Jun 16, 2024  
2022-2023 Catalog 
    
2022-2023 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Theatre

  
  • THE 235 - Fundamentals of Stage Design


    Instructor
    Tripathi

    Introduction, through exercises and projects, to the principles of designing scenery, costumes, and lighting for the theatre. For application in projects, the course includes basic rendering techniques for designers, including instruction in computer drafting and rendering.

    Students entering 2012 and after:  satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Students entering before 2012:  satisfies the Fine Arts requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Class includes a once a week lab.  (Fall)

  
  • THE 235 - Fundamentals of Stage Design


    Instructor
    Tripathi

    Have you ever wondered how the world of the play comes to life? This course is an introduction to the process of creating scenery, costumes, and lighting for stage productions. Students practice creating visual compositions and learn the necessary vocabulary for effectively communicating design ideas. These methods will be taught through the use of lecture, class discussion, exercises, and projects. No design or theatre experience necessary!

    Satisfies Theatre major requirement.
    Satisfies theater minor requirement.
    Satisfies Visual and Performing Arts requirement

  
  • THE 242 - Women’s Work: 21st Century Female Playwrights (=ENG 242)


    Instructor
    Green

    This course provides a close look at work created for the stage by women since 2000. The analysis of plays written and produced in the 21st century will be set in the context of feminist and queer theory which has offered insights into the cultural function of “women’s work.”

    Satisfies a requirement in the English major.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Theatre major or minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Literary and Cultural Representations track of the Gender & Sexuality Studies major and minor.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Global Literary Theory interdisciplinary minor.
    Satisfies Justice, Equality and Community requirement.

  
  • THE 245 - Acting I


    Instructors 
    Green, Sutch, Costa, Kaliski

    Study and application of the psycho-physical and emotional bases of performance. Emphasis on relaxation of the actor’s body, ensemble improvisation, freeing the natural voice, acting on impulse. The training will culminate in realistic scene work.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

  
  • THE 250 - Play Analysis for Production


    Instructors
    Sutch

    Examination of traditional methods of play analysis and their application in the development of production plans with a wide variety of theatrical scripts.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

  
  • THE 260 - Performing Music Theatre


    Instructor
    Ann Marie Costa

    Performing Musical Theatre is an introductory course designed to teach students the foundational skills required to perform musical theatre.  Students will learn the history of the American Musical and apply that knowledge to their development as performers. Students will perform solos and ensemble songs throughout the semester. The course will include a public performance.  (Permission of instructors required. The course has a required lab.)

    Counts for the Music major and minor
    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement

  
  • THE 270 - Entertainment Design in the Digital Age


    Instructor
    Tripathi

    Digital technology impacts all kinds of live entertainment and performance from Hamilton to Escape Rooms to Superbowl Half Time Shows. This course examines the impact that digital technology has had on the process, implementation, and final presentation of various live entertainment designs. The class explores how visual designers conceptualize, create, and convey their art in the digital age and how audiences experience the conflation of live entertainment and digital technology. Students will learn about and analyze technologies used in theatre, music, theme parks, and other forms of live production through lecture, presentations, and projects. No design or theatre experience necessary!

    Satisfies a Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Digital Studies interdisciplinary minor.

  
  • THE 285 - Politics & Performance: 20th Century Theatre & Drama (=ENG 285)


    Instructor
    Green

    The course is a study of plays and theatrical theory from a range of geographic regions.  The course explores ways practitioners experimented with form and content in articulating their reactions to the human condition of the 20th century.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

  
  • THE 310 - Leadership & Management in the Arts (=THE 210)


    Instructor
    Henderson

    The goal of this course is to introduce you to the methods of management of non-profit cultural institutions in the United States in order to further your understanding of how you fit into this environment, either as an administrator or an artist.  You will learn practical skills for the successful management of arts organizations that will also translate into tools for your personal success.  Topics we will cover include leadership, marketing, fundraising, financial management and board governance.  This class will provide a new perspective on the role of arts managers and an understanding of how capable management practices can strengthen the arts in our country.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    For Theatre majors only.  All other students should register as THE 210.

    Cross-listed with THE 210.

  
  • THE 325 - Production Dramaturgy


    Instructor
    Green

    This course is an examination of the art, craft, and practice of production dramaturgy. Students will learn how to bring research, script analysis, and interpretation into the theatrical process to support a theatre production’s creative team. Focusing specifically on production dramaturgy, students will gain experience creating materials typically delegated to a production dramaturg.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Theatre
    Satisfies a minor requirement in Theatre
    Satisifes Gender and Sexuality Studies major and minor requirement
    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement

  
  • THE 332 - Hamilton


    Instructor
    Costa, Culpepper, Lewis

    This interdisciplinary course centers on the ground-breaking, innovative musical by Tony-Award-winning Lin-Manuel Miranda.  More specifically, it focuses on the artistic process that Miranda followed in transforming white-male-centered, potentially dry Revolutionary history into popular entertainment with a cast whose major roles are played mostly by people of color and whose music mixes hip-hop, rap, and R&B ballads with both traditional American musical theater and classical forms.  Miranda’s version of Hamilton’s story is about who owns American history and who has charge of the narrative.  He offers a reimagined, inclusive version of the making of America through which everyone gets to be in “the room where it happened.”  The course’s starting point is Miranda’s: Ron Chernow’s biography of Alexander Hamilton.  From that point on, the course will investigate the Hamilton libretto, musical score, and choreography through a comparison with Chernow’s book and public schools’ telling of American history. Students will often learn experientially through performing aspects of the musical in class.  The class will attend a performance of Hamilton at the Blumenthal Performance Center and will enjoy appearances by both other Davidson faculty and guests from outside the college; all such extra expenses of the class have been generously underwritten by a Bacca Humanities grant.  Each student will complete a final project for the course that involves an artistic transformation of the type Hamilton represents, whether in creative writing, musical composition, theatrical composition, or analysis in one of those areas that, like the work of a dramaturg or a theatrical director, will be grounded in performance.

    Satisfies a requirement in the Theatre major.
    Counts as an Innovation Course in the English major.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Music major and minor.
    Satisfies Visual and Performing Arts Ways of Knowing requirement.

  
  • THE 345 - Acting II


    Instructor
    Sutch, Costa

    Study and application of the Stanislavsky acting process. Group and individual exercises designed to promote personalization and emotional fullness in characterization. Advanced techniques for scene and character analysis. Performances of scenes from contemporary realism, comedy, acting for the camera, and Anton Chekhov’s plays.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245. Meets for extra hours; please consult with the instructor.  (Fall) 

  
  • THE 355 - Directing I


    Instructors
    Sutch, Costa, Kaliski

    Fundamentals of directing for the stage, focusing on text analysis, blocking principles, the director-actor relationship, the director-designer conceptual process and scene work.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245 (Fall)

  
  • THE 362 - Theatre for Social Justice


    Instructor
    Green

    Course investigates the potential for theatre and performance to be catalysts for social change. Focusing on Community-Based Theatre, the course explores ways in which performance has participated in struggles against oppression and has been integral to community-building. Course combines case studies from various historical and geographical contexts with practical activities used by Community-Based Theatre practitioners.

    Satisfies a major or interdisciplinary minor requirement in Communication Studies.
    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Meets for extra hours; please consult with the instructor.

     

  
  • THE 371 - Theatre History


    Instructor 
    Green

    Study of the theory and practice of stage performance throughout the world from ancient Greece to the end of the 19th Century. Lectures, readings and discussions, with emphasis on the Western tradition.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Spring)

  
  • THE 380 - Special Topics in Theatre, THE 380-385


    Instructor
    Sutch, Costa

    Group study of selected theatre topics.

    Satisfies the Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
     

  
  • THE 381 - Advanced Acting Seminar


    Instructors
    Sutch, Costa, Staff

    Advanced acting seminar exploring a variety of dramatic forms.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245.

  
  • THE 383 - Contemporary Theatre and Performance: Trends in Theatre Studies


    Instructor
    Green


    This course introduces students to current artists, working methodologies, and scholarship within the field of theatre and performance.  The course focuses on ways broader cultural dialogues about identity-sexuality, race, gender, class, ability-and technological innovation influence what appears on-stage, and the ways that audiences and critics think and write about these performances.  Course includes field trips to see live performances.

    Satisfies Visual and Performing Arts requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    One previous THE course required or permission of instructor

    Offered every other year.

  
  • THE 386 - Voice and Movement for the Actor I


    Instructor
    Sutch

    Foundations of vocal technique and movement analysis for the actor.  Provides a working knowledge of anatomical and kinesiological principles pertinent to strong and healthy vocal production.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245 (Offered every other year.)

  
  • THE 390 - Independent Study, THE 390-398


    Instructor
    Staff

    For the advanced student with a special topic to be pursued under the direction and supervision of a faculty member. The topic of study must be reviewed and approved by the faculty member before permission is granted for enrollment. Normally, assigned work and criteria for evaluation will be clearly established by the instructor before the beginning of the semester; in all cases this will occur before the end of the Drop/Add period.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor.

  
  • THE 391 - Independent Study - Advanced Acting


    Instructor
    Staff

    Topics normally involve role research, preparation and/or performance.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 392 - Independent Study - Advanced Directing


    Instructors
    Costa, Sutch

    Topics normally involve background research, script analysis, and prompt book preparation in support of directing a full length production.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 393 - Independent Study - Advanced Design


    Instructor
    Gardner

    Topics may concentrate on any area of theatre design, including scenery, lighting, costumes, makeup, properties or sound, and normally involve design exercises and projects.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 394 - Independent Study - Dramaturgy


    Instructor
    Green, Staff

    Play analysis and interpretation in a performance-related context. Topics normally involve research in analytical methodologies as well as participation in production as an assistant to a faculty or guest director.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 395 - Independent Study - Stage Management


    Instructor
    Wadman

    Advanced practicum in play preparation and oversight responsibility for mainstage or 2nd stage production, including rehearsal assistance, promptbook preparation, backstage communications and performance management.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 396 - Independent Study - Playwriting


    Instructor
    Staff

    Topics normally involve writing exercises and a fully-developed original play script.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Permission of the instructor required.

  
  • THE 397 - Independent Study - Production Management and Advanced Design


    Instructor
    Staff

  
  • THE 410 - Collaboration in Theatre


    Instructor

    Sutch, Tripathi

     

    Rotating special topics course focusing on a team-taught exploration of theoretical and practical approaches to issues of artistic collaboration in theatre production, through readings, guest lectures, paper-exercises, studio experiments, and production practice.  The course features both cross-disciplinary investigations into models of collaboration and leadership, and advanced training in the student’s chosen area of specialization.  Depending on student interest and the expertise of the assigned faculty, areas of specialization in a given semester may include directing, scenic, lighting, costume, properties, projection, or sound design, playwriting, stage management, or production dramaturgy.  Culminates each spring in a fully-produced series of one-act plays or other short-form theatrical works.  Course may be repeated for credit, with a different area of specialization, pending permission of the instructors.

      

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Prerequisite -  Either THE 235 or THE 355

  
  • THE 435 - Advanced Scene Design


     

    Instructor
    Tripathi

    Advanced study of the design and implementation of scenic design for the stage.  Continuation of principles covered in THE 335, with special emphasis on practical solutions for specific plays. Process work, including research, play analysis, and drafting will be emphasized. The course concludes in the student designing a one-act play in the Barber Theatre with a student director.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    THE 335 (Additional lab hours required.) (Offered every other Spring.)

  
  • THE 436 - Lighting Design and Technical Production


    Instructors
    Tripathi

    Advanced study, through exercises and projects, of the tools, principles and techniques of designing and executing stage lighting, with parallel study of related technical areas.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 335 (Offered every other Spring.)

  
  • THE 445 - Acting III


    Instructors
    Sutch

    Advanced study of one or more production styles involving in-depth research and resulting in class performance. An effort will be made to tailor course content to promote the individual actor’s development.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245 and 345

  
  • THE 455 - Directing II


    Instructors
    Costa, Sutch

    Advance study of directing principles and their implementation for the stage. Continuation of developing the director’s aesthetic that began in THE 355, with special emphasis on directing rhythmic, comedic and contemporary non-realism scenes. The course concludes in the student directing a one-act play in The Barber Theatre with a design team.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 355  (Spring)

  
  • THE 486 - Voice and Movement for the Actor II


    Instructor
    Sutch

    Advanced study of vocal technique and movement analysis for the actor. Provides an in-depth analysis of individual habits and fosters healthy expansion of movement vocabulary and vocal production.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Theatre 245 and 386 (Meets for extra hours; please consult with the instructor.) 

  
  • THE 499 - Honors Tutorial and Thesis


    Instructor
    Green

    Required for graduation with honors in Theatre. For Theatre majors only with a 3.5 GPA in the theatre major and an overall GPA of 3.2.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Approval of thesis proposal by May 1st of the previous academic year.


Writing

  
  • WRI 101 - Course list for Writing in the Liberal Arts


    Fall 2022 Sections

    WRI 101 [A]: American Dream of Success
    MWF 9:30 - 10:20

    Roberts
    Whether you consider the American Dream to be a promise or a goal, the term is used frequently; one assumes the concept means the same thing to everyone. Today Americans perceive many challenges to this “American Dream,” a belief that upward mobility can result from hard work and determination. Beginning in the 1930s, the phrase “The American Dream” found its way into our political, cultural, and popular discussion. Without a doubt, America’s economic crisis has compromised our “American Dream of Success.”  Many scholars are skeptical about the accessibility of this dream to all Americans. What are consequences of this loss as a centerpiece of our national culture? As sociologist Barry Glassner explains, “You want to hold to your dream when times are hard. For the vast majority of Americans at every point in history, the prospect of achieving the American Dream has been slim, but the promise has been huge.” An analysis of the American Dream allows us to explore a number of different disciplines so as to unpack what political scientist Carl Jilson has called “one of the most evocative phrases in our national lexicon.” Through looking at legislation and political discourse, we will come to understand how the concept has become embedded in our collective psyche.   

    WRI 101 [B]: #Me Too
    TR 12:15 - 1:30 p.m.
    Horowitz

    This course examines the rhetoric of #MeToo, the most recent iteration of the movement against gender-based violence, in the context of earlier representations of sexual harassment and assault. We will begin by studying recent historical flashpoints in the national dialogue about sexual abuse, including the Anita Hill hearings (1991); David Mamet’s controversial play Oleana (1992); President Bill Clinton’s impeachment (1998); and the Boston Globe’s exposé on the Catholic Church (2002). Approaching #MeToo as a genre of storytelling still taking shape , we will uncover emerging tropes and patterns in the narration of experiences of sexual abuse, in media portrayals thereof, and in the critical backlash. Based on our investigations, we will attempt to answer the questions, “Whose and what kinds of stories of sexual violence are likeliest to capture a national audience? Whose and what kinds are likeliest to be silenced or ignored, and why” Our rhetorical analyses will follow the method advanced in David Rosenwasser’s and Jill Stephens’ Writing Analytically. The first assignment asks students to analyze the organizing themes and contrasts of a popularly circulated #MeToo story of their own choosing. In the second, we will uncover assumptions about who and what constitutes an “ideal victim” in our class readings. The third assignment asks students to use a theoretical text on narratives of sexual abuse as a lens through which to interpret characters’ actions and motivations in a fictional work on the topic. For their final project, students will perform close textual analysis of interviews with women faculty about their experiences of workplace sexual harassment and situate them with respect to the narrative priorities, possibilities, and limitations we have identified as shaping the broader movement. 

    WRI 101 [C]: Atheism
    MWF 10:30 - 11:20

    Blum
    Atheism may begin with the denial of God’s existence, but it need not end there. Various thinkers worked to expand and deepen atheism, seeking to develop it into a functional worldview-an understanding of the self and its place in the world that could be meaningful, moral, and intellectually coherent. The task of this course is to assess that attempt: to determine whether and to what degree atheism can be elaborated into a satisfying and livable understanding of the self in the world. Class assignments include three major papers and a number of shorter, lower-stakes writing assignments throughout the semester. 

    WRI 101 [D]: Bad Art
    MWF 10:30 - 11:20

    WRI 101 [E]: Bad Art
    MWF 11:30 - 12:20

    WRI 101 [F]: Bad Art
    MWF 12:30 - 1:20

    Rippeon
    This writing course examines “bad art”: cultural productions that raise questions about censorship and freedom of expression, the ethics of representation, kitsch and camp, and good art made by bad people.  We will consider a variety of cultural forms, including literary texts (poems, fiction); music, television and film; and the visual arts.  We will work to develop criteria for engaging with these forms; to develop these criteria, we will read critical theory, popular journalism, and literary and art criticism.  We will also occasionally make use of the College’s art collection, and our own practices of cultural consumption.  Student writing will include shorter, low-stakes assignments, informal presentations, and a series of essays (four) executed through a sequence of individual and group-oriented activities (e.g. conferences, peer-review, drafting and revision). 

    WRI 101 [G]: Writing Criticism
    MWF 10:30 - 11:20
    Ingram

    This section of WRI 101 considers criticism broadly, from online reviews to professional scholarship. Pushing beyond simple thumbs-up or thumbs-down assessments, this section focuses on criticism as writing that deepens our understandings of cultural texts-literature, theater, visual art, film, and more. By the end of the semester, students will have developed skills for analyzing those cultural texts, including their own writing.

    The semester begins with minute attention to one of the most influential rhetorical performances of American history, Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” Our discussions will emphasize King’s style and will explore what his famous “Letter” can teach us academic writers. Next, we will study the novel recognized by the 2020 National Book Award, Charles Yu’s genre-defying satire Interior Chinatown. Even Yu’s title raises questions (what does it mean to call a neighborhood “a Chinatown”?), and we will pursue those questions through the resources of the library. Finally, near the end of the semester, students will choose a film for our last exercises in analysis and research, as they undertake their transition out of WRI 101 and into a world of texts waiting for alert readers.

    WRI 101 [H]: Vicious Ignorance
    TR 9:40 - 10:55
    Busch

    Ignorance, strictly speaking, is the lack of knowledge. That in itself isn’t a bad thing. You and I can be ignorant about the variety of fonts available in a word processor, and the world would keep turning. But other forms of ignorance aren’t so innocent. Take for instance a politician’s willful ignorance about the needs of their constituents: It may result in harmful policies that deprive people of affordable housing, access to healthcare, safety from violence, or other basic needs. This raises an important question: To what extent do various harmful social institutions, practices, or events involve vicious ignorance, or ignorance that results from personal vice? 

    The course confronts this question through four writing projects. In the first project, we shall reflect on the nature and cognitive origins of vicious ignorance by engaging with philosopher Quassim Cassam’s Vices of the Mind. In the second project, we shall examine discourse on the role of vicious ignorance in empty talk. In the third project, we shall examine discourse on the role of vicious ignorance in tokenism (racial, sex-based, class-based). In the fourth project, each of us shall use the vicious ignorance model to help explain a given harmful social institution, practice, or event such as warmongering, squandering, or profiteering.

    WRI 101 [I]: Medicine and Otherness
    TR 8:15 - 9:30
    Vaz

    In this course, we will explore how cultural perceptions of otherness and difference emanate from or infiltrate medical conceptualizations of illness and disease. We will use fictional and nonfictional texts to explore a variety of questions like:  

    ·       What is “otherness”? What does it mean to be different?   

    ·       What is the normative?  

    ·       What is the function of difference or otherness in society?

    ·       What are the socio-political ramifications of such binaries? 

    ·       What assumptions of otherness inform our treatment of “others”?  

    ·       How does the medical gaze inform our treatment of difference?  

    WRI 101 [J]: Democracy in America
    TR 12:15 - 1:30
    Yesnowitz

    Is American democracy healthy? If so, what are the determinants of democratic strength and resilience? If not, are there specific remedies that might address the present challenges that we face? To explore these contemporary questions, we will situate the American democratic experience within an historical and comparative perspective. Students in this seminar will consider how the nation has arrived at this especially precarious moment and closely scrutinize possible proposals for democratic reform. Topics to be examined in written assignments include: democratic norms and traditions, persistent inequalities in American life, the erosion of public trust and faith in institutions, and the prospects for multiracial democracy and civic renewal.

    WRI 101 [K]: Justice and Piety
    MWF 8:30 - 9:20

    Shaw
    The course offers students a chance to investigate a venerable question of political life: What is the relationship between political justice and religious faith? While most of us in twenty-first century liberal democracies assume that politics and religion have nothing in common-and that they should have nothing in common-political philosophers have long acknowledged their intimate and mutually implicative relationship.

    We’ll explore this relationship by reading and discussing writings that span several genres (philosophy, epic poetry, historical narrative, rhetoric, and dramatic dialogue) by four ancient Greek authors: Homer, Thucydides, Sophocles, and Plato. We’ll attempt this task as well by writing often and in a variety of formats. In all assignments students will be encouraged to articulate and defend their own interpretations and points of view. 

    WRI 101 [M]: Identity in Black America
    TR 9:40 - 10:55

    Salter
    According to recent public opinion polling, a majority of Black Americans say that being Black is very important to how they see and think about themselves. But what does it mean to be Black? Who identifies as Black in America? How have Black identities changed over time? Does context matter? Through several major writing assignments, we will reflect on these questions and more. In this WRI course, we will draw upon a variety of disciplines (e.g., Psychology, Sociology, Africana Studies) to examine the complexities of Black identity in memoirs, films, empirical articles, and other sources. By the end of the semester, students will have considered the multiple ways different constructions of Black identity have powerfully shaped both individual and collective experiences.

    WRI 101 [N]: Facebook Friends and Other Virtual Companions
    MFW 11:30 - 12:20
    Heggestad

    The short-lived app Somebody allowed users to act as remote surrogates, offering hugs to long-distance partners by means of a stranger. Emerging AI social media influencers are followed by millions. Our phones accompany us everywhere we go, and when we return home, we’re often greeted by Alexas, Roombas, and other smart appliances. Worth noting, however, is that these digital companions aren’t entirely new. Before we had algorithms that learned our preferences, we were entertained by Neopets, Tamagotchis, Sims, and their kin. Sometimes, we form bonds through these technologies. At other times, we form bonds with them.  

    Some, like Clifford Stoll, view these trends antagonistically. According to him, “It’s sad when people’s lives are so sterile that they search for real human companionship in digital entities.” Many others have entered the chat; politicians, activists, psychologists, educators, and parents have all weighed in on the role that technology should play in our lives and in our relationships. Then again, finding companionship with the non-human is nothing new-as we’ll explore in this course. Over the semester, we will examine a wide array of virtual companions, the roles they play in our lives, and the rhetoric surrounding their existence. Assignments will include three primary pieces of writing: a personal narrative, a research paper, and a multimodal project. 

    WRI 101 [O]: Ain’t What it Used to Be
    TR 1:40 - 2:55
    Kaliski

    In the midst of our polarized America, how can our national theatre advocate for a more nuanced understanding of our society? Theatre has excelled as a civic tool throughout human history, but in current times, we often forget about its potency, considering it instead as a niche storytelling form that struggles to compete with film and TV. On the contrary, theatre has a singular magnetism. With its unique ability to realize long conversations between intricately developed characters in live, communal gathering spaces, we could argue that theatre is the sharpest artistic answer to a country that struggles mightily to understand itself. 

    This course will engage in close readings of four major plays from the past decade that articulate the disquieting uncertainty about future America and the fascinating, contradictory people who occupy it. For each of the plays, you will select one character, plot point, idea, or conceptual choice to unpack in a writing assignment, striving throughout the drafting process for deeper intellectual and emotional understanding of how the theatrical form nudges its audience toward more compassionate citizenry. The play selections will look expansively at identity, both with regards to the playwrights and their character creations, so that we may consider how contemporary theatre is capturing an abundance of lived experiences.  

    WRI 101 [P]: Scroll to Screen
    MWF 10:30 - 11:20

    G. Snyder
    Where do “sacred books” come from? How do they grow and change over time? How does their form-handwritten, then printed, and now digital-affect their meaning? These questions lie at the heart of the course, and we’ll explore them by looking at the Hebrew Bible, the Christian Bible, and the Qur’an. Along the way, we’ll create our own handwritten manuscript with papyrus and reed pens; we’ll set type and print documents in the letterpress shop in order to understand the printing revolution, and work with artifacts in the Rare Book Room. In the course of exploring the use of images in scripture, we’ll go to the Visual Arts Center and make woodblock prints.  Finally, we’ll consider what happens when scriptures are digitized and move into “the cloud.” How do these new digital forms influence the meaning, interpretation and authority of scripture?

    The course features four writing projects, each of which passes through distinct stages that will prepare you for every paper you’ll write in college: finding and assimilating reliable sources, citing them; capturing your ideas, drafting, revising, and revising again. Along the way, we’ll form a collaborative community of writers and editors, learning how to comment helpfully on the work of others and to benefit from the comments of our fellow writers.

    WRI 101 [Q]: Solitary Confinement Politics
    TR 1:40 - 2:55pm

    Garcia-Rojas
    Currently, there are nearly 100,000 people being held in solitary confinement in prisons across the United States. This number does not take into account people who are being held in jails, juvenile halls, and immigration detention centers. Because there is no federal reporting system that tracks how many people are isolated at any given time, the number is an undercount based on statistics gathered from the Bureau of Justice nearly a decade ago. Incarcerated people who are confined to solitary are often placed there for months, if not decades. People of color are disproportionately represented in isolation units. Despite recognition of the negative psychological and physical consequences of forced isolation, it remains constitutional in the United States.

    In this class, we will explore the politics of solitary confinement through a socio-legal lens and the questions this practice prompts: Why was solitary confinement first introduced in the United States, and what did it seek to accomplish? How has the public perception and practice of solitary confinement changed since it was first introduced? To what extent does the legacy of slavery and the convict lease system continue to shape incarceration practices and patterns in the U.S.? What are some of the strategies incarcerated people have developed to resist solitary confinement?

    WRI 101 [R]: Claiming Disability
    TR 9:40 - 10:55

    Fox
    In the United States today, amazing forces are being marshalled for social change. Yet disability too often remains an afterthought at best–or meets outright hostility at worst–when we speak about diversity, equity, and inclusion. There are many reasons for this: the long history of disability being regarded only as the province of doctors and other medical practitioners; resistance to understanding disability as a lived identity intersecting with race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class; the fact that disability has been used by majority communities against minority communities in order to justify oppression; and the ableism, both casual and overt, that generally pervades our society. COVID-19 has made thinking about disability all the more urgent: at pandemic’s start, all bodies were suddenly vulnerable and needed accommodations; the immunocompromised and unvaccinated remain vulnerable; and “long COVID” has brought a new community of disabled people into being. But of course, all bodies were always contingent, and the global pandemic simply made that more visible. And because all our bodies can be oppressed by ableist ideas, claiming disability as an identity, a creative force, and a social justice movement matters for everyone.

    More specifically, our course will be premised on exploring the following four big questions. Each will serve as the opportunity for you to write an intellectual argument of your own.

    What does it mean to think about disability as an identity in 21st century America? Here, we’ll consider the history of disability as a community and activist movement.

    How has disability representation shaped reality? We’ll consider how language and popular culture influence our ideas about disability.

    How is disability a force for artistic creation and innovation? We will consider how disability as an embodied, relational, and social experience has creative potential for art and design.

    How is the disability justice movement an essential part of social justice work? We examine how the principles of disability justice teach us the ways ableism snarls into and mutually constitutes other kinds of oppression.

    The four essays you craft will all follow the same workflow: A week for discussing readings, a week for preparing a draft, a week of commenting on drafts, and a week for revision. By the end of this course, you will have learned multiple strategies for writing at the College level, regardless of discipline.

    WRI 101 [S]: Building Stories
    MWF 2:30 - 3:20

     

    WRI 101 [T]: Building Stories
    MWF 11:30 - 12:20 p.m.

    Churchill
    Architecture is not a passive structure we occupy; rather, it shapes our minds and imaginations, influencing what we do and how we do it. In this course, we’ll explore physical and virtual spaces, ranging from homes, prisons, and hospitals, to blogs, websites, and digital archives. We’ll also approach writing as a form of architecture, breaking out of the predictable 5-paragraph essay blueprint in order to reimagine essays as more enticing dwelling spaces for your readers to inhabit. The course itself will inhabit the digital realm: the course hub will be a website; you will learn to write for web publication; and you will design a WordPress site on your own Davidson Domain to showcase your work throughout your career at Davidson. No previous technological training needed, but creativity, critical thinking, and a collaborative spirit are required. 

    WRI 101 [U]: In Search of Europe and Europeans
    MWF 1:30 - 2:20 p.m.

    Henry

    What is Europe? At first, this seems like an obvious question, but a glance at the international section of a newspaper proves otherwise. Unresolved tensions about the boundaries of Europe lurk behind headlines about Brexit-related food shortages in the United Kingdom, tensions between the United States and its European NATO partners or acts of violence by neofascist movements claiming to defend Europe against “invasion” by immigrants. In fact, as we will explore in this course, the exact definitions of “Europe” and “European” have been a matter of controversy and debate for centuries. The ancient Greek writer Herodotus argued that there was no good reason why “three distinct names [Asia, Europe and Africa] … should ever have been given to what is really a single landmass.” Yet more than two thousand years later, Europe remains very much alive, not only as a geographic descriptor but also as a cultural ideal and a political project.

    Throughout the semester, we’ll look at how a diverse assortment of written and visual sources have represented Europe and Europeans. We’ll hear from people around the world: artists, writers, politicians, activists, athletes, pirates, and more. Participants will hone their writings skills through a combination of traditional essays and shorter, more informal assignments.

    Spring 2023 Sections

    WRI 101 [A]: Religion in the Public Square
    MWF 9:30 - 10:20


    WRI 101 [B]: Religion in the Public Square
    TR 10:30 - 11:20


    WRI 101 [C]: Religion in the Public Square
    MWF 1:30 - 2:20
    Blum

    The ideal of democracy is a society in which well-informed citizens who disagree with each other engage in free and reasoned debate, guided by the shared aim of cultivating a flourishing society. The role of religion in this ideal has always been a contentious topic, and in recent years it has reemerged as a matter of dispute. This class poses the question: what role should religion play in public discourse? The class will draw on a variety of perspectives that speak to fundamental questions about the rights, freedoms, and responsibilities that citizens have, and the role that religion plays in those challenging questions. Students will write three major papers, in addition to a number of smaller, lower-stakes writing assignments.  

    WRI 101 [D]: Bad Art
    MWF 9:30 - 10:20

    WRI 101 [E]: Bad Art
    MWF 10:30 - 11:20
    Rippeon

    This writing course examines “bad art”: cultural productions that raise questions about censorship and freedom of expression, the ethics of representation, kitsch and camp, and good art made by bad people.  We will consider a variety of cultural forms, including literary texts (poems, fiction); music, television and film; and the visual arts.  We will work to develop criteria for engaging with these forms; to develop these criteria, we will read critical theory, popular journalism, and literary and art criticism.  We will also occasionally make use of the College’s art collection, and our own practices of cultural consumption.  Student writing will include shorter, low-stakes assignments, informal presentations, and a series of essays (four) executed through a sequence of individual and group-oriented activities (e.g. conferences, peer-review, drafting and revision). 

    WRI 101 [F]: Irrationality
    MWF 12:30 - 1:20
    Griffith

    Human beings often behave and think in ways that seem irrational. We do things we know we shouldn’t (e.g., we procrastinate, or smoke, or stay up too late). We engage in various kinds of self-deception. We fail to align our beliefs with our best evidence. Although these behaviors are everywhere, philosophers throughout the centuries have wondered how they are possible. They have also puzzled over how best to describe or explain them. For example, how could someone really know that it is bad for her to do something and then go ahead and intentionally do it? What is going on when this happens? How can a person lie to himself, given that being able to lie requires knowing the truth?

    In this course we will think, discuss, and write about these sorts of questions and what philosophers (and others) have had to say about them. Other questions we might consider are: What factors play a role in generating irrationality? Can irrationality be avoided? Is irrationality ever a good thing?

    In four major projects, each involving several weeks of critical reading, drafting, and revision, students will respond to these complex and important questions.

    WRI 101 [G]: Wisdom and Tech Across Time
    TR 12:15 - 1:30
    Kabala

    Is technology good or bad-or does it depend? This question haunts our smart-phone driven world of social media and innovation. It is not new, however: the question has also concerned generations of thinkers and spiritual masters going back thousands of years. This course invites students to confront the wisdom of technology by grounding ourselves in such ancient and medieval traditions. We will read, discuss, and write about Platonic dialogues, Ovidian poetry, as well as Old Testament books and apocrypha. We will then trace their lessons in the modern day through contemporary fiction and filmmaking.

    WRI 101 [H]: Genealogy of Food
    TR 3:05 - 4:20
    Stremlau

    What do our cherished family recipes teach us about the human experience? If we use our family’s beloved, ceremonial, holiday, or sacred dishes as a lens of historical analysis, what can we learn about our ancestors’ experiences over time and how those shape our own in the present? This class is a social history that centers our mouths and stomachs, dining room tables, elders’ kitchens, and recipes passed down through generations. We will read exemplary family histories that center food and food histories that emphasize family. Students will combine genealogical, oral history, and social history methods to research and write about the origin and evolution of a favorite dish, analyze it within a broad historical context, and connect their dish to their family’s story. Students will do this through four major writing assignments that include research, drafting, and revision.

    WRI 101 [I]: Democracy in America
    TR 12:15 - 1:30

    WRI 101 [J]: Democracy in America
    TR 1:40 - 2:55
    Yesnowitz

    Is American democracy healthy? If so, what are the determinants of democratic strength and resilience? If not, are there specific remedies that might address the present challenges that we face? To explore these contemporary questions, we will situate the American democratic experience within an historical and comparative perspective. Students in this seminar will consider how the nation has arrived at this especially precarious moment and closely scrutinize possible proposals for democratic reform. Topics to be examined in written assignments include: democratic norms and traditions, persistent inequalities in American life, the erosion of public trust and faith in institutions, and the prospects for multiracial democracy and civic renewal.
     

    WRI 101 [K]: Ain’t What It Used to Be
    TR 1:40 - 2:55
    Kaliski

    In the midst of our polarized America, how can our national theatre advocate for a more nuanced understanding of our society? Theatre has excelled as a civic tool throughout human history, but in current times, we often forget about its potency, considering it instead as a niche storytelling form that struggles to compete with film and TV. On the contrary, theatre has a singular magnetism. With its unique ability to realize long conversations between intricately developed characters in live, communal gathering spaces, we could argue that theatre is the sharpest artistic answer to a country that struggles mightily to understand itself. 

    This course will engage in close readings of four major plays from the past decade that articulate the disquieting uncertainty about future America and the fascinating, contradictory people who occupy it. For each of the plays, you will select one character, plot point, idea, or conceptual choice to unpack in a writing assignment, striving throughout the drafting process for deeper intellectual and emotional understanding of how the theatrical form nudges its audience toward more compassionate citizenry. The play selections will look expansively at identity, both with regards to the playwrights and their character creations, so that we may consider how contemporary theatre is capturing an abundance of lived experiences.  

    WRI 101 [L]: Fake News, Real Science
    TR 8:15 - 9:30
    M. Campbell

    We are inundated with information from multiple sources, but how can scientific data help us make sense of the world? Students will become a local expert on one “controversial” topic and write about this topic using data to formulate logical arguments. Students will be guided in methods for drafting and revising their work which will be critiqued by classmates. Course work includes multiple brief, low-stakes written assignments, as well as consistent engagement with course readings through regular participation in class discussion. Six minor and one major written projects are required, each of which involves detailed analysis of texts, while also challenging students to articulate and defend their own positions based on data.

    WRI 101 [M]: Problems in Museum Studies
    MW 2:30 - 3:45
    Corso-Esquivel

    Artgoing publics traditionally revere museums as secular temples for aesthetic appreciation and repositories to safeguard cultural heritage. But are these assumptions-which have their roots in the Enlightenment-reasonable? In this course, we will interrogate the positivist origins of the art museum. We will consider how museums have long participated in highly interested projects of nation-building and cultural imperialism. We will ask how the artistic representation of gender, race, and class has yielded collections structured by exclusion. Since museums are drastically rethinking their organizations, these problematics function as springboards to identify theoretical opportunities in curatorial and museum studies. Using Problem-Based Learning (PBL), we will work on three problem cases, each dealing with one of the following ethico-political themes: looking, collecting, and showing. We will use writing as a primary mode to learn, and we will produce several types of writing in traditional and new media formats, written collaboratively and individually. Our projects will address how museums today might navigate the critical problems in displaying art and visual culture intentionally designed or institutionally appropriated for public consumption.

    WRI 101 [N]: Facebook Friends
    MWF 11:30 - 12:20
    Heggestad

    The short-lived app Somebody allowed users to act as remote surrogates, offering hugs to long-distance partners by means of a stranger. Emerging AI social media influencers are followed by millions. Our phones accompany us everywhere we go, and when we return home, we’re often greeted by Alexas, Roombas, and other smart appliances. Worth noting, however, is that these digital companions aren’t entirely new. Before we had algorithms that learned our preferences, we were entertained by Neopets, Tamagotchis, Sims, and their kin. Sometimes, we form bonds through these technologies. At other times, we form bonds with them.  

    Some, like Clifford Stoll, view these trends antagonistically. According to him, “It’s sad when people’s lives are so sterile that they search for real human companionship in digital entities.” Many others have entered the chat; politicians, activists, psychologists, educators, and parents have all weighed in on the role that technology should play in our lives and in our relationships. Then again, finding companionship with the non-human is nothing new-as we’ll explore in this course. Over the semester, we will examine a wide array of virtual companions, the roles they play in our lives, and the rhetoric surrounding their existence. Assignments will include three primary pieces of writing: a personal narrative, a research paper, and a multimodal project. 

    WRI 101 [O]: The Linguist’s Dilemma
    TR 1:40 - 2:55
    Fernandez

    Since Aristotle, philosophers, theologians, and scientists alike have assumed that language is a uniquely human trait. When Descartes famously declared je pense, don je suis (I think, therefore I am), he suggested that only humans applied, as only they were believed to possess the tool through which humans demonstrate their ability to think-language. Centuries later, in the 1960s, the father of modern linguistics, Noam Chomsky, advanced this assumption by centering his research on the notion of Universal Grammar (UG), which holds that only humans are genetically endowed with the cognitive capacity for language. Animals, in contrast, were thought to possess neither the physiological nor the cognitive capacity for language.

    In recent decades, this linguistic orthodoxy has been challenged by the bourgeoning field of animal studies. Research on creatures as different as bees to whales have offered evidence of rich communicative repertoires, complicating assumptions about the nature of language and prompting some not only to reconsider what it means to be human but also to consider new ways of engaging with non-human species. As it considers this central problem of contemporary linguistics-the nature of language, its evolution, and whether it is unique to humans-this first-year writing course will give students an opportunity to hone their skills as intellectual writers: to become yet more practiced at close and critical reading of others’ public and scholarly arguments, to fashion independent positions in response to those arguments, and to craft prose that both evokes their own signature style and reaches powerfully to interested readers. 

    WRI 101 [P]: The Past in Scrapbooks to Statues
    MWF 9:30 - 10:20
    S. Campbell

    We celebrate the past in many ways, in baby books that document first teeth, steps and words, in yearbooks that commemorate school years, in eulogies that memorialize loved ones, and in statues that signify historical importance.  Scrapbooking or creating a digital photo album about a recent trip may seem straightforward. Yet, actions of remembrance also generate controversy.  For example, a recent obituary published about a family pet in a local newspaper inspired an irate letter to the editor.  Meanwhile, countries have enacted memory laws, which mandate state-approved interpretations of crucial historical events and promote certain narratives about the past, and debates rage about how the past should be remembered, which we have witnessed through struggles over historical monuments.

    In this WRI course, we will reflect on the past and explore key questions: how do we record our own pasts?  What is at stake when we engage in these activities, as individuals and as cultures?  Through several major projects, we will reflect on examples of personal commemoration, conduct archival research on college scrapbooking, explore historical monuments in the town of Davidson, and research current debates on historical control and commemoration.

    WRI 101 (Q): Mindfulness: Writing in the Present Moment  
    TR 8:15 - 9:30
    Bhandari
    This course approaches writing from a contemplative pedagogy perspective. Integrating tools from mindfulness and meditation practices into in-class and take-home writing assignments, students will learn to write for a variety of contexts and audiences. The goals of the writing strategy are to foster intrinsic motivation for the writing process, derive creative inspiration, and discover the joy in the creative process of writing.

     Mindfulness and contemplative exercises help to bring us fully into the present moment, from where we can communicate with clarity and passion. The same underlying skills that help us engage in dialogue with other scholars can also aid us in writing captivating blogposts that communicate scholarly ideas to a general audience. Mindfulness teaches us that being present in the moment fundamentally transforms our experiential reality and transmutes the quality of our focus. In this course, we will try to channel the qualities of mindful presence and focus to the process of writing. The three major assignments in this course will engage contemplative practices and mindfulness research; these assignments include writing scholarly analysis, writing for public engagement, and writing with a creative component. Readings in this course will present perspectives on mindfulness from multiple disciplinary approaches including (but not limited to) Sociology, Religious Studies and Literature.

     As a part of the class, we will take a fieldtrip to the Kadampa Meditation Center in Charlotte. The “Davidson Mindfulness” student group on campus will also be invited to visit our class, so you can learn about ways you can engage contemplative practices outside of class within the Davidson community. 

    WRI 101 [R]: Who Killed Jesus?
    MWF 9:30 - 10:20
    Krentz

    Who killed Jesus? For many centuries, the words of Matthew 27:25 (“His blood be upon us and upon our children!”) were used to justify the characterization of the Jews as Christ-killers. After the Holocaust, the Second Vatican Council rejected the idea that the Jewish people can be held responsible for Jesus’s death. Yet anti-Semitism persists. Perhaps each of us bears some responsibility for exploring why Jesus was executed.

    This course will have four major scaffolded writing projects, as well as shorter writing opportunities. As with any skill, you get better at writing by practicing. I love the line attributed to a professional golfer (usually Ben Hogan or Gary Player), “Golf is a game of luck. The harder I practice, the luckier I get.”

    WRI 101 [S]: In Search of Europe and Europeans
    TR 8:15 - 9:30
    L. Henry

    What is Europe? At first, this seems like an obvious question, but a glance at the international section of a newspaper proves otherwise. Unresolved tensions about the boundaries of Europe lurk behind headlines about Brexit-related food shortages in the United Kingdom, tensions between the United States and its European NATO partners or acts of violence by neofascist movements claiming to defend Europe against “invasion” by immigrants. In fact, as we will explore in this course, the exact definitions of “Europe” and “European” have been a matter of controversy and debate for centuries. The ancient Greek writer Herodotus argued that there was no good reason why “three distinct names [Asia, Europe and Africa] … should ever have been given to what is really a single landmass.” Yet more than two thousand years later, Europe remains very much alive, not only as a geographic descriptor but also as a cultural ideal and a political project.

    Throughout the semester, we’ll look at how a diverse assortment of written and visual sources have represented Europe and Europeans. We’ll hear from people around the world: artists, writers, politicians, activists, athletes, pirates, and more. Participants will hone their writings skills through a combination of traditional essays and shorter, more informal assignments.

    WRI 101 [T]: Nuclear Science, Technology, and Policy
    MWF 12:30 - 1:20

    A. Kuchera
    The discovery of the atomic nucleus in the early 1900s quickly led to history-changing technologies around the world. While some applications provide societal benefits, others have the power to cause mass destruction. A science with potential to advance and yet destroy civilizations needs global cooperation to understand the pros and cons of the technologies involved. In this course we will discuss the scientific principles behind the nucleus of the atom for a general audience and investigate how the properties can be harnessed for use in everyday life. From there we will discuss the risks and what role national and international policy should play in safeguarding the materials and regulations of nuclear science. This course has four major sections where students will reflect on what are the risks and rewards of: basic science, technological applications, environment, and governmental policy. No previous nuclear science or policy background in needed.

    WRI 101 [U]: Who Owns the Past?
    MWF 11:30 - 12:20
    Krentz

    Debates over cultural property have become more public and more acrimonious over the past thirty years. From Confederate monuments to the Parthenon marbles, from the 9,000-year-old skeleton found on the banks of the Columbia River near Kennewick, Washington, to the Bamiyan Buddha statues destroyed by the Taliban in Afghanistan, from the ancient amphora in the Carnegie Guest House to the Beaver Dam plantation owned by Davidson College, cultural property has become highly contested. Who owns it? Who is responsible for maintaining it? Who gets to decide?

    In this course, students will explore a number of these controversies and practice writing informed arguments that take into account the various stakeholders, the relevant laws, and applicable codes of ethics.

    WRI 101 [V]: Reproductive Justice: Birth Control, Bodyfeeding, and Beyond
    TR 3:05 - 4:20
    Ruhlen

    The overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022 has everyone talking about abortion laws. Against this backdrop of individual vs. states’ rights rhetoric, we will broaden the problem to a reproductive justice framework, which SisterSong defines as the human right to maintain personal bodily autonomy, have children, not have children, and parent the children we have in safe and sustainable communities. Legal abortion, and even access to affordable abortion, is just a narrow slice of this vision.

    Centering the experiences and priorities of indigenous women, women of color, and trans people, we will examine what reproductive justice says about health, choice, parenting, and education. Readings will range from scholarly articles to blog posts. With frequent short writing assignments and three larger projects, you will reflect on your own received notions of reproductive norms and research the larger cultural, economic, and environmental forces that shape and often impede people’s reproductive decisions.

  
  • WRI 210 - Rhetorics of Gender and Sexuality


    Instructor
    Horowitz

    “I’m gay.” “She’s straight.” “My roommate identifies as trans.” Today it is common practice to think of our gender and sexual identities as an integral part of who we are. But only two hundred years ago this would have been unthinkable. So how have our sexual desires and practices become a defining feature of our identities? Most contemporary scholars agree that gender and sexuality are constituted through rhetorical acts, that is, through the coalescence of penal codes, psychiatric diagnoses, church dictums, media representations, activist slogans, and community-based naming practices that deem some gender expressions and sexual act(or)s normal and others deviant. Indeed, the eminent historian Michel Foucault argued that modern Western society is distinguished by its painstaking efforts to control human sexual desire by transforming it into words rather than deeds.

                In this course, we will explore the many oral, written, and visual genres of discourse that have contributed to our understanding of “acceptable” and “aberrant” genders and sexualities over the past three centuries. Students will maintain a course blog for reflecting upon readings and responding to each other’s thoughts. They will write a short rhetorical analysis of the use and/or production of gender and/or sexuality through a specific law, advertisement, speech, television episode, etc. Then they will create an update version of the same law, ad, speech, etc. that produces gender and/or sexuality differently. Finally, students will work together throughout the semester to do participant-observation, create an interview guide, recruit participants, conduct interviews, and analyze responses for an ethnographic study of how Davidson students talk about gender and sexuality.

    Satisfies the Methods requirement for the Gender and Sexuality Studies major in the Society and Politics and Literary and Cultural Representations tracks.
    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing and Rhetoric distribution requirement.
    Satisfies Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

  
  • WRI 250 - Smart Writing in the Public Sphere


    Instructor
    Blum, Hillard

    Though the term “public intellectual” may sound remote (or even elitist), it perhaps best describes the kind of non-specialist writing found in long-form journalism, essays in top-tier monthlies, book-length non-fiction published for a general, educated audience, and extended blog posts, where writers address complex social, political, scientific, and cultural issues in critical but accessible fashion, expectant of their readers’ equally critical engagement. Such writing differentiates itself from “the news” by way of its participation in deliberative fora, often engaging the ideas of experts, academics, artists, and other public figures in relevant, exigent questions or ideologic critique. Public intellectual writing enjoys a long tradition as a genre necessary to maintaining a skeptical and curious citizenry of the sort anticipated for democratic living. Extending from John Winthrop to Angela Davis and from Thomas Jefferson to Edward Said, the public intellectual writer stimulates deliberation about thorny issues. Reading extensively in the genre, students will ponder its viability, will attempt to define its constituent rhetorical aspects, and try their own hand at publishing smart public writing in various forms.

     

    Satisfies the Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement

     

  
  • WRI 270 - A Bit About Me


    Instructor
    Kaliski

    In a society that increasingly values the person as the brand, we often encounter high stakes rhetorical moments in which we must write and speak about ourselves. The task can be daunting. We should come across as confident yet humble, professional yet personable, knowledgeable yet not jargon-y, and distinct yet recognizable. When considering these paradoxical expectations, it’s no wonder that we start to waver when we turn to the subject of who we are.

    This course, offered in collaboration with the Hurt Hub, will feature extensive practice in professional scenarios that ask us to craft a compelling story about our identity. Units will explore expansive applications of writing and speaking across multiple types of media and situations, including relatable visual aid decks, personal anecdotes in public speaking engagements, “about me” sections on websites and social media feeds, and narratives within emails, grant applications, and annual reports. Students will consider how to tailor the story of themselves to cohere with the norms and expectations of varying audiences and organizations. Real world case studies will illustrate positive and negative examples of the intersection between self and business.

    In addition to peer and instructor feedback within the course, students will be paired with a professional mentor through the Hurt Hub. This person will coach students on how to adapt materials created within the course for real world application, highlighting the Hub’s emphasis on innovation and entrepreneurship.

    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing and Rhetoric.
     

  
  • WRI 280 - Print Culture and Book Arts


    Instructor
    Rippeon

    As the book has undergone a rapid century of changes, how have writers, theorists, and cultural critics imagined and come to terms with the complimentary ideas of “the book” and “the library”? This course implements experiential approaches to the production, distribution, and reception of the book as a cultural object in order to focus attention on our own status as readers and writers in the twenty-first century. Students will examine books in various contexts, including special collections and archives (at Davidson and elsewhere), museums and galleries, in the general public, and in theoretical and critical contexts, and students will explore and experiment with book-making technologies (from moveable type to digital design). In the process, students will become familiar with the material aspects of books and book collections, and will consider how materiality and content overlap and intersect in relation to textual meaning. While students will write throughout the course, a final capstone may include a group proposal aimed at the development of holding in the E. H. Little Library’s Special Collections .

    Satisfies Literary Studies, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric requirement.


Public Health

  
  • PBH 110 - Introduction to Public Health


    Instructor
    S. Bullock

    This course will introduce the fundamentals and core concepts of public health research and practice. As we explore the history, philosophy and different disciplines of public health, we will evaluate contemporary health issues in ongoing individual assignments as well as in group activities. This course will focus on introducing the principles and basic disciplines of public health: epidemiology and biostatistics; environmental health sciences; social and behavioral health; and health policy, law and regulation.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Communication Studies interdisciplinary major and minor.

  
  • PBH 120 - Introduction to Clinical Ethics


    Instructor
    Staff

    This course will introduce students to the history, evolution and current topics relevant in clinical ethics. Topics will include issues around birth, reproduction, organ donation, refusal of vaccinations and blood transfusions, experimental treatments, alternative medicine, euthanasia, physician assisted suicide, and issues around death. Students will navigate ethical principles from a theoretical perspective, such as autonomy (self-determination), beneficence, non-maleficence and justice. At the same time they will discuss these principles in practical applications through case analysis and they will examine the tension between theory and practice. The course seeks to create awareness of the health care setting as an enterprise with different stakeholders and tensions, and to develop methods and analytical reasoning skills to discuss value-based conflicts in the health care setting.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies Philosophical and Religious Perspectives requirement.

  
  • PBH 130 - Sociobiology of Health and Illness


    Instructor
    Mamoon

    This course provides an exploration of biological mechanisms that underlie the effects of the psychosocial environment on chronic disease susceptibility in humans. In this course, students will learn about the biological and chemical bases of disease manifestation, diagnosis and treatment, psychosocial and cultural factors that impact health and wellness, and disparities in health status and access to healthcare amongst various populations in the US. However, emphasis will be given to the fundamental concepts in biology; this course has been specifically designed for students who are interested in future careers in health and seek to refresh the knowledge they acquired in a high school biology course.  Faced with the new realities of aging and associated increase in the prevalence of chronic disease, how do we as individuals, families and communities manage our health?  We need a vision of health care which allows effective and efficient management of chronic disease in order to reduce the burden of illness and disability on society. In this course, you will integrate your knowledge of the natural, clinical, and social sciences to understand select chronic illnesses and consider primary care as an effective, equitable and sustainable chronic care management model.  The goal of the course is to provide you with the knowledge and skills you will need to be a thoughtful advocate for quality healthcare for yourself, your family and your community. 

    Community-based learning is an important component of this course.  As such, it will require a field experience at a local hospital or clinic.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.


    Prerequisites & Notes
    Not open to students who have credit for BIO 111/113 except by permission of the instructor.

  
  • PBH 232 - Introduction to Environmental Health with Community-Based Learning (=ENV 232)


    Instructors
    Staff

    Students will apply biological, chemical and epidemiological content to environmental health case studies and community-based learning projects. This is an introductory course designed to expose students to different scientific disciplines within the context of environmental health.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies depth or breadth course requirement in Natural Science Track of the Environmental Studies major or interdisciplinary minor. 

     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    ENV 232 may not be taken for credit after ENV 233.

  
  • PBH 233 - Introduction to Environmental Health with Laboratory-Based Learning (= ENV 233)


    Instructors
    Staff

    Students will apply biological, chemical and epidemiological content to environmental health case studies and laboratory projects. This is an introductory course designed to expose students to different scientific disciplines within the context of environmental health.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies the Natural Science requirement.
    Satisfies depth or breadth course requirement in Natural Science Track of the Environmental Studies major or interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    ENV 233 may not be taken for credit after ENV 232.

  
  • PBH 234 - Genes, Environment and Health


    Instructor
    Mamoon

    Scientific literature suggests that a person’s zip code, and not genetic code,  is a better predictor of their health. Thus, to understand and predict chronic disease susceptibility in humans, we must examine an individual’s social and physical environment. How does the environment interact with our bodies to impact our long-term health? Epigenetic/epigenomic mechanisms are thought to underlie such gene-environment interactions.  This course provides an introduction to epigenetic mechanisms - mechanisms that regulate gene expression by altering chromosome structure and function.  Topics covered in the course include molecular mechanisms in epigenetics, experimental methods that are used to study epigenetic phenomena, and early clues from biological, environmental, epidemiological, behavioral and clinical studies that implicate epigenetics as a plausible mechanism in the pathogenesis of chronic disease such as metabolic syndrome and diabetes, cancer and mental illness.  In this course, students will learn to assess the validity of reports on epigenomic phenomena in popular press by identifying relevant primary literature, evaluating experimental design, and interpreting scientific data. Students will also hone their ability to communicate science with a broad audience.

    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies an interdisciplinary major requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Bio 111/113 is a prerequisite for this course as it builds on content covered in Bio 111/113.

  
  • PBH 244 - Child Psychopathology (=EDU 234 and PSY 234)


    Instructor 
    Stutts

    An overview of the psychological disorders of childhood, including their description, classification, etiology, assessment and treatment.  Emphasis will be placed on the theoretical and empirical bases of these disorders, focusing on relevant research methods and findings as well as case history material. 


    Social-Scientific Thought requirement.
    Educational Studies minor credit.
    Public Health interdisciplinary minor credit.
    Psychology Major credit (Clinical column)

    Prerequisites & Notes
    PSY 101

  
  • PBH 250 - Public Health Methods


    Instructor
    S. Bullock

    This course will focus on introducing fundamentals of methods used in modern public health research and practice. Through a variety of approaches to formal and experiential learning, you will develop your skills and knowledge in several core concept areas of public health methods: quantitative health data analysis, health surveys, policy analysis, environmental health risk assessment, qualitative data analysis, and health communications. One class per week (on average) will be a “workshop class”, in which you and your classmates will break out into groups to evaluate current topics and issues in public health using different methodological approaches.

    Satisfies an interdisci[plinary minor reuqirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Communication Studies interdisciplinary major and minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    PBH 110 “Introduction to Public Health” or PBH 292 “Introduction to Epidemiology”

  
  • PBH 251 - Health Disparities in the U.S. and Beyond


    Instructor
    Seide

    This course will explore connections between race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and U.S.  social policy with the historical and current trends in health disparities in the USA. This course will offer a foundation in both core concepts and theoretical frameworks for understanding health disparities in the US. Additionally, this course will introduce theory and strategies for developing health interventions and policies to address the crisis of racial, ethnic and socioeconomic health disparities in the USA.

    Satisfies a major requirement in Sociology.
    Satisfies an interdisciplinary minor requirement in Public Health.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Communication Studies interdisciplinary major and minor.
    Satisfies Social-Scientific Thought requirement.
    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    PBH 110 “Introduction to Public Health” or PBH 392 “Introduction to Epidemiology”

  
  • PBH 280 - Introduction to Global Health (=SOC 280)


    Instructor
    Chillag

    Global health is an emerging interdisciplinary field that approaches health issues as transnational challenges requiring multi-level, community-based solutions. This course introduces its major concepts, tools, and debates. Topics include global health inequities, historical and ongoing strategies for control of communicable diseases from smallpox to HIV/AIDS, the global rise in prominence of non-communicable disease, connections between social structures and the global distribution of disease, and debates over health as a human right. Students will learn to interpret and evaluate population health indicators, interact with WHO datasets, and analyze health interventions and policies from both solutions-oriented and critical perspectives.

    Satisfies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.

  
  • PBH 292 - Introduction to Epidemiology


    Instructor
    Bullock

    Epidemiology is the systematic and rigorous study of health and disease in a population. According to the Institute of Medicine, epidemiology is the basic science of public health. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to core concepts in epidemiology, including history, philosophy, and uses of epidemiology; descriptive epidemiology, such as patterns of disease and injury; association and causation of disease, including concepts of inference, bias, and confounding; analytical epidemiology, including experimental and non-experimental design; and applications to basic and clinical science and policy. The course is designed to require problem-based learning of epidemiological concepts and methods, so that students can use epidemiology as a scientific tool for addressing the health needs of the community.

    Satisfies the Social-Scientific Thought requirement.
    Satisfies a requirement in the Public Health interdisciplinary minor.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    (Spring)

  
  • PBH 305 - Public Health and Film


    Instructor
    Chillag

    The course will explore the history of and contemporary public health, using film to grapple with questions including: why do we pay attention to some public health problems and not others? From whose perspectives are the stories of public health told? How do those representations affect public perceptions and public health practice and policy? The course will require students to engage with public health and documentary ethics as well as critical analysis of how they and others produce and evaluate information about public health. We will engage with a variety of complex topics in public health, including the nature of public health as a profession and a range of public health issues including HIV/AIDS, emerging pathogens, opioid use, and environmental disasters.

  
  • PBH 306 - Public Health Ethics


    Instructor
    Chillag

    Those engaged in public health -whether as professionals or persons and communities affected by public health problems -will encounter challenging ethical issues. Beginning with that premise, this course will address ethical issues in public health practice and policy, providing conceptual frameworks and practical tools. It will grapple with challenging questions about what public health issues we pay attention to and why, the use of limited resources, restrictive public health measures like quarantine, vulnerable and marginalized persons, health disparities, and globalization. This course addresses a range of issues in public health ethics. Case studies will be an important component of the course.

    Satisfies Public Health minor requirement.

  
  • PBH 354 - Medical Rehabilitation and Disability (=PSY 354)


    Instructor
    Stutts

    This course addresses the conceptualization, assessment, and treatment of chronic health conditions, traumatic injuries, and disabilities.  The readings will include an evidenced-based handbook on psychosocial adjustment to illness; peer-reviewed articles; and memoirs from the vantage point of the patient, caregiver, and healthcare provider.  This course is community-based; therefore, it will also include a field experience at a local rehabilitation hospital

    Fulfills a credit in the Psychology major.
    Fulfills a credit in the Public Health interdisciplinary minor.
     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    PSY 101
     

  
  • PBH 370 - Nutrition, Bodies, and Health


    Instructor
    Stutts

    This seminar explores the connections between nutrition, bodies, and health from a biopsychosocial perspective and an interdisciplinary lens drawing from biology, psychology, and public health. In the first half of the course, we will discuss the assessment and research of nutritional diseases, contributors and causes of them, and the consequences and stigma related to them. In the second half of the course, we will evaluate interventions for nutritional diseases in the following categories: pharmacological, surgical, dietary, physical activity, body image, community-based, underserved population-focused, and Health at Every Size® interventions. We will approach this topic with an appreciation of body diversity and a social justice framework of size and weight equality. In addition, this course will include a community-based project where students will create an intervention with a group to improve an area of nutrition, bodies, and health in our society.

    Satisifies the Justice, Equality, and Community requirement.
    Satisfies a Public Health minor elective requirement.

    Prerequisites & Notes
    Open to juniors, and seniors only.

  
  • PBH 371 - Topics in Public Health


    Instructor
    Staff

    New Course. Information coming soon.

  
  • PBH 373 - Food and Nutrition Policy


    Instructor
    S. Bullock

    This seminar will provide a broad introduction to food and nutrition policies in the United States and across the globe.  We will explore an array of regulatory options available to promote healthy eating and prevent obesity, including taxation, marketing bans, front-of-package labeling, portion size bans, among others.  We will address how to evaluate policy options and how policy is made.  The seminar will draw upon readings from epidemiology, public health, health policy, ethics, economics, political science, and sociology to address key elements of food and nutrition policies.

  
  • PBH 380 - Issues in Medicine


    Instructor
    Staff

    The purpose of Issues in Medicine is to critically evaluate the external influence of social values, culture, political climate, technological development, population characteristics, and global concerns on shaping health care systems and delivery.  Implications for the patient and health care provider will be discussed.  By participating in clinical rotations, students are expected to apply concepts learned in class to real world experiences.


  
  • PBH 381 - Health Regulations and Public Policy


    Instructor
    Staff

    Topics in health care law including: HIPPA, EMTALA, ADA, CLIA.


  
  • PBH 395 - Special Topics


    Instructor
    Chillag

    Spring 2022

    Public Health Ethics

    Those engaged in public health -­whether as professionals or persons and communities affected by public health problems -will encounter challenging ethical issues. Beginning with that premise, this course will address ethical issues in public health practice, research, and policy, providing conceptual frameworks and practical tools. It will grapple with challenging questions about the use of limited resources, restrictive public health measures like quarantine, vulnerable and marginalized persons, health disparities, and globalization. The course will focus on a range of issues affecting public health, including HIV/AIDS, Ebola, COVID-19, climate change, migration, malnutrition, and others, often drawn from case studies based on real-world public health practice.

     

    Prerequisites & Notes
    The course is designed for students with prior exposure to public health issues and concepts. Enrollment in the course requires taking one or more of the following as a prerequisite, or obtaining the permission of the course instructor: Introduction to Public Health; Health Disparities in the US and Beyond; Introduction to Epidemiology; Genes, Environment and Health.

    PBH 395 is repeatable for credit.

 

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