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Course Sections | Registrar

Term Section Name/Title Status Department Meeting Information Comments/Requisites Faculty Course Type Capacity Enrolled/
Available/
Waitlist
Credits
18/FA
ACC-201-01
Financial Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
  • Hensley, Ed
35 34 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ACC-201-02
Financial Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
  • Foos, Jack
30 23 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ART-140-01
Special Topics in Museum Studi
OPEN
Art
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A105
ART 140-01: Louis Orr Exhibition In this course, students will develop an exhibition for Spring 2019 of prints by Louis Orr (1877-1966), a renowned American printmaker and uncle of David Orr '57. The exhibition will feature etchings that Louis Orr made while living in France. Students will do research, interpretation, and exhibition design, using American Alliance of Museums standards. They will also create an exhibition catalogue. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Elizabeth Morton

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  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 8 3 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ART-210-01
African Art in Hollywood Films
OPEN
Art
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M140
ART 210-01: African Art in Hollywood Films This course will look at Hollywood films that feature stories, dress, settings, architecture, and art inspired by Africa. It will look at how visual forms from Africa have been used in such varied films as Black Panther (2018), Coming to America (1988), and Cobra Verde (1987). The focus of the course will be on the original art, architecture, and dress of Africa that is referred to in these films. These African visual forms will be explored as evidence of rituals and beliefs of the various cultural groups that created them. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Elizabeth Morton

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  • Morton, Elizabeth
LFA 20 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ART-210-02
Rel and Rprsntns of Holocaust
OPEN
cross-listed with
HUM-295-01, REL-295-01
Art
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 305
REL 295-01 = ART 210-02 = HUM 295-01: Religion and Representations of the Holocaust This course explores a variety of representations of the Holocaust in theology, literature, film, and art. This interdisciplinary course examines the creative and material work of historians, theologians, novelists, poets, graphic novelists, painters, film makers, composers, photographers, and museum architects. The course explores the limits and possibilities of representing atrocity by raising such questions as: Can suffering be represented? What do representations of the Jewish genocide convey to 21st century citizens and subsequent generations of Jews and Christians? Is it barbaric to write poetry and fiction, paint or compose music, film documentaries and TV comedies, draw cartoons and graphic novels, publish photographs or erect monuments about such horrific events? How does visual media facilitate the raising of profound moral and religious questions about the Holocaust and our responses to it? Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Gary Phillips

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  • Phillips, Gary
LFA 20 4 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ART-224-01
Photography
OPEN
Art
08/27/2018-12/12/2018 Studio Monday, Wednesday 01:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A113
  • Weedman, Matthew
LFA 15 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ART-226-01
Cinematic Envmt: Digital Space
OPEN
Art
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A133 (more)...
  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 10 8 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ASI-196-01
Religion & Literature
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HUM-196-01, REL-196-01
Asian Studies
10/16/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
REL 196-01 = ASI 196-01 = HUM 196-01: Religion and Literature: "Old Pond-Frog Jumps In": Religion in Japanese Literature "Old pond-frog jumps in-sound of water." So runs the famous haiku by Basho. Is it religious? For the Japanese, yes. In Japan religion and art are arguably the same thing. In this course we'll ask how and why. We'll study Japanese ideas about art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"), and how they appear in Japanese literature. We'll read selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku), No drama, novels both classic and modern (e.g. The Tale of Genji, Kawabata), and some short stories. For first half-semester at 9:45 TTh, see REL 275-01. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: David Blix

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  • Blix, David
HPR, LFA 20 4 / -- / 0 0.50
18/FA
ASI-204-01
Music in East Asian Cultures
CLOSED
cross-listed with
MUS-204-01
Music
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
MUS 204-01 = ASI 204-01: Music in East Asian Cultures This is an introductory survey of the music, musical instruments, and their contextual significance in the societies of China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and Pakistan. Beyond the instruments and their roles in producing musical sound, this course will examine the significant ceremonies, rites, and rituals enhanced by the music, as a forum for learning about the cultures of these countries. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Makubuya

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  • Makubuya, James
LFA 2 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
ASI-260-01
Topics in Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01F, HIS-260-01, HIS-260-01F
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 112
ASI 260-01/01F = HIS 260-01/01F: China's Cultural Revolution In 1966, Mao Zedong declared the start of China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, a political and ideological campaign to mobilize China's youth against traditional institutions of all kinds. What followed were ten years of violence and chaos that left an irrevocable mark on Chinese history. This course will consider the causes and legacies of the Cultural Revolution from multiple perspectives. We will study the experiences of individuals from all walks of society as well as how the event has been remembered in a variety of media. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
HPR 15 4 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ASI-260-01F
Topics in Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01, HIS-260-01, HIS-260-01F
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 112
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION ASI 260-01/01F = HIS 260-01/01F: China's Cultural Revolution In 1966, Mao Zedong declared the start of China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, a political and ideological campaign to mobilize China's youth against traditional institutions of all kinds. What followed were ten years of violence and chaos that left an irrevocable mark on Chinese history. This course will consider the causes and legacies of the Cultural Revolution from multiple perspectives. We will study the experiences of individuals from all walks of society as well as how the event has been remembered in a variety of media. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
HPR 5 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ASI-277-01
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-277-01, SOC-277-01
Asian Studies
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI 277-01 = GEN 277-01 = SOC 277-01: Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary East Asia This course considers a range of themes related to gender and sexuality in China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. While the course will be interdisciplinary by nature, many of the readings and discussions will be rooted in a sociological approach. Potential topics include: marriage, family, femininity, masculinity, fluid gender identities, queer sexualities, sexual practices, family planning, gendered divisions of labor, gender and the state, women's and LGBTQ+ movements, gendered spaces, the commercialization of sex, and media portrayals of gender and sexuality. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
20 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
BIO-111-01
General Biology I
OPEN
Biology
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 104
Co-Requisite: BIO-111L
  • Burton, Patrick
  • Walsh, Heidi
  • Wetzel, Eric
SL 96 70 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
BIO-111L-01
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: BIO-111
  • Wetzel, Eric
20 15 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
BIO-111L-03
General Biol I Lab
OPEN
Biology
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: BIO-111
  • Burton, Patrick
20 12 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
BLS-270-01
Special Topics:lit/Fine Arts
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-370-01, FRE-312-01
Black Studies
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 212
FRE 312-01 = ENG 370-01 = BLS 270-01: African Film This course will study the evolution of African cinema since 1950. Traditionally dominated by the celluloid film, known for its sobering representations of Africa, the African cinematic landscape has recently witnessed the rise of the video film, generally characterized by a more aggrandizing portrayal of local cultures and communities. While analyzing the generic differences between these two types of films, we will also examine their appeal among African and international audiences. Furthermore, we will consider and reflect on the nexus points between African orality especially African myths and legends, and several contemporary issues among which immigration, globalization, gender relations, identity formation and modernity. Our primary resources will be films produced by acclaimed directors hailing from Cameroon, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Morocco, Egypt, Mali, Nigeria, South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo. This course will be offered in English, however French students will submit all writing assignments in French. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Adrien Pouille

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  • Pouille, Adrien
LFA 20 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
BLS-300-01
Special Topics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ENG-497-02
Black Studies
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
ENG 497-02 = BLS 300-01
  • Lake, Tim
15 1 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHE-101-01
Survey of Chemistry
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-101-01F
Chemistry
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 319
Co-Requisite: CHE-101L
CHE 101-01 = CHE 101-01F
  • Schmitt, Paul
  • Teitgen, Alicen
SL 52 51 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHE-101-01F
Survey of Chemistry
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-101-01
Chemistry
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 319
Co-Requisite: CHE-101L
CHE 101-01 = CHE 101-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Schmitt, Paul
  • Teitgen, Alicen
SL 8 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHE-101L-03
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-101L-03F
Chemistry
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-101
CHE 101L-03 = CHE 101L-03F
  • Schmitt, Paul
17 16 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-101L-03F
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-101L-03
Chemistry
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-101
CHE 101L-03 = CHE 101L-03F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Schmitt, Paul
3 1 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-111-01
General Chemistry I
OPEN
Chemistry
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 002
Co-Requisite: CHE-111L
CHE 111-01 = CHE 111-01F
  • Porter, Lon
  • Novak, Wally
  • Taylor, Ann
SL 25 24 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHE-111-02
General Chemistry I
OPEN
Chemistry
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 104
Co-Requisite: CHE-111L
CHE 111-01 = CHE 111-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Porter, Lon
  • Novak, Wally
  • Taylor, Ann
SL 40 29 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHE-111L-01
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-111L-01F
Chemistry
08/28/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-111
CHE 111L-01 = CHE 111L-01F
  • Taylor, Ann
8 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-111L-01F
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-111L-01
Chemistry
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-111
CHE 111L-01 = CHE 111L-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Taylor, Ann
12 10 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-111L-02F
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-111L-02
Chemistry
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-111
CHE 111L-02 = CHE 111L-02F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Porter, Lon
12 8 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-111L-03F
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
CHE-111L-03
Chemistry
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-111
CHE 111L-03 = CHE 111L-03F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Novak, Wally
12 7 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-111L-04
General Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 11:00AM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: CHE-111
  • Taylor, Ann
10 8 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHE-171-01
Special Topics
OPEN
Chemistry
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Friday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
  • Novak, Wally
15 1 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
CHI-101-01
Elementary Chinese I
OPEN
Chinese
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-Requisite: CHI-101L
  • Li, Yao
WL 15 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CHI-101L-02
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
Chinese
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-Requisite: CHI-101
  • Staff
5 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHI-101L-03
Elementary Chinese I Lab
OPEN
Chinese
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Laboratory Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 112
Co-Requisite: CHI-101
  • Staff
5 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CHI-311L-01
Studies in Chinese Lang Lab
OPEN
Chinese
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Days to be Announced, Times to be AnnouncedDetchon, Room 220
Take CHI-311.
  • Li, Yao
18 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
CLA-105-01
Ancient Greece
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-211-01, HIS-310-01
Classics
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Hays Science, Room 319
CLA 105-01 = HIS 211-01 CLA 105-01 = HIS 310-01
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
LFA, HPR 50 33 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
CLA-211-01
Special Topics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ENG-270-02
Classics
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 220
CLA 211-01 = ENG 270-02: Virgil's Aeneid This class will be an intensive literary and historical study of Virgil's epic the Aeneid, which after the Bible has been the most consistently influential book in the western canon. The poem will be read in translation, but the class is also intended for students of Latin who have not been able to read extensively in the original text. We will examine the literary traditions in which the Aeneid stands, Virgil's very particular aesthetic orientation, and the historical and cultural developments in Rome that influenced the composition of the poem. Explication of the text itself will be the main focus of the course, but there will also be readings from modern scholars representing different interpretative approaches. Finally, we will take up the question of the Aeneid's influence in later European literature, and will read the Inferno of Dante's Divina Commedia entire. Prerequisite: One CLA credit Credits: 1 Instructor: David Kubiak

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  • Kubiak, David
LFA 14 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
CLA-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-240-01
Classics
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
CLA 240-01 = PHI 240-01
  • Trott, Adriel
LFA, HPR 30 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
DV3-252-01
Stats Soc Sciences
OPEN
Division III
08/24/2018-10/10/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
  • Byun, Christie
30 23 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
DV3-252-02
Stats Soc Sciences
OPEN
Division III
10/15/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
  • Byun, Christie
30 19 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
ECO-101-01
Princ of Economics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-101-01F
Economics
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Hays Science, Room 002
ECO 101-01 = ECO 101-01F
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 20 19 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ECO-101-02
Princ of Economics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-101-02F
Economics
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
ECO 101-02 = ECO 101-02F
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 20 19 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ECO-101-02F
Princ of Economics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-101-02
Economics
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
ECO 101-02 = ECO 101-02F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 5 4 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ECO-101-03
Princ of Economics
OPEN
Economics
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 25 22 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
EDU-203-01
YA Development
OPEN
Education
08/23/2018-10/09/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Detchon, Room 111
  • Pittard, Michele
10 8 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
EDU-230-01
Special Topics in Education
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-270-01
Education
10/17/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
EDU 230-01 = ENG 270-01: Young Adult Literature According to Time Magazine, "We're living in a golden age of young adult literature." So, what influence do such popular characters as J. K. Rowling's, Harry Potter and John Green's, Hazel Grace Lancaster have on the development of young adolescents as people and as life-long readers? This course offers an introduction to young adult literature, with a focus on adolescent development and literacy. Critical literacy skills are taught and practiced as students read and analyze a variety of subgenres within YA literature (e.g., fantasy, historical fiction, and contemporary fiction). Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Michele Pittard

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  • Pittard, Michele
10 8 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
EDU-370-01
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-240-01
Education
08/27/2018-10/10/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 220
EDU 370-01 = HIS 240-01: Social Studies Education for Democratic Citizenship This course takes a "difficult questions" approach to explore the ways in which social studies education in the U.S. must grapple with complex historic content--and sometimes fails to do so adequately. Topics explored include: history curriculum related to immigrant history, slavery, and indigenous peoples; geography approaches such as critical geography to focus upon power relationships; and instruction in U.S. government and economy including the history and nature of social contract, separation of powers, and individual rights and freedoms. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (First Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Deborah Seltzer-Kelly

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
10 4 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
EDU-370-02
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-240-02
Education
10/15/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 220
EDU 370-02 = HIS 240-02: Science Education for Democratic Citizenship This course explores the history and dilemmas of U.S. educational approaches to science literacy during the 20th and early 21st centuries. Topics include: constructions of the nature of scientific method; recurring dilemmas such as evolution and global warming; and ways in which notions of science literacy itself are understood and discussed in governmental and educational policy and institutions. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Deborah Seltzer-Kelly

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
10 2 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
ENG-101-02
Composition
OPEN
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 305
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
15 14 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-101-03
Composition
OPEN
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 305
  • Benedicks, Crystal
15 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-101-05
Composition
OPEN
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
  • Aikens, Natalie
15 10 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-105-01
Intro to Poetry
OPEN
English
08/24/2018-10/10/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 300
  • Aikens, Natalie
LFA 20 10 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
ENG-106-01
Intro. to Short Fiction
OPEN
English
10/15/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 300
  • Aikens, Natalie
LFA 20 14 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
ENG-108-01
History and Novel
OPEN
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Hays Science, Room 002
  • Lambert, Matthew
LFA 30 4 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-110-01
Intro. to Creative Writing
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-110-01F
English
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
ENG 110-01 = ENG 110-01F
  • Freeze, Eric
LS 25 24 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-110-01F
Intro. to Creative Writing
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-110-01
English
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
ENG 110-01 = ENG 110-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Freeze, Eric
LS 10 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-180-01
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-270-01
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
ENG 180-01 = GEN 270-01: Extraordinary Bodies in Literature and Film We will study literary and filmic representations of bodies that exceed, fall short of, confound, or otherwise problematize "normal" selves. This includes representations of athletes, disabled people, superheroes, pregnant or nursing people, transgender or intersex people, and monsters/mythic creatures of all varieties. All levels of experience welcome. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Crystal Benedicks

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  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 30 17 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-202-02
Writing With Power and Grace
OPEN
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Aikens, Natalie
LS 6 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-202-02F
Writing With Power and Grace
OPEN
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Aikens, Natalie
LS 9 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-219-01
Amer Lit before 1900
OPEN
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Mong, Derek
LFA 30 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-270-01
Special Topics: Lit/Fine Arts
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-230-01
English
10/17/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
EDU 230-01 = ENG 270-01: Young Adult Literature According to Time Magazine, "We're living in a golden age of young adult literature." So, what influence do such popular characters as J. K. Rowling's, Harry Potter; Sherman Alexie's, Arnold Spirit; and John Green's, Hazel Grace Lancaster have on the development of young adolescents as people and as life-long readers? This course offers an introduction to young adult literature, with a focus on adolescent development and literacy. Critical literacy skills are taught and practiced as students read and analyze a variety of subgenres within YA literature (e.g., fantasy, historical fiction, and contemporary fiction). Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Michele Pittard

[show more]

  • Pittard, Michele
LFA 10 1 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
ENG-270-02
Special Topics: Lit/Fine Arts
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-211-01
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 220
CLA 211-01 = ENG 270-02: Virgil's Aeneid This class will be an intensive literary and historical study of Virgil's epic the Aeneid, which after the Bible has been the most consistently influential book in the western canon. The poem will be read in translation, but the class is also intended for students of Latin who have not been able to read extensively in the original text. We will examine the literary traditions in which the Aeneid stands, Virgil's very particular aesthetic orientation, and the historical and cultural developments in Rome that influenced the composition of the poem. Explication of the text itself will be the main focus of the course, but there will also be readings from modern scholars representing different interpretative approaches. Finally, we will take up the question of the Aeneid's influence in later European literature, and will read the Inferno of Dante's Divina Commedia entire. Prerequisite: One CLA credit Credits: 1 Instructor: David Kubiak

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  • Kubiak, David
LFA 3 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-297-01
Intro to the Study of Lit
OPEN
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
LFA 30 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-310-01
Studies in Literary Genres
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01F, THE-212-01, THE-212-01F
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
THE 212-01/01F = ENG 310-01/01F: The Revolutionary Stage NOTE: This class was formerly called "History and Literature of the Theatre II: The French Renaissance to the Rise of Realism" This class will delve into the history of the theatre and its various dramatic literatures in Europe between the years 1660-1900. The course ranges from the witty banterings of Molière and Behn to the realism of Ibsen and Strindberg to the apocalyptic trance of Alfred Jarry. We will discuss the "new woman," the rise of industrialism and cosmopolitanism, and a society shifting under the influence and pressure of the purveyors of new modes of thought-Hegel, Darwin, Nietzsche, Zola. This is a class about the coming of the "new," revolution and counterrevolution, the calms and the storms. The plays in this course will be discussed as instruments for theatrical production; as examples of dramatic structure, style, and genre; and, most importantly, as they reflect the moral, social, and political issues of their time. This course is appropriate for freshmen. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Cherry

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  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 12 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
ENG-310-01F
Studies in Literary Genres
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01, THE-212-01, THE-212-01F
English
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION THE 212-01/01F = ENG 310-01/01F: The Revolutionary Stage NOTE: This class was formerly called "History and Literature of the Theatre II: The French Renaissance to the Rise of Realism" This class will delve into the history of the theatre and its various dramatic literatures in Europe between the years 1660-1900. The course ranges from the witty banterings of Molière and Behn to the realism of Ibsen and Strindberg to the apocalyptic trance of Alfred Jarry. We will discuss the "new woman," the rise of industrialism and cosmopolitanism, and a society shifting under the influence and pressure of the purveyors of new modes of thought-Hegel, Darwin, Nietzsche, Zola. This is a class about the coming of the "new," revolution and counterrevolution, the calms and the storms. The plays in this course will be discussed as instruments for theatrical production; as examples of dramatic structure, style, and genre; and, most importantly, as they reflect the moral, social, and political issues of their time. This course is appropriate for freshmen. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Cherry

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  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 3 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
FRE-101-01
Elementary French I
OPEN
French
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-requisite: FRE-101L
  • Quandt, Karen
18 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
FRE-101L-02
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
08/27/2018-12/10/2018 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-requisite: FRE-101
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
FRE-101L-03
Elementary French 1 Lab
OPEN
French
08/28/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-requisite: FRE-101
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
FRE-201L-01
Intermediate French Lab.
OPEN
French
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-requisite: FRE-201
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
FRE-201L-02
Intermediate French Lab.
OPEN
French
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-requisite: FRE-201
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
FRE-201L-03
Intermediate French Lab.
OPEN
French
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Laboratory Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 111
Co-requisite: FRE-201
  • Staff
6 3 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
FRE-312-01
Studies in French Culture
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01, ENG-370-01
French
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 212
FRE 312-01 = ENG 370-01 = BLS 270-01: African Film This course will study the evolution of African cinema since 1950. Traditionally dominated by the celluloid film, known for its sobering representations of Africa, the African cinematic landscape has recently witnessed the rise of the video film, generally characterized by a more aggrandizing portrayal of local cultures and communities. While analyzing the generic differences between these two types of films, we will also examine their appeal among African and international audiences. Furthermore, we will consider and reflect on the nexus points between African orality especially African myths and legends, and several contemporary issues among which immigration, globalization, gender relations, identity formation and modernity. Our primary resources will be films produced by acclaimed directors hailing from Cameroon, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Morocco, Egypt, Mali, Nigeria, South Africa and the Democratic Republic of Congo. This course will be offered in English, however French students will submit all writing assignments in French. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Adrien Pouille

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  • Pouille, Adrien
LFA 20 3 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-105-01
Fatherhood
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PSY-105-01
Gender Studies
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
PSY 105-01 = GEN 105-01
  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 40 16 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-200-01
Topics Ethics & Social Phi
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-200-01F, PHI-109-01, PHI-109-01F
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
PHI 109-01/01F = GEN 200-01/01F: Philosophical Perspectives: Nature We refer to nature to make claims about the world, what is and what should be. Nature is used to justify the social order by identifying essences that prescribe roles. It is used to legitimate social hierarchy by dividing the world between what is closer to nature and what overcomes or surpasses nature. Nature is used to distinguish between good and natural actions and bad and unnatural ones. What is more closely associated with nature and material is considered that which culture uses to achieve its ends. This course will examine the philosophical positions behind these claims and critiques of these positions. The course will take up the example of gender at various places across the semester to think about the implications of various conceptions of nature in the history of philosophy. This course is NOT open to Junior and Senior PHI Majors. Prerequisite: None Credit: 1 Instructor: Adriel Trott

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  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 10 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-200-01F
Topics Ethics & Social Phi
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-200-01, PHI-109-01, PHI-109-01F
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION PHI 109-01/01F = GEN 200-01/01F: Philosophical Perspectives: Nature We refer to nature to make claims about the world, what is and what should be. Nature is used to justify the social order by identifying essences that prescribe roles. It is used to legitimate social hierarchy by dividing the world between what is closer to nature and what overcomes or surpasses nature. Nature is used to distinguish between good and natural actions and bad and unnatural ones. What is more closely associated with nature and material is considered that which culture uses to achieve its ends. This course will examine the philosophical positions behind these claims and critiques of these positions. The course will take up the example of gender at various places across the semester to think about the implications of various conceptions of nature in the history of philosophy. This course is NOT open to Junior and Senior PHI Majors. Prerequisite: None Credit: 1 Instructor: Adriel Trott

[show more]

  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 8 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-209-01
Special Topics: Behavioral Sci
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-210-01
Psychology
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSY 210-01 = GEN 209-01: Psychology of Sex and Gender What are the differences between men and women? Why do we tend to emphasize the differences rather than the many similarities? In this course, we will review psychological theory and empirical findings regarding common beliefs about gender, the impact of biological sex on behavior, the role of cultural forces on the construction of gender, the relationship of gender to traditional issues in psychology (e.g., moral development, personality, interpersonal relationships), and special issues pertinent to gender (e.g., gender violence). This course is designed to equip students to critically analyze the evidence for sex differences and similarities, gender roles, and the effect of gender on traditional issues in psychology. Prerequisites PSY 101 or PSY/GEN 105 Credits: 1 Instructor: Eric Olofson

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  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 20 3 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-270-01
Special Topics: Lit/Fine Arts
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-180-01
English
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
ENG 180-01 = GEN 270-01: Extraordinary Bodies in Literature and Film We will study literary and filmic representations of bodies that exceed, fall short of, confound, or otherwise problematize "normal" selves. This includes representations of athletes, disabled people, superheroes, pregnant or nursing people, transgender or intersex people, and monsters/mythic creatures of all varieties. All levels of experience welcome. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Crystal Benedicks

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  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 30 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GEN-277-01
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-277-01, SOC-277-01
Gender Studies
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI 277-01 = GEN 277-01 = SOC 277-01: Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary East Asia This course considers a range of themes related to gender and sexuality in China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. While the course will be interdisciplinary by nature, many of the readings and discussions will be rooted in a sociological approach. Potential topics include: marriage, family, femininity, masculinity, fluid gender identities, queer sexualities, sexual practices, family planning, gendered divisions of labor, gender and the state, women's and LGBTQ+ movements, gendered spaces, the commercialization of sex, and media portrayals of gender and sexuality. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
20 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GER-101-01
Elementary German I
OPEN
German
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 111
Co-requisite: GER-101L
  • Smith, Alexis
18 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GER-101-02
Elementary German I
OPEN
German
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
Co-requisite: GER-101L
  • Redding, Greg
18 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GER-101L-01
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
09/11/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 08:25AM - 09:10AM, Detchon, Room 212
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-02
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
09/11/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 09:20AM - 10:05AM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-03
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
09/12/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 212
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-05
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 109
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-06
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-07
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/15/2018
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-101L-08
Elementary German I Lab
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 109
Co-requisite: GER-101
  • Staff
6 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-201L-01
Intermediate German Lab.
OPEN
German
09/11/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 10:15AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-requisite: GER-201
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-201L-02
Intermediate German Lab.
OPEN
German
09/06/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 08:45AM - 09:35AM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-requisite: GER-201
  • Staff
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-201L-04
Intermediate German Lab.
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-requisite: GER-201
  • Staff
6 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GER-201L-05
Intermediate German Lab.
OPEN
German
08/23/2018-12/15/2018
Co-requisite: GER-201
  • Staff
4 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
GRK-101-01
Beginning Greek I
OPEN
Greek
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
Co-requisite: GRK-101L
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
17 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
GRK-101L-01
Elementary Greek
OPEN
Greek
08/23/2018-12/15/2018
Co-requisite: GRK-101
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
17 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
HIS-101-01F
World History to 1500
OPEN
History
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Warner, Rick
35 29 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-200-01
Topics World Comp History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-01F
History
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
HIS 200-01/01F: A History of the End of the World How will the world end? When will the world end? Will the world end at all? While many recall the May 21, 2011 "deadline" of Harold Camping's Family Radio caravans and the "ending" of the Mayan calendar in December 2012, these questions have provoked the human imagination for millennia. This course will study the history of how these questions have been posed and answered from Jewish and Christian communities in the ancient Mediterranean world to Christians in medieval Europe to contemporary America. Using the lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these apocalyptic ideologies have been shaped by historical events and how subgroups have interacted with, and often changed, society. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Robert Royalty

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  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 20 14 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-200-01F
Topics World Comp History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-200-01
History
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION HIS 200-01/01F: A History of the End of the World How will the world end? When will the world end? Will the world end at all? While many recall the May 21, 2011 "deadline" of Harold Camping's Family Radio caravans and the "ending" of the Mayan calendar in December 2012, these questions have provoked the human imagination for millennia. This course will study the history of how these questions have been posed and answered from Jewish and Christian communities in the ancient Mediterranean world to Christians in medieval Europe to contemporary America. Using the lenses of social and cultural history, we will examine how these apocalyptic ideologies have been shaped by historical events and how subgroups have interacted with, and often changed, society. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Robert Royalty

[show more]

  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 5 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-211-01
Ancient Hist:Greece
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-105-01, HIS-310-01
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Hays Science, Room 319
CLA 105-01 = HIS 211-01
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
HPR, LFA 50 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-220-01
Topics Med & Early Mod Europe
CLOSED
cross-listed with
MUS-205-01
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
MUS 205-01 = HIS 220-01
  • Ables, Mollie
HPR 8 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-240-01
Topics in American History
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-370-01
History
08/27/2018-10/10/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 220
EDU 370-01 = HIS 240-01: Social Studies Education for Democratic Citizenship This course takes a "difficult questions" approach to explore the ways in which social studies education in the U.S. must grapple with complex historic content--and sometimes fails to do so adequately. Topics explored include: history curriculum related to immigrant history, slavery, and indigenous peoples; geography approaches such as critical geography to focus upon power relationships; and instruction in U.S. government and economy including the history and nature of social contract, separation of powers, and individual rights and freedoms. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (First Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Deborah Seltzer-Kelly

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
HPR 10 4 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
HIS-240-02
Topics in American History
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-370-02
History
10/17/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 220
EDU 370-02 = HIS 240-02: Science Education for Democratic Citizenship This course explores the history and dilemmas of U.S. educational approaches to science literacy during the 20th and early 21st centuries. Topics include: constructions of the nature of scientific method; recurring dilemmas such as evolution and global warming; and ways in which notions of science literacy itself are understood and discussed in governmental and educational policy and institutions. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: Deborah Seltzer-Kelly

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  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
HPR 10 3 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
HIS-241-01
United States to 1865
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-241-01F
History
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
  • Thomas, Sabrina
HPR, HPR 20 18 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-260-01
Topics Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01, ASI-260-01F, HIS-260-01F
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 112
ASI 260-01/01F = HIS 260-01/01F: China's Cultural Revolution In 1966, Mao Zedong declared the start of China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, a political and ideological campaign to mobilize China's youth against traditional institutions of all kinds. What followed were ten years of violence and chaos that left an irrevocable mark on Chinese history. This course will consider the causes and legacies of the Cultural Revolution from multiple perspectives. We will study the experiences of individuals from all walks of society as well as how the event has been remembered in a variety of media. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
HPR 15 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-260-01F
Topics Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01, ASI-260-01F, HIS-260-01
History
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 112
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION ASI 260-01/01F = HIS 260-01/01F: China's Cultural Revolution In 1966, Mao Zedong declared the start of China's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, a political and ideological campaign to mobilize China's youth against traditional institutions of all kinds. What followed were ten years of violence and chaos that left an irrevocable mark on Chinese history. This course will consider the causes and legacies of the Cultural Revolution from multiple perspectives. We will study the experiences of individuals from all walks of society as well as how the event has been remembered in a variety of media. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

[show more]

  • Healey, Cara
HPR 5 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-260-02
Topics Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-260-02F
History
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
HIS 260-02/02F: China, 400 BCE-400 CE This course surveys the Warring States Era and the early Chinese Dynasties - Qin, Han, and the Han's immediate successors, constituting the "classical" period of Chinese history. While encompassing a broad range of topics including economic, social and cultural aspects of Chinese life in this era, the focus will be on the political development of the Chinese state, including its philosophical foundations and the evolution of its administrative and military mechanisms. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Stephen Morillo

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  • Morillo, Steve
HPR 20 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HIS-260-02F
Topics Asian History
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-260-02
History
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION HIS 260-02/02F: China, 400 BCE-400 CE This course surveys the Warring States Era and the early Chinese Dynasties - Qin, Han, and the Han's immediate successors, constituting the "classical" period of Chinese history. While encompassing a broad range of topics including economic, social and cultural aspects of Chinese life in this era, the focus will be on the political development of the Chinese state, including its philosophical foundations and the evolution of its administrative and military mechanisms. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Stephen Morillo

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  • Morillo, Steve
HPR 5 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
HUM-196-01
Religion & Lit
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-196-01, REL-196-01
Humanities
10/16/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
REL 196-01 = ASI 196-01 = HUM 196-01: Religion and Literature: "Old Pond-Frog Jumps In": Religion in Japanese Literature "Old pond-frog jumps in-sound of water." So runs the famous haiku by Basho. Is it religious? For the Japanese, yes. In Japan religion and art are arguably the same thing. In this course we'll ask how and why. We'll study Japanese ideas about art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"), and how they appear in Japanese literature. We'll read selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku), No drama, novels both classic and modern (e.g. The Tale of Genji, Kawabata), and some short stories. For first half-semester at 9:45 TTh, see REL 275-01. Prerequisite: None Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: David Blix

[show more]

  • Blix, David
LFA, HPR 20 4 / -- / 0 0.50
18/FA
HUM-295-01
Religion and the Arts
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-210-02, REL-295-01
Religion
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 305
REL 295-01 = ART 210-02 = HUM 295-01: Religion and Representations of the Holocaust This course explores a variety of representations of the Holocaust in theology, literature, film, and art. This interdisciplinary course examines the creative and material work of historians, theologians, novelists, poets, graphic novelists, painters, film makers, composers, photographers, and museum architects. The course explores the limits and possibilities of representing atrocity by raising such questions as: Can suffering be represented? What do representations of the Jewish genocide convey to 21st century citizens and subsequent generations of Jews and Christians? Is it barbaric to write poetry and fiction, paint or compose music, film documentaries and TV comedies, draw cartoons and graphic novels, publish photographs or erect monuments about such horrific events? How does visual media facilitate the raising of profound moral and religious questions about the Holocaust and our responses to it? Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Gary Phillips

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  • Phillips, Gary
HPR, LFA 20 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
LAT-101-01
Beginning Latin I
OPEN
Latin
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
Co-Requisite: LAT-101L
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
20 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
LAT-101L-01
Beginning Latin
OPEN
Latin
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Detchon, Room 212
Co-Requisite: LAT-101
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
9 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
LAT-101L-02
Beginning Latin
OPEN
Latin
09/06/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 212
Co-Requisite: LAT-101
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
11 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
MAS-102-01
World Music
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-102-01
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
MUS 102-01 = MAS 102-01
  • Makubuya, James
LFA 20 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MAT-010-01
Pre-Calc. With Intro to Calc.
OPEN
Math
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisite: MAT-010 placement
  • Cole, Joshua
30 29 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MAT-111-01
Calculus I
OPEN
Math
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
  • Gates, Zachary
35 27 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MAT-111-02
Calculus I
OPEN
Math
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
  • Ansaldi, Katie
35 33 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MAT-111-03
Calculus I
OPEN
Math
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
  • Cole, Joshua
24 23 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-101-01
Music in Society: A History
OPEN
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
  • Ables, Mollie
LFA 25 9 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-101-02
Music in Society: A History
OPEN
Music
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
  • Spencer, Reed
LFA 25 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-102-01
World Music
OPEN
cross-listed with
MAS-102-01
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
MUS 102-01 = MAS 102-01
  • Makubuya, James
LFA 20 8 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-107-01
Basic Theory and Notation
OPEN
Music
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M140
  • Renk, Christopher
LFA 20 9 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-151-01
Brass Ensemble
OPEN
Music
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Lecture Wednesday 07:00PM - 08:30PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Downey, Chad
LFA 0 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
MUS-152-01
Chamber Orchestra
OPEN
Music
08/27/2018-12/10/2018 Lecture Monday 04:15PM - 05:30PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Abel, Alfred
LFA 0 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
MUS-153-01
Glee Club
OPEN
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Monday, Thursday 07:00PM - 09:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Spencer, Reed
LFA 0 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
MUS-155-01
Jazz Ensemble
OPEN
Music
08/28/2018-12/11/2018 Lecture Tuesday 07:00PM - 09:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Pazera, Christopher
LFA 0 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
MUS-156-01
Wamidan World Music Ensemble
OPEN
Music
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Wednesday, Friday 05:00PM - 06:30PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Makubuya, James
LFA 0 / 0 / 0 0.50
18/FA
MUS-204-01
Special Topics in Music
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-204-01
Music
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
MUS 204-01 = ASI 204-01: Music in East Asian Cultures This is an introductory survey of the music, musical instruments, and their contextual significance in the societies of China, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, and Pakistan. Beyond the instruments and their roles in producing musical sound, this course will examine the significant ceremonies, rites, and rituals enhanced by the music, as a forum for learning about the cultures of these countries. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Makubuya

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  • Makubuya, James
LFA 2 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-205-01
European Music Before 1750
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-220-01
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
MUS 205-01 = HIS 220-01
  • Ables, Mollie
LFA 3 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-221-01
Intro to Electronic Music
OPEN
Music
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M140
  • Renk, Christopher
LFA 20 4 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
MUS-287-01
Independent Study
OPEN
Music
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Independent Days to be Announced, Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
  • Makubuya, James
LFA 2 / 0 / 0 0.50-1.00
18/FA
PE-011-01
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
08/24/2018-10/10/2018 Fieldwork Monday, Wednesday, Friday 06:00AM - 07:15AM, Room to be Announced
  • Brumett, Kyle
17 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PE-011-02
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
10/17/2018-12/14/2018 Fieldwork Monday, Wednesday, Friday 06:30AM - 07:30AM, Room to be Announced
  • Martin, Jake
12 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PE-011-03
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
10/17/2018-12/14/2018 Fieldwork Monday, Wednesday, Friday 07:30AM - 08:30AM, Room to be Announced
  • Martin, Jake
11 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHI-109-01
Perspectives on Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-200-01, GEN-200-01F, PHI-109-01F
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
PHI 109-01/01F = GEN 200-01/01F: Philosophical Perspectives: Nature We refer to nature to make claims about the world, what is and what should be. Nature is used to justify the social order by identifying essences that prescribe roles. It is used to legitimate social hierarchy by dividing the world between what is closer to nature and what overcomes or surpasses nature. Nature is used to distinguish between good and natural actions and bad and unnatural ones. What is more closely associated with nature and material is considered that which culture uses to achieve its ends. This course will examine the philosophical positions behind these claims and critiques of these positions. The course will take up the example of gender at various places across the semester to think about the implications of various conceptions of nature in the history of philosophy. This course is NOT open to Junior and Senior PHI Majors. Prerequisite: None Credit: 1 Instructor: Adriel Trott

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  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 10 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-109-01F
Perspectives on Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-200-01, GEN-200-01F, PHI-109-01
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION PHI 109-01/01F = GEN 200-01/01F: Philosophical Perspectives: Nature We refer to nature to make claims about the world, what is and what should be. Nature is used to justify the social order by identifying essences that prescribe roles. It is used to legitimate social hierarchy by dividing the world between what is closer to nature and what overcomes or surpasses nature. Nature is used to distinguish between good and natural actions and bad and unnatural ones. What is more closely associated with nature and material is considered that which culture uses to achieve its ends. This course will examine the philosophical positions behind these claims and critiques of these positions. The course will take up the example of gender at various places across the semester to think about the implications of various conceptions of nature in the history of philosophy. This course is NOT open to Junior and Senior PHI Majors. Prerequisite: None Credit: 1 Instructor: Adriel Trott

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  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 8 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-110-01F
Philosophical Ethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-110-01
Philosophy
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 215
PHI 110-01 = PHI 110-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Hughes, Cheryl
HPR 15 11 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-124-01
Philosophy and Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-124-01F
Philosophy
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 216 (more)...
PHI 124-01 = PHI 124-01F
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR, LFA 17 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-124-01F
Philosophy and Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-124-01
Philosophy
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 216 (more)...
PHI 124-01 = PHI 124-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR, LFA 8 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-213-01
Philosophy of Law
OPEN
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Center Hall, Room 300
  • Hughes, Cheryl
HPR 18 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-240-01
Ancient Philosophy
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-240-01
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
PHI 240-01 = CLA 240-01
  • Trott, Adriel
HPR, LFA 30 23 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-269-01
Topics Metaphys Epistemology
OPEN
Philosophy
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 310
PHI 269-01: Topics in Metaphysics and Epistemology: Knowledge and Skepticism Here are some things that I take myself to know. I am currently awake, and not merely dreaming. The universe is billions of years old, and did not come into existence five minutes ago. I have hands. Antarctica is a continent, but the Arctic is not. There are 238 Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives. The sun will rise tomorrow. But how do I know those things? This question is made particularly pressing by the existence of philosophical skepticism, according to which it is impossible for us to know what the world around us is actually like. Despite skepticism's absurd appearance, in this course we will study how it arises directly out of our ordinary practices of ascribing knowledge to others and pursuing it ourselves. In light of this, we will study classic and contemporary works in epistemology to help us to explore how philosophical skepticism forces us to reconsider what our knowledge is, and how it is possible for us to have it. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Matthew Carlson

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  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 18 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHI-270-01
Elem Symbolic Logic
OPEN
Philosophy
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 216
  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 35 25 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHY-109-01
Motion and Waves
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-109-01F
Physics
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
Co-Requisite: PHY-109L
PHY 109-01 = PHY 109-01F
  • Ross, Gaylon
SL 20 17 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHY-109-01F
Motion and Waves
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-109-01
Physics
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
Co-Requisite: PHY-109L
PHY 109-01 = PHY 109-01F
  • Ross, Gaylon
SL 2 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PHY-109L-01
Motion and Waves Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-109L-01F
Physics
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-109
PHY 109L-01 = PHY 109L-01F
  • Ross, Gaylon
20 17 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHY-109L-01F
Motion and Waves Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-109L-01
Physics
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-109
PHY 109L-01 = PHY 109L-01F
  • Ross, Gaylon
2 0 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHY-111L-01
General Physics Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-111L-01F
Physics
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-111
PHY 111L-01 = PHY 111L-01F
  • Brown, Jim
15 7 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHY-111L-01F
General Physics Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-111L-01
Physics
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-111
PHY 111L-01 = PHY 111L-01F
  • Brown, Jim
6 3 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHY-111L-02
General Physics Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-111L-02F
Physics
08/28/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-111
PHY 111L-02 = PHY 111L-02F
  • Ross, Gaylon
15 11 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PHY-111L-02F
General Physics Lab
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHY-111L-02
Physics
08/28/2018-12/11/2018 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Room to be Announced
Co-Requisite: PHY-111
PHY 111L-02 = PHY 111L-02F
  • Ross, Gaylon
6 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
PSC-121-01
Intro to Comparative Politics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PSC-121-01F
Political Science
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 109
PSC 121-01 = PSC 121-01F
  • Hollander, Ethan
BSC 22 21 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSC-210-01
Int Topics American Politics
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-240-01
Political Science
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 112
EDU 240-01 = PSC 210-01
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
BSC 18 3 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSC-210-02
Int Topics American Politics
OPEN
Political Science
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
This course will examine the fundamental features of congressional elections and use them to analyze the 2018 midterms in real time. How does incumbency help members of Congress win re-election? Does spending more money really give candidates a better chance of winning? What is the profile of a person who decides to run for Congress in the first place? These are the types of questions you will be able to answer at the end of the semester. The 'permanent campaign' that emanates from Capitol Hill is of intrigue as the midterm elections are rapidly approaching. Students will be able to apply what we have learned to what they see in the news during the run up to Election Day in November.

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  • Masthay, Theodore
BSC 15 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSC-313-01
Constitutional Law
OPEN
Political Science
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
  • Himsel, Scott
BSC 20 18 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSY-101-01F
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Horton, Bobby
40 27 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSY-101-02
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
BSC 40 29 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSY-105-01
Fatherhood
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GEN-105-01
Psychology
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
PSY 105-01 = GEN 105-01
  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 40 24 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
PSY-210-01
Intermediate Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-209-01
Psychology
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSY 210-01 = GEN 209-01: Psychology of Sex and Gender What are the differences between men and women? Why do we tend to emphasize the differences rather than the many similarities? In this course, we will review psychological theory and empirical findings regarding common beliefs about gender, the impact of biological sex on behavior, the role of cultural forces on the construction of gender, the relationship of gender to traditional issues in psychology (e.g., moral development, personality, interpersonal relationships), and special issues pertinent to gender (e.g., gender violence). This course is designed to equip students to critically analyze the evidence for sex differences and similarities, gender roles, and the effect of gender on traditional issues in psychology. Prerequisites PSY 101 or PSY/GEN 105 Credits: 1 Instructor: Eric Olofson

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  • Olofson, Eric
BSC 20 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-141-01
Hebrew Bible/Old Testament
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-141-01F
Religion
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
REL 141-01 = REL 141-01F
  • Phillips, Gary
HPR 20 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-171-01
History Christianity to Reform
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-171-01F
Religion
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
REL 171-01 = REL 171-01F
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 40 36 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-171-01F
History Christianity to Reform
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-171-01
Religion
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
REL 171-01 = REL 171-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 10 8 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-181-01
Religion in America
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-181-01F
Religion
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
REL 181-01 = REL 181-01F
  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 35 14 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-181-01F
Religion in America
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-181-01
Religion
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
REL 181-01 = REL 181-01F FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION
  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 15 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-196-01
Religion & Literature
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-196-01, HUM-196-01
Religion
10/16/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
REL 196-01 = ASI 196-01 = HUM 196-01: Religion and Literature: "Old Pond--Frog Jumps In": Religion in Japanese Literature. "Old pond--frog jumps in--sound of water." So runs the famous haiku by Basho. Is it religious? For the Japanese, yes. In Japan religion and art are arguably the same thing. In this course we'll ask how and why. We'll study Japanese ideas about art and religion (e.g. emptiness, solitude, "sublime beauty"), and how they appear in Japanese literature. We'll read selections from Japanese poetry (including haiku), No drama, novels both classic and modern (e.g. The Tale of Genji, Kawabata), and some short stories. For first half-semester at 9:45 TTh, see REL 275-01. Prerequisite: None. Credits: 0.5 (Second Half-Semester Course) Instructor: David Blix

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  • Blix, David
HPR, LFA 20 18 / -- / 0 0.50
18/FA
REL-270-01
Theological Ethics
OPEN
Religion
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 305
  • Bowen, Steve
HPR 20 9 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-295-01
Religion and the Arts
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-210-02, HUM-295-01
Religion
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 305
REL 295-01 = ART 210-02 = HUM 295-01: Religion and Representations of the Holocaust This course explores a variety of representations of the Holocaust in theology, literature, film, and art. This interdisciplinary course examines the creative and material work of historians, theologians, novelists, poets, graphic novelists, painters, film makers, composers, photographers, and museum architects. The course explores the limits and possibilities of representing atrocity by raising such questions as: Can suffering be represented? What do representations of the Jewish genocide convey to 21st century citizens and subsequent generations of Jews and Christians? Is it barbaric to write poetry and fiction, paint or compose music, film documentaries and TV comedies, draw cartoons and graphic novels, publish photographs or erect monuments about such horrific events? How does visual media facilitate the raising of profound moral and religious questions about the Holocaust and our responses to it? Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Gary Phillips

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  • Phillips, Gary
HPR 20 11 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-297-01
Anthropology of Religion
OPEN
Religion
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
REL 297-01: Anthropology of Religion A seminar examining the various ways anthropology describes and interprets religious phenomena. We will study anthropological theories of religion, and focus on how these theories apply to specific religions in diverse contexts. We will pay particular attention to the social and symbolic functions of beliefs and rituals and to the religious importance of myths, symbols, and cosmology. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Jonathan Baer

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  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 15 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
REL-373-01
Seminar in Theology
OPEN
Religion
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Center Hall, Room 304
REL 373-01: God, Guns and Jail: Theology and Criminal Justice This course examines the present state of the American criminal justice system and interprets it from the point of view of Christian theological commitments. The history of the prison, or as it sometimes called, a "penitentiary," relies on theological notions of penance and penitence. Our understanding of what "justice" means draws heavily on theological understandings of punishment, right and wrong, and atonement. Topics to be considered include violent crime and gun culture, for-profit and faith-based prisons, institutional racism, the purpose and rationale for punishment, the meaning of "redemption," and whether "sin" and "evil" are individual, structural, or both. Prerequisite: One REL Credit Credits: 1 Instructor: Derek Nelson

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  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 20 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
RHE-101-03
Public Speaking
OPEN
cross-listed with
RHE-101-03F
Rhetoric
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
RHE 101-03 = RHE 101-03F
  • Geraths, Cory
LS 15 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
RHE-101-05
Public Speaking
OPEN
Rhetoric
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room FA206
  • Geraths, Cory
LS 20 19 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
RHE-270-01
Special Topics Lit/Fine Arts
OPEN
Rhetoric
09/04/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Hays Science, Room 001
RHE 270-01: Digital Rhetoric + The Digital Humanities: Information, Media, Futures "Digital" possesses an expansive definition. It means, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, everything from "a whole number less than 10" to "any of the fingers . of the hand" to "technologies [of] media . television . and audio." In its many grammatical guises "digital" is, all at once, a noun, an adjective, and a verb. We have digits, we use digital things, and we digitize. This course will work to chart the rhetorical expansiveness embedded within our understandings and use of all things digital. In particular, we will work to unpack recent scholarship on "digital rhetoric." We will also explore the recent advent of the "digital humanities" as a field of academic inquiry. Similarly, this course will dwell with the communicative potentials and pitfalls of "information" and "media" as they relate to and make possible our understandings of the digital. Finally, the course will conclude by projecting toward and prognosticating about the "futures" of digitality and the rhetoric(s) therein: including case studies on social media, space exploration, biotechnology, linguistics, and translation. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cory Geraths

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  • Geraths, Cory
LFA 25 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
SOC-277-01
Special Topics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-277-01, GEN-277-01
Sociology
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI 277-01 = GEN 277-01 = SOC 277-01: Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary East Asia This course considers a range of themes related to gender and sexuality in China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. While the course will be interdisciplinary by nature, many of the readings and discussions will be rooted in a sociological approach. Potential topics include: marriage, family, femininity, masculinity, fluid gender identities, queer sexualities, sexual practices, family planning, gendered divisions of labor, gender and the state, women's and LGBTQ+ movements, gendered spaces, the commercialization of sex, and media portrayals of gender and sexuality. Prerequisites: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Cara Healey

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  • Healey, Cara
BSC 20 7 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
SPA-101-01
Elementary Spanish I
OPEN
Spanish
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
Co-Requisite: SPA-101L
  • Hardy, Jane
18 14 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
SPA-101-02
Elementary Spanish I
OPEN
Spanish
09/05/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 109
Co-Requisite: SPA-101L
  • Hardy, Jane
18 12 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
SPA-101L-01
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
Spanish
08/27/2018-12/10/2018 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 128
Co-Requisite: SPA-101
  • Staff
7 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-101L-02
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
Spanish
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
Co-Requisite: SPA-101
  • Staff
7 6 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-101L-03
Elementary Spanish I Lab
OPEN
Spanish
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 226
Co-Requisite: SPA-101
  • Staff
7 6 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-103-02
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
Requires SPA-103 placement,
Co-Requisite: SPA-103L
  • Castillo Botello, Yoel
WL 18 17 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
SPA-201L-04
Intermediate Spanish Lab.
OPEN
Spanish
08/29/2018-12/12/2018 Laboratory Wednesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 209
Co-Requisite: SPA-201
  • Staff
7 6 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-201L-06
Intermediate Spanish Lab.
OPEN
Spanish
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Laboratory Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 128
Co-Requisite: SPA-201
  • Staff
7 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-201L-07
Intermediate Spanish Lab.
OPEN
Spanish
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Laboratory Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
Co-Requisite: SPA-201
  • Staff
7 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
SPA-202L-03
Span. Lang/Hisp.Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 128
Co-Requisite: SPA-202
  • Staff
6 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
18/FA
THE-101-01
Introduction to Theater
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-101-01F
Theater
08/24/2018-12/14/2018 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:10PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
THE 101-01 = THE 101-01F
  • Vogel, Heidi
LFA 25 23 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
THE-103-01
Seminars in Theater
OPEN
Theater
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Fine Arts Center, Room T110
THE 103-01/01F: Stage Properties Stage Properties is a hands-on exploration of the methods and practices used to make convincing, practical props for theater. In this course, we will look at how tools and materials may be used to design and fashion objects which are nearly identical to the "real thing," and we will learn how to build a Jim Henson-style puppet as well. This course consists of individual projects and in-class critiques, with one written assignment. This course is appropriate for freshmen. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: Bridgette Dreher

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  • Dennett, Bridgette
LFA 8 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
THE-104-01F
Introduction to Film
CLOSED
cross-listed with
THE-104-01
Theater
08/23/2018-12/15/2018 Lecture Monday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120 (more)...
THE 104-01 = THE 104-01F
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 7 6 / -- / 0 1.00
18/FA
THE-106-01
Stagecraft
OPEN
Theater
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
  • Dennett, Bridgette
LFA 20 19 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
THE-212-01
The Revolutionary Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01, ENG-310-01F, THE-212-01F
Theater
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
THE 212-01/01F = ENG 310-01/01F: The Revolutionary Stage NOTE: This class was formerly called "History and Literature of the Theatre II: The French Renaissance to the Rise of Realism" This class will delve into the history of the theatre and its various dramatic literatures in Europe between the years 1660-1900. The course ranges from the witty banterings of Molière and Behn to the realism of Ibsen and Strindberg to the apocalyptic trance of Alfred Jarry. We will discuss the "new woman," the rise of industrialism and cosmopolitanism, and a society shifting under the influence and pressure of the purveyors of new modes of thought-Hegel, Darwin, Nietzsche, Zola. This is a class about the coming of the "new," revolution and counterrevolution, the calms and the storms. The plays in this course will be discussed as instruments for theatrical production; as examples of dramatic structure, style, and genre; and, most importantly, as they reflect the moral, social, and political issues of their time. This course is appropriate for freshmen. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Cherry

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  • Cherry, Jim
12 6 / 0 / 0 1.00
18/FA
THE-212-01F
The Revolutionary Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01, ENG-310-01F, THE-212-01
Theater
08/23/2018-12/13/2018 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
FRESHMEN ONLY SECTION THE 212-01/01F = ENG 310-01/01F: The Revolutionary Stage NOTE: This class was formerly called "History and Literature of the Theatre II: The French Renaissance to the Rise of Realism" This class will delve into the history of the theatre and its various dramatic literatures in Europe between the years 1660-1900. The course ranges from the witty banterings of Molière and Behn to the realism of Ibsen and Strindberg to the apocalyptic trance of Alfred Jarry. We will discuss the "new woman," the rise of industrialism and cosmopolitanism, and a society shifting under the influence and pressure of the purveyors of new modes of thought-Hegel, Darwin, Nietzsche, Zola. This is a class about the coming of the "new," revolution and counterrevolution, the calms and the storms. The plays in this course will be discussed as instruments for theatrical production; as examples of dramatic structure, style, and genre; and, most importantly, as they reflect the moral, social, and political issues of their time. This course is appropriate for freshmen. Prerequisite: None Credits: 1 Instructor: James Cherry

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  • Cherry, Jim
3 0 / 0 / 0 1.00
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