Fall 2009 Courses
NOTE: Letters in parenthesis indicate how the class fills a
distribution requirement in the WST General Concenrtation and/or
whether it counts for the TPS or GID track in the major. If a
course fils a Gen Ed requirement, that is specified separately.
Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Women's Studies
Amanda Davis Anita Anantharam
WST 3015 – Section 0853
WST 3015 – Section 1579 (Gordon Rule 4) T 3, R 3-4; TUR 2333; 3 Credits M 8-10; TUR 1315; 3 Credits
The life experiences of women through the study of materials
in the humanities, social and natural sciences and in the health
professions. This is a required course for the Women’s Studies major
and minor and it fulfills the general education requirement in
diversity. It can also be taken as an
elective. (Gen Ed: H, S, D; WST: Core)
Transnational Feminisms
Anita Anantharam
WST 3415 – Section 1535
T 5, R 5-6; MAT 108; 3
Credits
This course places women and feminism in a transnational
perspective, focusing on various theories and movements engendered by
women in contemporary national contexts. Development, reproductive
politics, women’s health, etc., will be examined. (Gen Ed: S, N;
WST: Core)
Gender, Travel and Tourism
Florence Babb
WST 3930 – Section 2535 T, 7 R7-8; TUR 1315; 3
Credits
This
course considers how gender, global travel, and tourism come together in the
contemporary world. We will examine
gender differences (as well as differences of race, class, sexual orientation,
national origin) in the experiences of travelers as well as of those who work
in the service industries that accommodate travelers’ needs. We will also examine the gendered and
racialized ways in which travel destinations are represented and marketed. Among the questions we will ask are the
following: How are “exotic” locations
portrayed as feminine? How are men and
women treated differently as they participate in transnational currents of
tourism? When and where are gender and
sexual identities commodified through tourism?
How are power relations negotiated and what prospects are there for
communities of women and men in the Global south to actively construct the
terms of their engagement with travelers from the Global north? (WST: H)
Women and Poverty
Amanda Davis
WST 3930 – Section 2550
R 10-E1; Pugh 120; 3
Credits
Over 37 million people in the U.S. were in poverty in
2007 alone, with many increasingly vulnerable to living below poverty
thresholds given current economic conditions. This course will examine some of
the varied effects of poverty on women and children in the wake of recent
social, political and programming shifts, as well as how poverty intersects
with other systems of inequality like racism and sexism. Three core segments
will constitute the majority of the material covered: women’s low-wage work and
their status in the labor market following the 1996 welfare reforms; the
effects of globalization and the growth of low-pay positions on immigrant women
working in a transnational economy; and literary examinations of poverty,
identity, race, and community in such remarkable texts as The Women of
Brewster Place and The Third Life of Grange Copeland. (WST: H/SS)
Sexualities Studies
Kendal Broad-Wright
WST 3930 – Section 4127
M,W,F 8 ; LIT 0113; 3 Credits
This is a course which will provide an overview of the
interdisciplinary study of sexualities. It will cover diverse approaches to the
study of sexualities and desire (in literary studies, cultural studies, and
social sciences) and pay attention to human sexuality as socially constructed
and regulated behaviors. Central to class will be attention to connections
between sexualities and other social locators, such as race, ethnicity, gender,
social class, age, and ability/disability. Some of the topics covered in the
course will be sex education, Internet sex, LGBTQ expressions, sexual violence,
and commercial sex, among others. This course serves as the core course for the
minor in Theories and Politics of Sexuality in the Center for Women’s Studies
and Gender Research.
Women and Men in Contempory Culture
Milagros Peņa
WST 3930 – Section 4127 MWF, 6; FLG0260; 3
Credits
This course considers the social construction of gender,
sexuality, race, class, and other identity categories. Readings focus on individuals, families, and
cultural groups, mainly in the U.S. but with attention to other nations. Subjects as intimate as the body and violence
and as pervasive as politics and the law are included. We emphasize differences in daily life
experiences of health care, education, sports, and religion. Finally, we examine the potential of
movements for social change.
Independent Study
Faculty
Variable Credits 1-3
WST 4905 – Section Department Controlled
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
For advanced undergraduate students who desire to supplement
the regular courses by independent reading or research. Online application. (WST: H/SS)
Women in Modern Hebrew Literature
Avraham Balaban WST 3930 – Section 3265 T 5, R4-5, AND 0134, CSE E119; 3 Credits This course examines the different images of women as depicted in Hebrew
literature throughout the twentieth century. It starts with a close reading of
stories by writers who established the new center of Hebrew literature in
then-Palestine: S.Y. Agnon, Devora Baron. Then we study some stories of the
"Palmach generation" (Moshe Shamir, Aharon Megged, Yigal Mossinson). A major
part of the course is dedicated to the works of the "New Wave" writers of the
early 1960's, Amos Oz, A.B. Yehosua, Amalia Kahana-Carmon, and Aharon Appelfeld.
The final part of the course deals with the new wave of female writers, who
started publishing in the late 1980's. No knowledge of Hebrew is required.
Capstone Seminar
Stephanie Evans WST 4935- Section 1537 T 3, R 3-4; Ustler 108 This course (required for all majors) is the culmination of the Women’s
Studies major. It explores some examples of past and present scholarship to
reaffirm the interdisciplinary nature of the field and to highlight the
relationships among feminist theory, intellectual practice, and social change.
The bulk of the semester is devoted to a full-length independent project on a
topic of student’s own choosing. Internship
Faculty
WST 4940 – Section Department Controlled
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor and program chair
This course is designed for students desiring practical
experience in the community. Students intern with a local agency, group
or business involved in women’s issues. Online
Application Women's/Gender Studies Honors Thesis
Faculty
WST 4970- Section department controlled
TBA; 3 Credits
Students register for this course when pursuing an Honors
Thesis in the WST major. In accordance with the protocols
established by WST and the Honors Program, students design and pursue
an independent research project with guidance from an advisor.
Further information is available here. Proseminar
Kendal Broad-Wright
WST 5933 - Section 0432 R 8-10, Ustler 108; 3 Credits
This Proseminar will prepare you for work
in
graduate-level women's and gender studies. There will be
an
overview of feminist scholarship, interdisciplinary
research, and
writing. Reading,
discussion, and assignments will focus on the development
of
women's studies as an academic field and on current
trends and
standards in scholarship. The Proseminar's grounding in
the broad
discourse of interdisciplinary women's studies will help
you frame
and make use of more specialized courses and to
conceptualize your
thesis or non-thesis project. By the end of the semester,
you will
be prepared to design and carry out independent research
projects
required in your women's and gender studies graduate
programs.
Moreover, you will be familiar with humanities and social
science methodologies
suitable to women's studies; options for further study
and for
careers; professional associations in the field of
women's
studies; and leading journals in the field.
Independent Study
Faculty
Variable Credits 1-3
WST 6905 – Section Department Controlled
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor and department chair
and 1 Women's Studies course or course that counts for women=s studies
Independent reading or research under guidance. Online application.
Gender and Social Justice Literature
Anita Anantharam
WST 6935 - Section 0435 W 7-9; Ustler 108; 3 Credits
The study of literature and film offers social scientists a
stimulating mode of inquiry into social and political institutions and
principles. This class explores the ways in which literature provides unique
insights into the nature of political life and the study of politics.
Additionally, we will explore how activists and politicians have used
literature (memoirs, autobiographies, film, poetry, etc) to find a critical
voice to address social injustices.
Issues in Theory: Bell Hooks
Tace Hedrick
WST 6935 - Section 0940 R E1-E3; 3 Credits In this class, we will be reading many of the works of feminist, public
intellectual, race theorist and cultural worker bell hooks. I envision this
course as one which not only looks at the many concerns which hooks addresses
(race, feminism, love, writing, teaching, cultural criticism), but also
investigates certain ideas about how a black intellectual career is shaped over
time: how a reader balances, and/or values, the varied moments of an
intellectual career; what we think the terms “public” or “organic” intellectual
mean; the presumed split between the intellectual and the public (“mind” and
“body”); the role of influence; what it means to be a public feminist black
woman; what “black cultural studies” might be; and others. We will also be doing
some of what I call “reading around/with hooks”: looking at other writers who
have influenced her work in one way or another. Internship
Faculty
1-3 Credits
WST 6946 – Section 0588
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor and program chair
Practical experience in community. Internship with local
agency, group, or business in women’s issues. Online Application
Master's Research
Faculty
WST 6971 – Section 6363
1-15 Credits
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