08 | Brazilian History | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 011 | Sharilyn Geistfeld | ||
HIST 294-09 | Asian American History | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 05 | Peter Rachleff | ||
Asians -- immigrants from China, Japan, the Philippines, Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, India, and the Hmong people -- and their children and grandchildren have long been central participants in U.S. history. Their experiences have included: the mid-19th century and the California gold rush, the building of the transcontinental railroad, the composition of a labor force for Hawaiian plantations and the construction of "Chinatowns" in major cities; the Chinese exclusion movement of the late 19th century and the incorporation of the Philippines into a new U.S. empire; the definition of Asians as non-white and ineligible for citizenship in the early 20th century; the dispossession and internment of Japanese immigrants and their children during WWII; and the complex receptions accorded Southeast Asian and South Asian immigrants after the Hart-Cellar immigration "reform" act of 1965. Have they been "Orientals," permanent others, as historian Robert Lee argues, "impossible subjects," neve | |||||||
HIST 330-01 | Historians/Crit Race Theory | W | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | MAIN 002 | Peter Rachleff | ||
*Permission of instructor required.* | |||||||
HIST 345-01 | Car Country: The Automobile and the Amer | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 270 | Christopher Wells | ||
***Cross-listed with ENVI 345-01; first day attendance required.*** | |||||||
HIST 367-01 | History of the Holocaust | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 010 | David Itzkowitz | ||
HIST 490-01 | Special Advanced Topics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | David Itzkowitz | ||
HIST 490-02 | Special Advanced Topics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 010 | Peter Weisensel | ||
International Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
INTL 110-01 | Intro to Intl St:Globalization | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 304 | Ahmed Samatar | ||
INTL 113-01 | Intro to Intl St: Theory/Cont | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 404 | Nadya Nedelsky | ||
INTL 194-01 | Comparative Muslim Cultures | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 404 | Smadar Lavie | ||
INTL 245-01 | Intro to Intl Human Rights | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 404 | Nadya Nedelsky | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
INTL 245-02 | Intro to Intl Human Rights | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 206 | James von Geldern | ||
INTL 272-01 | The Post-Soviet Sphere | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 404 | James von Geldern | ||
*Cross-listed with RUSS 272-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
INTL 325-01 | China/Russia/C Eur Transition | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 05 | Gary Krueger | ||
***Cross-listed with ECON 325-01.*** | |||||||
INTL 362-01 | Culture and Globalization | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 05 | Dianna Shandy | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 362-01.* | |||||||
INTL 367-01 | Postcolonial Theory | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 404 | David Moore | ||
***Cross-listed with ENGL 367-01 and HMCS 367-01.*** | |||||||
Japanese |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
JAPA 101-01 | Elementary Japanese I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 110 | Christopher Scott | ||
JAPA 101-02 | Elementary Japanese I | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 110 | Christopher Scott | ||
JAPA 101-L1 | Elementary Japanese I Lab | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 101-L2 | Elementary Japanese I Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 101-L3 | Elementary Japanese I Lab | T | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 203-01 | Intermediate Japanese I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 110 | Sachiko Dorsey | ||
JAPA 203-02 | Intermediate Japanese I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 110 | Sachiko Dorsey | ||
JAPA 203-L1 | Intermediate Japanese I Lab | R | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 203-L2 | Intermediate Japanese I Lab | R | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 203-L3 | Intermediate Japanese I Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 255-01 | Japanese Film | M | 07:00 pm-09:00 pm | HUM 401 | Christopher Scott | ||
JAPA 255-01 | Japanese Film | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 110 | Christopher Scott | ||
JAPA 294-01 | 18th Cent Love-Suicide Plays | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 101 | Sachiko Dorsey | ||
Chikamatsu Monzaemon, a famous Japanese playwright from the late 17th to the early 18th century, wrote over 100 plays during his career for joruri (puppet plays) as well as kabuki theaters. Twenty-four of these plays were love-suicide (double suicide) stories of everyday people, which were based on true events. These plays were immensely popular both as theatrical plays and literary texts, and had a tremendous impact on communities throughout Japan, even triggering a number of copycat suicides, which resulted in the government ban of such plays. The popularity of these plays is significant, especially considering the fact that up until then, plays mostly featured historical, aristocratic heroes, and never commoners, such as merchants and low-ranked bushi. Studying closely the texts as well as visual materials of the plays, and considering various issues surrounding them, we will ask: Who were the "everyday people" of Genroku Japan, during which literature and arts flourished to |
|||||||
JAPA 305-01 | Advanced Japanese I | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 110 | Ritsuko Narita | ||
JAPA 305-L1 | Advanced Japanese I Lab | T | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 113 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 305-L2 | Advanced Japanese I Lab | W | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 208 | Hideko Yamazaki | ||
JAPA 407-01 | Fourth Year Japanese I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 212 | Ritsuko Narita | ||
Latin American Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
LATI 194-01 | Latin Amer in Comparative Pers | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | CARN 05 | James Bowen | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 194-01.* This course examines Latin American politics and culture from a historical perspective. The major themes of the course are colonialism and its legacies, revolution in the 20th century, authoritarianism and violence, democratization, neoliberalism, and US-Latin America relations. The course will draw on theoretical discussions of these issues as well as specific case studies of Mexico, Peru, Cuba, Chile, El Salvador, Colombia, Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, and Venezuela. |
|||||||
LATI 307-01 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 216 | Leland Guyer | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 307-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
LATI 307-02 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 226 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 307-02; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
LATI 394-01 | Challenges-Democratization | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 107 | James Bowen | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 394-02.* This courses focuses on the process of democratization and the challenges faced by new (or newly restored) democracies. This first part of the course examines the philosophical and theoretical foundations of democracy and democratization from the ancient Greeks to the 21st century. The second part of the course focuses on specific case studies to illustrate the possibilities and pitfalls faced by countries emerging from different types of authoritarian rule since the 1970s. We explore the cases of Spain, Chile, Russia, South Africa, Indonesia, Mexico, and El Salvador. |
|||||||
LATI 494-01 | Narratives of Independence: A Transatlan | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 404 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 494-02.* This is an interdisciplinary course focusing on the processes whereby Spanish-speaking nations have created and instituted their narratives of independence since the 1800s. By resorting to history, literature, film, and art, we will study the sociopolitical circumstances responsible for the emergence of such discourses from the nineteenth century to today. We will also analyze the use of certain textual strategies in order to legitimize a specific ideology. The course will be divided into three thematic units corresponding to seminal historical events: 1) Spain's fight against Napolean: the 'Guerra de la Independencia', or Peninsular War (1808-1814); 2) The independence of the American colonies (1808-1826); 3) The independence of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines: the Spanish-American War (1898). An integral part of the course will be the incorporation of the study away experience. Whether students have completed their semester abroad or are ab |
|||||||
Linguistics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
LING 100-01 | Introduction to Linguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 226 | John Haiman | ||
LING 104-01 | The Sounds of Language | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 228 | Christina Esposito | ||
LING 201-01 | Historical Linguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 212 | Marianne Milligan | ||
LING 204-01 | Experimental Linguistics | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 102 | Christina Esposito | ||
LING 300-01 | Linguistic Analysis | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 217 | John Haiman | ||
LING 309-01 | Intro to Hispanic Linguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 216 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 309-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
LING 364-01 | Philosophy of Language | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 111 | Joy Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 364-01.* | |||||||
LING 437-01 | Spanish 2nd Lang Acquisition | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 270 | Susana Blanco-Iglesias | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 437-01.* | |||||||
Mathematics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
MATH 108-01 | Quantitative Thinking | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | OLRI 243 | David Bressoud | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 108-01.* | |||||||
MATH 135-01 | Applied Calculus | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 241 | Chad Topaz | ||
MATH 135-02 | Applied Calculus | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 241 | Karen Saxe | ||
MATH 135-03 | Applied Calculus | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 241 | Andrew Beveridge | ||
MATH 136-01 | Discrete Mathematics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 245 | Richard Molnar | ||
MATH 136-02 | Discrete Mathematics | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 245 | Richard Molnar | ||
MATH 137-01 | Single Variable Calculus | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 241 | Daniel Flath | ||
MATH 137-02 | Single Variable Calculus | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 247 | Daniel Flath | ||
MATH 153-01 | Data Analysis and Statistics | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 245 | Sharon Lane-Getaz | ||
MATH 153-02 | Data Analysis and Statistics | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 258 | Sharon Lane-Getaz | ||
MATH 155-01 | Intro to Statistical Modeling | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 258 | Daniel Kaplan | ||
MATH 155-02 | Intro to Statistical Modeling | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 258 | Daniel Kaplan | ||
MATH 194-01 | Newton's Principia | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 247 | David Bressoud | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
MATH 236-01 | Linear Algebra | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 241 | Thomas Halverson | ||
MATH 237-01 | Multivariable Calculus | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 243 | Stan Wagon | ||
MATH 237-02 | Multivariable Calculus | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 243 | Stan Wagon | ||
MATH 253-01 | Applied Mulitivariate Stats | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 245 | Vittorio Addona | ||
MATH 312-01 | Differential Equations | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 243 | Stan Wagon | ||
MATH 354-01 | Probability | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 243 | Vittorio Addona | ||
MATH 377-01 | Real Analysis | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 247 | Daniel Flath | ||
MATH 394-01 | Topics in Graph Theory | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 247 | Andrew Beveridge | ||
MATH 432-01 | Mathematical Modeling | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 245 | Chad Topaz | ||
MATH 476-01 | Topics in Modern Algebra | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 243 | Thomas Halverson | ||
Media and Cultural Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HMCS 110-01 | Texts and Power: Foundations of Cult'l S | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 270 | Vincent Doyle | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
HMCS 114-01 | News Reporting/Writing | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 216 | Howard Sinker | ||
HMCS 121-01 | The Greek World | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 009 | Corby Kelly | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 121-01 and HIST 121-01.* | |||||||
HMCS 126-01 | Media Institutions | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 250 | Vincent Doyle | ||
HMCS 128-01 | Film Analysis/Visual Culture | R | 02:45 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required; mandatory film screenings on Thursdays 2:45-4:30, Humanities 401.* | |||||||
HMCS 128-01 | Film Analysis/Visual Culture | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*First Year Course only; first day attendance required; mandatory film screenings on Thursdays 2:45-4:30, Humanities 401.* | |||||||
HMCS 128-02 | Film Analysis/Visual Culture | R | 02:45 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*First day attendance required; mandatory film screenings on Thursdays 2:45-4:30, Humanities 401.* | |||||||
HMCS 128-02 | Film Analysis/Visual Culture | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*First day attendance required; mandatory film screenings on Thursdays 2:45-4:30, Humanities 401.* | |||||||
HMCS 194-01 | From Literature to Cyberworlds: Technolo | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 111 | Kulvinder Arora | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 194-01.* | |||||||
HMCS 263-01 | Russia's Literary South | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 102 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
*Cross-listed with RUSS 363-01.* | |||||||
HMCS 294-01 | Not All Things Sugar and Spice: Gender i | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | Kulvinder Arora | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 294-01.* | |||||||
HMCS 334-01 | Cultural Studies and the Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 205 | Leola Johnson | ||
HMCS 367-01 | Postcolonial Theory | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 404 | David Moore | ||
***Cross-listed with ENGL 367-01 and INTL 367-01.*** | |||||||
HMCS 394-01 | How to Re-Appropriate Dead White Men: In | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 100 | Kiarina Kordela | ||
*Cross-listed with GERM 394-02; taught in English.* "How to Re-Appropriate Dead White Men: Intro to Critical Theory." This course is survey of major theoretical texts examined from the multiple perspective of both intellectual history and cultural studies, which foregrounds the ideological, social, and political function of concepts and other cultural artifacts. The focus will be on some of the central tenants of thought since the advent of modern secular capitalism in the seventeenth century, which continue to inform contemporary critical and political thought and discussions. The course will introduce students to (or further their existing knowledge in) central theories (ranging from philosophy, political theory, and linguistics to the various movements within twentieth-century critical theory, such as psychoanalysis, deconstruction, discourse theory, and theories of ideology) and methodologies involved in the analysis of theory itself, literature, film, society and politics, and |
|||||||
HMCS 488-01 | Sr Sem: War and Media | W | 01:10 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 402 | Leola Johnson | ||
HMCS 494-01 | French and African Cinema in Dialogue | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 402 | Jo�lle Vitiello | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with FREN 409-01.* | |||||||
Music |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
MUSI 110-01 | Music Appreciation | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MUSIC 123 | Chuen-Fung Wong | ||
MUSI 113-01 | Theory I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MUSIC 201 | Christopher Gable | ||
MUSI 113-02 | Theory I | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MUSIC 202 | Christopher Gable | ||
MUSI 113-L1 | Theory I Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MUSIC 201 | Christopher Gable | ||
MUSI 113-L2 | Theory I Lab | T | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MUSIC 201 | Christopher Gable | ||
MUSI 131-01 | African Music | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MUSIC 201 | Sowah Mensah | ||
MUSI 194-01 | Discovering World Music | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MUSIC 202 | Chuen-Fung Wong | ||
*First Year Only course.* | |||||||
MUSI 213-01 | Theory III, Form and Analysis | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MUSIC 202 | Carleton Macy | ||
MUSI 342-01 | Western Music-17th/18th Cent | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MUSIC 202 | Chuen-Fung Wong | ||
MUSI 361-01 | Composition | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MUSIC 123 | Carleton Macy | ||
MUSI 488-13 | Senior Project | TBA | TBA | Carleton Macy | |||
MUSI 72-01 | African Ensemble | TR | 05:30 pm-07:00 pm | MUSIC | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | ||
MUSI 72-01 | African Ensemble | TR | 05:30 pm-07:00 pm | MUSIC | Sowah Mensah | ||
MUSI 74-01 | Macalester Choir | MTWR | 04:30 pm-06:00 pm | MUSIC 123 | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | ||
MUSI 74-01 | Macalester Choir | MTWR | 04:30 pm-06:00 pm | MUSIC 123 | Robert Peterson | ||
MUSI 76-01 | MAC Singers/Women's Choir/Men's Choir | R | 06:15 pm-07:45 pm | MUSIC 123 | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | ||
MUSI 76-01 | MAC Singers/Women's Choir/Men's Choir | R | 06:15 pm-07:45 pm | MUSIC 123 | Robert Peterson | ||
MUSI 80-01 | Mac Jazz Band | TR | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | MUSIC | Joan Griffith | ||
MUSI 80-01 | Mac Jazz Band | TR | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | MUSIC | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | ||
MUSI 84-01 | Pipe Band | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | Michael Breidenbach | |||
MUSI 84-01 | Pipe Band | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 88-01 | Symphony Orchestra | TR | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | Cary Franklin | |||
MUSI 88-01 | Symphony Orchestra | TR | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 90-01 | Collegium Musicum | TBA | TBA | Carleton Macy | |||
MUSI 90-01 | Collegium Musicum | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 90-02 | Wind Ensemble | MW | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | Cary Franklin | |||
MUSI 90-02 | Wind Ensemble | MW | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 90-03 | Jazz Combos | M | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Joan Griffith | ||
MUSI 90-03 | Jazz Combos | M | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | ||
MUSI 92-01 | Chamber Music Ensemble | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 92-01 | Chamber Music Ensemble | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
MUSI 92-02 | Chamber Music Ensemble | TBA | TBA | Christopher Gable | |||
MUSI 92-02 | Chamber Music Ensemble | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-01 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-01 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 94-02 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Barbara Brooks | |||
MUSI 94-02 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-03 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Christine Dahl | |||
MUSI 94-03 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-04 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 94-04 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-08 | Organ | TBA | TBA | Winston Kaehler | |||
MUSI 94-08 | Organ | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-09 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-09 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Benjamin Allen | |||
MUSI 94-10 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 94-10 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-11 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-11 | Voice | TBA | TBA | William Reed | |||
MUSI 94-15 | Electric Guitar | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 94-15 | Electric Guitar | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-17 | Acoustic Guitar | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-17 | Acoustic Guitar | TBA | TBA | Jeffrey Thygeson | |||
MUSI 94-1M | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-1M | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Richard Gaynor | |||
MUSI 94-1W | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Richard Gaynor | |||
MUSI 94-1W | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-21 | Jazz Improvisation | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 94-21 | Jazz Improvisation | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-22 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-22 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Mary Horozaniecki | |||
MUSI 94-23 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-23 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 94-24 | Viola | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-24 | Viola | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 94-27 | String Bass | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 94-27 | String Bass | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-29 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 94-29 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-30 | African Flute | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 94-30 | African Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-31 | Oboe | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-31 | Oboe | TBA | TBA | Jennifer Loupe | |||
MUSI 94-33 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Shelley Hanson | |||
MUSI 94-33 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-37 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-37 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Caroline Lemen | |||
MUSI 94-38 | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-38 | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Richard Gaynor | |||
MUSI 94-42 | African Percussion | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 94-42 | African Percussion | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-43 | Jazz Drumming | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-43 | Jazz Drumming | TBA | TBA | Steve Kimball | |||
MUSI 94-44 | Sitar | TBA | TBA | David Whetstone | |||
MUSI 94-44 | Sitar | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-47 | Classical String Bass | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-5M | African Percussion | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-5M | African Percussion | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 94-9W | Classical Saxophone | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-9W | Classical Saxophone | TBA | TBA | Kristen Hanich | |||
MUSI 94-C2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 94-C2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-CC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-CC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 94-CI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-CI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 94-H1 | Harp | TBA | TBA | Ann Benjamin | |||
MUSI 94-H1 | Harp | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-H2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-H2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 94-HC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 94-HC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-HI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 94-HI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-HJ | Voice | TBA | TBA | William Reed | |||
MUSI 94-HJ | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-HP | Acoustic Guitar | TBA | TBA | Jeffrey Thygeson | |||
MUSI 94-HP | Acoustic Guitar | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M | Piano | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 94-M0 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M0 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Caroline Lemen | |||
MUSI 94-M2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 94-M2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M6 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Shelley Hanson | |||
MUSI 94-M6 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M8 | Jazz Saxophone | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-M8 | Jazz Saxophone | TBA | TBA | Kathy Jensen | |||
MUSI 94-MB | Piano | TBA | TBA | Christine Dahl | |||
MUSI 94-MB | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-MC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 94-MC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-MH | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-MH | Voice | TBA | TBA | Benjamin Allen | |||
MUSI 94-MI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-MI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 94-MT | Jazz Improvisation | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 94-MT | Jazz Improvisation | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-MU | Violin | TBA | TBA | Mary Horozaniecki | |||
MUSI 94-MU | Violin | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-W2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 94-W2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-WC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 94-WC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 94-WI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 94-WI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-01 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-01 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 96-02 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-02 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Barbara Brooks | |||
MUSI 96-03 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Christine Dahl | |||
MUSI 96-03 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-04 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 96-04 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-05 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
MUSI 96-05 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 96-06 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Benedict Weinbeck | |||
MUSI 96-06 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 99-01 | Piano Proficiency Exam | TBA | TBA | Gloria Ahlers-Uecker | |||
MUSI 99-01 | Piano Proficiency Exam | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
Philosophy |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PHIL 115-01 | Problems of Philosophy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 111 | Janet Folina | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
PHIL 115-02 | Problems of Philosophy | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 002 | Janet Folina | ||
PHIL 120-01 | Introduction to Symbolic Logic | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 206 | Janet Folina | ||
PHIL 125-01 | Ethics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 001 | Karen Warren | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
PHIL 125-02 | Ethics | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 001 | Karen Warren | ||
PHIL 125-03 | Ethics | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 009 | William Wilcox | ||
PHIL 160-01 | Foundations-Political Theory | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 160-01.* | |||||||
PHIL 227-01 | Bioethics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 247 | Martin Gunderson | ||
PHIL 231-01 | Modern Philosophy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 002 | Henry West | ||
PHIL 255-01 | History/Philosophy-Socialism | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 111 | Henry West | ||
*Must also register for HIST 255-01.* | |||||||
PHIL 364-01 | Philosophy of Language | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 111 | Joy Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 364-01.* | |||||||
PHIL 394-01 | Social/Political Philosophy | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 402 | William Wilcox | ||
PHIL 394-02 | Darwin, Nietzsche, Freud | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 213 | David Martyn | ||
*Cross-listed with GERM 394-01; taught in English; not open to first year students.* Reacting to Darwin's discovery of natural selection, Nietzsche and Freud both grappled with the question of what basis value judgments have in a world without God. The course explores their answers to this question, centering on the four domains of ethics, subjectivity, aesthetics, and theories of civilization. Topics of discussion will include: the genesis of moral values; "agency" and the loss of the subject ("there is no doer behind the deed" - Nietzsche); the split self; art and aesthetics as absolute values; art as sublimation; the deadening weight of history and civilization; the transience of culture; the death drive. Readings will include selections from the following: Darwin: The Origin of the Species and The Descent of Man; Nietzsche: The Birth of Tragedy, On the Advantages and Disadvantages of History for Life, Daybreak, The Genealogy of Morals, The Gay Science, Thus Spoke Zarat |
|||||||
PHIL 489-01 | Senior Seminar | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 003 | Martin Gunderson | ||
Physical Education |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PE 03-01 | Beginning Social Dance | M | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | KAGIN BALLROOM | Donna Edelstein | ||
PE 04-01 | Karate I | MW | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | IHM GYM | Anita Bendickson | ||
PE 06-01 | Yoga I | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | IHM GYM | Vanessa Seljeskog | ||
PE 08-01 | Step Aerobics | MWF | 04:45 pm-05:45 pm | IHM GYM | Vanessa Seljeskog | ||
PE 14-01 | Karate II | MW | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | IHM GYM | Anita Bendickson | ||
PE 18-01 | Pilates | TR | 04:30 pm-05:30 pm | IHM GYM | Kristine Spangard | ||
PE 20-01 | Weight Training | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | IHM GYM | Curtis Kietzer | ||
Physics and Astronomy |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PHYS 111-01 | Contemporary Concepts | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 150 | Sung Kyu Kim | ||
PHYS 111-02 | Contemporary Concepts | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 150 | Sung Kyu Kim | ||
PHYS 113-01 | Modern Astronomy | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 150 | John Cannon | ||
PHYS 120-01 | Astronomical Techniques | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 404 | John Cannon | ||
PHYS 194-01 | Gravity | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 170 | Tonnis ter Veldhuis | ||
*First Year Course only.* The gravitational force plays an important role in the macroscopic world. It makes a cup of coffee fall to the ground when it is dropped, and it determines the trajectory of a basketball on its way to the hoop after it is released for a three point attempt, The same force also causes the Earth to orbit the Sun, and the Sun to move around the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. In fact, gravity determines the evolution of the Universe as a whole. This course will be an introduction to gravity�s many facets. The first part of the course is an accelerated calculus-based discussion of traditional introductory mechanics topics such as kinematics, Newton�s laws, motion in a homogeneous gravitational field, conservation laws (energy, momentum, angular momentum), Newton�s law of gravitation, Kepler�s laws, and orbital dynamics. In the second part of the course this basic material will be applied to study more advanced gravity related phenomena such as the gravitation |
|||||||
PHYS 226-01 | Principles of Physics I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 150 | Tonnis ter Veldhuis | ||
PHYS 226-L1 | Principles of Physics I Lab | M | 02:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 226-L2 | Principles of Physics I Lab | T | 01:30 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 226-L3 | Principles of Physics I Lab | T | 09:15 am-11:15 am | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 227-01 | Principles of Physics II | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 150 | Luiz Vieira | ||
PHYS 227-L1 | Priciples of Physics II Lab | R | 01:30 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 227-L2 | Priciples of Physics II Lab | R | 09:15 am-11:15 am | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 331-01 | Modern Physics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 101 | James Doyle | ||
PHYS 331-L1 | Modern Physics Lab | R | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 154 | James Doyle | ||
PHYS 334-01 | Optics | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 170 | James Heyman | ||
PHYS 334-L1 | Optics Lab | T | 01:00 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 154 | James Heyman | ||
PHYS 443-01 | Electromagnetic Theory I | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 170 | Luiz Vieira | ||
PHYS 468-01 | Statistical Mechanics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | James Heyman | |||
PHYS 481-01 | Quantum Mechanics | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | OLRI 170 | Tonnis ter Veldhuis | ||
Political Science |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
POLI 100-01 | US Politics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 304 | Paru Shah | ||
POLI 120-01 | International Politics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 204 | David Blaney | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
POLI 120-02 | International Politics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 105 | Wendy Weber | ||
POLI 140-01 | Comparative Politics | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
POLI 160-01 | Foundations-Political Theory | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 160-01.* | |||||||
POLI 194-01 | Latin Amer in Comparative Pers | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | CARN 05 | James Bowen | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 194-01.* This course examines Latin American politics and culture from a historical perspective. The major themes of the course are colonialism and its legacies, revolution in the 20th century, authoritarianism and violence, democratization, neoliberalism, and US-Latin America relations. The course will draw on theoretical discussions of these issues as well as specific case studies of Mexico, Peru, Cuba, Chile, El Salvador, Colombia, Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, and Venezuela. |
|||||||
POLI 204-01 | Urban Politics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 204 | Paru Shah | ||
POLI 206-01 | US Constitutional Law | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 111 | Patrick Schmidt | ||
POLI 220-01 | Foreign Policy | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 227 | Binnur Ozkececi-Taner | ||
POLI 221-01 | Global Governance | TR | 02:45 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 05 | Wendy Weber | ||
POLI 243-01 | Political Anthropology | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 06 | Jack Weatherford | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 364-01.* | |||||||
POLI 252-01 | Water and Power | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 241 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 252-01 and GEOG 252-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
POLI 269-01 | Empirical Research Methods | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 350 | Paru Shah | ||
POLI 272-01 | Researching Political Comm | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 208 | Adrienne Christiansen | ||
POLI 294-01 | Politics of Middle East | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 228 | Binnur Ozkececi-Taner | ||
The Middle East has always been one of the most contentious regions in the world. Today is no different. Problems there are played out daily in the printed media and on our TV screens. The crises in the region-the Iranian Revolution of 1978-79, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the rise of political Islam and the issues related to different Middle Eastern societies and the recent Iraqi War among others-have grabbed the attention of the world, especially the Western world, for a long time now. What is often missed, however, is the geographical, intellectual, cultural and political history of this troubled region. With this in mind, the main purpose of this course is to answer the following questions: 1) how is today's Middle East influenced by its past?: 2) to what extent are our ("Western") theories fitting for the study of the Middle East and the politics of Middle Eastern Countries?: 3) what do we need to know about today's Middle Eastern societies?; 4) to what extent are Islam and demo | |||||||
POLI 294-02 | Law and Public Policy | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 301 | Serena Laws | ||
Law and Public Policy: In this course, we will read Supreme Court cases and secondary literature on law and public policy. The course will address a variety of areas of public policy, including (but not limited to): poverty law, welfare rights and welfare reform, the pay equity movement, access to legal representation, race deconcentration, campaigns and elections, the Family and Medical Leave Act, sexual harassment, and hate speech. | |||||||
POLI 305-01 | Womens Voices in Politics | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 204 | Adrienne Christiansen | ||
POLI 394-01 | Paradigms of Global Citizen | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 204 | Andrew Latham | ||
This is a course in cosmopolitan political theory. The purpose of the course is twofold: 1. to introduce and explore the related concepts of "global citizenship" and "cosmopolitanism"; 2. to assess the utility of these concepts in terms of their ability to help us address: (a) the fundamental issue of how we should live together as human beings under conditions of sometimes radical difference and always immanent conflict; and , (b) some of the key global challenges facing humanity today; 3. to provide an introduction to the curricular element of the proposed "Fellowship" program in global citizenship. The course is organized around the following questions: How should we, as members of a moral community comprising all of humanity, live together under conditions of sometimes radical difference (at the local, national and world scales) in an increasingly globalized world in which conflict is always immanent? How should we think about the boundaries of community in such a world? |
|||||||
POLI 394-02 | Challenges-Democratization | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 107 | James Bowen | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 394-01.* This courses focuses on the process of democratization and the challenges faced by new (or newly restored) democracies. This first part of the course examines the philosophical and theoretical foundations of democracy and democratization from the ancient Greeks to the 21st century. The second part of the course focuses on specific case studies to illustrate the possibilities and pitfalls faced by countries emerging from different types of authoritarian rule since the 1970s. We explore the cases of Spain, Chile, Russia, South Africa, Indonesia, Mexico, and El Salvador. |
|||||||
POLI 400-01 | Senior Research Seminar | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 204 | David Blaney | ||
POLI 400-02 | Senior Research Seminar | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 204 | David Blaney | ||
POLI 400-03 | Senior Research Seminar | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 204 | Patrick Schmidt | ||
POLI 404-01 | Honors Colloquium | W | 07:00 pm-09:00 pm | CARN 204 | Adrienne Christiansen | ||
Psychology |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PSYC 100-01 | Introduction to Psychology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 300 | Joan Ostrove | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
PSYC 100-02 | Introduction to Psychology | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 352 | Mary Gustafson | ||
PSYC 100-03 | Introduction to Psychology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 352 | Jaine Strauss | ||
PSYC 100-L1 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | T | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
PSYC 100-L2 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | T | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 301 | Jamie Atkins | ||
PSYC 100-L3 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | R | 08:30 am-10:00 am | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
PSYC 100-L4 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
PSYC 180-01 | Brain, Mind, and Behavior | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 100 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with CNS 180-01.* | |||||||
PSYC 201-01 | Research in Psychology I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 352 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 201-L1 | Research in Psychology I Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 354 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 201-L2 | Research in Psychology I Lab | R | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 354 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 202-01 | Research in Psychology II | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | OLRI 352 | Kendrick Brown | ||
PSYC 220-01 | Educational Psychology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*Cross-listed with EDUC 220-01.* | |||||||
PSYC 242-01 | Cognitive Psychology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 352 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 242-L1 | Cognitive Psychology Lab | R | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 354 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 246-01 | Exploring Sensation/Perception | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 270 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
PSYC 246-L1 | Sensation/Perception Lab | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 371 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
PSYC 250-01 | Developmental Psychology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 352 | Jennifer Wenner | ||
PSYC 254-01 | Social Psychology | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 352 | Kendrick Brown | ||
PSYC 258-01 | Industrial/Organizational Psyc | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 301 | Harold Brull | ||
PSYC 258-01 | Industrial/Organizational Psyc | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 301 | Scott Gregory | ||
PSYC 269-01 | Children/Family/Social Policy | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 352 | Jennifer Wenner | ||
PSYC 300-01 | Directed Research in Psych | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 370 | Lynda LaBounty | ||
PSYC 300-01 | Directed Research in Psych | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 370 | Jaine Strauss | ||
PSYC 300-01 | Directed Research in Psych | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 370 | Jennifer Wenner | ||
PSYC 370-01 | Understand/Confront Racism | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 352 | Kendrick Brown | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 370-01.* | |||||||
PSYC 394-01 | Analysis of Behavior | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | OLRI 352 | Lynda LaBounty | ||
Throughout his career, B. F. Skinner created controversy while founding and advancing his new science of behavior. This discussion-based course will explore the basic principles of behavior analysis, both applied and experimental as well as the founding philosophical principles of Skinner's "radical behaviorism". Along the way, some of the more famous commentaries and critiques of this approach (pro and con) will be considered. Other topics, such as, the design of cultures and freedom and dignity will be included as time allows. Prerequisites: Psychology 100, Psychology 200 or Psychology 201 and at least one intermediate course or permission of instructor. Psychology 240 Principles of Learning and Behavior recommended. Minors may substitute Math 153, 154 or 155 for the statistics and research methods prerequisite. | |||||||
PSYC 488-01 | Sr Sem: Lives in Context | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 300 | Joan Ostrove | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 405-01.* This seminar will explore the relationship between individual lives and broad social systems. We will read theory, research, and autobiographical work about the implications of gender, social class, race, physical ability, historical context, etc., on psychological experiences and will explore a variety of methodological strategies for doing research in these areas. Culture and Context course. Prerequisite: Senior major or minor. |
|||||||
PSYC 488-02 | Sr Sem: Addiction | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | OLRI 300 | Lynda LaBounty | ||
This seminar is designed to emphasize the most important themes and concepts in the field of substance abuse. These topics include, but are not limited to, the history of psychoactive drug use, U.S. drug policy, how the different classes of drugs work, prevention strategies, models of addiction including compulsive behaviors, treatment approaches, relapse prevention, and harm reduction. Prerequisite: Senior major or minor. | |||||||
Religious Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
RELI 120-01 | Hebrew Bible | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 110 | Jonathan Paradise | ||
This popular course uses modern, academic tools to study one of the oldest books: The Bible. (No knowledge of Hebrew or of the Bible is assumed.) For those who have never read the Hebrew Bible or for those whose Bible is well-thumbed, this course is an introduction to one of the most influential books in human cultural history. This is not a �preachy� approach to the Bible. We will operate with the assumption that biblical narrative is an art form. (It is not a transcript of speeches or an objective chronicle of events.) Our course seeks to discover the artistic devices and conventions that the ancient Hebrew writers used to produce their masterpieces of prose literature. What is it that makes the biblical stories so vivid, provocative, and so memorable? In addition to a study of the art of biblical narrative, we will ask: 1) what �agendas� do biblical writers have? 2) What notions form their worldview? 3) By what processes have their stories reached us, and how have those processe |
|||||||
RELI 123-01 | Jesus, Dissent, and Desire | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 003 | Paula Cooey | ||
RELI 124-01 | Asian Religions | TR | 08:30 am-10:00 am | MAIN 111 | Erik Davis | ||
RELI 194-01 | American Judaism | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 009 | Barry Cytron | ||
RELI 235-01 | Theory/Method in Religion | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | MAIN 111 | Paula Cooey | ||
RELI 238-01 | Catholicism | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 009 | James Laine | ||
RELI 294-01 | Ritual | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 304 | Erik Davis | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 294-02.* | |||||||
Russian |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
RUSS 101-01 | Elementary Russian I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 212 | Julia Chadaga | ||
RUSS 101-L1 | Elementary Russian I Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 228 | Alina Romanenko | ||
RUSS 101-L2 | Elementary Russian I Lab | T | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 212 | Alina Romanenko | ||
RUSS 194-01 | The Material World | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 213 | Julia Chadaga | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
RUSS 203-01 | Intermediate Russian I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 213 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
RUSS 203-L1 | Intermediate Russian I Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 228 | Alina Romanenko | ||
RUSS 203-L2 | Intermediate Russian I Lab | R | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | HUM 212 | Alina Romanenko | ||
RUSS 255-01 | Russian Culture | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | HUM 215 | Julia Chadaga | ||
RUSS 272-01 | The Post-Soviet Sphere | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 404 | James von Geldern | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 362-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
RUSS 363-01 | Russia's Literary South | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 102 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 263-01.* | |||||||
Sociology |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
SOCI 110-01 | Introduction to Sociology: Social Inequi | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | CARN 204 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
SOCI 110-02 | Introduction to Sociology | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | CARN 208 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
SOCI 180-01 | Sociology of Culture | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 304 | Christopher Pappas | ||
SOCI 194-01 | Sociology of Music | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | CARN 304 | Christopher Pappas | ||
This course examines music through major sociological theoretical and methodological perspectives. Topics include: subcultures and music scenes, politics/social movements and music, the production and creation of music from micro and macro perspectives, audience reception and reactions, musical taste, race/class/gender/sexuality, and many others. A variety of musical genres will be discussed, in American and global context. This course should appeal to those with a strong interest in music in its many social aspects, as well as those with a strong interest in cultural sociology. For more information, contact the instructor |
|||||||
SOCI 194-02 | Nonprofit Organizations | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 247 | Terry Boychuk | ||
Nonprofit organizations are important elements of the public sphere. They are one of the principal means by which we generate, concentrate, and channel our humanitarian and civic impulses. Sociological perspectives on nonprofit organizations presented in this course combined historical and contemporary accounts of the political, economic, and culture dimensions of the third sector � the panoply of private associations devoted to public purposes. Some of the learning goals are to develop an understanding and appreciation of: - the legal frameworks that specify the permissible activities of nonprofit organizations; - the ethical dilemmas that nonprofit organizations and professionals encounter as they envisage and strive to fulfill their service mission; - theoretical scholarship aimed at explaining and justifying the diverse roles of nonprofits organizations in US society; - the historical evolution of the relationship between the nonprofit, governmental, and commercial sect |
|||||||
SOCI 220-01 | Sociology of Race/Ethnicity | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 105 | Mahnaz Kousha | ||
SOCI 220-02 | Sociology of Race/Ethnicity | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 105 | Mahnaz Kousha | ||
SOCI 270-01 | Interpretive Social Research | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 105 | Mahnaz Kousha | ||
SOCI 480-01 | Senior Seminar | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 208 | Terry Boychuk | ||
SOCI 480-01 | Senior Seminar | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 208 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
Theatre and Dance |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
THDA 115-01 | Cultures of Dance | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | THEATR 205 | Antonia Krueger | ||
THDA 120-01 | Acting Theory/Performance I | MWF | 12:00 pm-02:20 pm | THEATR 3 | Beth Cleary | ||
*First Year Course only.* | |||||||
THDA 120-02 | Acting Theory/Performance I | MWF | 02:20 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Harry Waters | ||
THDA 125-01 | Technical Theater | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | THEATR 205 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 125-L1 | Technical Theater Lab | T | 08:30 am-11:45 am | THEATR 206 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 125-L2 | Technical Theater Lab | R | 08:30 am-11:45 am | THEATR 206 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 145-01 | Make-Up Design and Application | TR | 08:30 am-11:45 am | THEATR 205 | Thomas Barrett | ||
THDA 255-01 | Lighting Design | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 260-01 | Sources of Global Performance | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | THEATR 205 | Lara Nielsen | ||
THDA 460-01 | Directing Theory/Production II | MWF | 12:00 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Harry Waters | ||
THDA 465-01 | Advanced Lighting Design | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 489-01 | Performance Theory Seminar | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | THEATR 204 | Lara Nielsen | ||
THDA 21-01 | African Dance | WF | 10:10 am-11:40 am | THEATR 6 | Patricia Brown | ||
THDA 41-01 | Modern Dance I | TR | 02:45 pm-04:15 pm | THEATR 6 | Rebecca Heist | ||
THDA 43-01 | Modern Dance III | MW | 03:45 pm-05:15 pm | THEATR 6 | Rebecca Heist | ||
THDA 51-01 | Ballet I | MW | 02:15 pm-03:45 pm | THEATR 6 | Rebecca Stanchfield | ||
THDA 53-01 | Ballet III | TR | 04:30 pm-06:00 pm | THEATR 6 | Sharon Varosh | ||
THDA 60-01 | Dance Ensemble | TBA | TBA | THEATR 6 | Rebecca Heist | ||
Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
WGSS 110-01 | Intro to LGBTQ Studies | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | MAIN 009 | Scott Morgensen | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 112-01.* This course introduces the fields of LGBT and queer studies by examining how sexuality, race, and nation relate in the lives of people in the United States, which we read in relation to histories of colonialism and globalization. Course materials foreground scholarship, testimony, activist art, and social movements by LGBT, two-spirited, queer people of color, and by white anti-racist LGBT and queer people. Their stories offer a template through which all students may examine how everyday life is shaped by sexuality, race, and nation - both as power relations, and as spaces for creating new identity and action. Every year. (4 credits) |
|||||||
WGSS 194-01 | From Literature to Cyberworlds: Technolo | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 111 | Kulvinder Arora | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 194-01.* This course will explore the relationship between culture and the mass circulation of technological mediums used to represent issues of race, gender and sexuality (print, visual art, film, sound, Internet). Have these technologies brought about new ways of representing race, gender and sexuality? How have these technologies addressed gender and race inequities and transformed our understanding of sexuality? |
|||||||
WGSS 205-01 | Transnational Sexual Politics | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | MAIN 009 | Scott Morgensen | ||
WGSS 294-01 | Not All Things Sugar and Spice: Gender i | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | Kulvinder Arora | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-01.* This course will explore phases of history on the South Asian subcontinent (colonization, Independence struggle, postcolonialism, and globalization) to understand how gender roles are affected by specific historical circumstances. By reading literature and viewing films produced by South Asians living all over the globe, we will explore how gender constructs in the South Asian Diaspora are affected by the time and place they produce their work in. |
|||||||
WGSS 394-01 | Keeping the Faith: Understanding Gender | TR | 10:10 am-11:40 am | HUM 110 | Kulvinder Arora | ||
WGSS 405-01 | Lives in Context | TR | 01:00 pm-02:30 pm | OLRI 300 | Joan Ostrove | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 488-01.* | |||||||