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May 30, 2026
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2026-2027 Catalog
Gender and Sexuality Studies
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Return to: Academic Fields
Chair: Kaufman
Core Faculty
Professors: Dietz (History), Kaufman (Sociology), Roberts (Political Science), Tilburg (History)
Associate Professors: Bory (Dance), Boyer (Hispanic Studies), Fackler (English), Good (Psychology), González (Hispanic Studies), Horowitz (Gender and Sexuality Studies), Stremlau (History)
Assistant Professors: Worl (Environmental Studies)
Visiting Assistant Professors: Sokol
Affiliated Faculty
Professors: Campbell (English), Churchill (English), Fox (English), S. Green (Theatre), Kietrys (Hispanic Studies), Kruger (French and Francophone Studies), Maiz-Pena (Hispanic Studies), McCarthy (German Studies), Sample (Digital Studies), Shaw (Political Science), Wills (Religious Studies)
Associate Professors: Bowles (Anthropology), Crowder-Meyer (Political Science), Joubin (Arab Studies), Mangan (History), Martinez (Communication Studies and Sociology), Wiemers (History)
Assistant Professors: Garcia Peacock (Environmental Studies), Sockol (Psychology), Villarroel Lamoza (Africana Studies)
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Major Requirements (A.B. Degree)
(I) The Gender and Sexuality Studies major requires 10 courses, no more than five from one department, comprised of the following: (a) GSS 101 - Introduction to Gender and Sexuality Studies (b) GSS 201 - Feminist and Queer Theories Students will become familiarized with the different theoretical traditions that inform contemporary gender analysis, and examine scholarly definitions of gender and sexuality. We discuss the means by which gender and sexuality are produced and reproduced at the individual and institutional levels, their intersection with other dimensions of social difference, as well as various related approaches to and interpretations of equality, justice, and freedom. (c) Methods Course: Majors must complete at least ONE course which involves training in methodology. This course should be completed by the end of the junior year, and must be selected from those courses related to the major track chosen. Courses that serve both as methods classes and fall within one of the tracks listed below can only count for one of the requirements within the major, either methods or one of the tracks. (d) Upper Level Courses: SIX additional elective courses. Within these six courses, at least three should be within one of the following three tracks: Society & Politics; Literary & Cultural Representations; Histories & Genealogies. Students are required to take at least one course in each of the two remaining tracks. At least one course must be an Upper-Level seminar. (e) Senior Capstone: This senior research project involves a self-designed gender and sexuality studies topic from an interdisciplinary perspective. The capstone is taught as GSS 498. (f) GSS Honors: Students who qualify during their junior year with a minimum GPA and an approved research proposal will be eligible to complete a year-long thesis (GSS 498/499) by way of which honors in the major can be earned, and which serves as the capstone for those students. GSS 499 will be taught as an Independent Study with the close guidance of a GSS-affiliated faculty member. To qualify for honors at graduation, candidates must earn an average of 3.5 or above in the major, an overall average of 3.2 or above, and earn an A- or higher on their final thesis paper. In the case of an exceptional academic record, together with a thesis of exceptional quality, the department may confer high honors. (II) Sexuality Studies Requirement: At least ONE of the ten courses taken by each GSS major should deal primarily with the study of sexuality. Examples of courses that count for this requirement are: AFR 270;Racial Capitalism and Reproduction; BIO 263/ENG 285 Representations of HIV/AIDS; BIO 363 Biology of HIV/AIDS; DAN 282 Dance, Gender & Sexuality; ENG 360 Desire; GSS 220 Topics in Queer Studies; GSS 320 Sex Outside the City; GSS 340 Transnational Sexualities; GSS 350 Sex Radicals; GSS 431: Sciences of Sex; GSS 435 Brown, Black, and Blue; GSS440 Matters of Life and Death; HIS 228 The Modern Body: Gender, Sex, and Politics in France; HIS 389: Women, Gender & Sexuality in Japan; COM 390 U.S. Rhetorics of Sexuality; ENG 488 Modern Poetry: Queer America; SPA 403 Latino American Sexualities; MUS 221 Queer Perspectives on Popular Music. Other courses may count with the chair’s approval. (III) Partial-Content Courses: Only ONE elective course (whether at the introductory or upper level) can be taken from a list of approved partial-content courses (courses that deal in a substantial way with questions related to gender and sexuality, but do not have Gender and Sexuality Studies as their primary focus). Some examples of partial-content courses are: ENG 231 Young Adult Literature; ENG 282 African American Literature; ENG 360 British Literature since 1945; FRE 223 Childhood and Adolescence; GER 341 Performance, Sex and Gender (this course only), GSS 390 Rhetoric and Law (this course only); HIS 475 Drugs and Drink in East Asia. Course Offerings
Note: Courses other than those listed may count toward the major with the approval of the Gender and Sexuality Studies Chair. Society and Politics Track
- AFR 234 - Race, Gender, and Tourism in the Caribbean
- AFR 330 - Decolonizing Development in Africa
- ANT 343 - Feminist Anthropology
- ARB 250 - Gender and Sexuality in the Middle East
- ARB 340 - Gender and Politics in Contemporary Syrian Literature
- ART 150 - Female Sultans: Women, Power and Patronage in Islamic Visual Culture
- BIO 220 - Comparative Neuroendocrinology +Lab
- BIO 269 - Genetics, Disability, and Gender Identities
- BIO 360 - Biology of HIV/AIDS
- COM 218 - Gendered Communication
- ECO 227 - Economics of Gender Family
- GSS 204 - Introduction to Trans Studies
- GSS 250 - Writing a Research Proposal
- GSS 321 - Sex Outside the City
- GSS 340 - Transnational Sexualities Studies
- GSS 350 - Sex Radicals!
- GSS 360 - Transgender Studies
- GSS 431 - The Science of Sex
- GSS 435 - Brown, Black, and Blue: Queer of Color Critiques of Policing and Prisons
- GSS 440 - Matters of Life and Death: Biopower, Necropolitics, Sex
- LAS 394 - Latinx Sexual Dissidence and Guerrilla Translation (=GSS 394)
- POL 423 - Politics of Reproduction
- POL 424 - Women in American Politics
- PSY 366 - Advanced Seminar: Psychology of Women: Critical Perspectives on Race, Class, and Gender
- SOC 102 - Race, Class, Gender & Sexuality
- SOC 217 - Sociology of Gender and Sexuality
- SOC 237 - Boys and Men in Society
- SOC 310 - Gender, Sexuality, and Sports
- SOC 355 - Queer Families
- SOC 382 - Men and Masculinities
- WRI 210 - Rhetorics of Gender and Sexuality
Approved Methods Courses for Society and Politics Track
Histories and Genealogies Track
- AFR 234 - Race, Gender, and Tourism in the Caribbean
- AFR 302 - Black Women’s Intellectual History
- ART 150 - Female Sultans: Women, Power and Patronage in Islamic Visual Culture
- BIO 220 - Comparative Neuroendocrinology +Lab
- CLA 235 - Families of the Ancient Mediterranean
- COM 312 - Resistance Rhetorics
- DAN 246 - Odissi Dance Technique I
- ENG 373 - Modern Poetry from Walt Whitman to Bad Bunny.
- GSS 324 - Sex, Law, Modernity (=HIS 324)
- HIS 225 - Women and Work: Gender and Society in Britain, 1700-1918
- HIS 228 - Modern Bodies: Gender, Sex, & Race in France
- HIS 243 - Native Women
- HIS 306 - Women and Gender in U.S. History to 1900
- HIS 307 - Women and Gender in U.S. History Since 1900
- HIS 336 - Sexual Revolutions:Women, Gender, & Sex in Modern Europe
- HIS 389 - Women, Gender, and Sexuality in Japan
- HIS 422 - Gender in Early Modern Europe (C. 15th-18th Centuries)
- HIS 444 - History of Sexuality in the United States
- HIS 459 - Topics in American History
- HIS 469 - Work, Gender, and Political Imagination in Africa
- LAS 300 - Major Thinkers in Africana Studies: Afro-Cuban Feminisms (=AFR 300)
- REL 161 - GodLoveSex
- REL 365 - Women in American Religion
Approved Methods Courses for Histories and Genealogies Track
Literary and Cultural Representations Track
- AFR 283 - Islands, Archipelagoes and Black Women’s Literature
- AFR 308 - Toni Cade Bambara
- AFR 354 - Gender, Power, Spirituality in African Aesthetics
- AFR 355 - Black Feminist Art Practices
- ART 150 - Female Sultans: Women, Power and Patronage in Islamic Visual Culture
- BIO 220 - Comparative Neuroendocrinology +Lab
- CHI 207 - Engendering Chinese Cinema
- DAN 246 - Odissi Dance Technique I
- DAN 292 - Queer(ing) Performance
- DIG 340 - Gender and Technology
- ENG 262 - Bodies at Risk in American Drama
- ENG 271 - Disability in Literature and Art
- ENG 288 - Contemporary American Multicultural Drama
- ENG 294 - Harlem Renaissance
- ENG 295 - Women Writers
- ENG 360 - Studies in Brit Lit: 1660-1900:Desire
Only ENG 360A Desire and ENG 360B British Literature Since 1945 count for GSS - ENG 373 - Modern Poetry from Walt Whitman to Bad Bunny.
- ENG 409 - Television: Queer Representations (=GSS 401)
- FRE 320 - Husbands, Wives, and Lovers
- FRE 351 - A Genre for Gender: Québec Comics
- GSS 220 - Topics in Queer Studies
- GSS 324 - Sex, Law, Modernity (=HIS 324)
- GSS 325 - Production Dramaturgy (=THE 325)
- GSS 394 - Latinx Sexual Dissidence and Guerilla Translation (=LAS 394)
- GSS 401 - Television: Queer Representations (=ENG 409)
- LAS 394 - Latinx Sexual Dissidence and Guerrilla Translation (=GSS 394)
- SPA 371 - Latinx Culture in the US: Race, Gender, Sexuality
- SPA 345 - Latinx Digital Cultures
- SPA 364 - Latin American Women Writers
- SPA 400 - Seminar on Special Topics, SPA 401-411
Only SPA 403, Latino American Sexualities, will count toward the major in Gender and Sexuality Studies.
Only SPA 406 Life-Writing, Gender, and Representation, will count toward the major in Gender and Sexuality Studies. - SPA 406 - Life-writing, Gender, Performativity
- SPA 420 - Life-writing, Performance, and Narrative Textures
- THE 242 - Women’s Work: 21st Century Female Playwrights (=ENG 242)
- THE 325 - Production Dramaturgy
- WRI 210 - Rhetorics of Gender and Sexuality
Approved Methods Courses for Literary and Cultural Representations Track
Minor Requirements
- Satisfactory completion of six courses to include:
- A maximum of one elective may be an independent study, tutorial or practicum.
- No more than two courses in the minor may be in the student’s major field of study.
- A grade of C- or higher is required in all courses applied toward the minor.
- Courses taken pass/fail at Davidson College may not be counted toward the minor.
- At most two elective courses may be taken away from Davidson College.
- No more than three courses for the minor may be from the same department with the exception of courses with GSS designation.
Additional Information
The above list is not exhaustive. Please check with the GSS Chair or visit the GSS web site for the most current, complete listing of approved electives when planning course selection. If there is a course for which you would like to request GSS credit that is not listed, please check with the GSS Chair. If there is a question about when a particular elective will next be offered, please consult the department offering that course. If one of the proposed electives is an independent study, tutorial, practicum, or internship, the student shall provide to the GSS Chair for approval a complete description of that course prior to the term of enrollment. Certification of completion of the requirements for the minor is made by the Registrar upon the recommendation of the GSS Chair. Year-Long Capstone and Honors
We encourage any GSS major interested in pursuing an idea or question through sustained, year-long study to pursue the year-long capstone process, which may culminate in Honors. All GSS majors must take the GSS 498 capstone seminar, which includes a one-semester research project of each major’s choosing and design. In addition, any GSS major may elect to extend this project into a year-long thesis or creative project, taking both the GSS 498 seminar in the Fall with fellow senior majors, as well as the independent study GSS 499 in the Spring with the project advisor. Honors will be determined once the project is complete. Receiving Honors in GSS requires the following: - a public presentation of the project attended by Core GSS faculty;
- approval of both the project advisor and second reader (usually the GSS 498 instructor); and
- meeting the GPA requirements by the end of senior year, factoring in any P/F grades (overall GPA of 3.2 or higher and GSS major GPA of 3.5 or higher).
Because of GSS’ multi-disciplinary nature, year-long projects may take many forms besides a traditional thesis project, though all require research and writing. Examples of projects that are not traditional theses include: a final performance supplemented by an artist’s statement and literature review; a documentary film; a critically informed auto-ethnography; a digital archive. |
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