This is a class schedule from a previous term. View current class schedules
American Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
AMST 101-01 | Explorations of Race/Racism | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 112 | Daniel Gilbert | ||
AMST 203-01 | Race, Ethnicity and Politics | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 206 | Paru Shah | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 203-01* | |||||||
AMST 285-01 | Asian American Community and Identity | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 110 | Karin Aguilar-San Juan | ||
*Cross-listed with SOCI 285-01* | |||||||
AMST 292-01 | Engaging the Public: Writing and Publishing in American Studies | W | 12:10 pm-02:10 pm | Jane Rhodes | |||
*2 credit course; will meet in Library room 225.* This course will focus on ways to disseminate research findings and knowledge beyond the American Studies classroom. Course content will focus on writing, editing, and the art of preparing a journal article for publication. It will also consider how to engage various publics, including other students, the College, and local communities, through digital publishing. Students will be involved in preparing a student peer-reviewed open access journal and will be part of a collaborative model for circulating research and criticism. Students will design and launch the journal, organize a peer-review process, and learn about some of the broader issues involved in publishing including verifying facts, copyright, intellectual property, author rights, and open access. | |||||||
AMST 294-03 | Race and Sound in Modern American Culture | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 217 | Daniel Gilbert | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-05; first day attendance required.* This seminar examines sound as a fundamental form of racialized experience, creativity and struggle in the modern history of the United States. Readings and class discussions examine a range of components of the modern soundscape, including the development of key genres of performed and recorded popular music (such as forms of blues, country, jazz and salsa), the political uses and meanings of radio and sound film, and the history of call centers, ring tones and other components of racialized sonic experience. Seminar participants design and write substantial essays on elements of race and sound in modern American culture. | |||||||
AMST 294-04 | Baseball: The Cultural Politics of Race, Gender and Nation | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 112 | Daniel Gilbert | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-06; first day attendance required.* From its early development within the nationalisms of the 19th century to its contemporary place amid the currents of globalization, baseball has been both a pervasive and contested form of modern mass culture. This course examines the ways in which baseball's players, owners, writers and fans have made the sport a central stage for the elaboration of a range of political, economic and cultural projects. Key topics include: the racial segregation and integration of teams and leagues, the construction of masculinity and femininity on the playing field and in media representations, the transnational configuration of player development and recruitment, the history of players' unions, and the territorial struggles that have shaped ballparks and stadiums. In addition to key selections from the scholarly literature, readings will include a range of primary sources and cultural texts, from first-hand accounts to fiction, film and visual art. Prior engagement with baseball is NOT a prerequisite for this class. All students interested in the cultural politics of race, gender and nation are welcome. | |||||||
AMST 294-05 | Critical Perspectives in American Indian Land Law | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 112 | Terry Janis | ||
This course will take a critical review of US Indian law as it relates to the land of Indian nations. Students will then examine the process of law reform. We will review and identify the laws that have a destructive impact on Indian nations and those that have a beneficial impact. The class will then consider how those laws can be improved or reformed. Finally, students will explore and identify practical strategies for implementing these reforms. | |||||||
AMST 294-06 | US Jews and the Media | MW | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-02.* | |||||||
AMST 294-07 | Disciplining Race | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 212 | Christine Manganaro | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 294-04.* | |||||||
AMST 305-01 | Race, Sex, and Work in Global Economy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 105 | Paige Sweet | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 305-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
AMST 305-01 | Race, Sex, and Work in Global Economy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 105 | Corie Hammers | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 305-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
AMST 334-01 | Cultural Studies and the Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 402 | Leola Johnson | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 334-01* | |||||||
AMST 341-01 | Urban Social Geography | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 009 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*Cross-listed with GEOG 341-01* | |||||||
AMST 392-01 | Critical Race Theory | M | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 112 | Leola Johnson | ||
*Course for Mellon Program students only; instructor approval required; cross-listed with HMCS 392-01; 2 credits.* | |||||||
AMST 394-01 | Race Relations in America | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 003 | Christine Manganaro | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 394-02; first day attendance required.* Concentrating on historical scholarship and methodology, this course surveys the history of race relations in the United States by thematically examining processes of racial formation as well as race as a subject and product of state policy. A thematic approach will allow us to compare and contrast how inequality has been produced, maintained, and resisted in a number of historical contexts among various racialized groups. This course focuses on domestic issues while considering the influence of global movements of people and ideas on American race relations. We will focus on forms of colonization, immigration, exclusion, segregation, integration, assimilation, and other policies and processes that have shaped American race relations during the last two centuries. | |||||||
AMST 394-02 | Asian American Visual Culture | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 394-02.* | |||||||
AMST 400-01 | Critical Perspectives in American Studies | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 112 | Jane Rhodes | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
Anthropology |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ANTH 101-01 | General Anthropology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 06A | Scott Legge | ||
ANTH 111-01 | Cultural Anthropology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 06A | Arjun Guneratne | ||
ANTH 230-01 | Ethnographic Interviewing | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 112 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
*Permission of instructor required; Open only to Anthropology majors* | |||||||
ANTH 242-01 | Psychological Anthropology | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 05 | Olga Gonzalez | ||
ANTH 294-01 | Anthropology of Death/Dying | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 05 | Ron Barrett | ||
*First day attendance required.* This course examines the dying process and the ways that human beings come to terms with their mortality in different societies. We will learn how people die in major illnesses and critically analyze controversial issues regarding brain death, suicide, and euthanasia. We will survey funerary traditions from a variety of cultures and compare the social, spiritual, and psychological roles that these rituals play for both the living and the dying. We will examine cultural attitudes towards death; and how the denial and awareness of human mortality can shape social practices and institutions. Finally, we will consider issues regarding the quality of life, the opportunities and challenges of caregiving, and hospice traditions around the world. | |||||||
ANTH 294-02 | Osteology and Paleopathology | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 06B | Scott Legge | ||
The study of the human skeletal system is basic to the disciplines of biological anthropology, forensic science, medicine and even archaeology. This class will examine the fundamentals of human and great ape osteology. It will also explore numerous pathological conditions associated with both infectious and non-infectious diseases in addition to those caused by traumatic events. Students will learn to identify and analyze human bone and pathological conditions of the skeleton to aid in the reconstruction of life histories from human remains. | |||||||
ANTH 294-03 | Gender and Development in Africa | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 06A | Sonia Patten | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 294-04.* Development in Africa has many players - national governments, international organizations, nongovernmental organizations both international and domestic, private contractors, religious organizations, community-based organizations, individual development experts. In the midst of all the development policies, activities, projects and money, there is a very big question: how is development working out for the women and men of Africa, for their families and communities. In the course we will use the works of anthropologists and other scholars to examine this and related questions such as whose voices are heard when development agendas are set, who gains and who loses when development projects are mounted, what recourse exists for individuals and families who suffer losses as a result of development, and how have African women and men organized to address these and other issues linked to development. | |||||||
ANTH 358-01 | Anthropology of Violence | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 05 | Olga Gonzalez | ||
ANTH 365-01 | Environmental Anthropology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 105 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 365-01* | |||||||
ANTH 394-01 | Emerging Infectious Diseases | MW | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 06B | Ron Barrett | ||
At what point does an infectious disease become an 'emerging infection'? It could be argued that the only thing emerging these days is public awareness of long-standing health and social problems that were previously ignored. Based on this premise, our course will examine the unnatural history of infectious diseases from the Paleolithic to the present day using the combined frameworks of evolution, human ecology, critical history, and social epidemiology. We will consider the co-evolution of culture and disease: the ways that human subsistence, ecological disruptions, social inequalities, and demographic changes have created selective conditions for new infections, re-emerging infections, and antibiotic resistance. We will also address the social dynamics of current epidemics, such as H1N1, and major controversies over biosecurity and bioterrorism. | |||||||
ANTH 394-02 | Ritual | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 003 | Erik Davis | ||
*Cross-listed with RELI 311-01.* | |||||||
ANTH 490-01 | Senior Seminar | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 06A | Dianna Shandy | ||
Art and Art History |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ART 130-01 | Drawing I | TR | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 123 | Megan Vossler | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 130-02 | Drawing I | TR | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 135 | Stanton Sears | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 149-01 | Intro to Visual Culture | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | ART 113 | Tiffany Bidler | ||
ART 161-01 | Art of the West II: Renaissance Through Modern | MW | 09:40 am-11:10 am | ART 113 | Joanna Inglot | ||
ART 171-01 | Art of the East II: Japan | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 171-01; first day attendance required.* This course provides a survey of the art and architecture of Japan from the archaic pottery of the J'mon period to the impact of Japanese animation on the global art market. While the chronological scope of this course is defined broadly, works of art are studied within their specific social, religious, and political settings. Topics include Zen temple gardens, the decoration of feudal castles, woodblock prints of the pleasure quarters and contemporary Japanese anime. | |||||||
ART 232-01 | Fiber and Material Studies I | MW | 01:10 pm-04:20 pm | ART 116 | Pritika Chowdhry | ||
*$100 material fee required; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ART 234-01 | Painting I | TR | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 128 | Christine Willcox | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 235-01 | Sculpture I | TR | 08:00 am-11:10 am | ART 135 | Stanton Sears | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 236-01 | Printmaking I | TR | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 119 | Ruthann Godollei | ||
Permission of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 237-01 | Ceramic Art I: Handbuilding | TR | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | ART 130 | Gary Erickson | ||
*Permission of instructor required; $100 Material fee required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 264-01 | Contemporary Art | MW | 01:10 pm-02:40 pm | ART 113 | Joanna Inglot | ||
ART 294-01 | Art and Architecture of Early Modern Venice | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 402 | Kristin Lanzoni | ||
This course investigates the art of Venice from approximately 1450-1630, considering a range of topics from the Myth of Venice, an image the city worked hard to promote through public artistic programs, to the realities that existed in both public and private spheres. The Venetian Republic, its state and religious communities, wealthy individuals and corporate groups sponsored some of the most spectacular art of the early modern period, and the city's thriving mercantile economy and subsequent opportunity for work, attracted a number of the most important and influential artists of all time, including Titian, Veronese and Andrea Palladio. In addition to the art of Venice, this class will explore art produced in occupied territories, including the mainland and strategic peripheral regions, such as Crete. | |||||||
ART 294-02 | Performance Studies Praxis: Body and Performance Art | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | ART 113 | Joanna Inglot | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required; course cross-listed with THDA 260-01.* (See full description and course requirements under THDA 260-01) | |||||||
ART 334-01 | Figure Painting | TR | 08:00 am-11:50 am | ART 128 | Christine Willcox | ||
ART 366-01 | 2-D Design | MW | 01:10 pm-04:30 pm | Richard Barlow | |||
*Course will meet in the Lampert Building, 3rd Floor.* | |||||||
ART 370-01 | Drawing II | TR | 08:00 am-11:10 am | ART 123 | Megan Vossler | ||
ART 373-01 | Printmaking II | TR | 04:30 pm-06:00 pm | ART 119 | Ruthann Godollei | ||
*Permission of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 374-01 | Ceramic Art II | TR | 08:00 am-11:10 am | ART 130 | Gary Erickson | ||
*Permission of instructor required; $100 material fee required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 378-01 | Fiber and Material Studies II | MW | 08:30 am-11:40 am | ART 116 | Pritika Chowdhry | ||
*$100 material fee required; first day attendance required.* Topic: Bodily Metaphors. Take your exploration of Fibers and material studies into new directions in this thematic studio seminar. Create fresh interpretations of the body in your work by investigating the corporeal through the material. This class offers you the opportunity to continue to further develop technical skills and push conceptual thinking. Propose projects of your own choice and take your work to the next level. In addition to intensive studio work, the class will include technical demonstrations, critiques, readings, and discussions. | |||||||
ART 394-01 | The Buddhist Body | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 402 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 394-03; first day attendance required.* This course examines visual and textual representations of the human body in Buddhist art, scripture and literature as a site of idealization, mutilation, sacrifice, and relic making, among other cultural practices. Interdisciplinary in scope, this course is neither limited to a specific tradition nor to a specific time period. Rather, it encourages students to explore individual interests in Buddhist art, practice and ritual through critical readings of historical Buddhist texts, recent scholarship on Buddhist visual and material culture, and modern theories of embodiment, gender and sexuality. | |||||||
ART 394-02 | Asian American Visual Culture | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 394-02; first day attendance required.* This course investigates the intersections of diaspora, displacement and human rights through the specific lens of Asian American visual culture, including fine art, commercial images, documentary photography, film and video and the built environment. By exploring the role of the visual arts in resisting and documenting the violation of human rights in multicultural and transnational communities, this course is especially attentive to the role of place, citizenship, and identity in Asian American artistic production. Topics include the visual culture of Chinatowns, Japanese internment camps as sites of art making, and the work of contemporary diasporic Asian American artists that blur the lines between voluntary and forced human migration. | |||||||
ART 488-01 | Senior Seminar | MW | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | ART | Ruthann Godollei | ||
*Meets in the Fine Arts Lounge; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ART 490-08 | Art Apprenticeship | TBA | TBA | Ruthann Godollei | |||
ART 490-16 | Art Apprenticeship | TBA | TBA | Stanton Sears | |||
Asian Languages and Cultures |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ASIA 102-01 | Elementary Chinese II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 111 | Patricia Anderson | ||
ASIA 102-02 | Elementary Chinese II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 111 | Patricia Anderson | ||
ASIA 102-L1 | Elementary Chinese II Lab | T | 02:30 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 301 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 102-L2 | Elementary Chinese II Lab | W | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 112 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 102-L3 | Elementary Chinese II Lab | W | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 101 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 171-01 | Art of the East II: Japan | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | ART 113 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 171-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ASIA 204-01 | Intermediate Chinese II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 102 | Xin Yang | ||
ASIA 204-02 | Intermediate Chinese II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 102 | Xin Yang | ||
ASIA 204-L1 | Intermediate Chinese II Lab | R | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 402 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 204-L2 | Intermediate Chinese II Lab | R | 02:30 pm-03:30 pm | HUM 404 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 204-L3 | Intermediate Chinese II Lab | R | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | HUM 404 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 277-01 | History of Modern Japan | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 003 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 277-01* | |||||||
ASIA 278-01 | War Crimes and Memory in Contemporary East Asia | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 001 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 278-01* | |||||||
ASIA 294-01 | Metropolis as Muse: Writing Shanghai in 20th Century China | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 111 | Frederik Green | ||
This interdisciplinary and cross-cultural course explores Shanghai's importance in China's turbulent literary and political trajectory from the last days of the Qing Empire until the present. At the same time, it attempts to place China�s first cosmopolitan metropolis into the context of global modernism and world history. With its focus on literary texts and movies by Chinese, Japanese and European artists that range from the late 19th until the early 21st centuries, the course explores a variety of topics that are all intricately connected to China's encounter with modernity and the ways Shanghai was and is imagined outside China. | |||||||
ASIA 294-02 | Sanskrit and Classical Religion in India | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 010 | James Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with RELI 294-03 and CLAS 294-01* | |||||||
ASIA 304-01 | Advanced Chinese II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 300 | Jin Stone | ||
ASIA 304-L1 | Advanced Chinese II Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 110 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 304-L2 | Advanced Chinese II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | HUM 102 | Hong Juan Zhou | ||
ASIA 494-01 | Translating Chinese | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 111 | Frederik Green | ||
This course approaches the topic of Chinese translation simultaneously from a socio-historical, empirical, and theoretical perspective. It addresses some of the fundamental issues faced when translating Chinese into foreign languages, English in particular. It also explores some of the issues translators face when attempting to render Western texts, names, or concepts into Chinese. At the same time, the course functions as a workshop where we study and back-translate existing translations, and attempt our own translations. Finally, we read a select number of texts that have become fundamental to the field of translation studies. Prerequisite: 2 years of Chinese. |
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Biology |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
BIOL 112-01 | Origins | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 250 | Kristina Curry Rogers | ||
BIOL 117-01 | Women, Health, Reproduction | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 250 | Elizabeth Jansen | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 117-01.* | |||||||
BIOL 255-01 | Cell Biology and Genetics Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 285 | Steven Sundby | ||
*First day attendance required; 2 credit course.* | |||||||
BIOL 255-02 | Cell Biology and Genetics Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 285 | Mary Montgomery | ||
*First day attendance required; 2 credit course.* | |||||||
BIOL 255-03 | Cell Biology and Genetics Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 285 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*First day attendance required; 2 credit course.* | |||||||
BIOL 260-01 | Genetics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 350 | Mary Montgomery | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 265-01 | Cell Biology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 100 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 270-01 | Biodiversity and Evolution | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 250 | Sarah Boyer | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 270-L1 | Biodiversity and Evolution Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 273 | Sarah Boyer | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 270-L2 | Biodiversity and Evolution Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 273 | Michael Anderson | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 285-01 | Ecology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 226 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 285-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 285-L1 | Ecology Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 285-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 285-L2 | Ecology Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 284 | Michael Anderson | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 285-L2; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 342-01 | Animal Behavior/Ecology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 284 | Mark Davis | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 342-L1 | Animal Behavior/Ecology Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 284 | Mark Davis | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 346-01 | Biogeography | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 301 | Sarah Boyer | ||
BIOL 352-01 | Biochemistry II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 243 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 352-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 352-L1 | Biochemistry II Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 289 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 352-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 352-L2 | Biochemistry II Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 289 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with CHEM 352-L2; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 358-01 | Microbiology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 170 | Steven Sundby | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 358-L1 | Microbiology Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 289 | Steven Sundby | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 360-01 | Neuroanatomy | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 367-01 | Human Physiology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 250 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 367-L1 | Human Physiology Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 367-L2 | Human Physiology Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 275 | Lin Aanonsen | ||
BIOL 394-01 | Research in Paleobiology | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | Kristina Curry Rogers | |||
*Permission of instructor required; course meets in Olin Rice 172.* This course offers an opportunity to conduct collaborative research with a faculty member on topics in paleobiology. Students will actively engage with the primary literature and will design and pursue an investigation independently. The lecture component of the course will center on discussions of literature related to projects, as well as peer-evaluation of oral and written work. The laboratory component focuses on lab research and data analysis. Prerequisites: junior or senior standing, Biodiversity and Evolution (BIOL 170) and permission of the instructor. Spring semester (4 credits). | |||||||
BIOL 394-L1 | Paleobiology Lab | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | Kristina Curry Rogers | |||
BIOL 473-01 | Research in Immunology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 270 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
*Permission of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 473-L1 | Research in Immunology Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 277 | Devavani Chatterjea | ||
*Permission of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
BIOL 489-01 | Biology Seminar | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 250 | Mary Montgomery | ||
Chemistry |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CHEM 112-01 | General Chemistry II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 350 | Paul Fischer | ||
CHEM 112-02 | General Chemistry II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 350 | Kathryn Splan | ||
CHEM 112-03 | General Chemistry II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 350 | Paul Fischer | ||
CHEM 112-L1 | General Chemistry II Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 343 | Robert Rossi | ||
*First day attendance required; $6 lab fee required* | |||||||
CHEM 112-L2 | General Chemistry II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 343 | Keith Kuwata | ||
*First day attendance required; $6 lab fee required* | |||||||
CHEM 112-L3 | General Chemistry II Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 343 | Amy Rice | ||
*First day attendance required; $6 lab fee required* | |||||||
CHEM 112-L4 | General Chemistry II Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 343 | Amy Rice | ||
*First day attendance required; $6 lab fee required* | |||||||
CHEM 112-L5 | General Chemistry II Lab | W | 01:10 pm-04:20 pm | OLRI 343 | Amy Rice | ||
*First day attendance required; $6 lab fee required* | |||||||
CHEM 212-01 | Organic Chemistry II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 150 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 212-L1 | Organic Chemistry II Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 383 | Susan Green | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 212-L2 | Organic Chemistry II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 383 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 212-L3 | Organic Chemistry II Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 383 | Susan Green | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 222-01 | Analytical Chemistry | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 301 | Keith Kuwata | ||
CHEM 222-L1 | Analytical Chemistry Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 380 | Keith Kuwata | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 222-L2 | Analytical Chemistry Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 380 | Keith Kuwata | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
CHEM 300-01 | Chemistry Seminar | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 350 | Thomas Varberg | ||
*1 Credit course* | |||||||
CHEM 312-01 | Quantum Mech/Spectroscopy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 301 | Thomas Varberg | ||
CHEM 312-L1 | Quantum Mech/Spectroscopy Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 301 | Thomas Varberg | ||
CHEM 352-01 | Biochemistry II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 243 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 352-01* | |||||||
CHEM 352-L1 | Biochemistry II Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 289 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 352-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 352-L2 | Biochemistry II Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 289 | Christopher Calderone | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 352-L2; First day attendance required* | |||||||
CHEM 361-01 | Advanced Organic Chemistry | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 301 | Ronald Brisbois | ||
CHEM 394-01 | Research in Biochemistry | MW | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 370 | Kathryn Splan | ||
*Permission of instructor required; Concurrent enrollment in CHEM 394-L1 is required" | |||||||
CHEM 394-L1 | Research in Biochemistry Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 289 | Kathryn Splan | ||
Classics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CLAS 122-01 | The Roman World | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 06A | Andrew Overman | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 122-01 and HMCS 122-01* | |||||||
CLAS 123-01 | Introduction to Archaeology | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 111 | Andrew Overman | ||
CLAS 194-01 | Background to the Modern Middle East | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | MAIN 111 | Andrew Overman | ||
*Permission of instructor required* | |||||||
CLAS 212-01 | Elementary Latin II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 002 | Beth Severy-Hoven | ||
CLAS 214-01 | Elementary Arabic II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 001 | Antoine Mefleh | ||
CLAS 235-01 | Elementary Greek II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 010 | Corby Kelly | ||
CLAS 235-L1 | Elementary Greek II Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 243 | Corby Kelly | ||
CLAS 271-01 | Studies in Archaeology: Dead Sea Scrolls | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 009 | Nanette Goldman | ||
*Cross-listed with RELI 294-04* | |||||||
CLAS 294-01 | Sanskrit and Classical Religion in India | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 010 | James Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 294-02 and RELI 294-03* | |||||||
CLAS 294-02 | Constantine to Charlemagne | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 009 | Ellen Arnold | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 294-01* | |||||||
CLAS 294-03 | Christianity in Late Antiquity | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 010 | Susanna Drake | ||
*Cross-listed with RELI 222-01 and WGSS 294-03.* | |||||||
CLAS 332-01 | Intermediate Latin: Poetry | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 002 | Corby Kelly | ||
CLAS 338-01 | Intermediate Hebrew II | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | MAIN 002 | Nanette Goldman | ||
CLAS 342-01 | Intermediate Arabic II | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 002 | Antoine Mefleh | ||
CLAS 394-01 | Advanced Arabic | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 001 | Antoine Mefleh | ||
CLAS 487-01 | Advanced Reading in Greek | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 003 | Beth Severy-Hoven | ||
Cognitive and Neuroscience Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
CNS 248-01 | Behavioral Neuroscience | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 352 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 248-01* | |||||||
CNS 248-L1 | Behavioral Neuroscience Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 371 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 248-L1* | |||||||
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 | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 258 | Eric Theriault | ||
COMP 123-01 | Core Concepts-Comp Science | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 258 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
COMP 124-01 | Object-Oriented Programming | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 256 | Shilad Sen | ||
COMP 124-L1 | Object-Oriented Program Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 256 | Shilad Sen | ||
COMP 221-01 | Algorithm Design/Analysis | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 256 | Shilad Sen | ||
COMP 240-01 | Computer Systems Organization | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 245 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
COMP 302-01 | Intro Database Mngmt Systems | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 245 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
COMP 365-01 | Computational Linear Algebra | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 245 | Daniel Kaplan | ||
*Cross-listed with MATH 365-01* | |||||||
COMP 490-01 | Senior Capstone Seminar | F | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 241 | Shilad Sen | ||
*1 Credit course; S/NC grading only* | |||||||
COMP 490-01 | Senior Capstone Seminar | F | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 241 | Elizabeth Shoop | ||
*1 Credit course; S/NC grading only* | |||||||
COMP 494-01 | Collective Intelligence | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 256 | Shilad Sen | ||
Economics |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ECON 108-01 | Quantitative Thinking | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 05 | Lisa Giddings | ||
*Cross-listed with MATH 108-01* | |||||||
ECON 113-01 | Financial Accounting | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 204 | Jeff Evans | ||
ECON 119-01 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 304 | Amy Damon | ||
ECON 119-02 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 304 | Amy Damon | ||
ECON 119-03 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 305 | Karine Moe | ||
ECON 119-04 | Principles of Economics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 305 | Karine Moe | ||
ECON 119-05 | Principles of Economics | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 05 | Paul Aslanian | ||
ECON 119-06 | Principles of Economics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 350 | Kristine Lamm West | ||
ECON 201-01 | Internship Seminar | M | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | CARN 305 | Joyce Minor | ||
*2 credit course* The Internship Seminar is recommended as a companion course for students taking an internship through the economics department. The course is designed to help assure that the theories, principles and concepts developed in academic work are effectively integrated with the internship experience. The course will use a combination of in-class readings and discussions to allow students to reflect on their own career aspirations as a result of the internship experience as well as to learn from the experiences of other students in the seminar. The goals of the course include supporting students during the internship, analyzing the challenges posed by an internship and providing success strategies, and developing take-aways from the internship program that help students plan remaining coursework and career preparation. Prerequisites: Economics 113 or Economics 119. | |||||||
ECON 225-01 | Comparative Economic Systems | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 304 | Gary Krueger | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 225-01* | |||||||
ECON 227-01 | Adam Smith and Karl Marx | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 206 | Vasant Sukhatme | ||
ECON 242-01 | Economics of Gender | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 305 | Karine Moe | ||
ECON 333-01 | Economics of Global Food Problems | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 228 | Amy Damon | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 333-01 and INTL 333-01.* | |||||||
ECON 353-01 | Managerial Accounting | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | CARN 304 | Jeff Evans | ||
ECON 361-01 | Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 304 | Sarah West | ||
ECON 361-02 | Intermediate Microeconomic Analysis | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 304 | Sarah West | ||
ECON 371-01 | Intermed Macroecon Analysis | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 305 | Pete Ferderer | ||
ECON 381-01 | Introduction to Econometrics | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 309 | Raymond Robertson | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ECON 381-L1 | Intro to Econometrics Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 309 | Raymond Robertson | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ECON 394-02 | Applied Economics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 06A | Karl Egge | ||
ECON 394-02 | Applied Economics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 06A | Joyce Minor | ||
ECON 394-02 | Applied Economics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 06A | Paul Aslanian | ||
ECON 424-01 | Effects of Intl Competition | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | CARN 305 | Raymond Robertson | ||
ECON 431-01 | Public Finance | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 304 | Sarah West | ||
ECON 490-01 | Behavioral Economics | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 305 | Pete Ferderer | ||
Educational Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
EDUC 210-01 | Urban Education | R | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 216 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
*Bonner Scholars only; 2 credit course; S/NC grading only* | |||||||
EDUC 220-01 | Educational Psychology | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 220-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
EDUC 230-01 | Community Youth Development in Multicultural America | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
EDUC 260-01 | Philosophy of Education | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | HUM 216 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
EDUC 300-01 | Education/Family/Community | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 215 | Marceline DuBose | ||
*2 credit course; S/NC grading only; First day attendance required; Meets second 7 weeks of semester* | |||||||
EDUC 320-01 | Educating Exceptional Students | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*2 credit course; S/NC grading only; First day attendance required; Meets first 7 weeks of semester* | |||||||
EDUC 360-01 | Educ/Emerging Technology | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | Brad Belbas | |||
*First day attendance required; course will meet in Humanities 302.* | |||||||
EDUC 370-01 | Challenge of Globalization | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 215 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 370-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
English |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ENGL 101-01 | College Writing | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 228 | Jennifer White | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 105-01 | American Voices | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 111 | Daylanne English | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 115-01 | Shakespeare | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 370 | Theresa Krier | ||
ENGL 135-01 | Poetry | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 204 | Neil Chudgar | ||
ENGL 136-01 | Drama: Staging Violence | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 002 | Casey Jarrin | ||
ENGL 150-01 | Intro to Creative Writing | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | MAIN 111 | Ping Wang | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 150-02 | Intro to Creative Writing | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 003 | Ping Wang | ||
*First day attendance required; freshmen and sophomores only.* | |||||||
ENGL 150-03 | Intro to Creative Writing | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 011 | Bradley Liening | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENGL 150-04 | Intro to Creative Writing | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 011 | Peter Bognanni | ||
*First day attendance required; Freshman and Sophomores only* | |||||||
ENGL 150-05 | Intro to Creative Writing | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 111 | Kristin Naca | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 150-06 | Intro to Creative Writing | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 05 | Marlon James | ||
*First day attendance required; Freshman and Sophomores only* | |||||||
ENGL 232-01 | Victorian Literature | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 010 | Robert Warde | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 232-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 269-01 | Environmental Classics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 270 | Christina Manning | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 280-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 272-01 | 19th Century American Lit | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 370 | James Dawes | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 274-01 | American Lit 1945-Present | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 227 | Andrew Opitz | ||
ENGL 275-01 | African American Literature to 1900 | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 05 | Daylanne English | ||
ENGL 281-01 | Crafts of Writing: Fiction | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 011 | Marlon James | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 281-02 | Crafts of Writing: Fiction | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 002 | Ethan Rutherford | ||
*First day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENGL 284-01 | Crafts of Writing: Screenwriting | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 011 | Peter Bognanni | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 294-01 | British Youth Subcultures: 1945-Present | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | Casey Jarrin | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-07; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENGL 294-02 | Russian Literary Theory | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 216 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-01 and RUSS 294-01* | |||||||
ENGL 294-03 | African American Theater | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 204 | Harry Waters | ||
*Cross-listed with THDA 263-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 294-04 | The American Memoir | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | THEATR 204 | Robert Warde | ||
ENGL 294-05 | At Home in the World: Indian Diaspora and Global Fictions | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 208 | Madhurima Chakraborty | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 294-03.* | |||||||
ENGL 294-06 | Playwrighting/Textual Analysis | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | THEATR 205 | Beth Cleary | ||
*Cross-listed with THDA 242-01.* | |||||||
ENGL 311-01 | Shakespeare: Comedy and Tragicomedy | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 305 | Theresa Krier | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 394-02.* | |||||||
ENGL 321-01 | 18th Century British Novel | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | THEATR 204 | Neil Chudgar | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 394-04.* | |||||||
ENGL 341-01 | Twentieth Century British Novel: Diasporic London | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 300 | Casey Jarrin | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 394-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
ENGL 362-01 | Gendered/Feminist Writings | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 009 | Sonita Sarker | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 310-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 366-01 | Nabokov | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 213 | Julia Chadaga | ||
*Cross-listed with RUSS 366-01* | |||||||
ENGL 403-01 | Seminar in American Authors | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 300 | James Dawes | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENGL 406-01 | Projects in Creative Writing | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 111 | Ping Wang | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
Environmental Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
ENVI 130-01 | Science of Renewable Energy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 101 | James Doyle | ||
*Cross-listed with PHYS 130-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 130-L1 | Science Renewable Energy Lab | T | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 154 | James Doyle | ||
*Cross-listed with PHYS 130-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 133-01 | Environmental Science | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 284 | Daniel Hornbach | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 133-L1 | Environmental Science Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 273 | Daniel Hornbach | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 133-L1 | Environmental Science Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 273 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 140-01 | The Earth's Climate System | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 101 | Louisa Bradtmiller | ||
ENVI 140-L1 | Earth's Climate System Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 187 | Louisa Bradtmiller | ||
ENVI 215-01 | Environmental Politics/Policy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 250 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 215-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 234-01 | American Environmental History | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR 204 | Stephanie Rutherford | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 234-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 258-01 | Geog of Environmental Hazards | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 107 | Helen Hazen | ||
*Cross-listed with GEOG 258-01.* | |||||||
ENVI 280-01 | Environmental Classics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 270 | Christina Manning | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 269-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 285-01 | Ecology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 226 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 285-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 285-L1 | Ecology Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 284 | Jerald Dosch | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 285-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 285-L2 | Ecology Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 284 | Michael Anderson | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 285-L2; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 294-01 | Environment and the Media | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 170 | Stephanie Rutherford | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 294-02 | 100 Words for Snow: Language and Nature | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 301 | Marianne Milligan | ||
*First day attendance required.* How has the environment influenced language? How do the ways we talk about nature influence our perceptions of it and the ways we interact with it? Are biodiversity and linguistic diversity linked? Can saving endangered languages help us save endangered environments? What are the links between biological evolution and the evolution of languages? | |||||||
ENVI 333-01 | Economics of Global Food Problems | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 228 | Amy Damon | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 333-01 and INTL 333-01.* | |||||||
ENVI 335-01 | Science and Citizenship | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 270 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 335-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 365-01 | Environmental Anthropology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 105 | Arjun Guneratne | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 365-01* | |||||||
ENVI 368-01 | Sustainable Development/Global Future | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MARKIM 201 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 368-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 370-01 | Challenge of Globalization | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 215 | Ruthanne Kurth-Schai | ||
*Cross-listed with EDUC 370-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
ENVI 488-01 | Sr Seminar in Environmental St | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | HUM 214 | Louisa Bradtmiller | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
French and Francophone Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
FREN 102-01 | French II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 111 | Joelle Vitiello | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 102-02 | French II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 110 | Anne Carayon | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 102-L1 | French II Lab | T | 09:10 am-10:10 am | OLRI 270 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 102-L2 | French II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | HUM 226 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 102-L3 | French II Lab | R | 08:00 am-09:00 am | HUM 111 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 102-L4 | French II Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 110 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 111-01 | Accelerated French I-II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 102 | Anne Carayon | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 111-L1 | Accelerated French I-II Lab | TR | 09:10 am-10:10 am | HUM 404 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 111-L2 | Accelerated French I-II Lab | TR | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 150 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-01 | French III | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 111 | Jean-Pierre Karegeye | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-02 | French III | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 227 | Anna Tahinci | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-L1 | French III Lab | T | 08:00 am-09:00 am | HUM 111 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-L3 | French III Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 404 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-L4 | French III Lab | R | 09:10 am-10:10 am | OLRI 270 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 203-L5 | French III Lab | R | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | HUM 227 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-01 | Text, Film and Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 214 | Andrew Billing | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-02 | Text, Film and Media | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 112 | Anne Carayon | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-L1 | Text, Film and Media Lab | T | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 215 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-L2 | Text, Film and Media Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | HUM 227 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-L3 | Text, Film and Media Lab | R | 08:00 am-09:00 am | HUM 102 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-L4 | Text, Film and Media Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 101 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 204-L5 | Text, Film and Media Lab | R | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 170 | Mariane Yade | ||
FREN 305-01 | Advanced Expression | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 228 | Martine Sauret | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 305-L1 | Advanced Expression Lab | T | 08:00 am-09:00 am | HUM 102 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 305-L2 | Advanced Expression Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 247 | Mariane Yade | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 305-L3 | Advanced Expression Lab | R | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | OLRI 247 | Sandra Vende | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 306-01 | Intro to Literary Analysis | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 112 | Andrew Billing | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
FREN 394-01 | La civilisation francaise en evolution from Lascaux to 1789 | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 404 | Martine Sauret | ||
*First day attendance required; taught in French.* | |||||||
FREN 408-01 | French Cultural Studies: Literature and Cinema of Immigration | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 402 | Joelle Vitiello | ||
FREN 494-02 | Litterature et temoignage | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Jean-Pierre Karegeye | ||
*First day attendance required; taught in French.* | |||||||
Geography |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GEOG 111-01 | Human Geog of Global Issues | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 107 | William Moseley | ||
GEOG 111-02 | Human Geography of Global Issues | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 107 | Kathryn Pratt | ||
GEOG 111-03 | Human Geography of Global Issues | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 107 | Kathryn Pratt | ||
GEOG 225-01 | Intro to Geog Info Systems | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | CARN 107 | Holly Barcus | ||
*$20 materials fee required* | |||||||
GEOG 225-L1 | Intro to Geog Info Systems Lab | M | 10:50 am-12:20 pm | CARN 108 | Birgit Muehlenhaus | ||
GEOG 225-L2 | Intro to Geog Info Systems Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 108 | Birgit Muehlenhaus | ||
GEOG 243-01 | Geography of Africa | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 107 | William Moseley | ||
GEOG 256-01 | Medical Geography | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 107 | Helen Hazen | ||
GEOG 258-01 | Geography of Environmental Hazards | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 107 | Helen Hazen | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 258-01.* | |||||||
GEOG 261-01 | Geography of World Urbanization | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 107 | David Lanegran | ||
GEOG 294-01 | Geography of Development and Underdevelopment | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 107 | William Moseley | ||
This course introduces students to the geographic study of development around the world, with a particular emphasis on the Global South. The geographic approach emphasizes: the highly uneven nature of development; processes that link and differentiate various areas of the world; connections between development and the natural resource base; and the power relations inherent in development discourse. The course will have a three main sections: an introduction to development theory; an investigation of various development themes (e.g., health, education, agriculture); and an intense exploration of what works and what doesn't in development practice. While much of the development literature has focused on failure, a specific aim of this course will be to uncover and interrogate success stories. | |||||||
GEOG 341-01 | Urban Social Geography | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 009 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 341-01* | |||||||
GEOG 370-01 | Rural Landscapes/Livelihoods | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 109 | Holly Barcus | ||
GEOG 378-01 | Research Methods in Geography | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 107 | Laura Smith | ||
GEOG 488-01 | Seminar: Transportation Geography | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 105 | Laura Smith | ||
GEOG 488-02 | Seminar: Cities of the 21st Century | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 105 | Daniel Trudeau | ||
*Permission of instructor required* | |||||||
Geology |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GEOL 100-01 | Oceanography | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 100 | John Craddock | ||
GEOL 103-01 | Geocinema | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 100 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
GEOL 155-01 | History/Evolution of Earth | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 100 | Raymond Rogers | ||
GEOL 155-L1 | History/Evolution of Earth Lab | M | 07:00 pm-09:10 pm | OLRI 187 | Jeffrey Thole | ||
GEOL 155-L2 | History/Evolution of Earth Lab | T | 09:00 am-11:10 am | OLRI 187 | Jeffrey Thole | ||
GEOL 250-01 | Mineralogy | MWF | 08:30 am-10:30 am | OLRI 179 | Karl Wirth | ||
GEOL 255-01 | Structural Geology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 179 | John Craddock | ||
GEOL 255-L1 | Structural Geology Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 179 | John Craddock | ||
GEOL 303-01 | Surface/Groundwater Hydrology | TR | 09:40 am-10:10 am | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
GEOL 303-L1 | Surface/Groundwater Hydr Lab | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 175 | Kelly MacGregor | ||
GEOL 450-01 | Senior Seminar | TBA | TBA | Raymond Rogers | |||
*1 Credit course* | |||||||
GEOL 450-01 | Senior Seminar | TBA | TBA | Karl Wirth | |||
*1 Credit course* | |||||||
German Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
GERM 102-01 | Elementary German II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 213 | Brigetta Abel | ||
GERM 102-L1 | Elementary German II Lab | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 212 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 102-L3 | Elementary German II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | OLRI 101 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 102-L4 | Elementary German II Lab | W | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 214 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 110-01 | Accelerated Elementary German | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 214 | Kiarina Kordela | ||
GERM 110-L1 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | M | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 212 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 110-L2 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | T | 09:00 am-10:00 am | HUM 110 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 110-L3 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | T | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | HUM 226 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 110-L4 | Accelerated Elem German Lab | TBA | TBA | Benjamin Stoltenburg | |||
GERM 203-01 | Intermediate German I | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 216 | Kiarina Kordela | ||
GERM 203-L1 | Intermediate German I Lab | M | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 213 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 203-L2 | Intermediate German I Lab | T | 09:00 am-10:00 am | OLRI 370 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 203-L3 | Intermediate German I Lab | T | 02:45 pm-03:45 pm | OLRI 101 | Constanze Gundlach | ||
GERM 203-L4 | Intermediate German I Lab | TBA | TBA | Constanze Gundlach | |||
GERM 204-02 | Intermediate German II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 215 | David Martyn | ||
GERM 204-L1 | Intermediate German II Lab | W | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | HUM 111 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 204-L2 | Intermediate German II Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 113 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 204-L3 | Intermediate German II Lab | R | 03:00 pm-04:00 pm | HUM 214 | Benjamin Stoltenburg | ||
GERM 255-01 | German Cinema Studies: Movies of the Third Reich | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 401 | Linda Schulte-Sasse | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 294-04.* | |||||||
GERM 306-01 | Introduction to German Studies | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 213 | Brigetta Abel | ||
*In German* | |||||||
GERM 327-01 | Darwin/Nietzsche/Freud | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 001 | David Martyn | ||
*In English; cross-listed with PHIL 327-01.* "God is dead! God remains dead! And we have killed him!", cries the madman in Nietzsche's Gay Science; and in Totem and Taboo, Freud identifies the murder of "God-Father" as the origin of civi-lization. Both Nietzsche and Freud were reacting to Darwin's discovery of natural selection, which dispelled nature's divine aura and inaugurated the secular age. Writing at a moment when religious faith had lost credence as a foundation for ethics, Nietzsche and Freud were the great debunkers of the noble ideals and beliefs we all ascribe to and that give our lives meaning. But while both con-fronted the groundlessness of value systems, they also acknowledged and even stressed the impos-sibility of living without values. The course explores this tension, 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 Truth and Lie in an Extra-Moral Sense," On the Advantages and Disadvantages of History for Life, Daybreak, The Genealogy of Morals, The Gay Science, Thus Spoke Zarathustra; Freud: The Interpretation of Dreams, Totem and Taboo, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, The Ego and the Id, Civilization and Its Discontents, Moses and Monotheism, "Tran-sience," "The Economic Problem of Masochism." Requirements: two 6-page papers; in-class midterm; final exam. |
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GERM 327-02 | Darwin/Nietzsche/Freud | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 215 | David Martyn | ||
*Course cross-listed with PHIL 327-02.* | |||||||
GERM 365-01 | Modernism and Avant-Garde | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 217 | Linda Schulte-Sasse | ||
*In German* | |||||||
GERM 488-01 | Senior Seminar | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 214 | Gisela Peters | ||
*In German; Capstone course required for senior majors* | |||||||
Hispanic and Latin American Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HISP 101-01 | Elementary Spanish I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 216 | Alexandra Bergmann | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 101-L1 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 217 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 101-L2 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 217 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 101-L4 | Elementary Spanish I Lab | TBA | TBA | STAFF | |||
*TBA section is reserved for schedule conflicts only. If you register for this section please see Susana Blanco-Iglesias (HUM 200A), Lab Coordinator. You will need to make arrangements to meet with a tutor in order to fulfill lab requirements.* | |||||||
HISP 102-01 | Elementary Spanish II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 216 | Alexandra Bergmann | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-02 | Elementary Spanish II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 215 | Susana Blanco-Iglesias | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-03 | Elementary Spanish II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 270 | Teresa Kupin-Escobar | ||
HISP 102-L1 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 170 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-L2 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | W | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 217 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-L3 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | W | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 228 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-L4 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | R | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 215 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 102-L5 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | F | 02:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 212 | STAFF | ||
*TBA section is reserved for schedule conflicts only. If you register for this section please see Susana Blanco-Iglesias (HUM 200A), Lab Coordinator. You will need to make arrangements to meet with a tutor in order to fulfill lab requirements.* | |||||||
HISP 102-L5 | Elementary Spanish II Lab | W | 12:30 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 102 | STAFF | ||
*TBA section is reserved for schedule conflicts only. If you register for this section please see Susana Blanco-Iglesias (HUM 200A), Lab Coordinator. You will need to make arrangements to meet with a tutor in order to fulfill lab requirements.* | |||||||
HISP 110-01 | Accel Beginning Spanish | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 214 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 110-L1 | Accel Beginning Spanish Lab | TBA | TBA | STAFF | |||
HISP 111-01 | Accel Elementary Portuguese | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 217 | David Sunderland | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 111-L1 | Accel Elem Portuguese Lab | W | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 217 | STAFF | ||
HISP 203-01 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 214 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-02 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 214 | Teresa Mesa Adamuz | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-03 | Intermediate Spanish I | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 215 | Laura Wasenius | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-L1 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 214 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-L2 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 350 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-L4 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | W | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 228 | Lucrecia Zanolli | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-L6 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 215 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 203-L8 | Intermediate Spanish I Lab | TBA | TBA | STAFF | |||
*TBA section is reserved for schedule conflicts only. If you register for this section please see Susana Blanco-Iglesias (HUM 200A), Lab Coordinator. You will need to make arrangements to meet with a tutor in order to fulfill lab requirements.* | |||||||
HISP 204-01 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 214 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-02 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 226 | Laura Wasenius | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-03 | Intermediate Spanish II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 216 | Laura Wasenius | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L1 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 214 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L2 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | T | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 247 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L3 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | W | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 213 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L4 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | W | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 226 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L5 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | R | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 215 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L6 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | R | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 243 | Hugo Gonzalez Martinez | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 204-L8 | Intermediate Spanish II Lab | F | 01:00 pm-01:30 pm | HUM 227 | STAFF | ||
*TBA section is reserved for schedule conflicts only. If you register for this section please see Susana Blanco-Iglesias (HUM 200A), Lab Coordinator. You will need to make arrangements to meet with a tutor in order to fulfill lab requirements.* | |||||||
HISP 220-01 | Accel Intermediate Spanish | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 217 | Rosa Rull-Montoya | ||
*Signature of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 220-02 | Accel Intermediate Spanish | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 216 | Susana Blanco-Iglesias | ||
*Signature of instructor required; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 220-L1 | Accel Intermediate Spanish Lab | TBA | TBA | STAFF | |||
HISP 220-L2 | Accel Intermediate Spanish Lab | TBA | TBA | STAFF | |||
HISP 305-01 | Oral and Written Expression | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 110 | David Sunderland | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 305-02 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 215 | Teresa Kupin-Escobar | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 305-03 | Oral and Written Expression | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 216 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 307-01 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 243 | Alicia Munoz | ||
*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 227 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 307-02; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 308-01 | Locating US Latino Studies | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 212 | Alicia Munoz | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 309-01 | Intro to Hispanic Linguistics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 112 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 309-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 331-01 | Luso-Brazilian Voices | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 227 | Katherine Ostrom | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 416-01 | Mapping the New World | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 217 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 416-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 422-01 | Modern Hispanic Novel and Visual Arts | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 215 | Teresa Kupin-Escobar | ||
*Cross-listed as WGSS 494-01; first day attendance required.* Course subtitle is: Feminist and Postmodern Intersectionalities and Innovation of Popular Culture | |||||||
HISP 436-01 | Spanish Dialectology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 212 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 436-01 and LING 436-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 443-01 | Reality of Contemporary Spain | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 212 | Rosa Rull-Montoya | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
HISP 488-01 | Senior Seminar | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 215 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
History |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HIST 110-01 | Introduction to European History: The Middle Ages | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 009 | Ellen Arnold | ||
Stretching from the fall of Rome through the Pax Mongolica to the expansion of European culture and power into the New World, the Middle Ages were a dynamic and eventful stage of European and world history. Medieval people across Europe and the Mediterranean created unique and lasting cultures that reflected a complex mixture of religion, politics, warfare, cross-cultural contact, spirituality, and unmatched literary and artistic achievements. This class will work with the three major medieval cultures: Christian Europe, Byzantium, and Islamic civilization, tracking patterns of internal developments and external connections to the rest of Eurasia and the World. We will look at major turning points (such as the rise of both Christianity and Islam, the crusades, and the Black Death) alongside the cultural, technological, and religious developments of the period (such as castles, cathedrals, and universities). | |||||||
HIST 115-01 | Africa Since 1800 | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 111 | Jamie Monson | ||
HIST 122-01 | The Roman World | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 002 | Andrew Overman | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 122-01 and HMCS 122-01* | |||||||
HIST 194-03 | Introduction to Modern European Women's History, 1500-Present | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 105 | Aeleah Soine | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 194-02.* This course traces the history of women in Europe since 1500. The organization is broadly chronological as we look at patterns of everyday life for women of various classes, regions, and eras. Given the daunting breadth of this course, we will focus on particular moments that illuminate an era or suggest significant historical change. Students will be challenged to recognize the contributions of many individual and groups of women in various historical movements and eras, as well as posit alternative chronologies reflective of women's unique historical experiences. Reoccurring themes in the readings, lectures, and discussions will include women's roles in: feminist or proto-feminist consciousness; roles within the household, family, and society; citizenship, suffrage, governance, and political power; class, religious, and social milieus or movements; and national, imperial, or wartime mobilizations. | |||||||
HIST 194-04 | The U.S. in the World | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 208 | Christine Manganaro | ||
The United States as a political formation, physical space, and cultural ideal has been shaped by its encounters with other nations. This course examines American civilization in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as it was wrought on a world stage, through dialog as well as violent conflict at and beyond its borders. It will focus on the role of ideas about the frontier, manifest destiny, and American exceptionalism in the formation of the U.S.; the expansion of settlement and influence westward and into the Pacific; immigration; war and commercial enterprise abroad; and the symbiotic relationship between foreign affairs and domestic culture. We will use primary sources and historians' scholarship as we examine how international encounters have shaped America and vice versa. | |||||||
HIST 234-01 | American Environmental History | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR 204 | Stephanie Rutherford | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 234-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HIST 277-01 | History of Modern Japan | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 003 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 277-01* | |||||||
HIST 278-01 | War Crimes and Memory in Contemporary East Asia | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 001 | Yue-him Tam | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 278-01* | |||||||
HIST 282-01 | Latin America: Art/Nation | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 001 | Ernesto Capello | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 282-01* | |||||||
HIST 294-01 | Constantine to Charlemagne | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MAIN 009 | Ellen Arnold | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 294-02.* The "Fall of Rome." The "Dark Ages." "Late Antiquity." "The Early Middle Ages." All of these labels could be (and are) applied to a dynamic and complex period that lasted from roughly 300 to 800 CE. This period witnessed the transformation of one of world history's great empires, the rise of two new monotheistic religions that rose to global prominence, and the emergence of new empires, polities, and cultures--yet they are often imagined as a period "between" other eras. In this class we will study the religious, political, and cultural histories of the Western European states, the Byzantine Empire, and the early Islamic dynasties. We will study both the larger social, cultural, and religious forces that shaped these diverging groups and the roles of individual leaders. This dual focus will also give us a chance to explore the construction of historical memory as we examine how medieval writers drew on and created histories and biographies of famous (and infamous) political and religious leaders, and how modern historians have used these accounts to construct "biographies" of these civilizations. | |||||||
HIST 294-02 | Remembering the Modern City | M | 01:10 pm-04:10 pm | THEATR 205 | Ernesto Capello | ||
This class interrogates the role that memory and history played in the formation of modern urban identities by reviewing theoretical literature on urban memory, a series of case studies, and hands-on archival research. We will be treating the layering of metaphorical significance upon particular zones or sites within an urban landscape that demarcate social memory of groups at the local, urban, provincial, or national level. We will be particularly concerned with the role of the state (local, provincial national) in fostering an official memory landscape within cities, the role of historic preservationists especially as regards zoning and planning decisions, and the creation of heritage tourism. We shall also be attending to the contestation that is inherent in the inscription of a particular narrative upon the urban fabric, highlighting moments in which subaltern groups attempted to interrogate the memory landscape of the dominant culture, etc. Our theoretical conversation will be complemented by attention to a series of case studies of individual cities, including Paris, New York, New Orleans, Buenos Aires, and Oaxaca. We will also be considering the memory landscape of the Twin Cities in site visits and archival research with a particular emphasis upon the history of public art and the remembering of Rondo. | |||||||
HIST 294-03 | Farm and Forest: African Environmental History | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 002 | Jamie Monson | ||
This course will explore the complex interaction between the African physical world or "nature" (plants, soils, water, climate) and "culture" (human society) over time, from the pre-colonial period through colonization and independence. We will also seek to understand the cultural and symbolic meanings historically associated with the African natural world, both for African societies and for non-Africans who have been engaged with the continent. We will delve into controversies about land use, population growth, wildlife conservation, desertification and other topics. Each student will gain insight into a particular issue or case study through an independent research project. | |||||||
HIST 294-04 | Disciplining Race | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 212 | Christine Manganaro | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 294-07.* Perhaps more than any other subject, the study of race has occupied researchers across disciplinary boundaries. This course on the history of the study of race and racial formation focuses on the development of thinking about race in biology, genetics, anthropology, sociology, and psychology. We will examine racial science - the study of race itself - particularly the ways that scientists constructed and reconstructed racial categories and eventually demonstrated their fictitiousness. Studying human difference has been an inherently political project, and results and their application have been fraught with questions about proper methodology, ideological underpinnings, and usefulness. Thus, we will also examine the influence of researchers' ideas in American culture, including law, education, and the persistence of ideas about race as a 'natural' category in American life. | |||||||
HIST 294-05 | Europe and the World Wars, 1900-1950 | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 009 | Aeleah Soine | ||
For much of the first half of the twentieth century, Europeans seemed to be preparing for war, at war, or recovering from war. This course will explore the diverse experiences of the world wars in Europe through the eyes of world and national leaders, soldiers and civilians, children and adults, collaborators and resistance fighters. It will also introduce students to key scholarly debates over issues of the causes of World Wars I and II, Nazi collaboration versus resistance, and whether the world wars are best understood as a single era of modern warfare or two distinct military and social conflicts separated by an era of peace. Students will be expected to read and analyze a variety of primary and secondary historical sources with the intention of understanding better the political, social, economic, and moral values that were tested by this dynamic era of total war and fragile peace. | |||||||
HIST 294-06 | Transnational Origins of the European Welfare State, 1848-Present | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 05 | Aeleah Soine | ||
The European welfare state of the post-World War II era has been praised as the hallmark of post-war socio-economic recovery and stability, generous state-funded systems of education, health-care, and social safety nets, and models of social justice and human equity. Yet, critics have come to see these developments as propping up a system plagued by inefficiency, bloated government bureaucracies, and tainted with socialism. This course will explore the origins and development of European social welfare out of the early industrialized economies of Great Britain, the United States, and Germany, and their development into modern debates over the ideal level of government intervention and obligation to its citizens and non-citizens. Specific topics will include the rationalization of poor laws in the nineteenth century, the introduction of worker�s insurance and pensions, the collaborative role of American and European women in the creation of modern social welfare programs and systems, the real and imagined relationship between social welfare and socialism, the politicization of health and welfare, and the nature of a post-war European consensus on the welfare state in the context of the Cold War and contemporary American health care debates. | |||||||
HIST 379-01 | The Study of History | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 002 | Andrea Cremer | ||
HIST 379-02 | The Study of History | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 002 | Andrea Cremer | ||
HIST 394-01 | Public History | W | 01:10 pm-04:10 pm | THEATR 205 | Lynn Hudson | ||
HIST 394-02 | Race Relations in America | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 003 | Christine Manganaro | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 394-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
Interdisciplinary Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
INTD 411-01 | Senior Seminar in Community and Global Health | W | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 300 | Jaine Strauss | ||
*1 credit course.* | |||||||
International Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
INTL 112-01 | Introduction to International Studies: Globalization, Media, and Cultural Identities | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 404 | Amanda Ciafone | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
INTL 113-01 | Introduction to International Studies: Identities, Interests, and Community | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 404 | Nadya Nedelsky | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
INTL 225-01 | Comparative Economic Systems | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 304 | Gary Krueger | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 225-01* | |||||||
INTL 245-01 | Introduction to International Human Rights | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 404 | Nadya Nedelsky | ||
INTL 245-02 | Introduction to International Human Rights | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 404 | Wendy Weber | ||
INTL 285-01 | Ethnicity and Nationalism in Central & Eastern Europe | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 404 | Nadya Nedelsky | ||
INTL 294-01 | Study of Terrorism | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 404 | Robert Nalbandov | ||
This course explores terrorism - the spreading of fear and uncertainty by inhumane acts of violence - and state and international responses. We will investigate terrorism's definitions, causes, long history, and diverse forms. We will engage state-sponsored vs. non-state; global vs. regional; terrorism vs. freedom fight; biological, environmental, cultural, political, genetic; and "old" vs. "new" terrorisms in multiple world geographies. | |||||||
INTL 294-02 | Revolution and the Emergence of the Modern Muslim World | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 404 | Erin Glade | ||
Since the 1880s, the states and regions of the Muslim world have experienced many political revolutions. Whether they were constitutional, military or populist, each illuminated diverse Muslim societies and their aspirations, and reverberated regionally and worldwide. This course explores Muslim-world transformations using multiple case studies, including revolutions in Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Indonesia. | |||||||
INTL 294-03 | At Home in the World: Indian Diaspora and Global Fictions | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 208 | Madhurima Chakraborty | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-05.* This course focuses on contemporary Indian and Indian-diaspora writers and filmmakers who create global fictions, in the U.S. and worldwide. Paying attention to the moves migrants make to recreate old homes and make new, we will engage compelling authors including Rushdie, Lahiri, and Mukherjee, film-makers Nair and Chadda, and diverse essayists and other writers. | |||||||
INTL 294-04 | Performance/Documents/Rights | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR 204 | Lara Nielsen | ||
*Cross-listed with THDA 294-02.* | |||||||
INTL 333-01 | Economics of Global Food Problems | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 228 | Amy Damon | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 333-01 and ENVI 333-01.* | |||||||
INTL 368-01 | Sustainable Development/Global Future | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MARKIM 201 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 368-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
INTL 372-01 | Post-Nationalism: Euro Union | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 404 | Robert Nalbandov | ||
INTL 374-01 | Culture and Global Capitalism | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 404 | Amanda Ciafone | ||
*Cross-listed with LATI 374-01* | |||||||
INTL 480-01 | Paradigms-Global Leadership | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | Ahmed Samatar | |||
INTL 494-01 | Sr Seminar: Diasporic Media | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 404 | Amanda Ciafone | ||
Japanese |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
JAPA 102-01 | Elementary Japanese II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 110 | Satoko Suzuki | ||
JAPA 102-02 | Elementary Japanese II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 110 | Satoko Suzuki | ||
JAPA 102-L1 | Elementary Japanese II Lab | M | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 228 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 102-L2 | Elementary Japanese II Lab | T | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 402 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 102-L3 | Elementary Japanese II Lab | T | 08:30 am-09:30 am | HUM 402 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 194-01 | Introduction to Modern Japanese Literature | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 402 | Jason Herlands | ||
As Japan underwent political, economic, and social changes in the second half of the 19th century, fiction writers were at the forefront of capturing and representing new developments in style, thought, and social mores. In this course, we will examine those exemplary fictional works that helped to usher in the sense of the modern era while self-consciously questioning ideas of tradition, nation, race, sexuality, and the new social structure. Readings will consist of novels, short stories, and secondary sources that provide sociohistorical and cultural background. No knowledge of Japanese or experience with Japanese culture is required. | |||||||
JAPA 204-01 | Intermediate Japanese II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 110 | Ritsuko Narita | ||
JAPA 204-02 | Intermediate Japanese II | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 110 | Ritsuko Narita | ||
JAPA 204-L1 | Intermediate Japanese II Lab | R | 10:10 am-11:10 am | HUM 110 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 204-L2 | Intermediate Japanese II Lab | R | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | OLRI 101 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 204-L3 | Intermediate Japanese II Lab | R | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 294-02 | Masculinity in Japanese Film and Fiction | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 110 | Jason Herlands | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 294-02; film viewing to be held Monday evenings, 7-10pm, in Humanities 402.* Macho or pansy? Boyish or manly? In this course, we will consider representations of masculine gender and sexuality in works of modern Japanese fiction and film, covering a variety of materials from canonical novels to experimental cinema. We will consider historical and cultural constructions of masculinity in various guises, whether normative, transgressive, or gratuitously extreme. Topics will include adolescence, romance, success, masochism, incest, prostitution, violence, class background, homosociality, and repression, among others. No knowledge of Japanese is required. | |||||||
JAPA 294-02 | Masculinity in Japanese Film and Fiction | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 402 | Jason Herlands | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 294-02; film viewing to be held Monday evenings, 7-10pm, in Humanities 402.* Macho or pansy? Boyish or manly? In this course, we will consider representations of masculine gender and sexuality in works of modern Japanese fiction and film, covering a variety of materials from canonical novels to experimental cinema. We will consider historical and cultural constructions of masculinity in various guises, whether normative, transgressive, or gratuitously extreme. Topics will include adolescence, romance, success, masochism, incest, prostitution, violence, class background, homosociality, and repression, among others. No knowledge of Japanese is required. | |||||||
JAPA 306-01 | Advanced Japanese II | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 110 | Ritsuko Narita | ||
JAPA 306-L1 | Advanced Japanese II Lab | T | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 111 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 306-L2 | Advanced Japanese II Lab | W | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 217 | Eriko Ike | ||
JAPA 408-01 | Fourth Year Japanese II | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 213 | Jason Herlands | ||
Latin American Studies |
|||||||
Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
LATI 141-01 | Latin America Through Women's Eyes | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*Graded S/D/NC with Written Evaluation; cross-listed with POLI 141-01 and WGSS 141-01; first day attendance required.* Latin American women have overcome patriarchal "machismo" to serve as presidents, mayors, guerilla leaders, union organizers, artists, intellectuals, and human rights activists. Through a mix of theoretical, empirical, and testimonial work, we will explore issues such as feminist challenges to military rule in Chile, anti-feminist politics in Nicaragua, the intersection of gender and democratization in Cuba, and women's organizing and civil war in Colombia. Teaching methods include discussion, debates, simulations, analytic papers, partisan narratives, lecture, film, poetry, and a biographical essay. This class employs an innovative system of qualitative assessment. Students take the course "S/D/NC with Written Evaluation." This provides a powerful opportunity for students to stretch their limits in a learning community with high expectations, but without a high-pressure atmosphere. This ungraded course has been approved for inclusion on major/minor plans in Political Science, Latin American Studies, and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies. (4 credits) | |||||||
LATI 246-01 | Comparative Democratization | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with POLI 246-01* | |||||||
LATI 282-01 | Latin America: Art/Nation | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 001 | Ernesto Capello | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 282-01* | |||||||
LATI 307-01 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 243 | Alicia Munoz | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 307-01* | |||||||
LATI 307-02 | Intro Analysis Hispanic Texts | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 227 | Antonio Dorca | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 307-02* | |||||||
LATI 341-01 | Comparative Social Movements | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with POLI 341-01* | |||||||
LATI 374-01 | Culture and Global Capitalism | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 404 | Amanda Ciafone | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 374-01* | |||||||
LATI 416-01 | Mapping the New World | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 217 | Galo Gonzalez | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 416-01* | |||||||
LATI 436-01 | Spanish Dialectology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 212 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 436-01 and LING 436-01* | |||||||
Linguistics |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
LING 100-01 | Introduction to Linguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 213 | Christina Esposito | ||
LING 175-01 | Sociolinguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 204 | Marianne Milligan | ||
*Cross-listed with SOCI 175-01* | |||||||
LING 202-01 | Origins/Evolution of Language | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 102 | John Haiman | ||
LING 205-01 | Phonology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 270 | Christina Esposito | ||
LING 309-01 | Intro to Hispanic Linguistics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 112 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 309-01* | |||||||
LING 364-01 | Philosophy of Language | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 111 | Joy Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 364-01* | |||||||
LING 378-01 | Psychology of Language | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 352 | Brooke Lea | ||
*Cross-listed with PSYC 378-01* | |||||||
LING 400-01 | Field Methods in Linguistics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 212 | John Haiman | ||
*6 Credit course* | |||||||
LING 436-01 | Spanish Dialectology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 212 | Cynthia Kauffeld | ||
*Cross-listed with HISP 436-01 and LATI 436-01* | |||||||
Mathematics |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
MATH 108-01 | Quantitative Thinking | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 05 | Lisa Giddings | ||
*Cross-listed with ECON 108-01* | |||||||
MATH 135-01 | Applied Calculus | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 241 | Andrew Beveridge | ||
MATH 135-02 | Applied Calculus | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 241 | Andrew Beveridge | ||
MATH 136-01 | Discrete Mathematics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 100 | Thomas Halverson | ||
MATH 137-01 | Single Variable Calculus | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 243 | Karen Saxe | ||
MATH 137-02 | Single Variable Calculus | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 243 | Karen Saxe | ||
MATH 153-01 | Data Analysis and Statistics | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 241 | David Ehren | ||
MATH 153-02 | Data Analysis and Statistics | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 241 | David Ehren | ||
MATH 155-01 | Intro to Statistical Modeling | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 245 | Alicia Johnson | ||
MATH 155-02 | Intro to Statistical Modeling | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 258 | Daniel Kaplan | ||
MATH 236-01 | Linear Algebra | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 350 | Thomas Halverson | ||
MATH 237-01 | Multivariable Calculus | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 243 | Wayne Roberts | ||
MATH 237-02 | Multivariable Calculus | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 247 | Wayne Roberts | ||
MATH 253-01 | Applied Mulitivariate Stats | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 258 | Lisa Lendway | ||
MATH 312-01 | Differential Equations | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 243 | Daniel Flath | ||
MATH 365-01 | Computational Linear Algebra | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 245 | Daniel Kaplan | ||
*Cross-listed with COMP 365-01* | |||||||
MATH 369-01 | Advanced Symbolic Logic | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 001 | Janet Folina | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 369-01* | |||||||
MATH 371-01 | Modern Geometry | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 243 | Daniel Flath | ||
MATH 376-01 | Algebraic Structures | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 247 | Andrew Beveridge | ||
MATH 455-01 | Mathematical Statistics | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 247 | Alicia Johnson | ||
MATH 478-01 | Complex Analysis | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | OLRI 241 | David Bressoud | ||
MATH 490-01 | Senior Capstone Seminar | F | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 241 | Karen Saxe | ||
*1 Credit course; S/NC grading only* | |||||||
Media and Cultural Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
HMCS 110-01 | Texts and Power: Foundations of Cultural Studies | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 301 | John Kim | ||
*Course suitable for first years.* | |||||||
HMCS 114-01 | News Reporting/Writing | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 212 | Nick Coleman | ||
HMCS 122-01 | The Roman World | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 002 | Andrew Overman | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 122-01 and HIST 122-01* | |||||||
HMCS 126-01 | Local Media Institutions | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 250 | Michael Griffin | ||
This course is an analysis of the major community, industrial, political, and regulatory factors shaping media production, distribution, access, and civic participation, with special attention to local Twin Cities media organizations and current initiatives for media innovation and reform. Topics include the political economy of media production and distribution, ownership, and control, government regulation, systems of power within media organizations, the influence of advertisers on news and programming practices as well as on media access and diversity, and the creation of new media networks and local community-based media activities. Following an overview of contemporary commercial media practices and structures in light of contemporary, historical, and potential alternatives, students will pursue class projects that explore and report on specific media organizations and community media initiatives in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area. Opportunities for field observations and study will include commercial, community, and public media organizations and new media initiatives. In Spring 2010, HMCS 126 - Local Media Institutions will offer opportunities for interested students to work on projects related to a large public arts project along University Avenue in St. Paul. | |||||||
HMCS 128-01 | Film Analysis/Visual Culture | TR | 01:20 pm-03:50 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*Suitable for first year students.* | |||||||
HMCS 232-01 | Victorian Literature | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 010 | Robert Warde | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 232-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
HMCS 272-01 | Social Theories | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 305 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
*Cross-listed with SOCI 272-01* | |||||||
HMCS 294-01 | Russian Literary Theory: Formalists, Bakhtin, and Company | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 216 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-02 and RUSS 294-01* | |||||||
HMCS 294-02 | US Jews and the Media | MW | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | HUM 401 | Clay Steinman | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 294-06.* U.S. Jews and the Media will emphasize five topics: Yiddish cinema (with English subtitles), Jews and race in pre-1950s Hollywood, Jews and Communists in Hollywood, feminist and queer approaches to gendered media representations of Jews, and the controversy over scholarship about journalism and 'The Israel Lobby' - all in the context of critical race theory. Written work will include three essay tests and a short research paper, although students who have taken HMCS 128, Film Analysis and Visual Culture, will be invited to do extensive original research. Except insofar as they affect media representations, the course will not cover theological or Palestinian-Israeli issues. No prerequisites, but an interest in twentieth-century U.S. Jewish history and media representations is essential, as there will be extensive background readings and screenings in both areas. | |||||||
HMCS 294-04 | German Cinema Studies: Movies of the Third Reich | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 401 | Linda Schulte-Sasse | ||
*Cross-listed with GERM 255-01.* | |||||||
HMCS 294-05 | Race and Sound in Modern American Culture | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 217 | Daniel Gilbert | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 294-03; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HMCS 294-06 | Baseball: The Cultural Politics of Race, Gender and Nation | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 112 | Daniel Gilbert | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 294-04; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HMCS 294-07 | British Youth Subcultures: 1945 to Present | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | Casey Jarrin | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HMCS 334-01 | Cultural Studies and the Media | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 402 | Leola Johnson | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 334-01* | |||||||
HMCS 357-01 | Adv Journalism: Print | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 228 | Douglas Stone | ||
HMCS 376-01 | Critical Social Theory/Media | W | 01:10 pm-04:10 pm | Clay Steinman | |||
HMCS 392-01 | Critical Race Theory | M | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | HUM 112 | Leola Johnson | ||
*Course for Mellon Program students only; instructor approval required; cross-listed with AMST 392-01; 2 credits.* | |||||||
HMCS 394-01 | Twentieth Century British Novel: Diasporic London | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 300 | Casey Jarrin | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 341-01; first day attendance required.* | |||||||
HMCS 394-02 | Critical Issues in Video Practice | F | 01:10 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 404 | Jenny Lion | ||
*First day attendance required.* An advanced practical seminar exploring critical issues involved in video production and curation, treating both production and curation as forms of authorship. In addition to individual projects, which are to be completed outside of class, students will be expected to do a significant amount of reading and presentations on the texts. Class participation is required. Weekly film/video viewings will be scheduled additional to class time or put on reserve. Previous technical knowledge will be helpful, as well as background in the history of media and of video and/or film. Recommended prerequisite is Artists' and Experimental Video or equivalent. Additional screening times TBA. | |||||||
HMCS 488-01 | Advanced Topics Seminar | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | John Kim | |||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required.* Course will meet in the computer lab, Humanities 302. This capstone seminar is an opportunity for students in HMCS to use the skills they have acquired in previous coursework on new media and culture. This year's seminar will have a core civic engagement component. In close collaboration with the Civic Engagement Center at Macalester, students will work with various Twin Cities community organizations in creating a range of new media projects. The goal of this seminar is to encourage students to apply the knowledge and tools gained in the classroom to issues affecting local communities and new media's role in promoting the public interest. Students are expected to produce work that demonstrates high-level skills in reading, writing, research, editing, self-critical analytical thinking and new media production, culminating in high quality public presentations. Prerequisite: Permission of instructor. Preference given to students who have taken Texts and Power: Foundations of Cultural Studies and Introduction to New Media. | |||||||
Music |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
MUSI 112-01 | Basic Musicianship | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MUSIC 123 | Joseph Schlefke | ||
MUSI 114-01 | Theory II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MUSIC 202 | Randall Bauer | ||
MUSI 114-02 | Theory II | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | MUSIC 202 | Randall Bauer | ||
MUSI 114-L1 | Theory II Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MUSIC 201 | Joseph Schlefke | ||
MUSI 114-L2 | Theory II Lab | T | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MUSIC 201 | Joseph Schlefke | ||
MUSI 153-01 | Electronic Music | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | MUSIC 202 | Janet Gilbert | ||
MUSI 294-01 | Introduction to North Indian Music | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MUSIC 202 | Pooja Pavan | ||
MUSI 294-02 | Jazz in America | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Joan Griffith | ||
MUSI 314-01 | Theory IV, Contemp Theory/Lit | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MUSIC 202 | Carleton Macy | ||
MUSI 343-01 | Western Music-19th Century | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | MUSIC 123 | Mark Mazullo | ||
MUSI 394-01 | Improvisation and the Creative Impulse | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Randall Bauer | ||
*Signature of instructor required* | |||||||
MUSI 73-01 | African Music Ensemble | TR | 05:30 pm-07:00 pm | MUSIC | Sowah Mensah | ||
*Ensemble will meet in Music Room 205.* | |||||||
MUSI 75-01 | Macalester Choir | MTWR | 04:45 pm-06:15 pm | MUSIC 123 | Eugene Rogers | ||
MUSI 77-01 | Hildegard Singers | T | 07:30 pm-09:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Eugene Rogers | ||
MUSI 77-02 | Singing Scotsmen | T | 07:30 pm-09:30 pm | MUSIC 123 | Eugene Rogers | ||
MUSI 81-01 | Mac Jazz Band | TR | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | MUSIC CONC HALL | Joan Griffith | ||
MUSI 85-01 | Pipe Band | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MUSIC CONC HALL | Michael Breidenbach | ||
MUSI 87-01 | Wind Ensemble | MW | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | MUSIC CONC HALL | Cary Franklin | ||
MUSI 89-01 | Symphony Orchestra | TR | 04:45 pm-06:00 pm | MUSIC CONC HALL | Cary Franklin | ||
MUSI 91-01 | Mac Jazz Combo | M | 07:00 pm-09:30 pm | MUSIC CONC HALL | Joan Griffith | ||
MUSI 91-02 | Collegium Musicum | TBA | TBA | Carleton Macy | |||
MUSI 95-01 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 95-02 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Barbara Brooks | |||
MUSI 95-03 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Christine Dahl | |||
MUSI 95-04 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 95-05 | Piano | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
MUSI 95-06 | Jazz Piano | TBA | TBA | Michael Vasich | |||
MUSI 95-08 | Organ | TBA | TBA | Winston Kaehler | |||
MUSI 95-09 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Benjamin Allen | |||
MUSI 95-10 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 95-11 | Voice | TBA | TBA | William Reed | |||
MUSI 95-13 | African Voice | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 95-15 | Jazz Guitar | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-16 | Bass | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-17 | Classical Guitar | TBA | TBA | Jeffrey Thygeson | |||
MUSI 95-18 | Mandolin | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-19 | Guitar | TBA | TBA | Jeffrey Thygeson | |||
MUSI 95-1M | Trombone | TBA | TBA | Richard Gaynor | |||
MUSI 95-22 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Mary Horozaniecki | |||
MUSI 95-23 | Violin | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 95-24 | Viola | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 95-26 | Cello | TBA | TBA | Thomas Rosenberg | |||
MUSI 95-28 | Harp | TBA | TBA | Ann Benjamin | |||
MUSI 95-2M | Tuba | TBA | TBA | Charles Wazanowski | |||
MUSI 95-30 | African Flute | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 95-33 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Shelley Hanson | |||
MUSI 95-36 | Trumpet | TBA | TBA | David Jensen | |||
MUSI 95-37 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Caroline Lemen | |||
MUSI 95-39 | Accordian | TBA | TBA | Cary Franklin | |||
MUSI 95-40 | Indian Voice | TBA | TBA | Pooja Pavan | |||
MUSI 95-41 | Percussion | TBA | TBA | Steve Kimball | |||
MUSI 95-43 | Jazz Drumming | TBA | TBA | Steve Kimball | |||
MUSI 95-4M | Percussion | TBA | TBA | Steve Kimball | |||
MUSI 95-5M | African Drumming | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 95-C | Piano | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 95-CI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 95-H1 | Harp | TBA | TBA | Ann Benjamin | |||
MUSI 95-HH | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 95-M0 | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Caroline Lemen | |||
MUSI 95-M2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 95-M3 | African Flute | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 95-M5 | Voice | TBA | TBA | Rachel Holder | |||
MUSI 95-M6 | Clarinet | TBA | TBA | Shelley Hanson | |||
MUSI 95-M8 | Saxophone | TBA | TBA | Kathy Jensen | |||
MUSI 95-M9 | Trumpet | TBA | TBA | David Jensen | |||
MUSI 95-MC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 95-MD | Piano | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
MUSI 95-ME | Jazz Piano | TBA | TBA | Michael Vasich | |||
MUSI 95-MH | Voice | TBA | TBA | Benjamin Allen | |||
MUSI 95-MI | Voice | TBA | TBA | Laura Nichols | |||
MUSI 95-MJ | Voice | TBA | TBA | William Reed | |||
MUSI 95-ML | African Voice | TBA | TBA | Sowah Mensah | |||
MUSI 95-MM | Guitar | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-MN | Jazz Guitar | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-MT | Jazz Improvisation | TBA | TBA | Joan Griffith | |||
MUSI 95-MV | Violin | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 95-MW | Viola | TBA | TBA | Stella Anderson | |||
MUSI 95-MY | Cello | TBA | TBA | Thomas Rosenberg | |||
MUSI 95-W2 | Flute | TBA | TBA | Martha Jamsa | |||
MUSI 95-WC | Piano | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 95-WO | French Horn | TBA | TBA | Caroline Lemen | |||
MUSI 95-WU | Violin | TBA | TBA | Mary Horozaniecki | |||
MUSI 97-01 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Laurinda Sager Wright | |||
MUSI 97-02 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Barbara Brooks | |||
MUSI 97-03 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Christine Dahl | |||
MUSI 97-04 | Piano for Proficiency | TBA | TBA | Claudia Chen | |||
MUSI 99-01 | Piano Proficiency Exam | TBA | TBA | Mark Mazullo | |||
Philosophy |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PHIL 115-01 | Problems of Philosophy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 009 | Janet Folina | ||
PHIL 119-01 | Critical Thinking | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 112 | Geoffrey Gorham | ||
PHIL 125-01 | Ethics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 002 | Diane Michelfelder | ||
PHIL 125-02 | Ethics | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 105 | William Wilcox | ||
PHIL 160-01 | Foundations-Political Theory | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 160-01* | |||||||
PHIL 227-01 | Bioethics | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 011 | Martin Gunderson | ||
PHIL 231-01 | Modern Philosophy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 111 | Geoffrey Gorham | ||
PHIL 294-01 | Human Rights and Healthcare | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 010 | Martin Gunderson | ||
This course will explore legal and ethical foundations of human rights that relate to health care. Human rights are used to protect human subjects in biomedial research and to support claims for adequate health care. Both areas raise legal and ethical issues. The use of human rights to protect human research subjects raises issues of informed consent, privacy, and individual autonomy. The use of human rights to secure health care resources raises issues about what level of health care ought to be supported and what constitutes a just distribution of health care resources. This in turn raises questions about what is to count as a disease or disability and who is responsible to provide the resources to which people have a right. Behind all of these specific ethical issues is the need to balance global standards of care with the diverse values of local cultures. No prerequisites. | |||||||
PHIL 294-02 | Philosophy of Technology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 011 | Diane Michelfelder | ||
Most of the time we use technology without giving it a second thought - particularly a second, philosophical thought: How do technological innovations add not only to the contents of our world but shape the very contours of our world and our experience within it? This question is a key one for the philosophy of technology, a sub-field of inquiry aimed giving the material environment of our lives its philosophical due. In this course we will look at technology from a variety of perspectives, such as phenomenological, critical, and actor-network theory. We will consider questions such as: What is the relationship between technology and "the good life"? Between technology and democracy? What are some of the ethical and social issues raised by newer technologies, such as nanotechnology, information technology, and the interface between them? What is technology anyway? Our readings will be drawn from both classic and contemporary sources whose authors include Jacques Ellul, Martin Heidegger, Albert Borgmann, Andrew Feenberg, Don Ihde, Hubert Dreyfus, Luciano Floridi, Paul Virilio, and Bruno Latour. | |||||||
PHIL 327-01 | Darwin/Nietzsche/Freud | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 001 | David Martyn | ||
*Cross-listed with GERM 327-01.* Please see detailed course description under GERM 327-01. | |||||||
PHIL 327-02 | Darwin/Nietzsche/Freud | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 215 | David Martyn | ||
*Course cross-listed with GERM 327-02.* | |||||||
PHIL 364-01 | Philosophy of Language | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 111 | Joy Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 364-01* | |||||||
PHIL 369-01 | Advanced Symbolic Logic | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 001 | Janet Folina | ||
*Cross-listed with MATH 369-01* | |||||||
Physical Education |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PE 01-01 | Swimming I | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | LEOCTR POOL | Robert Pearson | ||
PE 03-01 | Beginning Social Dance | M | 07:00 pm-08:00 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Julie Jacobson | ||
PE 04-01 | Karate I | TR | 03:15 pm-04:40 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Anita Bendickson | ||
PE 06-01 | Yoga I: Hatha Style | MW | 03:30 pm-04:40 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Anita Bendickson | ||
PE 06-02 | Yoga I: Sivananda Style | TR | 03:30 pm-04:40 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 2 | Vanessa Seljeskog | ||
PE 08-01 | Step Aerobics | TR | 04:45 pm-05:45 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 2 | Vanessa Seljeskog | ||
PE 09-01 | Conditioning | MW | 08:00 am-09:00 am | LEOCTR FITNESS RM | Stephen Murray | ||
PE 09-02 | Conditioning | TR | 08:00 am-09:00 am | LEOCTR FITNESS RM | Stephen Murray | ||
PE 11-01 | Swimming II | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | LEOCTR POOL | Robert Pearson | ||
PE 13-01 | Intermediate Social Dance | M | 08:00 pm-09:00 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Julie Jacobson | ||
PE 14-01 | Karate II | TR | 03:15 pm-04:40 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Anita Bendickson | ||
PE 16-01 | Yoga II: Kundalini Style | TR | 01:20 pm-02:20 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Kelsey Lumpkin | ||
PE 18-01 | Pilates | MW | 04:45 pm-05:45 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Kristine Spangard | ||
PE 20-01 | Weight Training | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | LEOCTR FITNESS RM | Stephen Murray | ||
PE 21-01 | Swim for Fitness | TR | 01:20 pm-02:30 pm | LEOCTR POOL | Robert Pearson | ||
PE 26-01 | Tai Chi Chuan | MW | 04:45 pm-05:45 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 2 | Phyllis Calph | ||
PE 28-01 | Pilates II | TR | 04:45 pm-05:45 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Kristine Spangard | ||
PE 31-01 | Scuba Diving | T | 09:40 am-11:00 am | LEOCTR POOL | Robert Pearson | ||
PE 43-01 | Salsa II | T | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | LEOCTR STUDIO 1 | Gary Erickson | ||
PE 51-01 | Aqua Aerobics | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | LEOCTR POOL | Robert Pearson | ||
Physics and Astronomy |
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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 112-01 | Cosmos: Perspectives | M | 07:00 pm-08:30 pm | OLRI 150 | Sung Kyu Kim | ||
*2 credit course; S/D/NC grading only* | |||||||
PHYS 130-01 | Science of Renewable Energy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 101 | James Doyle | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 130-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
PHYS 130-L1 | Science Renewable Energy Lab | T | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 154 | James Doyle | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 130-L1; First day attendance required* | |||||||
PHYS 226-01 | Principles of Physics I | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 150 | Joshua Nollenberg | ||
PHYS 226-L1 | Principles of Physics I Lab | R | 09:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 226-L2 | Principles of Physics I Lab | R | 01:30 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 227-01 | Principles of Physics II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 150 | John Cannon | ||
PHYS 227-L1 | Principles of Physics II Lab | M | 02:20 pm-04:20 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 227-L2 | Principles of Physics II Lab | T | 09:10 am-11:10 am | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 227-L3 | Principles of Physics II Lab | T | 01:30 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 152 | Brian Adams | ||
PHYS 348-01 | Laboratory Instrumentation | MWF | 08:30 am-09:30 am | OLRI 170 | James Heyman | ||
PHYS 348-L1 | Laboratory Instrumentation Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 154 | James Heyman | ||
PHYS 440-01 | Observational Astronomy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 404 | John Cannon | ||
PHYS 440-L1 | Observational Astronomy Lab | T | 01:20 pm-03:30 pm | OLRI 404 | John Cannon | ||
PHYS 444-01 | Electromagnetic Theory II | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | OLRI 170 | James Doyle | ||
PHYS 461-01 | Mechanics | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | OLRI 170 | Joshua Nollenberg | ||
PHYS 489-01 | Physics Seminar | F | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 170 | John Cannon | ||
*1 Credit course; S/D/NC grading only* | |||||||
PHYS 494-01 | Condensed Matter Physics | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 170 | James Heyman | ||
Political Science |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
POLI 100-01 | US Politics | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 204 | Michael Zis | ||
POLI 120-01 | International Politics | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 206 | Jennifer Lobasz | ||
POLI 120-02 | International Politics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 010 | Lauren Wilcox | ||
POLI 141-01 | Latin America Through Women's Eyes | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*Graded S/D/NC with Written Evaluation; cross-listed with LATI 141-01 and WGSS 141-01; first day attendance required.* Latin American women have overcome patriarchal "machismo" to serve as presidents, mayors, guerilla leaders, union organizers, artists, intellectuals, and human rights activists. Through a mix of theoretical, empirical, and testimonial work, we will explore issues such as feminist challenges to military rule in Chile, anti-feminist politics in Nicaragua, the intersection of gender and democratization in Cuba, and women's organizing and civil war in Colombia. Teaching methods include discussion, debates, simulations, analytic papers, partisan narratives, lecture, film, poetry, and a biographical essay. This class employs an innovative system of qualitative assessment. Students take the course "S/D/NC with Written Evaluation." This provides a powerful opportunity for students to stretch their limits in a learning community with high expectations, but without a high-pressure atmosphere. This ungraded course has been approved for inclusion on major/minor plans in Political Science, Latin American Studies, and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies. | |||||||
POLI 160-01 | Foundations-Political Theory | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
*Cross-listed with PHIL 160-01* | |||||||
POLI 170-01 | Theories of Rhetoric | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 204 | Zornitsa Keremidchieva | ||
POLI 203-01 | Race, Ethnicity and Politics | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 206 | Paru Shah | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 203-01* | |||||||
POLI 207-01 | US Civil Rights/Liberties | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 206 | Patrick Schmidt | ||
POLI 214-01 | Cyber Politics | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | CARN 204 | Adrienne Christiansen | ||
*Suitable for first year students.* | |||||||
POLI 215-01 | Environmental Politics/Policy | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 250 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 215-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
POLI 216-01 | Legislative Politics | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 204 | Paru Shah | ||
*Permission of instructor required.* | |||||||
POLI 221-01 | Global Governance | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 208 | Wendy Weber | ||
POLI 222-01 | Regional Conflict/Security | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 206 | Andrew Latham | ||
POLI 241-01 | The Holocaust | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
POLI 242-01 | Development Politics | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 206 | David Blaney | ||
POLI 246-01 | Comparative Democratization | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with LATI 246-01* | |||||||
POLI 260-01 | Contemporary Political Theory | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 206 | Franklin Adler | ||
POLI 261-01 | Feminist Political Theory | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 305 | Zornitsa Keremidchieva | ||
*Cross-listed with WGSS 261-01.* | |||||||
POLI 294-01 | The Rhetoric and Politics of Immigration | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | CARN 208 | Zornitsa Keremidchieva | ||
POLI 320-01 | Global Political Economy | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 204 | David Blaney | ||
POLI 323-01 | Humanitarianism and World Politics | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 204 | Wendy Weber | ||
POLI 335-01 | Science and Citizenship | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 270 | Roopali Phadke | ||
*Cross-listed with ENVI 335-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
POLI 341-01 | Comparative Social Movements | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*First day attendance required; cross-listed with LATI 341-01* | |||||||
POLI 390-01 | Civic Engagement Fellowship | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 208 | Julie Dolan | ||
*Instructor approval required.* | |||||||
POLI 394-01 | The Information Society | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | CARN 204 | Patrick Schmidt | ||
*Signature of instructor required* | |||||||
POLI 404-01 | Honors Colloquium | W | 07:00 pm-09:00 pm | CARN | Julie Dolan | ||
*2 credit course; S/NC grading only; meets in the Political Science department office.* | |||||||
Psychology |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
PSYC 100-01 | Introduction to Psychology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 270 | Mary Gustafson | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 100-02 | Introduction to Psychology | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 241 | Bruce Hinrichs | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 100-03 | Introduction to Psychology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 100 | Bruce Hinrichs | ||
PSYC 100-L1 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | T | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 100-L2 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | R | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 100-L3 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | T | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 352 | Jamie Atkins | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 100-L4 | Introduction to Psychology Lab | R | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 241 | Jamie Atkins | ||
PSYC 201-01 | Research in Psychology I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 301 | Sun No | ||
PSYC 201-01 | Research in Psychology I | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 301 | Brooke Lea | ||
PSYC 201-L1 | Research in Psychology I Lab | R | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 354 | Sun No | ||
PSYC 201-L2 | Research in Psychology I Lab | R | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 354 | Sun No | ||
PSYC 202-01 | Research in Psychology II | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | OLRI 352 | Darcy Burgund | ||
PSYC 220-01 | Educational Psychology | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 216 | Tina Kruse | ||
*Cross-listed with EDUC 220-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
PSYC 240-01 | Principles-Learning/Behavior | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | OLRI 352 | Julia Manor | ||
PSYC 240-L1 | Princ-Learning/Behavior Lab | T | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 352 | Julia Manor | ||
PSYC 248-01 | Behavioral Neuroscience | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 352 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with CNS 248-01* | |||||||
PSYC 248-L1 | Behavioral Neuroscience Lab | R | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 371 | Eric Wiertelak | ||
*Cross-listed with CNS 248-L1* | |||||||
PSYC 250-01 | Developmental Psychology | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | OLRI 352 | Rachel Lucas-Thompson | ||
PSYC 252-01 | Distress/Dysfunction/Disorder | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 150 | Jaine Strauss | ||
PSYC 254-01 | Social Psychology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | OLRI 241 | Chris Miller | ||
PSYC 268-01 | Psychology of Multiculturalism | T | 01:20 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 100 | Hideko Sera | ||
PSYC 300-01 | Directed Research in Psych | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | Rachel Lucas-Thompson | |||
PSYC 372-01 | Health Psychology | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 352 | Daniel Graham | ||
PSYC 375-01 | Mood and Anxiety | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | OLRI 300 | Jaine Strauss | ||
Sadness, despair, anxiety, dread: This seminar explores contemporary theories and research that help us understand and alleviate mood and anxiety disorders. We will examine evolutionary, cognitive, biological, sociocultural, and developmental perspectives on mood and anxiety, and we will grapple with current controversies concerning diagnosis, comorbidity, prevention, and pharmacology of mood and anxiety disorders. The seminar will also examine the promotion of well-being and positive psychology. Prerequisites: Psychology 100, Psychology 201, and Psychology 252 or permission of the instructor. | |||||||
PSYC 378-01 | Psychology of Language | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | OLRI 352 | Brooke Lea | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 378-01* | |||||||
PSYC 394-01 | Mind Reading: Techniques for Probing Human Brain Function | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | OLRI 270 | Darcy Burgund | ||
This course will explore currently available techniques for probing the normally functioning human brain. Techniques covered include electroencephalogram/event-related potentials (EEG/ERP), positron emission tomography (PET), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). In addition to covering the mechanisms involved, recent applications and the pros and cons of each technique will be discussed. Prerequisites: Psychology 100 or Psychology 180; Psychology 201; and Psychology 242 or 244 or Psychology 248. |
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PSYC 488-02 | Senior Seminar: Inside the Animal Mind | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 300 | Julia Manor | ||
Ever wondered what your dog is thinking or why your cat behaves a certain way? In this seminar, students will be introduced to the questions and concepts in the study of animal cognition. We will take a peek into the animal mind and show that many topics in animal cognition can be studied in an objective and scientific manner. The format of the seminar will include student led discussion of recent topics in the study of animal cognition. Topics may include: animal sensory abilities, abstract representations (e.g., numbers and time), cause and effect detection, memory systems, insight and reasoning, theory of mind, and communication. Book chapters and journal articles will be employed to illustrate these concepts. (Prerequisite: Senior major or minor). | |||||||
Religious Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
RELI 102-01 | Modern Islam | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | MAIN 111 | Brett Wilson | ||
RELI 111-01 | Introduction to Buddhism | MWF | 03:30 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 111 | Erik Davis | ||
RELI 120-01 | Hebrew Bible | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 305 | Jonathan Paradise | ||
RELI 222-01 | Christianity in Late Antiquity | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 010 | Susanna Drake | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 294-03 and WGSS 294-03.* | |||||||
RELI 294-01 | Atheism Past and Present | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 003 | Brett Wilson | ||
Most human beings believe that God or gods created the universe and potentially play some role in guiding the course of its events This course examines the contrary view, exploring the origins, varieties, and arguments of atheistic thought past and present. In what historical conditions did atheism emerge and what role does atheism play todayin politics and social discourse? What assumptions undergird non-theistic arguments and what conclusions emerge regarding ethics, religion, and the meaning of life? Readings include al-Maari, Diderot, Hume, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Feuerbach, and Dawkins. |
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RELI 294-02 | After the Holocaust | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | MAIN 010 | Barry Cytron | ||
The Nazi Holocaust, the attempted extermination of European Jews and the wholesale murder of gypsies, homosexuals and others, completely altered the historical and cultural landscape of the Western world, challenging most every relationship � among neighbors, faiths, peoples. The language of 'genocide' and 'ghetto' has come to inform how one speaks of belief, morality, and our common humanity. After an introductory examination of the events, we turn to a study of the Holocaust's impact on religious life, and on interreligious and intergroup relations, including African-Americans and Jews and Israelis and Palestinians. We conclude with memoirs and movies that speak to the impact of these years on personal and communal life, including `the call to forgiveness� and the command to 'never forget.' | |||||||
RELI 294-03 | Sanskrit and Classical Religion in India | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 010 | James Laine | ||
*Cross-listed with ASIA 294-02 and CLAS 294-01.* Like Greek and Latin, Sanskrit is an ancient, highly inflected language that served the religious and scholarly community of India as a pan-Indian mode of communication for centuries. Any real understanding of classical and medieval India requires some familiarity with this language. This course will provide students with an introduction to the grammar and script of written Sanskrit and provide a brief introduction to some of the literature written in Sanskrit through English translations. We will pay special attention to the classical epics (Ramayana, Mahabharata), and do some simple translations of Sanskrit to English and English to Sanskrit. |
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RELI 294-04 | Studies in Archaeology | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | MAIN 009 | Nanette Goldman | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 271-01* | |||||||
RELI 294-05 | Society Worshipping Itself: Durkheim and Religion | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | MAIN 111 | Erik Davis | ||
This seminar-style class will introduce students to the cohesive and profoundly influential work of �mile Durkheim and the members of the Ann�e Sociologique. Perhaps more than any other group of intellectuals, the Durkheimians pursued a single-minded view of society, the human subject, and the importance of religion and ritual to the maintenance of social order. The thoughts which emerged out of this school - the sacred versus the profane, the contemporary attention to ritual, the relationship between the individual and the social, and the importance of division of labor on social solidarity, continue to drive much contemporary social and anthropological theory. Along with Karl Marx and Max Weber, the Durkheimians appear as one of the three founding groups of the modern social scientists. This course will be of special interest to Anthropology, Sociology, Religious Studies, and Critical Theory Program students. | |||||||
RELI 294-06 | Religion and Food | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 003 | Peter Harle | ||
Why does food play such a big part in so many sacred traditions? How do people use food to make sense of the world? Why do we fast, kill animals, feed spirits, and throw potluck suppers in the name of religion? This course will introduce students to the study of religion, using food as an entry point. Through readings, lectures, slides, videos, and hands-on experiences, we will investigate case studies from many cultures and historical periods. We will explore aspects of foodways such as cooking, farming, sacrifice, aesthetics, and display as they relate to myth, magic, ritual, healing, ethics and doctrine. Students will be expected to keep up with an intensive but interesting schedule of reading, to participate in class discussions and activities, and to complete written assignments including responses, several mini-projects, and a final library or field project on a topic of their choice. | |||||||
RELI 294-07 | Native American Religious Traditions | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 009 | Monica Siems | ||
The religious beliefs and practices of Native Americans have long fascinated non-Native observers, from the interest of the earliest academic scholars of religion in "primitive" religions to the contemporary popularity of "Native American spirituality." At the same time, agents of colonization from missionaries to government officials have sought to eradicate these beliefs and practices through their vigorous pursuit of assimilationist policies, the impacts of which are ongoing. This course will attempt to navigate this complicated landscape while also striving to come to a preliminary understanding of some of these traditions in and on their own terms. In short, the course can be thought of as an introduction to Native American religious traditions and an introduction to the study of these traditions in all its complexity. Special attention will be paid to the Dakota and Anishinabe traditions of Minnesota. | |||||||
RELI 311-01 | Ritual | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | MAIN 003 | Erik Davis | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 394-02.* | |||||||
RELI 469-01 | Approaches to the Study of Religion | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 113 | James Laine | ||
Russian |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
RUSS 102-01 | Elementary Russian II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 213 | Julia Chadaga | ||
RUSS 102-L1 | Elementary Russian II Lab | T | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 226 | Elizaveta Kundas | ||
RUSS 102-L2 | Elementary Russian II Lab | T | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 102 | Elizaveta Kundas | ||
RUSS 204-01 | Intermediate Russian II | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | HUM 212 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
RUSS 204-L1 | Intermediate Russian II Lab | R | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 226 | Elizaveta Kundas | ||
RUSS 204-L2 | Intermediate Russian II Lab | R | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | HUM 102 | Elizaveta Kundas | ||
RUSS 255-01 | Russian Culture Before Revolution | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 214 | Julia Chadaga | ||
RUSS 294-01 | Russian Literary Theory: Formalists, Bakhtin & Company | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | HUM 216 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-02 and HMCS 294-01* | |||||||
RUSS 366-01 | Nabokov | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | HUM 213 | Julia Chadaga | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 366-01* | |||||||
RUSS 488-01 | Senior Seminar | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 212 | Gitta Hammarberg | ||
Sociology |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
SOCI 110-01 | Introduction to Sociology | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 05 | Deborah Smith | ||
SOCI 175-01 | Sociolinguistics | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 204 | Marianne Milligan | ||
*Cross-listed with LING 175-01* | |||||||
SOCI 210-01 | Sociology of Sexuality | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 204 | Deborah Smith | ||
SOCI 210-02 | Sociology of Sexuality | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 204 | Deborah Smith | ||
SOCI 220-01 | Sociology of Race/Ethnicity | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 208 | Mahnaz Kousha | ||
*Restricted to First Year or Sophomore students, or permission of instructor* | |||||||
SOCI 220-02 | Sociology of Race/Ethnicity | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | CARN 208 | Mahnaz Kousha | ||
*Restricted to First Year or Sophomore students, or permission of instructor* | |||||||
SOCI 269-01 | Science and Social Inquiry | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 304 | Erik Larson | ||
SOCI 272-01 | Social Theories | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 305 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
*Cross-listed with HMCS 272-01* | |||||||
SOCI 285-01 | Asian Amer Community/Ident | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 110 | Karin Aguilar-San Juan | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 285-01* | |||||||
SOCI 290-01 | Islam and the West | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | CARN 208 | Khaldoun Samman | ||
SOCI 294-01 | Economic Sociology | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 105 | Erik Larson | ||
*How do people find jobs? What historical and social legacies affect prospects for development? How do art dealers know how to set prices on unique original works of art? What social arrangements influence economic inequalities? In what ways do people mix economic activities and intimacy? Why are there so many different varieties of mustard but not ketchup? Economic sociology provides insight into questions such as these by understanding economic activity as social activity. That is, people attribute meaning to economic activity and engage in these behaviors in relation to others, while at the same time these actions are patterned and organized. In this course, we survey the ways in which a variety of economic phenomena are shaped by, organized through, and grounded in social relations. In addition to class sessions discussing assigned readings, students complete three papers applying course content to a range of economic behavior (consumer products / shopping, national economic development, and how people negotiate economic action in their personal lives) and will complete a final course paper or a final exam.* | |||||||
Theatre and Dance |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
THDA 120-01 | Acting Theory/Performance I | MWF | 12:00 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR 3 | Harry Waters | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
THDA 121-01 | Beginning Dance Composition | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
THDA 125-01 | Technical Theater | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | THEATR 204 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 125-L1 | Technical Theater Lab | T | 08:00 am-11:10 am | THEATR 206 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 125-L2 | Technical Theater Lab | R | 08:00 am-11:10 am | THEATR 206 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 235-01 | Fundamentals of Scene Design | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR 205 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 242-01 | Playwrighting/Textual Analysis | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | THEATR 205 | Beth Cleary | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-06.* | |||||||
THDA 250-01 | Experiential Anatomy | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
THDA 260-01 | Performance Studies Praxis: Body and Performance Art | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | THEATR 205 | Lara Nielsen | ||
*Permission of instructor required; first day attendance required; course cross-listed with ART 294-02. * With this unique collaboration between Performance Studies and Art History, students of performance art, performance studies, visual arts and art history will examine the trajectory of body and performance art from early 20th century avant-garde practices through contemporary period in which performance has become a vehicle to explore identities of gender, sexuality, race and issues of power. The course will address the work of the major artists and theorists of performance, including Antonin Artaud, Marcel Duchamp, Roland Barthes, Jerzy Grotowski, Michel Foucault, Walter Benjamin, Guy Debord, Allan Kaprow, Marina Abramovic, Peggy Phelan, Ana Mendieta, Judith Butler, Adrienne Piper, Yves Klein, Yoko Ono, Carolee Schneeman, Orlan, Amelia Jones, Joseph Beuys, Coco Fusco, Forced Entertainment, Ann Hamilton, James Luna, Nick Cave. Students must be ready to participate and perform in a workshop with an internationally renowned guest performance artist. Prerequisites: THDA 110 and/or an introductory level art history course. Enrollment limited: instructors' permission and first day attendance required. Students who register for this course should submit a letter of application to the instruction by Dec 4. Application should delineate 1) your interest in the course topic 2) your experience with erformance/visual arts 3) courses that you have taken which motivate further study of performances (1-2 pages total) |
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THDA 263-01 | African American Theater | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 204 | Harry Waters | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 294-03; First day attendance required* | |||||||
THDA 294-02 | Performance/Documents/Rights | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR 204 | Lara Nielsen | ||
*Cross-listed with INTL 294-04.* While studies in the aesthetics of theatre, performance, literature, and film concerned with human rights often begin with the conventions of prison, courtroom, and testimonial 'dramas,' the goal of this course is to move beyond such genres, to examine experimental techniques in contemporary performing media arts that theorize the history and politics of human rights. Locating the avant-garde as a site for critical interdisciplinary work in performance and rights, we study the prevalence of contemporary uses of `the archive,� which works between database and narrative in order to think the interlinking challenges of memory, narrative, and documentation. Sections of the course address a re-thinking of the international avant-garde, and questions the deployments of documentation and evidence in performance media projects. Because human rights, like representations of war, are often constructed through gendered binaries, one section of the course focuses on women in the context of wars and rights in order to examine the uses of gender as an analytical tool amidst the incommensurabilities of violence and aesthetic representation. We read works from Theatre Studies, Performance Studies, Critical Theory, Legal Studies, Media and Documentary Studies, as well as plays, multimedia performance texts, literatures, and film. | |||||||
THDA 294-03 | Voice and Speech | MWF | 09:40 am-11:50 am | THEATR 205 | Cheryl Brinkley | ||
*First day attendance required.* A highly experiential exploration of the fundamentals of spoken voice communication required for public speaking and the specialized demands of stage performance. Focusing on healthy voice production and projection through a body-based, Lessac-influenced system, clarity of articulation and enunciation are attained through identifying and practicing the structural specifics of Standard American English Pronunciation. Students develop practical skills for realizing individual vocal potential and enhanced expressiveness. No previous training or requirements necessary (anyone may play!). | |||||||
THDA 340-01 | Mask Improvisation | MWF | 12:00 pm-02:10 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Paul Herwig | ||
**$15 materials fee will be assessed.** | |||||||
THDA 341-01 | Intermediate Dance Composition | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
THDA 350-01 | Directing Theory/Production I | MWF | 02:20 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR STUDIO | Beth Cleary | ||
THDA 394-01 | Magic in Motion: Advanced Explorations in Technical Theater | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | THEATR 205 | Thomas Barrett | ||
THDA 475-01 | Advanced Scene Design | TBA | TBA | THEATR 206 | Daniel Keyser | ||
THDA 31-01 | Dance Improvisation | MWF | 10:50 am-11:50 am | THEATR 6 | Krista Langberg | ||
THDA 42-01 | Modern Dance II | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
THDA 45-01 | Modern Dance IV | MW | 03:50 pm-05:20 pm | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
THDA 52-01 | Ballet II | MW | 02:20 pm-03:50 pm | THEATR 6 | Rebecca Stanchfield | ||
THDA 53-01 | Ballet III | TR | 04:40 pm-06:10 pm | THEATR 6 | Sharon Varosh | ||
THDA 60-01 | Dance Ensemble | TBA | TBA | THEATR 6 | Wynn Fricke | ||
Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies |
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Number/Section/Name | Days | Time | Room | Instructor | |||
WGSS 101-01 | Feminist Sex Wars | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | MAIN 009 | Corie Hammers | ||
WGSS 101-01 | Feminist Sex Wars | TR | 08:00 am-09:30 am | MAIN 009 | Paige Sweet | ||
WGSS 117-01 | Women, Health, Reproduction | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | OLRI 250 | Elizabeth Jansen | ||
*Cross-listed with BIOL 117-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 141-01 | Latin Amer Through Womens Eyes | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | HUM 213 | Paul Dosh | ||
*Graded S/D/NC with Written Evaluation; cross-listed with LATI 141-01 and POLI 141-01; first day attendance required.* Latin American women have overcome patriarchal "machismo" to serve as presidents, mayors, guerilla leaders, union organizers, artists, intellectuals, and human rights activists. Through a mix of theoretical, empirical, and testimonial work, we will explore issues such as feminist challenges to military rule in Chile, anti-feminist politics in Nicaragua, the intersection of gender and democratization in Cuba, and women's organizing and civil war in Colombia. Teaching methods include discussion, debates, simulations, analytic papers, partisan narratives, lecture, film, poetry, and a biographical essay. This class employs an innovative system of qualitative assessment. Students take the course "S/D/NC with Written Evaluation." This provides a powerful opportunity for students to stretch their limits in a learning community with high expectations, but without a high-pressure atmosphere. This ungraded course has been approved for inclusion on major/minor plans in Political Science, Latin American Studies, and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies. | |||||||
WGSS 194-02 | Introduction to Modern European Women's History, 1500-Present | MWF | 09:40 am-10:40 am | CARN 105 | Aeleah Soine | ||
*Cross-listed with HIST 194-03.* | |||||||
WGSS 261-01 | Feminist Political Theory | MWF | 02:20 pm-03:20 pm | CARN 305 | Zornitsa Keremidchieva | ||
*Cross-listed with POLI 261-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 294-01 | Film and Feminism | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 010 | Paige Sweet | ||
*First day attendance required* | |||||||
WGSS 294-02 | Masculinity in Japanese Film and Fiction | W | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 110 | Jason Herlands | ||
*Cross-listed with JAPA 294-02.* | |||||||
WGSS 294-02 | Masculinity in Japanese Film and Fiction | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | HUM 402 | Jason Herlands | ||
*Cross-listed with JAPA 294-02.* | |||||||
WGSS 294-03 | Christianity in Late Antiquity | M | 07:00 pm-10:00 pm | MAIN 010 | Susanna Drake | ||
*Cross-listed with CLAS 294-03 and RELI 222-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 294-04 | Gender and Development in Africa | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | CARN 06A | Sonia Patten | ||
*Cross-listed with ANTH 294-03.* | |||||||
WGSS 305-01 | Race, Sex, and Work in Global Economy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 105 | Paige Sweet | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 305-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
WGSS 305-01 | Race, Sex, and Work in Global Economy | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | CARN 105 | Corie Hammers | ||
*Cross-listed with AMST 305-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
WGSS 310-01 | Gendered/Feminist Writings | TR | 03:00 pm-04:30 pm | MAIN 009 | Sonita Sarker | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 362-01; First day attendance required* | |||||||
WGSS 394-02 | Shakespeare: Comedy and Tragicomedy | MWF | 12:00 pm-01:00 pm | CARN 305 | Theresa Krier | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 311-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 394-03 | The Buddhist Body | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | HUM 402 | Winston Kyan | ||
*Cross-listed with ART 394-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 394-04 | 18th Century British Novel | TR | 09:40 am-11:10 am | THEATR 204 | Neil Chudgar | ||
*Cross-listed with ENGL 321-01.* | |||||||
WGSS 400-01 | Senior Seminar | TR | 01:20 pm-02:50 pm | Sonita Sarker | |||
*First day attendance required* Course to meet in the WGSS conference room Old Main 410. | |||||||
WGSS 494-01 | Modern Hispanic Novel and Visual Arts | MWF | 01:10 pm-02:10 pm | HUM 215 | Teresa Kupin-Escobar | ||
*Cross-listed as HISP 422-01; first day attendance required.* Course subtitle is: Feminist and Postmodern Intersectionalities and Innovation of Popular Culture | |||||||