Gender & Women's Studies Concentration
Dr. Ken McGraw
About the Program
Gender & Women's Studies is born of the historical effort to retrieve from obscurity the realities of women's lives and to advocate for equality for all genders in the modern world. This interdisciplinary field investigates the cultural categories of masculinity and femininity (and the various mixtures of the two) which have developed in and through complex socio-historical processes, and which face the possibility of future transformation. Gender & Women's studies courses approach the relationship of gender to sex, class, race, sexuality, ethnicity, religion and language in a critical and self-critical spirit.
Requirements
Students from any major-male or female-may earn a concentration in Gender & Women's Studies by successfully completing (with a cumulative grade point average of at least 2.0) at least six units. Of these six units one must be GNDR 150. The other five units must come from at least two different disciplines from the course list below. In accordance with the general rules for concentrations, the six courses taken for the concentration must include at least three units which are not used to satisfy the student's major requirements. While GNDR 150 is not a prerequisite to the other courses, taking GNDR 150 as early as possible is recommended. Students should see the concentration coordinator(s) for additional special topics courses, INQ courses, and independent studies that can be counted toward the concentration. No more than two INQ courses may be applied toward the concentration.
Required Course:
GNDR 150 Introduction to Gender & Women's Studies
Elective Courses: (5 from at least two disciplines)
(Items with a bullet are specific topics courses that have been approved through Fall 2012. Check with coordinators or website for updates.)
ENGL 220 Special Topics (as appropriate)
Gender in Literature (FA 09)
Sex, the City, and the Self (SP 10)
Science Fiction and Gender (SP 11)
ENGL 301 Special Studies in Language and Literature (as appropriate)
ENGL 305 Women Writers
ENGL 308 Author Studies (as appropriate)
The Cult of Jane Austen (SP 10)
Eliza Haywood and the Culture of Print (SP 11)
ENGL 336 Studies in Restoration of 18th C. Lit. (as appropriate)
The Rise of the Female Novelist (SP 10, SP 12)
ENGL 356 Studies in Film (as appropriate)
Gender in Asian Cinema (SP 11)
HIST 215 History of Women
HIST 235 History of Witchcraft
HIST 262 U.S. Women's History
HIST 290 Special Studies (as appropriate)
Women and the West (SP 09)
Roman Women (SP 10)
HIST 310-380 Issues Courses (as appropriate)
HIST 370 Guys and Dolls (FA09, FA12)
HIST 375 Gender and Biography
HIST 420-475 Research Seminars (as appropriate)
PHIL 260 Selected Topics (as appropriate)
Existentialism and Feminism (SP 10)
POLI 261 Special Topics (as appropriate)
Political Theory: Power/Resistance (FA 09, SP12)
Feminist Political Theory (SP 11)
RELG 290 Feminist Readings of the Bible
RELG 312 Topics in Biblical Studies and Early Christianity (as appropriate)
SOCI 226 Intimate, Marital, and Family Relationships
SOCI 229 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOCI 360, 361 Selected Topics in Sociology (as appropriate)
SOCI 424 Gender and Development (discontinued 2011)
SOCI 429 Gender Violence (discontinued 2011)
INQ 177 Intensive Learning (May term) (as appropriate)
Women, Work and Life (May 10)
INQ 260 Social Scientific Reasoning (as appropriate)
Women in Politics (SP 11)
INQ 270 Human Heritage I (as appropriate)
Gender in Early World Literature (FA 10, SP 12, FA12)
Men, Women, and Monsters (FA 10, SP 12, FA12)
Goddess Traditions (SP 11, FA 11)
INQ 271 Human Heritage II (as appropriate)
Women Playwrights (FA 10, FA 11, SP 12)
Radical Movements in America from 1950-1970 (SP 11)
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