Program Director: Professor R. Ingram (English)
The Western Tradition: First-Year Directors: Associate Professor Wills (Religion) and Professor Swallow (Mathematics)
The Western Tradition: Second-Year Directors: Professor Henke (German) and Professor Goldstein (Philosophy)
Faculty Affiliated with the Humanities Program
Professors: Barnes (History), Berkey (History), Churchill (English), Denham (German), Epes (German), Goldstein (Philosophy), Henke (German), R. Ingram (English), Lerner (Music), Ligo (Art), Munger (Psychology), Neumann (Classics), Parker (English), Rigger (Political Science), Robb (Philosophy), S. Smith (Art), Swallow (Math)
Associate Professors: Cheshire (Classics), Dietz (History), Ewington (Russian), Gay (Education), Griffith (Philosophy), Guasco (History), Robb (Philosophy), Snyder (Religion), Tilburg (History), Wills (Religion)
The Humanities program offers two separate course sequences, The Western Tradition and Cultures & Civilizations. The Western Tradition, a two-year, four-course sequence, is an interdisciplinary study of texts and contexts of the West, from the ancient world to the present. Cultures & Civilizations, a one-year, two-course sequence, is a comparative, interdisciplinary study of western and non-western texts. Cultures and Civilizations is not offered 2010-11.
Satisfactory completion of the four-course Western Tradition sequence enables a student to satisfy the requirement in Composition and receive credit for four distribution requirements as follows: Literature (one course), History (one course), Philosophy and Religion (two courses). Enrollment is limited to 80 students.
Satisfactory completion of the two-course Cultures & Civilizations sequence enables a student to satisfy the requirement in Composition, the cultural diversity requirement, and to receive credit for the distribution requirement in Literature. Enrollment is limited to 32 students.
To receive distribution credit for either Humanities sequence, a student must pass all courses in that sequence. Students may not change sequences.
In the Western Tradition sequence, classes meet together for lectures and in groups of 16 students for discussions led by individual instructors. In the Cultures & Civilizations sequence, two discussion groups (of 16 students) usually meet jointly with both instructors. Humanities courses encourage and reward clear thinking, speaking, and writing.