May 16, 2024  
2021-2022 Catalog 
    
2021-2022 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Chemistry

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 220 - Introduction to Analytical Chemistry (=ENV 315)


    Instructors
    Blauch, Hauser

    Topics in chemical equilibrium, electrochemistry, spectroscopy, chromatography, and nuclear chemistry, with applications in biological, environmental, forensic, archaeological, and consumer chemistry. Laboratory experiments include qualitative and quantitative analyses using volumetric, electrochemical, chromatographic, and spectroscopic methods.

    Satisfies the Natural Science requirement.
    Counts as an Applied Environmental Science course in the Natural Science track of the Environmental Studies interdisciplinary major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 115. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall)

     

  
  • CHE 230 - Introduction to Biological Chemistry


    Instructors
    Key, Myers

    Introduction to the chemistry of biological systems. Includes the study of amino acids and proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, carbohydrates, enzymes and enzyme mechanisms, and the chemistry of important metabolic pathways and regulatory mechanisms.

    Satisfies the Natural Science requirement.
    Satisfies a requirement in Group A of the Biology major.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Chemistry major.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Neuroscience major and interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Genomics major and interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Bioinformatics major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 115 and 250. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 240 - Introduction to Inorganic Chemistry


    Instructor
    Anstey

    Foundational course in inorganic chemistry. Topics include nuclear chemistry and atomic structure, simple bonding and molecular orbital theory, molecular symmetry and group theory, acid-base and donor-acceptor chemistry, solid-state and crystal-field theory, coordination chemistry, and modern inorganic chemistry topics in fields such as solar energy conversion, materials science, and nanoparticles.

    Satisfies Natural Science requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 115. One laboratory meeting per week. (Spring)

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 250 - Introduction to Organic Chemistry


    Instructors
     N. Kaspi-Kaneti, Snyder, E. Stevens

    Introduction to organic chemistry including nomenclature, structure and properties of organic and bioorganic molecules, spectroscopic analysis, and reactions of carboxylic acid and carbonyl derivatives. Laboratory introduces students to basic experimental techniques.

    Satisfies Natural Science requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 115. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall and Spring)

     

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 260 - Thermodynamics and Kinetics


    Instructors
    Blauch, Striplin

    This course addresses the specific topics of thermodynamics and kinetics with an increased emphasis on biochemical systems.


    Satisfies the Natural Science requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 115; Math 111 or 112. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 320 - Experimental Analytical Chemistry


    Instructors
    Blauch, Hauser

    In-depth course in analytical methods including optical spectroscopy, mass spectroscopy, separations, and advanced topics in chemical equilibrium. Emphasis will be placed on the principles behind, and components of, chromatographic and mass spectrometry instrumentation.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 215/220. One laboratory meeting per week. (Spring, offered every two years)

  
  • CHE 321 - Special Topics in Analytical Chemistry: Mass Spectrometry


    FALL 2019

    Mass Spectronomy
    Instructors

    Blauch

    This course examines the principles of mass spectrometry, including the design and operation of ion sources and mass analyzers, interpretation of mass spectra and fragmentation processes.  Mass spectrometry is applied to problems in chemistry, biochemistry, food science, and environmental science.

  
  • CHE 325 - The Chemistry of Hookah Smoke


    Instructor
    Hauser

    What is smoke, how is smoke formed, what instrumental methods are associated with the characterization of the physical and chemical properties of hookah smoke, and how do they work? In the second half of the course, students will investigate the physical and/or chemical properties of smoke formed as a function of a variable of interest such as type of filtration media or shisha or height of water pipe.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Notes and Prerequisites - Chemistry 220. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 330 - Experimental Biological Chemistry


    Instructor 
    Myers

    Chemistry and mechanisms of gene expression, signal transduction, and advanced metabolism.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 230.  Biology 111 recommended. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 331 - Topics in Biological Chemistry: Protein Chemistry


    Instructor
    Staff

    Advanced topics in protein chemistry including: protein synthesis, isolation, purification, manipulation, and characterization. A strong emphasis will be placed on the biochemical and biophysical methods that lead to protein characterization. This course also will include the study of protein-protein and protein-small molecule interactions as well as structure-function relationships. 

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 230. No laboratory. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 335 - Research Methods in Biological Chemistry


    Instructor 
    Myers

    This course is designed to expose students to critical components of the biological chemistry research experience including reading and interpretation of the primary literature, writing literature reviews and proposals, completing an independent project around a guided question, and presenting the results of their work in oral and written forms. 

    Methods covered in this course will be related to the instructor’s areas of interest and expertise. 

     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 230. 

     

  
  • CHE 340 - Experimental Inorganic Chemistry


    Instructor
    Anstey

    A survey of experimental methods for the synthesis, isolation and purification, identification, and characterization of inorganic compounds.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 240. One laboratory meeting per week. 

  
  • CHE 341 - Topics in Inorganic Chemistry: Batteries from a Chemical Perspective


    Instructor
    Anstey

    Energy in the form of chemical potential is a powerful and efficient method of energy storage. However, batteries, the most common implementation of this principle, can be complex and still in need of optimization. A historical survey of battery technologies will be undertaken with the express purpose of identifying the aspects that chemistry has and can continue to improve. New and nascent technologies will be identified and explored, identifying how chemistry can make them viable. Course work will involve literature studies on battery technology, analysis of battery components, presentations from experts on related topics, and group work and presentations on cutting-edge research.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 220 or 240.

  
  • CHE 345 - Research Methods in Inorganic Chemistry


    Instructor
    Anstey

    This course is designed to expose students to critical components of the inorganic chemistry research experience including reading and interpretation of the primary literature, writing literature reviews and proposals, completing an independent project around a guided question, and presenting the results of their work in oral and written forms. 

    Methods covered in this course will be related to the instructor’s area of interest and expertise. 

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 240

     

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 350 - Experimental Organic Chemistry


    Instructors
    A. Kaspi-Kaneti, N. Snyder, E. Stevens

    Continuing studies in organic chemistry. Emphasis on carbon-carbon bond forming reactions, oxidations, and reductions.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 250. One laboratory meeting per week. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 351 - Pharmacology


    Instructor
    N. Snyder

    Introduction to immunology and immunopharmacology, including mechanisms of immunity, and the diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases and immune disorders. A strong emphasis will be placed on the design and development of therapeutics, including protein and carbohydrate-based vaccines.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Chemistry.
    Satisfies requirement in the Biochemistry interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 250 and 230; Chemistry 330, or Biology 208 and 303, strongly recommended. (Spring)

  
  • CHE 351 - Topics in Organic Chemistry:Pharmacology


    Instructors
    N. Snyder, E. Stevens

    In pharmacology we will discuss how different drugs (natural and synthetic) function by examining the mechanisms through which they act. General topics will include drug receptors, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and toxicology. In addition, an overview of the different classes of drugs, their structure/function and mechanisms of action will be discussed. Drug classes will include drugs that are used treat inflammation, cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, drugs that act on the nervous system, drugs that are used to treat autoimmune diseases, drugs that are used during organ transplant, and drugs that are used to treat infectious diseases and malignant diseases.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Chemistry.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    CHE 250 required and CHE 230 preferred.
    No laboratory.

  
  • CHE 355 - Group Investigation in Organic Chemistry: Carbohydrates in Materials and Medicine


    This course is designed to expose students to critical components of the organic chemistry research experience including reading and interpretation of the primary literature, writing literature reviews and proposals, completing an independent project around a guided question, and presenting results of their work in oral and written forms. 

    Methods covered in this course will be related to the instructor’s area of interest and expertise. 

     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 250. 

     

  
  • CHE 360 - Quantum Chemistry and Spectroscopy


    Instructors
    Blauch, Striplin

    This in-depth course covers quantum mechanics and its application to spectroscopy and the structure of matter.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Mathematics 113 or 140. One laboratory meeting per week. (Offered every two years)

  
  • CHE 361 - Topics in Physical Chemistry


    Instructor
    Striplin

    Physical chemistry topics covered in this course will be related to the instructor’s area of interest and expertise. 

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 260. No laboratory. 

  
  • CHE 365 - Research Methods in Physical Chemistry


    Instructor
    Striplin

    This course is designed to expose students to critical components of the physical chemistry research experience including reading and interpretation of the primary literature, writing literature reviews and proposals, completing an independent project around a guided question, and presenting the results of their work in oral and written forms. 

    Methods covered in this course will be related to the instructor’s area of interest and expertise. 

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 260. 

     

  
  • CHE 371 - Energy


    Instructor
    Striplin

    Course focuses on energy fundamentals such as the various guises of energy, combustion, inescapable inefficiencies, electric generation, and the planet’s energy balance. Unsustainable energy technologies (coal, oil, gas, nuclear, and hydropower), sustainable energy technologies (solar, photovoltaics, wind, wave and tidal, biomass, geothermal, and fusion), and other fuel technologies such as hydrogen/fuel cells, carbon sequestration, and syngas production will be discussed and, in some cases, demonstrated.


    Satisfies depth and breadth course requirement in the Natural Science track of the Environmental Studies major or interdisciplinary minor.
    Counts as an Applied Environmental Science course in the Natural Science track of the Environmental Studies interdisciplinary major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 260. No laboratory.

  
  • CHE 372 - Environmental Chemistry


    Instructor
    Hauser

    Introduction to environmental chemical principles and methodology including aspects of the chemistry of air, water, and soil; identities, sources, properties, and reactions of pollutants; green chemical approaches to pollution prevention; environmentally-benign synthetic methodologies, design of safer chemical products, alternative solvents and catalyst development, and applications of biomimetic principles.


    Satisfies depth and breadth course requirement in the Natural Science track of the Environmental Studies major or interdisciplinary minor.
    Counts as an Applied Environmental Science course in the Natural Science track of the Environmental Studies interdisciplinary major.

    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 220. No laboratory. 

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 374 - Medicinal Chemistry


    Instructor
    E. Stevens

    Chemical basis of pharmaceuticals and pharmaceutical development. Topics include drug discovery, pharmacokinetics (delivery of a drug to the site of its action), pharmacodynamics (mode of action of the drug), drug metabolism, and patent issues that affect the development and manufacture of pharmaceuticals.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 250. No laboratory. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 395 - Literature Investigation


    Instructors
    Hauser

    This course is designed for any qualified student who desires to pursue a literature research project in an area of special interest in chemistry under the direction and supervision of a faculty member. The latter reviews and approves the topic of research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following acceptance of the student’s written research proposal. Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 396 - Laboratory Research I


    Instructors

     Hauser, Key, Snyder N.

    Experimental chemistry projects conducted with the direction and supervision of a faculty member, who reviews and approves the topic of the research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following acceptance of the student’s written research proposal. Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals. This course is intended for non-senior students.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 397 - Laboratory Research II


    Instructors
    N.Snyder

    Experimental chemistry projects conducted with the direction and supervision of a faculty member, who reviews and approves the topic of the research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following acceptance of the student’s written research proposal. Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals. This course is intended for non-senior students.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 396. Permission of the instructor. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 410 - Advanced Topics in Chemistry


    Instructor
    Blauch

    Selected topics in organic chemistry.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 202 and 351, or permission of the instructor. (Fall)

  
  • CHE 420 - Seminar in Analytical Chemistry


    Instructor

     Hauser

    Advanced topics in analytical chemistry related to instructor’s areas of interest and expertise.

    In this course (Spring 2022), we will explore Wicked Questions in Environmental Chemistry with a focus on the Analytical Techniques that are developed and employed to study them. Upon completion of this course, students will have demonstrated competence in: (a) identifying the complexity of wicked questions in environmental chemistry, (b) understanding the operating principles of a variety of cutting edge analytical techniques including long range spectroscopic methods, electrochemical sensors, nanomaterial and surface methods, chromatography and mass spectrometry, (c) finding, reading, discussing and presenting primary literature for cutting edge analytical techniques, and (d) communicating science to a variety of audiences in both written and oral form. 

    Satisfies a major requirement in Chemistry.
    Satisifes Environmental Studies major requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    CHE 220, 320, 321, 325 or by permission of the instructor. No laboratory.

  
  • View Course Syllabus

    CHE 430 - Enzyme Engineering (= BIO 395)


    Instructor
    Key

    The capability of enzymes to catalyze selective organic reactions is both an essential biological phenomenon and an opportunity for new, sustainable approaches to synthetic chemistry.  This multidisciplinary course will investigate classic and cutting-edge approaches to re-engineering natural enzymes and organisms that create suitable catalysts for abiological reactions and new metabolic pathways. 

    Satiafies Chemistry major requirement, emphasis in Biochemistry.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 330, or by permission of the instructor; Biology 111. No laboratory. (Spring)

  
  • CHE 440 - Seminar in Inorganic Chemistry


    Instructor
    Anstey

    Application of modern theories of chemistry and physics to the study of bonding, structure, synthesis, and reaction pathways of non-metal, organometallic, and transition metal compounds.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 340. No laboratory.

  
  • CHE 450 - Seminar in Organic Chemistry


    Instructors
    Carroll, Snyder, E. Stevens

    Advanced topics in organic chemistry related to instructor’s areas of interest and expertise.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 350. No laboratory. (Spring)

  
  • CHE 460 - Seminar in Physical Chemistry


    Instructors
    Blauch, Striplin

    Advanced topics in physical chemistry related to instructor’s areas of interest and expertise.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 352/360. No laboratory. (Fall, offered every two years)

  
  • CHE 496 - Senior Research I


    Instructors
    Hauser, Key, Snyder N.

    Experimental chemistry project conducted with the direction and supervision of a faculty member, who reviews and approves the topic of the research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following acceptance of the student’s written research proposal. Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals. This course is intended for senior chemistry majors.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor.  (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 497 - Senior Research II


    Instructors
    Staff

    Experimental chemistry project conducted with the direction and supervision of a faculty member, who reviews and approves the topic of the research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following acceptance of the student’s written research proposal. This course is not intended for students who are completing a thesis and pursuing an honors degree (See Chemistry 498). Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 496 or a summer of research with the instructor after the student’s junior year. (Fall and Spring)

  
  • CHE 498 - Thesis Research


    Instructors
    Staff

    Experimental chemistry project conducted with the direction and supervision of a faculty member, who reviews and approves the topic of the research and evaluates the student’s work. Admission by consent of the faculty member following accepatance of the student’s written research proposal. This course is intended for senior students that are completing a thesis for evaluation by the department and pursuing an honors degree. Consult the department’s guidelines for the preparation of independent research proposals.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chemistry 496 or a summer of research with the instructor after the student’s junior year. (Fall and Spring)


Chinese

  
  • CHI 101 - Elementary Chinese I


    Instructor
    Tsai

    Introduction and development of basic skills in modern standard Chinese (Mandarin) designed for students who have no previous exposure to the Chinese language. The goal is to develop students’ communicative competency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing at the elementary level.

  
  • CHI 102 - Elementary Chinese II


    Instructor
    Tsai, Wu

    Continuation of elementary Chinese I. The goal is to develop the students’ communicative competency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing at the elementary level.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 101.

  
  • CHI 120 - Introduction to Chinese Culture (in translation)


    Instructor
    Shen

    Introduces several aspects of Chinese culture including Chinese cultural motifs and their cultural implications, holidays and festivals, Peking opera, 20th century Chinese drama, Chinese etymology and calligraphy, Chinese popular music, Chinese cinema, Chinese martial arts, and food. Additionally, the course will also talk about some paradoxes, dialectics, and misconceptions in Chinese culture.

    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.
    Satisfies a requirement in the East Asian Studies major and interdisciplinary minor.
     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English.

  
  • CHI 121 - Introduction to Traditional Chinese Culture (in translation)


    Instructor
    Shao

    Examination of key aspects of traditional Chinese culture, including birth myths, views of the body, women and sexuality, symbols of evil and folklore, feng-shui and divination, martial arts and heroism, gardens and imperial places, and traditional music.

    Satisfies the Cultural Diversity requirement.
     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 122 - Introduction to Chinese Visual Culture (in translation)


    Instructor
    Kyo

    This course introduces students to different aspects of Chinese visual culture including traditional ink paintings, popular publications, propaganda posters, performance art, as well as cinema. We will explore broader themes, such as the representation of the natural world and its relationship to people; women, gender, and ethnicity in visual arts; and the formation of Chinese identity at home an abroad in the diaspora community. This course is taught in English.

    Satisfies a requirement in the Art History major and minor.
    Satisfies the Literature, Culture, and Cinema requirement of the Chinese Studies minor.
    Satisifes a requirement in the East Asian Studies interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.

  
  • CHI 201 - Intermediate Chinese I


    Instructor
    Shao

    Continuing work in developing skills in standard Chinese (Mandarin). Designed for students who have had one year of Chinese at the college level. The goal is to develop the students’ communicative competency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing at the intermediate level.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 102.

  
  • CHI 202 - Intermediate Chinese II


    Instructor
    Shao

    Continuation of Intermediate Chinese I. The goal is to develop the students’ communicative competency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing at the intermediate level.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 201.

  
  • CHI 206 - Introduction to Traditional Chinese Literature


    Instructor
    Shao

    Selection of poetry, drama and narrative from ancient times up to 1900, with special emphasis on major themes and conventions.

    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.
    Students entering before 2012: satisfies Literature requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 207 - Engendering Chinese Cinema


    Instructor
    Shen

    Course examines gender relations in 20th-century China through cinematic representations. By looking in detail at the films of a few key directors and reading scholarly works, the class discusses the changing social and political positions of women in cinema from the 1920s to the 1990s, and how this change affects gender relations.

    Satisfies a Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 220 - Modern Chinese Fiction and Film (1919 - 1949)


    Instructor
    Shen

    Explores Chinese fiction and film from 1919 to 1949. Addresses historical, political and literary or cinematic background; considers origins of modern Chinese consciousness, influence of foreign literature, images of oppressed peoples, social roles of the modern Chinese writers, family, women and gender, politics, nation and revolution. 

    Satisfies a minor requirement in Chinese Studies.
    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in East Asian Studies.
    Students entering 2012 and after: satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, cultural diversity, and Rhetoric requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English.

  
  • CHI 224 - Modern and Contemporary Chinese Art


    Instructor
    Shao

    Introduction to the Chinese idea of martial arts heroes and its representation in fiction and film with emphasis on its historical and changing cultural contexts.

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement.
    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 225 - Crime & Detective Literature (in translation)


    Instructor
    Shao

    The purpose of this course is to build on the student’s knowledge of the crime and detective fiction and film in their own language(s) and extend it to the crime and detective fiction and film in the Chinese context.  The course approaches the genre from a multi-cultural perspective.

    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.
    Satisfies a requirement in the East Asian Studies major and interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English.

  
  • CHI 226 - In the Name of Religion: Love and Gender in Chinese Fiction and Film


    Instructor
    Shao

    This course will focus on love, gender roles, and sexuality in the religious contexts:  how they are conceived of according to Buddhism, Daoism, and Confucianism, and how they play out separately, as well as against each other.  The course will examine two distinct but closely related literary traditions.  One is literature in religion: it is a popular practice with both Buddhism and Daoism to employ literature as a vehicle for their ideologies.  The other is religion in literature: a popular literary tradition that habitually exploits religious themes and motifs for entertainment.

    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.
    Students entering before 2012: satisfies Literature requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English.

  
  • CHI 228 - Modern Chinese Literature in Translation


    Instructor
    Shen

    This course is a survey of modern Chinese literature from around 1919 (known as the May 4th period) to the Post-Mao era.  The class functions as an introduction to modern Chinese literary works by prominent writers.

    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.
    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing and Rhetoric requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English.

  
  • CHI 253 - Business Chinese Language


    Instructor
    Staff

    Business Chinese is designed to develop students’ communicative competency in reading, writing, and speaking business Chinese at the intermediate and advanced level.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 202 or equivalent is required.

  
  • CHI 265 - Contemporary Chinese Society and Culture


    Instructor
    Shen

    This course explores issues in Chinese society and culture, and includes on-site visits to important places in China. In addition to the course requirements, students will be required to maintain a field journal. This course will also be informed by the travel experiences included in the program.

  
  • CHI 295 - Independent Study


    Instructor
    Staff

    Course information coming soon.

  
  • CHI 301 - Advanced Chinese I


    Instructor
    Shen

    Extensive reading and discussion of texts of increased difficulty, exposure to authentic Chinese materials, emphasis on expanding vocabulary, speaking and writing skills, and skills that will help further develop proficiency in Chinese.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    CHI 202

  
  • CHI 302 - Advanced Chinese II


    Instructor
    Shen

    Extensive reading and discussion of difficult texts, exposure to authentic Chinese materials, emphasis on expanding vocabulary, speaking and writing skills, and skills that will help further develop proficiency in Chinese. Continuation of Chinese 301.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Spring)

  
  • CHI 303 - Advanced Conversational Chinese


    Instructor
    Staff

    To further improve students’ oral proficiency to converse on various topics in daily life, perform various discourse function, and speak appropriately in different social situations.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 202 or permission of the instructor. (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 350 - Advanced Reading and Writing


    Instructor
    Staff

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Not offered every year.)

  
  • CHI 354 - Advanced Conversation and Composition II


    Instructor
    Shen

    Chinese 354 is designed to develop students’ communicative competency in speaking and writing at the advanced level. The course introduces students to more literary texts by famous writers including Lu Xun, Xu Dishan, Zhu Ziqing, etc. and (classical) idiomatic expressions as well as two-part allegorical expressions. Chinese 354 serves as a transitional course from modern Chinese to classical Chinese.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Chinese 353 or equivalent. Students are expected to have completed three years of modern Chinese at the college level before taking this class.

  
  • CHI 360 - Issues in Chinese Society


    Instructor
    Staff

    The topic for this course rotates; it is offered by the faculty from the School of Social Development and Public Policy (taught in English). In 2016, the anticipated class will be The Chinese Marketplace, a course on the impact of globalization on China taught by an anthropologist.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    UG Credit

  
  • CHI 395 - Advanced Independent Study


    Instructor
    Tsai

  
  • CHI 401 - Advanced Chinese I


    Instructor
    Shao

    Reading and discussion of modern Chinese written and verbal texts with an emphasis on developing oral and aural fluency, expanding vocabulary, deepening grammatical knowledge, and learning Chinese writing conventions.

    Satisfies East Asian Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Chinese Language and Liturature major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies foreign language requirement

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: CHI 302

  
  • CHI 402 - Advanced Chinese III


    Instructor
    Staff

    Reading and discussion of modern Chinese written and verbal texts with an emphasis on developing oral and aural fluency, expanding vocabulary, deepening grammatical knowledge, and learning Chinese writing conventions.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Chinese Language and Literature

    Satisfies a major requirement in East Asian Studies

    Satisfies a minor requirement in Chinese Studies

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in East Asian Studies

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite: CHI 401

  
  • CHI 405 - Chinese Cinema and Modern Literature (in translation)


    Instructor
    Shen

    Reading and discussion of selected works in Chinese literature and cinema. Discussion of individual research projects.

    Satisfies a requirement in the Communication Studies major and interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Global Literary Theory major and interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the East Asian Studies major.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Film and Media Studies interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies the cultural diversity requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. May repeat for credit if the subject is different.

  
  • CHI 406 - Seminar: Topics in Traditional Chinese Literature


    Instructor
    Shao

    Critical study of tales, short stories and novels from 1300 to 1900, with special attention to themes, conventions, critical approaches, and the problem of adaptation from fiction to film, theater, and cartoons.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Taught in English. May repeat for credit if the subject is different.

  
  • CHI 450 - Topics in Advanced Modern Chinese


    Instructor
    Tsai, Shen

    Selected topics on Chinese current affairs, economy, culture, literature, etc. It is designed for students who have successfully completed Advanced Modern Chinese courses or its equivalent. The goal is to bring students to native or near-native competence in all aspects of modern Chinese. Prepares students for advanced research or employment in a variety of China-related fields. Taught in Chinese. Actual contents, requirements and teaching style may vary from instructor to instructor. Can repeat for credit. Check with the instructor who teaches the class for updates. 

    Satisfies Chinese Language and Literature major requirement.
    Satisfies East Asian Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Foreign Language requirement

  
  • CHI 451 - Topics in Advanced Modern Chinese


    Instructor
    Tsai, Shen

    Selected topics on Chinese current affairs, economy, culture, literature, etc.   It is designed for students who have successfully completed Advanced Modern Chinese courses or its equivalent. The goal is to bring students to native or near-native competence in all aspects of modern Chinese. Prepares students for advanced research or employment in a variety of China-related fields. Taught in Chinese. Actual contents, requirements and teaching style may vary from instructor to instructor.  Can repeat for credit.  Check with the instructor who teaches the class for updates. 

    Pre-requisite: CHI 401

    Satisfies Chinese Language and Literature major requirement.
    Satisfies East Asian Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Foreign Language requirement

  
  • CHI 498 - Honors Thesis


    Instructor
    Staff


    Independent honors thesis under the direction of a faculty member.

  
  • CHI 499 - Honors Thesis


    Instructor
    Staff

    Independent honors thesis under the direction of a faculty member.


Classical Civilization

  
  • CLA 111 - The Ancient World


    Instructor
    Krentz

    An introduction to the world of heroes like Odysseus and Romulus, gods like Athena and Bacchus, rulers like Cleopatra and Augustus, historians like Herodotus and Livy, martyrs like the seven Jewish brothers and Perpetua. The Greco-Roman world saw the beginning of history and philosophy, tragedy and comedy, epic and epigram. It laid the foundations of democracy. If the Greeks lived around the Mediterranean Sea like frogs around a pond, as Plato said, the Romans conquered the pond and then some. Yet for all these achievements, millions of people in this world lived and died in slavery, and the average life expectancy was 35 years, due to an appallingly high infant mortality rate.

    This course will introduce students to this diverse and influential world, paying particular attention to how we know what we know, resources (print, electronic, material) for studying the classical world, and connections between the classical world and our own. 

    Satisfies the Historical Thought requirement.
    Counts towards the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as a pre-modern course in the History major and minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Offered annually, Fall only.)

  
  • CLA 121 - Greek Literature in Translation


    Instructor
    Cheshire

    Selected works from a variety of ancient Greek literary genres.

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Satisfies the historical approaches requirement in the English major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Not offered in 2020-2021)
    Students at all levels welcome.
     

  
  • CLA 141 - Greek Art and Archaeology


    Instructor
    Toumazou

    A survey of the Minoan-Mycenaean art and architecture of the Aegean Bronze Age (3,000-1,100 BC), followed by a survey of later Greek art and architecture from the Geometric, Orientalizing, Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods (1,100-31 BC). Emphasis upon art and architecture as cultural expressions, the influence of neighboring civilizations, and the development of different styles and techniques, as well as the relationship between art and literature. A small component of the course will involve discussion of the ethics of art collecting.  Mostly slide lectures with some discussion.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts towards the major in Art History.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Fall)

     

  
  • CLA 142 - Roman Art and Archaeology


    Instructor 
    Toumazou

    Art and architecture of the Roman Republic and Empire, including influences of earlier Etruscan and Hellenistic Greek art upon the Romans. 

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts towards the major in Art History.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Fall)

     

  
  • CLA 224 - Medical Etymology


    Instructor
    Neumann

    This course explains the Greek and Latin roots of the language of medical science, and encourages mastery of these elements as essential to understanding medical language.  In addition to etymological study, the course will investigate word origins in their cultural and mythological contexts.  Students will learn to become morphological surgeons, dissecting the layered and sometimes cumbersome language of the body and its treatments.

    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as an elective in the Public Health interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 233 - Justice in a Pure Democracy: Searching for Equal Rights in Ancient Athens


    Instructor
    Krentz

    Using speeches from the Athenian lawcourts as case studies, this course will explore how justice was administered in the Classical Athenian democracy. How close did the Athenians come to achieving the isonomia-equality before the law-they boasted of? What legal difference did divisions between women and men, slave and free, foreigner and Athenian, immigrant and citizen, youth and adult make? To find out, we will read speeches by Aischines, Andokides, Antiphon, Demosthenes, Hypereides, Isaios, and Lysias, a sample of Greek orators employing all their rhetorical skills.

    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as a 300-level course and fulfills the pre-modern requirement in the History major.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Fall)

  
  • CLA 235 - Families of the Ancient Mediterranean


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    In this course, we will explore the definitions, forms, and roles of families in societies of the ancient Mediterranean, focusing on ancient Greece and Rome but also considering Carthage, Egypt, and Israel. What constituted a “family” in these societies? How were ancient families integrated into social, economic, and political life? What similarities do families of the ancient Mediterranean share with one another and with modern families, and how do ancient conceptions of family differ from our own? Topics will include marriage and divorce, childbirth, adoption, parenthood, childhood, slavery, houses and households, household religion, ancestors, and inheritance patterns.  Throughout the course, we will be attentive to the diversity of families both across and within ancient societies, taking into account factors like ethnicity and social status.

    The readings will be drawn largely from primary texts, including Homer, Lysias, Euripides, Plautus, Cicero, and the Roman legal code. We will also examine material evidence, ranging from the archaeology of ancient houses to inscribed tombstones to the imagery of sculptures, paintings, and coins. In addition, we will consider social-scientific approaches to ancient families, drawing on scholarship in the fields of sociology and demography.

    Satisfies Classical Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Classical Languages and Literature major requirement.
    Satisfies History major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Gender and Sexuality Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Historical Thought requirement.
     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Spring 2022)

  
  • CLA 238 - War and Gender in the Ancient World


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    This course explores the ways that warfare in ancient Greece and Rome both depended on and produced particular ideas about gender. We will consider not only the actual experiences of warfare by ancient men and women, but also the role of gender in ancient discourse about war and the influence of militarism more generally on ancient conceptions of masculinity and femininity. Topics include the representation of women as war’s cause, purpose, or medium; combat trauma and masculinity; women warriors; gendered divisions of wartime labor; sexual violence in war; gender and resistance to war; militarism and the socialization of young men; feminized depictions of “the enemy”; gender and war commemorations; and militarized representations of love and sex. For each topic, we will also explore the intersections of gender with other dimensions of social difference, such as social status and ethnicity.

    We will examine literary and material evidence from Greco-Roman antiquity, including readings in Homer, Euripides, Vergil, Livy, and Ovid, and imagery on vase paintings, sculptural reliefs, coins, and ancient inscriptions. We will also read contemporary scholarship on gender and warfare and discuss recent film and literary adaptations of ancient sources on these topics, such as Spike Lee’s Chi-Raq (2015) and Pat Barker’s The Silence of the Girls (2018).

    Satisfies Historical Thought requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts toward the Gender and Sexuality Studies major and minor. Counts as a 300-level course and fulfills the pre-modern requirement in the History major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 244 - Field School in Mediterranean Archaeology


    Instructor
    Toumazou

    Intensive, on-site training in archaeological field methods and techniques. Daily instruction on excavation and recording, lectures by specialists, visits to other archaeological sites and museums. Conducted at a site near Athienou in south-central Cyprus.

    Counts as an elective toward the Classical Studies major and the Classical Languages and Literature major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required. (Summer only.)

  
  • CLA 250 - Classical Mythology


    Instructor
    Neumann

    Investigates the evidentiary remains of Greco-Roman mythology (primarily, but not exclusively, textual) and aims to arrive at an understanding of myth in its multi-faceted context. It also explores the persistence of mythology in our contemporary consciousness. 

    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Satisfies the historical approaches requirement in the English major.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 252 - Classics in the Cinema


    Instructor
    Krentz

    This course will analyze films set in the ancient Roman world, approximately one each week, starting from Giovanni Pastrone’s silent classic Cabiria (1914) and proceeding chronologically to Alejandro Amenábar’s Agora (2009), including along the way big movies such as Quo Vadis, Spartacus, Cleopatra (1963), and The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, comedies both serious and silly such as A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Life of Brian, and History of the World, Part I, the blockbuster Gladiator and challenging films such as Fellini Satyricon and Titus that some might call bloody and disgusting. We will also include some episodes of HBO’s Rome, a small-screen series with high production values. We will pay particular attention not only to the films as films, but also to the cultural and political contexts in which they were made.

    All the movies are in English or dubbed into English. Assignments will include a creative video project on a film set in the ancient world that we are not covering in the course.

    Satisfies the Social-Scientific Thought requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.

    Counts toward the major in English
    Counts toward the Film & Media Studies interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 255 - Greek Sports and Athletic Festivals


    Instructor
    Toumazou

    Ideal of the athlete in the Greek system of values explored through art and archaeology, literature, and inscriptions. Selected victory odes of Pindar and field demonstrations of individual athletic events.

    Satisfies the Historical Thought Ways of Knowing requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Offered in alternate years.)

  
  • CLA 277 - Rome and Carthage


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    Between the 8th and 3rd centuries BCE, Rome and Carthage developed from small settlements into the two major powers controlling much of the western Mediterranean. After centuries of peaceful relations between these two city-states, a series of three wars broke out between them from 264 to 146 BCE. Rome’s ultimate victories in these wars would firmly secure its status as hegemon of the western Mediterranean and pave the way for further imperial expansion to the east. But Carthaginian cultural practices did not cease to exist, and the area flourished for centuries as the Roman province of Africa. 

    In this course, we will trace the development of these two ancient city-states and their relationship with one another from their foundations through the imperial period of the first several centuries CE. We will compare the two societies in the centuries before their conflicts. How were they similar to and different from one another in terms of origins, political system, military culture, approaches to expansion, social structure, ethnicity and identity, and religion? How did these city-states interact with one another during this period? Then we will turn to the three wars themselves, investigating their causes, progress, and eventual outcome. Finally, we will look at the immediate and long-term consequences of these wars for both Roman and Carthaginian societies, and we will think about how both cultures later reflected upon their interactions with one another in peace and in war.

    The readings will be drawn largely from primary texts, including the works of Diodorus, Polybius, Plautus, Livy, and Vergil. We will also pay close attention to the rich body of material evidence from both Rome and Carthage, including sculptures, architecture, coins, and inscriptions.

    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as a pre-modern course for the History major and as a 300-level course for the History minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 325 - Families of the Ancient Mediterranean


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    In this course, we will explore the definitions, forms, and roles of families in societies of the ancient Mediterranean, focusing on ancient Greece and Rome but also considering Carthage, Egypt, and Israel. What constituted a “family” in these societies? How were ancient families integrated into social, economic, and political life? What similarities do families of the ancient Mediterranean share with one another and with modern families, and how do ancient conceptions of family differ from our own? Topics will include marriage and divorce, childbirth, adoption, parenthood, childhood, slavery, houses and households, household religion, ancestors, and inheritance patterns.  Throughout the course, we will be attentive to the diversity of families both across and within ancient societies, taking into account factors like ethnicity and social status.

    The readings will be drawn largely from primary texts, including Homer, Lysias, Euripides, Plautus, Cicero, and the Roman legal code. We will also examine material evidence, ranging from the archaeology of ancient houses to inscribed tombstones to the imagery of sculptures, paintings, and coins. In addition, we will consider social-scientific approaches to ancient families, drawing on scholarship in the fields of sociology and demography.

     

    Satisfies Classical Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies Classical Languages and Literature major requirement.
    Satisfies Gender and Sexuality Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies History major requirement.
    Satisfies Historical Thought Ways of Knowing requirement.

  
  • CLA 332 - Greeks and Persians


    Instructor
    Krentz

    This course explores the various cultural, economic, military, political, and religious interactions between the Greeks and the Achaemenid Persians, rulers of the first world empire, and investigates how Herodotus, the “Father of History,” constructed his grand narrative. The focus will be on the period from Cyrus the Great to Xerxes (559-478 BCE), but we will pay some attention to the later Greek and the modern reception of this early confrontation between east and west, including the movie 300

    Satisfies the Historical Thought requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as a 300-level course and fulfills the pre-modern course requirement in the History major and minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 336 - Augustus and the Roman Republic


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    After several decades of civil war, Augustus set out to “restore the republic.” Yet when he died 45 years later, his political position was inherited by his stepson, Tiberius. Republican governance by Roman senate and people had morphed into a form of hereditary monarchy that would last for centuries. Nor was change limited to the political sphere. This period witnessed profound transformations to Roman society, religion, literature, art, and even the physical fabric of the city of Rome. 

    This course explores all of these aspects of the dynamic period corresponding to Augustus’ lifespan (63 BC - AD 14). We will examine the breakdown of the Roman republican system, which resulted in the outbreak of a series of civil wars. Then we will investigate the various ways that Augustus sought to repair and renew a society that had been fractured by the wars from which he emerged victorious. We will also consider the responses to these reforms by inhabitants of Rome and the provinces. While the figure of Augustus looms large during this period, he was by no means the only agent of change, and the transformations he spearheaded were not always uncontested.

    The readings will be drawn largely from primary texts, including Augustus’ own account of his deeds (the Res Gestae); selections from the works of Vergil, Horace, Ovid, and other contemporary authors; and Suetonius’ Life of Augustus. We will also pay close attention to the rich body of material evidence from the period, including sculptures, paintings, architecture, coins, and inscriptions.

    Satisfies the Historical Thought requirement.
    Counts toward the major in Classical Languages and Literature, the major in Classical Studies, and the minor in Classical Studies.
    Counts as a 300-level course and fulfills the pre-modern course requirement in the History major and minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022)

  
  • CLA 399 - Independent Study in Classical Studies


    Instructor
    Staff

    Research and writing under the direction and supervision of a faculty member who reviews and approves the topic(s) and evaluates the student’s work.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • CLA 456 - Minting Money: Coins, Politics, and the Economy in the Ancient World


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    Produced by the billions in antiquity, millions of ancient Greek and Roman coins still exist today. Coins are tangible pieces of ancient history, forming the largest category of surviving material evidence from the ancient world. In this course, we will examine the development of coined money in the ancient Mediterranean from its origins in the 7th century BCE through the 4th century CE. How and why were these objects made and circulated? What roles did coins play in ancient economic and political systems and in the everyday lives of inhabitants of the Mediterranean world? How can we use this rich body of evidence to investigate topics ranging from trade patterns to the architecture of monuments, from political propaganda to ritual practices, from mint output to specific historical events? What special data do coins offer the field archaeologist, and what special challenges do they pose for the cultural property lawyer?

    In addition to surveying the types and uses of various coinages from the Greco-Roman world, students will be introduced to methodological approaches used by scholars studying ancient coins. These include die studies, analysis of coin hoards, archaeological inferences from coin finds, metallurgical analysis of coins, and statistical techniques. Students will gain hands-on experience applying these methods to the college’s collection of ancient coins during a “lab session” each week. They will also catalog the coins and contribute written and visual material for a virtual exhibition of the college’s coins.

    Satisfies Classical Languages and Literature major requirement.
    Satisfies Classical Studies major and minor requirement.
     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Students at all levels welcome. (Not offered in 2021-2022) 

  
  • CLA 480 - Senior Research Seminar


    Instructor
    Truetzel

    Capstone course for classics majors. Students define, research, and write a major research paper on a topic of their choice.

    Satisfies a requirement for the major in Classical Languages and Literature and the major in Classical Studies.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Required of senior majors in Classical Languages and Literature and in Classical Studies. (Fall)

  
  • CLA 499 - Senior Thesis


    Writing of a thesis under the supervision of an appropriate professor. Oral defense before the entire Classics faculty required. Admission by unanimous consent of the Department of Classics.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Admission by consent of the Department of Classics.


Communication Studies

  
  • COM 101 - Principles of Oral Communication


    Instructor

     Baugh

    Examination and implementation of both classical and contemporary principles of effective oral communication. Individual presentations informed by readings, discussions, lectures, and examinations of key speeches.

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirements.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Fall and Spring)

  
  • COM 201 - Introduction to Communication Studies


    Instructor
    Martinez

    A survey of the nature and processes of communication. Begins with basic concepts of communication, including language, nonverbal processes, perception, listening, and adaptation to audiences; then examines communication in specific contexts, including intrapersonal, interpersonal, small group, organizational, public, and mass communication.

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirements.

    Satisfies a Communication Studies Interdisciplinary minor requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes

    This course may be offered as an indpendent study should a need exist for international students.

  
  • COM 202 - Rhetorical Criticism


    Instructor
    Hogan, Leslie, Baugh

    A survey of methods in rhetorical analysis of oral, written, and visual discourses. Covers neo-classical criticism, Burkean dramatism, narrative, metaphoric, genre, and social movement criticism, and various ideological and post-structural methods, including feminist criticism and postmodern criticism.

     

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirements.
    Satisfies a Communication Studies interdisciplinary minor requirement.

     

  
  • COM 207 - Trump, Obama, Race and 21st Century U.S. Media


    Instructor
    Bailey

    This course will teach students how to navigate contentious discussions concerning race in a browning America that swung from the first black president to the man who rose to national political prominence by pushing the idea the first black president wasn’t fully American. We will explore how media are handling and mishandling the use of race in the current political environment, how to honestly contend with the issue of race across political lines, and compare and contrast the coverage of race during the Obama-Trump era to contentious eras from the mid-20th century to the early 21th century. The class is being designed for a mix of liberal, conservative and independent-minded students

    Satisfies Digital & Screen Media major requirement.
    Satisfies Communication Studies major and minor requirement.
    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement

  
  • COM 216 - Rhetorics of Masculinity


    Instructor
    Spikes

    This class explore masculinities from a communication perspective that centers it as socially constructed, performative, contextual, cultural, and negotiated. We will examine how the discourse of masculinities changed over time, the time periods that heralded those discursive changes, how certain masculinities emerge as hegemonic, and how different identity markers affect the construction of masculinities.

    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

  
  • COM 218 - Gendered Communication in Society (= SOC 218)


    Instructor
    Martinez

    Examination of the social construction of gender in both personal relationships and professional contexts. Areas to be explored may include culture, verbal and nonverbal communication, family dynamics and close relationships, education, organizational communication, and roles in media.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Sociology and in Gender and Sexuality Studies.
    Satisfies a requirement in Gender and Sexuality Studies and Communication Studies interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement

  
  • COM 225 - Interpersonal Communication


    Instructor
    Spikes

    A theoretical, practical, and experiential study of the selective, systemic, and individual transactions that allow people to reflect and build personal knowledge of one another and create shared meaning. Readings, discussions, and exercises focus on connecting concepts and models to everyday interactions. Included are issues of diversity, personal identity, human perceptions, language use, mindful listening, conflict management, and nonverbal communication.

    Satisfies a Communication Studies interdisciplinary minor requirement.
    Satisfies the Social-Scientific Thought requirement
     

  
  • COM 230 - Organizational Communication


    Instructor
    Staff

    Study of how communication creates and sustains organizations and is coordinated and controlled to achieve collective outcomes. Such topics as leadership, globalization, workplace collaboration, diversity, and crisis communication will connect theoretical concepts and models to today’s changing world.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Communication Studies.
    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement.

  
  • COM 253 - True Stories


    Instructor
    Sill, Bailey

    “Tell me a story,” is one of the most powerful invitations in human communication, and narrative forms - from podcasts such as “Serial” to everyday newspaper and web reporting - communicate information through compelling storylines and characters. Yet narratives also can mislead and misrepresent, depending on their point of view, factual veracity, research support, sourcing and ethics. This course will draw on analysis of a variety of narrative journalism forms as well as hands-on work and visits from top practitioners in considering the elements and standards of good journalism and the role and influence of narrative in media and culture.

    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement

  
  • COM 273 - Reporting Politics and Criminal Justice


    Instructor
    Bailey

    Students wanting to better understand our contentious political era have a unique opportunity to explore how politics intersects with criminal justice efforts. Students will learn the basics of solid, ethical journalism and on-the-ground reporting. That will include reporting on issues such as race, inequality, health care, hyper-partisanship and interviewing city, county, state and national-level officials to craft pieces for potential publication online, The Davidsonian and other local media outlets.

    Satisfies Digital and Screen Media major requirement
    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement
    Satisfies Justice, Equality, and Community requirement

  
  • COM 275 - Mass Media & Society (= SOC 275)


    Instructor
    Martinez

    This course will evaluate mass media and its role in contemporary society using sociological lenses of conflict theory. Specifically, we will use Fisher’s capitalist realism lens in learning about the boundaries placed on self and society within a capitalist system that produces alienation and mental illness. This course will evaluate how mainstream (“old”) and online (“new”) media perpetuate these boundaries and reinforce capitalist realism. In part of doing so, we will collectively develop new strategies for organizing online society to challenge rather than reinforce capitalist realism. Additionally, we will learn about the first set of digitally-instigated social revolutions that took place in the early 2010s across the Arab World, known as the “Arab Spring.” Beyond performing a case study of these revolutions, we will apply what we learned from these social movements to contemporary social movements that have also been promoted by the internet and digital medias. In particular, we will assess what lessons can be drawn from the Arab Spring to apply to 1) the 2019 protests in India against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), and 2) the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests against the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Finally, we will study canonical critiques of the political economy of mass media - the “propaganda model” popularized by Herman & Chomsky in “Manufacturing Consent” - and apply these ideas to contemporary society, online media and social movements. We will end the semester by gaining an understanding of how digitally-instigated social movements provide new hopes for overcoming capitalist realism. 

    Major credit in Sociology and Interdisciplinary Minor in Communication Studies.
    Satisfies Social Science requirement.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement

  
  • COM 280 - Intercultural Communication


    Instructor
    Leslie

    This course explores issues related to the intercultural communication process. We will consider the important role of context (social, cultural, and historical) in intercultural interactions. We will examine the complex relationship between culture and communication from three conceptual perspectives: the social psychological perspective, the interpretive perspective, and the critical perspective. It is through these three conceptual perspectives that we will strive towards a comprehensive picture of intercultural communication. From applying these approaches to the study of intercultural communication, we will also come to appreciate the complexity and dialectical tensions involved in intercultural interactions. This learning process should enhance self-reflection, flexibility, and sensitivity in intercultural communication which students will likely find useful whether interested in studying or working abroad or simply wanting to become better informed intercultural communicators in our increasingly diverse nation and world.

    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

 

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11Forward 10 -> 19