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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
23/SP
ACC-202-01
Management Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
ACC-201
  • Hensley, Ed
60 15 / 45 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ACC-202-02
Management Accounting
OPEN
Accounting
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
ACC-201
  • Foos, Jack
60 12 / 48 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-104-01
Roman Art & Archaeology
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-104-01
Art
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Hays Science, Room 104
ART-104-01=CLA-104-01
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
LFA 40 13 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-125-01
Drawing
CLOSED
Art
03/20/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A133
  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 15 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-210-01
Contemporary African Am Art
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-04
Art
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 305
ART-210-01=BLS-270-04 African American Contemporary art synthesizes approaches from art history, Black Studies and visual culture studies to investigate race and representation in the United States since 1919. In this course we will discuss historical art movements such as the Red Summer, the Harlem Renaissance, Social Realism, Abstraction, Magical Realism, and Afrofuturism. We will utilize digital humanities investigation techniques such as mapping and network theory to explore how African American artists addressed ideas about race and belonging through works of art, and through the ties they forged within artist communities, collectives, and social movements.

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  • Mahady, Anne
LFA 15 10 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-210-02
Gender, Art and Media
OPEN
Art
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
This course takes an intersectional approach to the study of art through movies and video games. Rather than viewing works of art as discrete objects on display in a gallery, we will explore the ways that films, video games, painting, drawing and sculpture shape societal and individual ideas about gender. We will analyze how fine art informs popular media such as John Wick, The Harder They Fall, Birds of Prey, and the Assassin's Creed franchise, and what these media communicate about representations of gender identity and performance.

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  • Mahady, Anne
LFA 25 13 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-219-01
Auteur Cinema
WAITLISTED
Art
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
Mystery and atmosphere, abstract logic and absurdity, psychological surrealism, and genre stylization are just a few of the topics we will examine in this course on contemporary auteur filmmakers. Auteur theory connects a director to a film in the same way an author is connected to a book; as the primary creative force that distinctly links a myriad of decisions and ideas into a unified vision. A film can be much more than a spectacle that momentarily entertains, it can serve as a window into the mind of a director and allow an audience to view the world in imaginative, challenging, and unexpected new ways. Through screenings and discussions, we will analyze unique stylistic tonalities, thematic preoccupations, and philosophical perspectives that define auteur films and the directors who create them. In doing so, students will develop a deeper appreciation and understanding of the medium and its limitless possibilities.

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  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 15 17 / -2 / 1 1.00
23/SP
ART-225-01
Experimental Filmmaking
OPEN
Art
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room A133
This course re-evaluates the tropes and mainstream conventions of narrative filmmaking and focuses on the methodologies of the artist/filmmaker who uses the medium as a personal form of expression. It examines alternative modes of cinematic production, revolving around the Avant-guard, underground, abstract, poetic, transcendental, and visionary. Students will learn basic camera operation, editing software, audio field recording, and sound design. They will have the opportunity to explore their ideas through project prompts, with parameters designed to develop specific skill sets and aesthetic sensibilities. Depending on the semester, projects may include: remixing current/archival images and footage, time and repetition experiments, compositing/2D collage, nonlinear narratives, and site-specific projection. No previous camera or editing experience is required.

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  • Mohl, Damon
LFA 10 9 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-225-02
Art and Social Practice
OPEN
cross-listed with
HSP-312-02
Art
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A124
The field of Social Practice blurs the line between life and art, emphasizing creative work that connects to current social and cultural issues. Students will develop projects in response to social and cultural issues that are relevant to them, once areas of interest are identified they will research various strategies for expression to create socially engaged art projects. The course pays particular attention to underrepresented artists to better understand the ways in which social practice artists use evocative and agitational strategies to subvert oppressive systems. Among other topics we will consider issues of place, identity, immigration, climate, the role of the global majority in the social fabric, the nature of public space, and using art as a conduit for creative transformation in our contemporary life.

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  • Strader, Annie
  • Corona-Aguilera, Hoesy
LFA 14 6 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-225-03
Advanced Photography
OPEN
Art
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Studio Monday, Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A113
This course dives further into photoshop, in compositing, portrait enhancement, along with layout strategies and methods. Photography advancements will explore stroboscopic, macro and experimental methods along with advanced lighting techniques. Pre-requisites for the course are Art - 224 Photography or intermediate experience with photoshop and mastery of basic manual exposure DSLR techniques.

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  • Weedman, Matthew
LFA 12 11 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-331-01
Advanced Studio
OPEN
Art
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room A119
Two credits from ART-125,
ART-126,
ART-223,
ART-224, ART-225,
ART-227,
and ART-228. At least one credit must be from the 200 level.
This course is open to junior or seniors or Instructor permission.
  • Strader, Annie
12 9 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ART-433-01
Senior Studio
OPEN
Art
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room A113
ART-330 or ART-331
  • Weedman, Matthew
8 2 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ASI-112-01
Japanese Manga and Anime
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
ENG-180-01
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Hays Science, Room 319
ASI-112-01=ENG-180-01 From Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball to Sui Ishida's Tokyo Ghoul, Japanese manga and anime have earned a reputation for being globally influential genres of literature and entertainment. Japanese manga artists often use their manga to interrogate complex themes of humanity, technology, gender, race, existential beliefs, and culture. Likewise, Japanese anime uses cinematic visual storytelling to raise questions about adolescence, identity, and personal growth. This course will delve into a variety of Japanese anime and manga genres in order to discover how these mediums function as literature. Assigned reading material includes Naoko Takeuchi's Sailor Moon, Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball, Sui Ishida's Tokyo Ghoul, Hiromu Arakawa's Fullmetal Alchemist, and other works. We will also engage several anime adaptations, such as Noriyuki Abe's Yu Yu Hakusho: Ghost Files, Mitsuru Hongo's Outlaw Star, Shinichiro Watanabe's Cowboy Bebop and Daisuke Nishio's Dragon Ball Z. Major assignments will include quizzes, short literary analysis papers, an in-class oral presentation, a midterm exam, and a comprehensive final exam on the material.

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  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 40 25 / 1 / 1 1.00
23/SP
ASI-112-02
Chinese Science Fiction
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-180-02
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI-112-02=ENG-180-02 Over the past decade, Chinese science fiction in translation has garnered attention worldwide, winning international awards and bringing Chinese literature to a wider audience than ever before. The genre is often seen as a way of representing China's breakneck economic and technological development in a political environment where censorship is the norm. This course will consider the development of Chinese science fiction from the early twentieth century to the present. Stories will touch on themes ranging from cyborgs to alien invasion to environmental catastrophe. We will consider Chinese science fiction's unique contributions to both Chinese literary tradition and global science fiction. All readings will be in English.

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  • Healey, Cara
LFA 16 6 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ASI-260-01
Modern China
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-262-01, HIS-360-01
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI-260-01=HIS-262-01 An introduction to modern Chinese history and cultural traditions from the late 1800s to the present, outlining themes such as nation-building, socialism, social movements, economic development, memory, gender, international relations, and the relationship between art and politics. The class will analyze a variety of primary sources (in translation), such as speeches, editorials, memoirs, fiction, film, documentary, photography, visual art, and popular music. All readings in English.

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  • Healey, Cara
HPR 20 2 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ASI-260-02
World Hist Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-102-02
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
ASI-260-02=HIS-102-02
  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 35 0 / 14 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ASI-260-03
World Hist Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-102-01
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
  • Morillo, Stephen
50 0 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ASI-277-01
The Economics of Asia
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-277-01
Asian Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Prerequisite: ECO-101
ASI-277-01=ECO-277-01 This is an introductory course on the economic development in East and Southeast Asian Countries. The course explores the elements of emerging markets with a focus on the impact of capital flows, globalization, economic and financial development, social and economic inequality, social system, and poverty. Several Asian economies experienced speedy economic growth in the last sixty to seventy years. After World War II, Japan was the first high-growth economy in Asia. It was quickly followed by a set of very diverse countries, for example, China, India, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam. China and India had sudden emergence onto the world stage as active traders, investors, and consumers. Common characteristics of these countries' growth success are macroeconomic stability, relatively less inequality and investment in people, export promotion, etc. This course focuses on the economic characteristics and socio-economic development of these Asian economies to examine similarities and differences among them, how the Asian regions grew from an agricultural area into a newly developed area, and how the institutional environment supported the economic growth. Finally, it is worth noting that growth has also levied a toll on these countries' environment and has led to the rapid degradation of their natural resources. The goal of this course is to explore the key components and features of the rapidly growing/grown East and Southeast Asian economies and to analyze the development strategies and socio-economic conditions of the individual countries.

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  • Saha, Sujata
25 2 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-101-01
Human Biology
OPEN
Biology
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 104
  • Bost, Anne
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
  • Wetzel, Eric
SL 64 62 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-101L-01
Human Biology Lab
WAITLISTED
Biology
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 110
Co-Requisite: BIO-101
  • Bost, Anne
16 16 / 0 / 1 0.00
23/SP
BIO-101L-02
Human Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 110
Co-Requisite: BIO-101
  • Wetzel, Eric
16 16 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-101L-03
Human Biology Lab
CLOSED
Biology
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 110
Co-Requisite: BIO-101
  • Bost, Anne
16 16 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-101L-04
Human Biology Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 110
Co-Requisite: BIO-101
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
16 14 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-103-01
Environmental Science
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
GHL-103-01
Biology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
BIO-103-01=GHL-103-01
  • Carlson, Bradley
SL 32 31 / 0 / 2 1.00
23/SP
BIO-103L-01
Environmental Science Lab
WAITLISTED
Biology
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 103
Concurrent registration required in BIO-103
  • Carlson, Bradley
16 17 / -1 / 2 0.00
23/SP
BIO-103L-02
Environmental Science Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 103
Concurrent registration required in BIO-103
  • Carlson, Bradley
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-112-01
General Biology II
OPEN
Biology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 104
Prerequisite: BIO-111.
  • Burton, Patrick
  • Ingram, Amanda
SL 64 57 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-112L-01
General Biol II Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 111
BIO-112
  • Ingram, Amanda
16 10 / 6 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-112L-02
General Biol II Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 111
BIO-112
  • Ingram, Amanda
16 14 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-112L-03
General Biol II Lab
CLOSED
Biology
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 111
BIO-112
  • Burton, Patrick
16 16 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-112L-04
General Biol II Lab
CLOSED
Biology
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 111
BIO-112
  • Burton, Patrick
16 17 / -1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-212-01
Cell Biology
OPEN
Biology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisite: BIO-211 or BIO-213
  • Walsh, Heidi
QL, SL 32 28 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-212L-01
Cell Biology Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 214
Co-requisite: BIO-212
  • Walsh, Heidi
16 13 / 3 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-212L-02
Cell Biology Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 214
Co-requisite: BIO-212
  • Walsh, Heidi
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-311-01
Molecular Genetics
OPEN
Biology
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 001
BIO-211
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
12 4 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-311L-01
Molecular Genetics Lab
OPEN
Biology
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 212
Co Req BIO-311
  • Sorensen-Kamakian, Erika
12 4 / 8 / 0 0.00
23/SP
BIO-322-01
Biology of Invertebrates
OPEN
Biology
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Immersion Component Monday, Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 101
Prerequiste: BIO-112
Lecture and Lab are integrated
  • Wetzel, Eric
12 7 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BIO-371-01
Molecular Endocrinology
OPEN
cross-listed with
NSC-310-01
Biology
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 001
BIO-212
BIO-371-01=NSC-310-01 Hormones, the chemical signals of the endocrine system, rely on receptors and signal transduction pathways to carry out their powerful physiological, neural, and behavioral effects. This course will examine the molecular and cellular mechanisms of hormone action through primary scientific literature analysis and extensive writing. Students will learn to integrate concepts from molecular biology, cell biology, neuroscience, physiology, and pharmacology while emphasizing the contributions basic endocrine research to human health. This course counts as an elective for the Biology and Biochemistry majors and the Neuroscience minor.

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  • Walsh, Heidi
16 10 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-201-01
Introduction to Black Studies
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-260-01
Black Studies
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 305
BLS-201-01=ENG-260-01
  • Lake, Tim
20 11 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-270-01
French Colonial Hist. & Media
OPEN
cross-listed with
FRE-277-01, HIS-230-02
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 128
FRE-277-01=HIS-230-02=BLS-270-01 Who gets to write History? This seminar will approach French colonial history through the lens of the "archive" as a site of knowledge and power. What alternative modes of knowledge production and preservation have risen to challenge dominant historical narratives across the Francophone world? How do the formal aspects and possibilities of a medium change how memories get transmitted? Drawing from historical sources, novels, and multimedia objects-from podcasts to photographs, graphic novels, and video games-we will learn to critique imperial modes of representation and elaborate a new definition of "the archival" through orality, repertoire, testimony, historical fiction, and other Francophone cultural productions. This course will be taught in English, and we will use English translations of French texts. Those taking the course for credit towards the French major or minor will be expected to do the readings and written assignments in French. This course is cross-listed with History and Black Studies. It also satisfies requirements for the Film and Digital Media minor, as well as the diversity requirement for PPE majors.

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  • Altergott, Renee
HPR, LFA 15 0 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-270-02
Law & Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-270-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 304
ENG-270-01=BLS-270-02 What does reading literature teach us about the connections between race and law? How can legal and literary texts be read to understand issues of race and justice? In this class, we will discuss how literature (both fiction and non-fiction) examines the way the law negotiates and reinforces systems of race, bias and racism. We will think about the ways in which different literary works depict the law and encourage us to be skilled interpreters/critics of the law. Assigned reading material will include Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy, Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, and legal writings from a number of legal scholars such as Michelle Alexander and Cheryl Harris. Major assignments will include quizzes, short literary analysis essays, an in-class oral presentation, and a final exam. Students interested in either attending law school or doing any public policy work are highly encouraged to take the course.

[show more]

  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 20 1 / 17 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-270-03
Black Dance
OPEN
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Center Hall, Room 215
What is the connection between spiritual dance and twerking? They are both dances inspired by African rhythmic and aesthetic movements. African and African Diasporic dance traditions are deployed for a range of ritual and cultural expressions. Spiritual movements in worship are meant to free the body from the mundane world bracketed by time and space while stylized movements in the club and on music videos are evocative of a worldly freedom. What is the source of these movements and gestures? How are we to make sense of the various religious and social articulation of Black bodies in the past and today? This course will explore Black dance across history and geography and at the intersections of race, class, gender and our modern hyper-media economy. Students will be able to trace the history of Black people through dance and critically engage dance for its social, political and economic valences.

[show more]

  • Lake, Tim
25 5 / 20 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-270-04
Contemporary African Am Art
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-210-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 305
ART-201-01=BLS-270-04 African American Contemporary art synthesizes approaches from art history, Black Studies and visual culture studies to investigate race and representation in the United States since 1919. In this course we will discuss historical art movements such as the Red Summer, the Harlem Renaissance, Social Realism, Abstraction, Magical Realism, and Afrofuturism. We will utilize digital humanities investigation techniques such as mapping and network theory to explore how African American artists addressed ideas about race and belonging through works of art, and through the ties they forged within artist communities, collectives, and social movements.

[show more]

  • Mahady, Anne
LFA 15 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-01
Malcolm and Mandela
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-240-02
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
HIS-240-02=BLS-280-01 This course considers the overlapping lives and legacies of Malcolm X and Nelson Mandela, two revolutionary figures whose influence on the fight for civil rights in America and Africa was profound and far reaching. Though the American public rarely imagined them as political bedfellows in their time, their lives had striking autobiographical similarities and pan-African connections. Students will examine the convergences and confluences of their biographies, political ideologies, and activism while exploring broader issues including colonialism, civil disobedience, cultural resistance, social justice, and freedom. We will consider how their lives intersected in the transnational struggle for racial equality and how their legacies continue to shape contemporary debates about black identity and the continued crisis of American race relations. Notably, students will also connect the lives of both men to Black experience at Wabash College and the Crawfordsville community since the 1950s.

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  • Thomas, Sabrina
20 1 / 14 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-02
Black Germany
OPEN
cross-listed with
GER-312-01, HIS-230-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
HIS-230-01=GER-312-01=BLS-280-02 Despite its widespread image as a white, racially homogenous country, Germany is home to a vibrant and growing Black community with a long and complicated history. Students in this course will explore the history of Black Germany beginning with the 19th century colonial encounters between Germany and the African diaspora and the emergence of a German born Black population. The course will consider questions of nationality, citizenship, race, and identity, such as "What does it means to be German?" and "What does it mean to be Black?" from transnational and transracial perspectives.

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  • Thomas, Sabrina
  • Tucker, Brian
LFA 16 1 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-03
Educational Policy & Eval
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-240-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
EDU-240-01=BLS-280-03
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
18 0 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-04
Philosophy of Education
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-201-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
EDU-201-01=BLS-280-04
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
18 1 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-05
Protest & Policy in the Us
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-238-01, PSC-210-01
Black Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
PSC-210-01=PPE-238-01=BLS-280-05 This course examines the role of protest as a means of political expression that has been used by a variety of political actors seeking to change the policies and political practices of the United States throughout its history. The focus will be on two overarching questions: Why has protest been such a fixture of American politics? And to what extent does it actually influence public policy outcomes? In addition to considering frameworks for making sense of the role of protest in the development of US public policy in general, we'll take a close look at the experiences of three specific protest movements: the mid-twentieth-century Civil Rights Movement; the Tea Party, and the contemporary Environmental Justice Movement. Students will also have the opportunity to research the policy impact of a US-based protest initiative of their choosing.

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  • Gelbman, Shamira
18 2 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-280-06
Africa Since 1885
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-272-01, HIS-370-01
Black Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
HIS-272-01=BLS-280-06=HIS-370-01
  • Warner, Rick
25 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-300-01
Anti-Racist Christian Theology
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-373-01
Black Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Center Hall, Room 300
REL-373-01=BLS-300-01 "Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere." -- Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor. The world is finally understanding that there can be no teaching about race that is not also teaching against racism. This course will compare the Black experience in the United States, and theological reflection thereon, with Black experience under the brutal Apartheid regime in South Africa. We begin by examining first-person narratives from Black and White Americans on the harms done by racism. We will do the same with Black (Bantu), White and the so-called "Cape-Coloured" South Africans. Then we will look at histories told about how the parallel systems of oppression were conceived, installed and how they functioned. The last half of the class explores arguments made by James Cone on how the cross of Jesus Christ looks like (and unlike) a lynching tree; by South African Allan Boesak on the dangerous but tantalizing specter of "hope"; and by the womanist theologian Kelly Brown Douglas on theology in the wake of the killing of teenager Trayvon Martin.

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  • Nelson, Derek
16 0 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-300-02
Diversity & Multicultural Ed
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-303-01
Black Studies
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:15PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 112
EDU-303-01=BLS-300-02
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
12 0 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
BLS-300-03
Southern Gothic Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-01, GEN-300-01
Black Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
ENG-310-01=GEN-300-01=BLS-300-03 This class is about the ghosts that haunt the literature of the American South. After the Civil War, when the ideal of the pastoral plantation crumbled, Southern writers sought to contend with the brutal historic realities that had always lurked behind the white-pillared façade: poverty, violence, slavery, racism, patriarchy. Southern Gothic literature-which emerged in the early 19th century and continues strong today-is marked by dark humor, transgressive desires, grotesque violence, folk spiritualism, hereditary sins, emotional and environmental isolation, supernatural forces, and punishing madness. In this class, we will listen to the stories that the ghosts of the American South have told, and still tell today.

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  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 20 0 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-101-01
Survey of Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 319
  • Wysocki, Laura
QL, SL 36 35 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-101L-01
Survey Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 316
  • Kalb, Annah
18 17 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-101L-02
Survey Chemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 316
  • Kalb, Annah
18 18 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-241-01
Inorganic Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Hays Science, Room 104
Prerequisite: CHE-111.
  • Porter, Lon
  • Scanlon, Joe
QL, SL 42 31 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-241L-01
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 315
  • Porter, Lon
14 13 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-241L-02
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 315
  • Scanlon, Joe
14 6 / 8 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-241L-03
Inorganic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 315
  • Scanlon, Joe
14 12 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-321-01
Organic Chemistry II
OPEN
Chemistry
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Hays Science, Room 319
Prerequisite: CHE-221
  • Wysocki, Laura
32 21 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-321L-01
Organic Chem II Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 314
Corequisite: CHE-321
  • Wysocki, Laura
16 12 / 4 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-321L-02
Organic Chem II Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 314
Corequisite: CHE-321
  • Wysocki, Laura
16 9 / 7 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-331-01
Analytical Chemistry
CLOSED
Chemistry
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 002
CHE-241 (must be completed prior to taking this course)
  • Kalb, Annah
13 13 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-331L-01
Analytical Chemistry Lab
CLOSED
Chemistry
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 002
Corequisite: CHE-331
  • Kalb, Annah
13 13 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-361-01
Biochemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 319
Prerequisite: CHE-211,
CHE-241,
or CHE-321,
or permission of instructor
  • Taylor, Ann
QL, SL 32 27 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHE-361L-01
Biochemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 211
CoReq CHE-361
  • Taylor, Ann
16 12 / 4 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-361L-02
Biochemistry Lab
OPEN
Chemistry
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 211
CoReq CHE-361
  • Taylor, Ann
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHE-451-01
Advanced Physical Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
01/16/2023-03/03/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Hays Science, Room 003
CHE-351 (must be completed prior to taking this course)
1st half semester course
  • Scanlon, Joe
10 8 / 2 / 0 0.50
23/SP
CHE-471-01
Computational Chemistry
OPEN
Chemistry
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Hays Science, Room 003
CHE-241 (must be completed prior to taking this course)
2nd half semester course This course is designed as an introduction to the many applications of computational chemistry. The background theory of methods will be discussed briefly so that the proper method for each chemical topic can be chosen. The focus of the course will be to showcase how to use computational chemistry to solve chemical problems. Students will run calculations to answer chemical questions.

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  • Scanlon, Joe
10 8 / 2 / 0 0.50
23/SP
CHI-102-01
Elementary Chinese II
OPEN
Chinese
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
CHI-101,
or CHI-102 placement
  • Li, Yao
WL 9 7 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHI-102L-01
Elementary Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
  • Chou, Yu
3 1 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHI-102L-02
Elementary Chinese II Lab
CLOSED
Chinese
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Chou, Yu
3 3 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHI-102L-03
Elementary Chinese II Lab
CLOSED
Chinese
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Chou, Yu
3 3 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHI-202-01
Intermediate Chinese II
OPEN
Chinese
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 220
CHI-201,
or CHI-202 placement
  • Healey, Cara
WL 3 2 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CHI-202L-01
Intermediate Chinese II Lab
OPEN
Chinese
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Chou, Yu
3 2 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
CHI-311-01
Studies in Chinese Language
OPEN
Chinese
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
Prerequisite: CHI-301,
or CHI-311 placement
  • Li, Yao
WL 3 2 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CLA-101-01
Classical Mythology
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-171-01
Classics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
CLA-101-01=GEN-171-01
  • Barnes, Robert
LFA 45 42 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CLA-104-01
Roman Art & Archaeology
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ART-104-01
Classics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Hays Science, Room 104
CLA-104-01=ART-104-01
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
LFA 40 30 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
CLA-162-01
New Testament
OPEN
cross-listed with
REL-162-01
Classics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 216
CLA-162-01=REL-162-01
  • Reed Jay, Jeff
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR, LFA 50 15 / 21 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CLA-212-01
Uncovering Greek Religion
CLOSED
cross-listed with
REL-290-03
Classics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Immersion Component Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Hays Science, Room 321
CLA-212-01=REL-290-03 The Greeks were a polytheistic society: they worshipped numerous gods. Moreover, they did so in a variety of modes and for a multitude of reasons. Using ancient literature and archaeological remains, we will consider the nature and function of the gods of the Greek pantheon, as well as the sacred spaces, festivals, dedications, and rituals through which the Greeks worshipped their deities from the Bronze Age through the Hellenistic period and the rise of Christianity. As we explore these topics, we will situate religion within the changing social and historical contexts of the ancient world. This entails analysis of the relation between cults and the state, especially Athenian democracy; the impact of deities and festivals on warfare, the economy, athletics, and literature; and the role of refugees, slaves, women, and other marginalized groups. The course is discussion oriented; most class periods will be spent in conversation about assigned readings. An intensive immersion component rounds out the course: we will travel to Greece from May 7-17, 2023.

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  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
  • Perry, Julia
HPR, LFA 16 13 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
CLA-213-01
Greek and Roman Science
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
HIS-210-01
Classics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 112
CLA-213-01=HIS-210-01 Archimedes, the famous Sicilian-Greek mathematician and inventor, is said to have founded the discipline of fluid dynamics in a moment of inspiration while taking a bath. But beyond the confines of Archimedes' bathtub, the evolution of what we now think of as "science" was often a freewheeling and haphazard affair, with many fascinating detours and dead ends along the way. This course will investigate ancient Greek and Roman innovations in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math, along with their varied connections to the modern world. We will study the earliest attempts to understand, quantify, and control the natural world of the ancient Mediterranean, tracing the origins and growth of modern "STEM" fields from Ancient Egypt and Babylonia to Classical Greece and Imperial Rome.

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  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 14 / 1 / 1 1.00
23/SP
CLA-400-01
Senior Seminar
OPEN
Classics
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Days to be Announced, Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
LFA 5 4 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
COL-402-01
Important Books
WAITLISTED
Colloquium
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Wednesday 07:30PM - 09:00PM, Center Hall, Room 304
  • Blix, David
  • Howland, Frank
LFA 15 15 / 0 / 1 1.00
23/SP
CSC-101-01
Intro to Computer Science
CLOSED
Computer Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
  • McKinney, Colin
QL 24 25 / -1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CSC-111-01
Intro to Programming
CLOSED
Computer Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisite: CSC-101,
CSC-106,
or MAT-112; or permission of the instructor.
  • McKinney, Colin
QL 24 27 / -3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CSC-211-01
Intro to Data Structures
OPEN
Computer Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
Prerequisite: CSC-111 with a minimum grade of C-.
  • Westphal, Chad
22 21 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CSC-243-01
Algorithm Design and Analysis
OPEN
Computer Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
MAT-111,
CSC-211,
and MAT-108 or MAT-219
  • Ansaldi, Katie
16 12 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CSC-271-01
Image Processing
OPEN
cross-listed with
MAT-277-01
Computer Science
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisite: CSC-111 and MAT-223
CSC-271-01=MAT-277-01 This course provides an introduction to basic concepts and techniques in digital image processing. Topics may include intensity transformations, spatial filtering, filtering in the frequency domain, image restoration and reconstruction, color image processing, wavelets and multiresolution processing, image compression, and image segmentation.

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  • Surina, FNU
30 6 / 21 / 0 1.00
23/SP
CSC-371-01
Retrocomputing: 8-BIT/6502 Era
OPEN
Computer Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Hays Science, Room 003
Minimum grade of C- in CSC-241
In 1977, The "Trinity" of mass-produced microcomputers hit the market: the TRS-80, the Apple II, and the Commodore PET. The latter two computers, like the Apple I before them, were powered by the venerable MOS 6502 processor. The 6502 though was not enough; building a computer around it required an array of auxiliary support processors. Thus, each computer of the era had different capabilities for sound, graphics, and storage; each had a different array of peripheral devices designed to work with them. Even today, millions of 6502 processors are manufactured; they are used in everything from industrial systems to the Tamagotchi toy. Fictional characters even use them, including Bender from Futurama and the T-800 series from Terminator. This intensely project-based class will focus on the 6502 processor and family of supporting auxiliary processors. We'll look at how the family was used in popular systems of the time, such as the Commodore 64 and the Famicom/Nintendo Entertainment System. We'll program in a variety of languages, including BASIC, Pascal, Forth, C, and TONS OF ASSEMBLY, using both modern emulators and real hardware. We'll look at how graphics and sound work, how data is stored, and how the user was able to interact with the system. We'll look at how the limitations of the 6502 and auxiliary processors fostered creative programming and clever thinking. Finally, we'll look at the legacy of the 6502 and its 16-bit descendent, the 65816.

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  • McKinney, Colin
16 13 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
DV1-178-01
Forensic Chemistry
OPEN
Division I
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 319
The continued popularity of crime scene analysis dramas and literary whodunits reflect society's fascination with criminal investigation. This introductory survey course in chemistry will focus on the theme of forensic science. Designed for non-science concentrators, this class explores the historical and philosophical developments in chemistry, as well as applications of chemical principles to criminalistics in the laboratory setting. Topics include the development of the atomic theory of matter, atomic structure, chemical bonding, thermodynamics, the chemistry of life (organic and biochemistry), and forensic analysis. In addition, the course will explore the role of forensics in law enforcement, data ethics, bias, and issues relating to equity and social justice. Some elementary mathematics and simple statistics will be required for problem solving in class and lab. Two lectures and one laboratory each week. Partially fulfills the College laboratory science requirement but cannot be combined with CHE101 or CHE 111 to complete the laboratory science requirement. This course does not satisfy requirements for the chemistry major or minor.

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  • Porter, Lon
QL, SL 16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
DV1-178L-01
Forensic Chemistry Lab
OPEN
Division I
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Hays Science, Room 316
Co-requisite: DV1-178
  • Porter, Lon
16 15 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
DV3-252-01
Stats Soc Sciences
OPEN
Division III
01/16/2023-03/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
1st half semester course
  • Howland, Frank
QL 25 15 / 10 / 0 0.50
23/SP
ECO-101-01
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 28 27 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-101-02
Principles of Economics
CLOSED
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC 28 28 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-101-03
Principles of Economics
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
  • Snow, Nick
BSC 28 25 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-224-01
Econom & Political Development
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-224-01, PPE-264-01
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisite: ECO-101
ECO-224-01=PPE-264-01=GHL-224-01
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC 25 8 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-231-01
Law & Economics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-251-01
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
Prerequisite: ECO-101
ECO-231-01=PPE-251-01
  • Snow, Nick
BSC 25 24 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-241-01
Game Theory
WAITLISTED
Economics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC, QL 25 29 / -4 / 1 1.00
23/SP
ECO-251-01
Economic Approach With Excel
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Prerequisite: ECO-101
2nd half semester course
  • Howland, Frank
BSC, QL 30 27 / 3 / 0 0.50
23/SP
ECO-253-01
Intro to Econometrics
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-,
One of the following courses or combinations with minimum grade(s) of C-: DV3-252,
or PSC-300,
or MAT-253 and MAT-254, or PSY-201 and PSY-202
  • Dunaway, Eric
BSC, QL 30 22 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-262-01
Financial Markets & Inst
WAITLISTED
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Pre-requisite: ECO-101
  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 30 29 / 1 / 2 1.00
23/SP
ECO-277-01
The Economics of Asia
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-277-01
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Prerequisite: ECO-101
ECO-277-01=ASI-277-01 This is an introductory course on the economic development in East and Southeast Asian Countries. The course explores the elements of emerging markets with a focus on the impact of capital flows, globalization, economic and financial development, social and economic inequality, social system, and poverty. Several Asian economies experienced speedy economic growth in the last sixty to seventy years. After World War II, Japan was the first high-growth economy in Asia. It was quickly followed by a set of very diverse countries, for example, China, India, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam. China and India had sudden emergence onto the world stage as active traders, investors, and consumers. Common characteristics of these countries' growth success are macroeconomic stability, relatively less inequality and investment in people, export promotion, etc. This course focuses on the economic characteristics and socio-economic development of these Asian economies to examine similarities and differences among them, how the Asian regions grew from an agricultural area into a newly developed area, and how the institutional environment supported the economic growth. Finally, it is worth noting that growth has also levied a toll on these countries' environment and has led to the rapid degradation of their natural resources. The goal of this course is to explore the key components and features of the rapidly growing/grown East and Southeast Asian economies and to analyze the development strategies and socio-economic conditions of the individual countries.

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  • Saha, Sujata
BSC 25 11 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-291-01
Intermediate Micro Theory
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111,
MAT-112 or MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C-.
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC 30 12 / 18 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-292-01
Intermediate Macro
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-.
  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 30 8 / 22 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-322-01
International Finance
OPEN
Economics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
ECO-253 and ECO-292
  • Mikek, Peter
BSC 20 9 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-358-01
Crime and Punishment
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-358-01
Economics
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C- and one 200 level ECO course with a minimum grade of D,
OR with the consent of the instructor
ECO-358-01=PPE-358-01 This class will investigate the social phenomena of crime and punishment through the analytical tool kit of political economy. Students will learn a variety of theoretical approaches and apply them to understand and explain historic and contemporary trends of crime and punishment. Theoretical approaches will include rational and strategic decision making, public goods theory, bureaucratic incentives, comparative institutional analysis, and industrial organization. Key applied topics covered during the semester will include criminal behavior, the historic origins of criminal law and law enforcement services, the potentials and limits of both public and private provisions of policing and punishment, and the historic and contemporary patterns of crime and punitive trends across social contexts. Finally, students will assess the viability of historic and current criminal justice reform movements.

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  • D'Amico, Daniel
BSC 25 4 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ECO-361-01
Corporate Finance
OPEN
Economics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
Prerequisites: ECO-251,
ECO-253,
and ECO-291
  • Howland, Frank
BSC 25 4 / 21 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-101-01
Intro Child & Adolescent Devel
OPEN
Education
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 209
  • Pittard, Michele
BSC 18 16 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-201-01
Philosophy of Education
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-04
Education
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
Prerequisite: ENG-101 or established proficiency
EDU-201-01=BLS-280-04
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
HPR 18 16 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-230-01
Teaching Jazz Improvisation
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-204-01
Education
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
EDU-230-01=MUS-204-01 This course will focus on learning how to improvise with the Blues, and then teaching that improvisational skill to K - 12 school-age students in their native educational environment. Students will spend the first six weeks of the course on the Wabash campus learning, first, how to improvise with the blues and, second, how to teach this skill to younger students. Wabash students will be divided up into groups of 2 - 3 who will then be placed in a classroom corresponding with their age-level interests. The second half of the course will then be spent in an area K - 12 music classroom, teaching school-age students these improvisational skills. Wabash students will receive specific pedagogical methods appropriate for the age group in which they will be working, and the instructor will be able to observe their in-classroom teaching several times throughout the second half of the semester. While the ability to read music is not a requirement for this class, the willingness to sing for others (for teaching and demonstration) is a necessity.

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  • Williams, Sarin
LFA 12 1 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-235-01
Studies in Rural Education
OPEN
Education
01/17/2023-03/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 111
1st half semester course.
  • Pittard, Michele
18 10 / 8 / 0 0.50
23/SP
EDU-240-01
Educational Policy & Eval
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-03
Education
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
Prerequisite: FRT-101 Freshman Tutorial
EDU-240-01=BLS-280-03
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
QL 18 16 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-303-01
Diversity & Multicultural Ed
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-300-02
Education
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:15PM - 03:25PM, Detchon, Room 112
Prerequisite: FRT-101 (required),
EDU-201 (recommended)
EDU-303-01=BLS-300-02
  • Seltzer-Kelly, Deborah
BSC 12 6 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
EDU-330-01
Studies in Urban Education
OPEN
Education
03/14/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 111
2nd half semester course.
  • Pittard, Michele
18 7 / 11 / 0 0.50
23/SP
ENG-109-01
Genocide & Refugees
OPEN
English
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 300
The course will explore representations of genocide and exile in Polish, Senegalese, South African, and Irish literatures and film. We will discuss the rise of fascism in Europe, the pre-WW II anti-Semitic rhetoric in the media, and the atrocities of the Holocaust itself from an interdisciplinary point of view, combining history, political science, and literature.

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  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
15 6 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-109-02
Dante's Divine Comedy
OPEN
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Center Hall, Room 300
Travel with Dante through hell, purgatory, and the celestial sphere-and also deep into the world of Medieval Italy. Dante Alighieri's Divina Commedia (in English, The Divine Comedy), is an epic poem written by a man in crisis. Depressed and driven from his homeland, Dante dedicated a decade of his life to this work, seeking to find meaning in heartbreak, exile, and tragic loss. What is the narrator looking for? Himself. His first love. Home. Revenge. Salvation. God. Each of these answers is correct, yet none is sufficient. Along the way, the poem is unsparing, as it exposes the corruption of politicians, popes, priests, and commoners alike. On this literary journey, we will read about the people, places, beliefs, and questions that moved the spiritual seekers of the Middle Ages, and line them up against the questions that plague our own age. Past students in this course have been surprised and pleased by how Dante's search for moral and ethical clarity-and his boldness in speaking truth to power-has inspired them on their own journeys.

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  • Lamberton, Jill
LFA 30 13 / 17 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-121-01
Language Variation & Change
OPEN
cross-listed with
HUM-121-01, MLL-121-01
English
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
Prerequisite: ENG-122 or HUM-122 or MLL-122
MLL-121-01=HUM-121-01=ENG-121-01 2nd half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 11 / 14 / 0 0.50
23/SP
ENG-122-01
Modern Linguistics
OPEN
cross-listed with
HUM-122-02, MLL-122-01
English
01/16/2023-03/13/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
MLL-122-01=HUM-122-02=ENG-122-01 1st half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 17 / 7 / 0 0.50
23/SP
ENG-180-01
Japanese Manga and Anime
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-112-01
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Hays Science, Room 319
ENG-180-01=ASI-112-01 From Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball to Sui Ishida's Tokyo Ghoul, Japanese manga and anime have earned a reputation for being globally influential genres of literature and entertainment. Japanese manga artists often use their manga to interrogate complex themes of humanity, technology, gender, race, existential beliefs, and culture. Likewise, Japanese anime uses cinematic visual storytelling to raise questions about adolescence, identity, and personal growth. This course will delve into a variety of Japanese anime and manga genres in order to discover how these mediums function as literature. Assigned reading material includes Naoko Takeuchi's Sailor Moon, Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball, Sui Ishida's Tokyo Ghoul, Hiromu Arakawa's Fullmetal Alchemist, and other works. We will also engage several anime adaptations, such as Noriyuki Abe's Yu Yu Hakusho: Ghost Files, Mitsuru Hongo's Outlaw Star, Shinichiro Watanabe's Cowboy Bebop and Daisuke Nishio's Dragon Ball Z. Major assignments will include quizzes, short literary analysis papers, an in-class oral presentation, a midterm exam, and a comprehensive final exam on the material.

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  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 40 14 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-180-02
Chinese Science Fiction
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-112-02
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI-112-02=ENG-180-02 Over the past decade, Chinese science fiction in translation has garnered attention worldwide, winning international awards and bringing Chinese literature to a wider audience than ever before. The genre is often seen as a way of representing China's breakneck economic and technological development in a political environment where censorship is the norm. This course will consider the development of Chinese science fiction from the early twentieth century to the present. Stories will touch on themes ranging from cyborgs to alien invasion to environmental catastrophe. We will consider Chinese science fiction's unique contributions to both Chinese literary tradition and global science fiction. All readings will be in English.

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  • Healey, Cara
LFA 16 5 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-202-01
Writing With Power and Grace
OPEN
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
  • Whitney, Julian
LS 15 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-210-01
Writing for the Web
OPEN
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
This course unfolds at the intersections of creative writing and technology. Design your own website. Create an interactive environment. Manipulate code to make poetry. We will explore a range of digital humanities, including open-access research design, digital mapping, and multimodal writing. Students will craft texts in multiple genres, such as personal narratives, free-verse poetry, and drama. Then, we will practice using a series of digital platforms that enhance storytelling by representing narratives in multiple modes: visual, auditory, spatial, and more. By the end of the semester, students will have experience with computer coding, digital mapping, crafting original work in Google Sites, and video production. There are no prerequisites or tech requirements for this course. No previous knowledge of coding is necessary. Computers, cameras, and apps will be made available, so it is not necessary to own a personal laptop to complete this course successfully. Most of the resources featured here are freely available so students develop multimodal writing skills for diverse media and contexts that are applicable beyond our class together.

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  • Pavlinich, Elan
LS 11 8 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-214-01
Intro. British Lit. After 1900
OPEN
English
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 300
  • Szczeszak-Brewer, Agata
LFA 20 6 / 14 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-260-01
Introduction to Black Studies
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-201-01
English
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 305
ENG-260-01=BLS-201-01
  • Lake, Tim
20 0 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-270-01
Law & Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-02
English
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 304
ENG-270-01=BLS-270-02 What does reading literature teach us about the connections between race and law? How can legal and literary texts be read to understand issues of race and justice? In this class, we will discuss how literature (both fiction and non-fiction) examines the way the law negotiates and reinforces systems of race, bias and racism. We will think about the ways in which different literary works depict the law and encourage us to be skilled interpreters/critics of the law. Assigned reading material will include Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy, Toni Morrison's The Bluest Eye, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird, and legal writings from a number of legal scholars such as Michelle Alexander and Cheryl Harris. Major assignments will include quizzes, short literary analysis essays, an in-class oral presentation, and a final exam. Students interested in either attending law school or doing any public policy work are highly encouraged to take the course.

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  • Whitney, Julian
LFA 20 2 / 17 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-310-01
Southern Gothic Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-300-03, GEN-300-01
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
ENG-310-01=BLS-300-03=GEN-300-01 This class is about the ghosts that haunt the literature of the American South. After the Civil War, when the ideal of the pastoral plantation crumbled, Southern writers sought to contend with the brutal historic realities that had always lurked behind the white-pillared façade: poverty, violence, slavery, racism, patriarchy. Southern Gothic literature-which emerged in the early 19th century and continues strong today-is marked by dark humor, transgressive desires, grotesque violence, folk spiritualism, hereditary sins, emotional and environmental isolation, supernatural forces, and punishing madness. In this class, we will listen to the stories that the ghosts of the American South have told, and still tell today.

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  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 20 5 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-310-02
The Classic Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-215-01
English
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
THE-215-01=ENG-310-02
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 15 1 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-370-01
Neurodiversity Lit,Film,TV
OPEN
English
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
This class addresses multiple ways of knowing, experiencing, and representing the world. We will explore literary and media representations of and by people on the Autism Spectrum. While neurodivergency is often considered "abnormal," we will take it seriously as a valid form of meaning-making. We will read novels and short stories by people on the Autism Spectrum as well as analyze film and TV representations of neurodivergency. We will also address the growing body of theory on neurodiversity and its place in education and society. I welcome everyone to this class regardless of major or experience; however, I would like to have a brief conversation with you before you enroll in the course.

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  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 15 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-411-01
Business & Technical Writing
OPEN
English
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
Prerequisite: FRC-101 Enduring Questions,
and junior or senior standing
  • Pavlinich, Elan
LS 20 16 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
ENG-499-01
Capstone Portfolio
OPEN
English
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
ENG-311,
312,
or 313
  • Benedicks, Crystal
LS 5 3 / 2 / 0 0.50
23/SP
FRC-101-01
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 006
  • Poffald, Esteban
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-02
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 001
  • Burton, Patrick
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-03
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 305
  • Krause, Dennis
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-04
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
  • Himsel, Scott
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-05
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 304
  • Gower, Jeff
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-06
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 002
  • Bost, Anne
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-07
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
  • Royalty, Bob
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-08
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Pavlinich, Elan
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-09
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
  • Pittard, Michele
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-10
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 301
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-11
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 305
  • Reed Jay, Jeff
  • Horton, Bobby
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-12
Enduring Questions
CLOSED
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
  • Makubuya, James
16 16 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-13
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
  • Lindsay, Beth
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-14
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Hays Science, Room 321
  • Carlson, Bradley
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-15
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room M140
  • Vogel, Heidi
16 13 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-16
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
  • Drury, Jeffrey
16 15 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRC-101-17
Enduring Questions
OPEN
Freshman Colloquium
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
  • Mikek, Peter
16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRE-102-01
Elementary French II
OPEN
French
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 112
Prerequisite: FRE-101,
or FRE-102 placement
  • Altergott, Renee
WL 10 8 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRE-102L-01
Elementary French II Lab
OPEN
French
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 226
Corequisite: FRE-102
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
FRE-102L-02
Elementary French II Lab
WAITLISTED
French
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 226
Corequisite: FRE-102
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 5 / 0 / 1 0.00
23/SP
FRE-103-01
Accelerated Elementary French
OPEN
French
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Quandt, Karen
WL 15 10 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRE-103L-01
Accelerated Elem French Lab
CLOSED
French
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 226
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 5 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
FRE-103L-02
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
French
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
FRE-103L-03
Accelerated Elem French Lab
OPEN
French
01/20/2023-05/05/2023 Laboratory Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 226
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 1 / 4 / 0 0.00
23/SP
FRE-202-01
French Lang & Francophone Cult
OPEN
French
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Immersion Component Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 226
Prerequisite: FRE-201,
or FRE-202 placement
Immersion study in Paris and Normandy
  • Quandt, Karen
WL 5 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRE-202L-01
French Lng/Francophne Cult Lab
OPEN
French
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 226
Corequisite: FRE-202
  • Cuoc, Morgane
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
FRE-277-01
French Colonial Hist. & Media
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01, HIS-230-02
French
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 128
FRE-277-01=HIS-230-02=BLS-270-01 Who gets to write History? This seminar will approach French colonial history through the lens of the "archive" as a site of knowledge and power. What alternative modes of knowledge production and preservation have risen to challenge dominant historical narratives across the Francophone world? How do the formal aspects and possibilities of a medium change how memories get transmitted? Drawing from historical sources, novels, and multimedia objects-from podcasts to photographs, graphic novels, and video games-we will learn to critique imperial modes of representation and elaborate a new definition of "the archival" through orality, repertoire, testimony, historical fiction, and other Francophone cultural productions. This course will be taught in English, and we will use English translations of French texts. Those taking the course for credit towards the French major or minor will be expected to do the readings and written assignments in French. This course is cross-listed with History and Black Studies. It also satisfies requirements for the Film and Digital Media minor, as well as the diversity requirement for PPE majors.

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  • Altergott, Renee
HPR, LFA 15 3 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
FRE-302-01
Intro to Literature
OPEN
French
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Immersion Component Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 220
Prerequisite: FRE-301
Immersion study in Paris and Normandy
  • Quandt, Karen
LFA 5 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-101-01
Intro to Gender Studies
CLOSED
Gender Studies
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room M140
  • Vogel, Heidi
HPR, LFA 20 20 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-171-01
Classical Mythology
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-101-01
Gender Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
CLA-101-01=GEN-171-01
  • Barnes, Robert
LFA 45 1 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-209-01
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-338-02, PSC-330-01
Gender Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
GEN-209-01=PSC-330-01=PPE-338-02 Learn from a polymath, pioneering social reformer-a woman who was also an economist, sociologist, novelist, lecturer, and feminist. In this class, we will read Gilman (1860-1935) on eugenics, utopia, architecture, clothing, children, the family, and more. We will study her as a Machiavellian, a pragmatist, and a pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps American. Students will conduct original research into The Forerunner, a magazine Gilman wrote from front to back-even the advertisements. Students will read sections of The Forerunner and come together to discuss the political ideas they encounter there, before developing their own original analysis of those sections.

[show more]

  • McCrary, Lorraine
12 0 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-300-01
Southern Gothic Literature
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-300-03, ENG-310-01
Gender Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 215
ENG-105,106,107,109,160,214,215,216,217,218,219,220,260,
or 297
GEN-300-01=ENG-310-01=BLS-300-03 This class is about the ghosts that haunt the literature of the American South. After the Civil War, when the ideal of the pastoral plantation crumbled, Southern writers sought to contend with the brutal historic realities that had always lurked behind the white-pillared façade: poverty, violence, slavery, racism, patriarchy. Southern Gothic literature-which emerged in the early 19th century and continues strong today-is marked by dark humor, transgressive desires, grotesque violence, folk spiritualism, hereditary sins, emotional and environmental isolation, supernatural forces, and punishing madness. In this class, we will listen to the stories that the ghosts of the American South have told, and still tell today.

[show more]

  • Benedicks, Crystal
LFA 20 0 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-304-01
Bioethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-310-01, PHI-319-01, PPE-329-01
Gender Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
Pre-Req: 1 Wabash Literature course.
PHI-319-01=PPE-329-01=GHL-310-01=GEN-304-01 Controversies in bioethics have become a regular part of contemporary life. We are in the midst of a biological and technological revolution that raises interesting and important ethical, political, and philosophical questions. Focused especially on concepts of autonomy and dependency, we will explore asking: When does life begin? How do we define death? What life is worth living, who decides, and how? What does it mean to suffer from disease and disability? Should we mandate vaccination for disease? Should we use new technologies for human enhancement? What is a good relationship between a patient and caregivers? What is informed consent and how do we decide who is competent to give it? What is trauma-informed care? Gender-affirming care? Who should take care of our elders and how should we approach end-of-life care? What is our responsibility for providing a just distribution of health-care resources in our communities, both local and global? We'll consider these questions and more in a seminar discussion format. Background in biology suggested. Interested students who don't satisfy the prerequisites should contact the instructor.

[show more]

  • Rognlie, Dana
18 2 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GEN-324-01
Sports, War, and Masculinity
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-340-01
Gender Studies
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Center Hall, Room 304
HIS-240,
HIS-241,
HIS-242,
HIS-244,
or HIS-245
HIS-340-01=GEN-324-01 Throughout history, sport has been an expression and a reflection of human conflict and aggression and a critical tool for teaching the virtues of manliness and defining masculinity. In America, sport has often been associated with war-preparing good soldiers-the better the athlete the better the soldier, while making boys into men. This course will explore the connection between sports, war and masculinity. It will examine and interpret the role of sports in America since the colonial era, and consider how sports have created an ideal of American masculinity that has contributed to American foreign policy goals. This is a course in American social and cultural history and will explore issues of gender, race, and class. It is also a course in American foreign policy and American militarism and will examine the relationship between sports, war, and masculinity within the geopolitical context of military conflict. Prerequiste: One history credit or permission of Instructor.

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  • Thomas, Sabrina
HPR 15 0 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-102-01
Elementary German II
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 212
Prerequisite: GER-101,
or GER-102 placement
  • VanderKolk, Jake
WL 16 7 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-102-02
Elementary German II
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
Prerequisite: GER-101,
or GER-102 placement
  • VanderKolk, Jake
WL 16 7 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-102L-01
Elementary German II Lab.
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
Corequisite: GER-102
  • Sackniess, Sascha
4 2 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-102L-02
Elementary German II Lab.
CLOSED
German
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 220
Corequisite: GER-102
  • Sackniess, Sascha
4 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-102L-03
Elementary German II Lab.
CLOSED
German
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
Corequisite: GER-102
  • Sackniess, Sascha
4 4 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-102L-04
Elementary German II Lab.
OPEN
German
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 09:45AM - 10:35AM, Detchon, Room 220
Corequisite: GER-102
  • Sackniess, Sascha
4 3 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-102L-05
Elementary German II Lab.
OPEN
German
01/20/2023-05/05/2023 Laboratory Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
Corequisite: GER-102
  • Sackniess, Sascha
4 2 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-202-01
German Language & Culture
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Immersion Component Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 109
Prerequisite: GER-201,
or GER-202 placement
  • Tucker, Brian
WL 16 11 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-202L-01
German Lang. & Culture Lab.
OPEN
German
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 09:45AM - 10:35AM, Detchon, Room 220
CoReq GER-202
  • Sackniess, Sascha
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-202L-02
German Lang. & Culture Lab.
OPEN
German
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 220
CoReq GER-202
  • Sackniess, Sascha
5 4 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-202L-03
German Lang. & Culture Lab.
OPEN
German
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 220
CoReq GER-202
  • Sackniess, Sascha
5 3 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GER-302-01
Intro to Literature
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 212
Prerequisite: GER-301
  • VanderKolk, Jake
LFA 16 3 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-312-01
Black Germany
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-02, HIS-230-01
German
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
GER-312-01=HIS-230-01=BLS-280-02 Despite its widespread image as a white, racially homogenous country, Germany is home to a vibrant and growing Black community with a long and complicated history. Students in this course will explore the history of Black Germany beginning with the 19th century colonial encounters between Germany and the African diaspora and the emergence of a German born Black population. The course will consider questions of nationality, citizenship, race, and identity, such as "What does it means to be German?" and "What does it mean to be Black?" from transnational and transracial perspectives.

[show more]

  • Tucker, Brian
  • Thomas, Sabrina
LFA 8 5 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GER-401-01
Senior Seminar in German
OPEN
German
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
  • Redding, Greg
  • Tucker, Brian
  • VanderKolk, Jake
5 3 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-103-01
Environmental Science
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BIO-103-01
Global Health
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 209
BIO-103-01=GHL-103-01
  • Carlson, Bradley
SL 32 1 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-107-01
Health Psychology
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-107-01
Global Health
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
PSY-107-01=GHL-107-01
  • Gunther, Karen
BSC 25 10 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-201-01
Sociology & Politics of Health
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PSC-201-01, SOC-201-01
Global Health
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
This course is open to sophomore, juniors and seniors by Instructor permission. PSC-201=SOC-201=GHL-201.
  • Gelbman, Shamira
BSC 30 2 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-212-01
The Poor and Justice
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HIS-240-01, PPE-234-01, PSC-212-01
Global Health
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-212-01=HIS-240-01=PPE-234-01=GHL-212-01 The economic impact of the COVID pandemic, including the evictions it caused, reflects a harsh reality: tens of millions of Americans still live in poverty although this is the richest nation on earth. What should government do about this? From the New Deal to the present, have our federal, state and local poverty initiatives done more harm or good? Have government benefits lifted citizens out of poverty or created dependency that traps them in poverty? Has government integrated citizens or continued to segregate them based upon race or wealth? Or should the focus instead be on our courts? Do they extend equal justice to the poor, or do they favor landlords and others with whom the poor do business? This is a critical time to ask these questions. Even before the pandemic struck, America had one of the highest levels of economic inequality and one of the lowest levels of economic mobility in its own history and among other industrialized nations. In addition, while the poor are participating less in politics, wealthy Americans are participating and funding politics more and more. Given the importance and difficulty of these issues, we will consider a wide variety of views including those of liberals, conservatives, and libertarians. We will ground our study not only in history but also in the present, lived experience of the urban poor as reported in Matthew Desmond's Evicted and the rural poor as reported in JD Vance's Hillbilly Elegy.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
20 0 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-224-01
Econom & Political Development
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-224-01, PPE-264-01
Economics
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisite: ECO-101
ECO-224-01=PPE-264-01=GHL-224-01
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC 25 0 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GHL-310-01
Bioethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-304-01, PHI-319-01, PPE-329-01
Global Health
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
PHI-319-01=PPE-329-01=GHL-310-01=GEN-304-01 Controversies in bioethics have become a regular part of contemporary life. We are in the midst of a biological and technological revolution that raises interesting and important ethical, political, and philosophical questions. Focused especially on concepts of autonomy and dependency, we will explore asking: When does life begin? How do we define death? What life is worth living, who decides, and how? What does it mean to suffer from disease and disability? Should we mandate vaccination for disease? Should we use new technologies for human enhancement? What is a good relationship between a patient and caregivers? What is informed consent and how do we decide who is competent to give it? What is trauma-informed care? Gender-affirming care? Who should take care of our elders and how should we approach end-of-life care? What is our responsibility for providing a just distribution of health-care resources in our communities, both local and global? We'll consider these questions and more in a seminar discussion format. Background in biology suggested. Interested students who don't satisfy the prerequisites should contact the instructor.

[show more]

  • Rognlie, Dana
18 0 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GRK-102-01
Beginning Greek II
CLOSED
Greek
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Hays Science, Room 002
Prerequisite: GRK-101
  • Gorey, Matthew
WL 15 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GRK-102L-01
Elem Greek Lab
OPEN
Greek
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Co-requisite: GRK-102
  • Gorey, Matthew
15 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
GRK-301-01
Advanced Greek Reading: Poetry
CLOSED
Greek
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 128
Prerequisite: GRK-201.
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
WL, LFA 8 8 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
GRK-400-01
Senior Seminar
OPEN
Greek
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Days to be Announced, Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
LFA 2 1 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-102-01
World Hist Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-03
History
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
HIS-102-01=ASI-260-03
  • Morillo, Stephen
HPR 50 42 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-102-02
World Hist Since 1500
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-02
History
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
HIS-102-02=ASI-260-02
  • Royalty, Bob
HPR 35 21 / 14 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-210-01
Greek and Roman Science
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
CLA-213-01
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 112
CLA-213-01=HIS-210-01 Archimedes, the famous Sicilian-Greek mathematician and inventor, is said to have founded the discipline of fluid dynamics in a moment of inspiration while taking a bath. But beyond the confines of Archimedes' bathtub, the evolution of what we now think of as "science" was often a freewheeling and haphazard affair, with many fascinating detours and dead ends along the way. This course will investigate ancient Greek and Roman innovations in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math, along with their varied connections to the modern world. We will study the earliest attempts to understand, quantify, and control the natural world of the ancient Mediterranean, tracing the origins and growth of modern "STEM" fields from Ancient Egypt and Babylonia to Classical Greece and Imperial Rome.

[show more]

  • Gorey, Matthew
HPR, LFA 20 5 / 1 / 1 1.00
23/SP
HIS-230-01
Black Germany
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-02, GER-312-01
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
HIS-230-01=GER-312-01=BLS-280-02 Despite its widespread image as a white, racially homogenous country, Germany is home to a vibrant and growing Black community with a long and complicated history. Students in this course will explore the history of Black Germany beginning with the 19th century colonial encounters between Germany and the African diaspora and the emergence of a German born Black population. The course will consider questions of nationality, citizenship, race, and identity, such as "What does it means to be German?" and "What does it mean to be Black?" from transnational and transracial perspectives.

[show more]

  • Thomas, Sabrina
  • Tucker, Brian
16 0 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-230-02
French Colonial Hist. & Media
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-270-01, FRE-277-01
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 128
FRE-277-01=HIS-230-02=BLS-270-01 Who gets to write History? This seminar will approach French colonial history through the lens of the "archive" as a site of knowledge and power. What alternative modes of knowledge production and preservation have risen to challenge dominant historical narratives across the Francophone world? How do the formal aspects and possibilities of a medium change how memories get transmitted? Drawing from historical sources, novels, and multimedia objects-from podcasts to photographs, graphic novels, and video games-we will learn to critique imperial modes of representation and elaborate a new definition of "the archival" through orality, repertoire, testimony, historical fiction, and other Francophone cultural productions. This course will be taught in English, and we will use English translations of French texts. Those taking the course for credit towards the French major or minor will be expected to do the readings and written assignments in French. This course is cross-listed with History and Black Studies. It also satisfies requirements for the Film and Digital Media minor, as well as the diversity requirement for PPE majors.

[show more]

  • Altergott, Renee
HPR, LFA 15 0 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-230-03
The Beatles
OPEN
cross-listed with
MUS-204-03
History
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
HIS-230-01=MUS-204-03 The four lads from Liverpool were arguably the most significant cultural event of the mid-20th c, from popular music to fashion, politics, and religion. This course will study the Beatles in their social, political and cultural context, from post-war Britain of the 1940s, through the economic and social recovery of the 50s, and the swinging and turbulent 60s. We will use a range of methods including social and cultural history as well as musicology.

[show more]

  • Royalty, Bob
HPR, LFA 25 8 / 10 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-240-01
The Poor and Justice
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-212-01, PPE-234-01, PSC-212-01
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
HIS-240-01=PSC-212-01=PPE-234-01=GHL-212-01 The economic impact of the COVID pandemic, including the evictions it caused, reflects a harsh reality: tens of millions of Americans still live in poverty although this is the richest nation on earth. What should government do about this? From the New Deal to the present, have our federal, state and local poverty initiatives done more harm or good? Have government benefits lifted citizens out of poverty or created dependency that traps them in poverty? Has government integrated citizens or continued to segregate them based upon race or wealth? Or should the focus instead be on our courts? Do they extend equal justice to the poor, or do they favor landlords and others with whom the poor do business? This is a critical time to ask these questions. Even before the pandemic struck, America had one of the highest levels of economic inequality and one of the lowest levels of economic mobility in its own history and among other industrialized nations. In addition, while the poor are participating less in politics, wealthy Americans are participating and funding politics more and more. Given the importance and difficulty of these issues, we will consider a wide variety of views including those of liberals, conservatives, and libertarians. We will ground our study not only in history but also in the present, lived experience of the urban poor as reported in Matthew Desmond's Evicted and the rural poor as reported in JD Vance's Hillbilly Elegy.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
BSC, HPR 20 3 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-240-02
Malcolm and Mandela
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-01
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 214
HIS-240-02=BLS-280-01 This course considers the overlapping lives and legacies of Malcolm X and Nelson Mandela, two revolutionary figures whose influence on the fight for civil rights in America and Africa was profound and far reaching. Though the American public rarely imagined them as political bedfellows in their time, their lives had striking autobiographical similarities and pan-African connections. Students will examine the convergences and confluences of their biographies, political ideologies, and activism while exploring broader issues including colonialism, civil disobedience, cultural resistance, social justice, and freedom. We will consider how their lives intersected in the transnational struggle for racial equality and how their legacies continue to shape contemporary debates about black identity and the continued crisis of American race relations. Notably, students will also connect the lives of both men to Black experience at Wabash College and the Crawfordsville community since the 1950s.

[show more]

  • Thomas, Sabrina
HPR 20 5 / 14 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-243-01
US Since 1945
WAITLISTED
History
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
  • Warner, Rick
HPR 25 24 / 1 / 1 1.00
23/SP
HIS-250-01
Climate Change &classical Maya
CLOSED
History
03/13/2023-05/06/2023
  • Warner, Rick
1 1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
HIS-252-01
Peoples & Nations of Lat Amer
OPEN
cross-listed with
HSP-252-01
History
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
  • Warner, Rick
25 11 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-262-01
Modern China
OPEN
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01, HIS-360-01
History
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
ASI-260-01=HIS-262-01=HIS-360-01 An introduction to modern Chinese history and cultural traditions from the late 1800s to the present, outlining themes such as nation-building, socialism, social movements, economic development, memory, gender, international relations, and the relationship between art and politics. The class will analyze a variety of primary sources (in translation), such as speeches, editorials, memoirs, fiction, film, documentary, photography, visual art, and popular music. All readings in English.

[show more]

  • Healey, Cara
HPR 20 4 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-272-01
Africa Since 1885
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-280-06, HIS-370-01
History
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
HIS-272-01=BLS-280-05=HIS-370-01
  • Warner, Rick
25 15 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-300-01
Swords, Sorcery and Reality
CLOSED
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
One previous course in History
This course will examine some of the great works of fantasy literature, especially in the subgenre described as "Sword and Sorcery" -- that is fantasy lit that describes combat that derives from (popular) impressions of medieval warfare -- including Tolkien and some visual fantasy such as Game of Thrones. It will place that literature in comparison with descriptions of and analysis of actual medieval warfare, especially as seen in primary source documents describing medieval combat and warfare more generally. The twin goal of the course will be to better understand medieval military history, and to evaluate how well medieval fantasy authors captured the essentials of that history in fictional form (with added magic!). A final project will involve students writing their own sword and sorcery short story that incorporates the lessons of the course.

[show more]

  • Morillo, Stephen
HPR 20 21 / -1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-340-01
Sports, War, and Masculinity
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-324-01
History
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Center Hall, Room 304
Prerequisite: One previous credit in History
HIS-340-01=GEN-324-01 Throughout history, sport has been an expression and a reflection of human conflict and aggression and a critical tool for teaching the virtues of manliness and defining masculinity. In America, sport has often been associated with war-preparing good soldiers-the better the athlete the better the soldier, while making boys into men. This course will explore the connection between sports, war and masculinity. It will examine and interpret the role of sports in America since the colonial era, and consider how sports have created an ideal of American masculinity that has contributed to American foreign policy goals. This is a course in American social and cultural history and will explore issues of gender, race, and class. It is also a course in American foreign policy and American militarism and will examine the relationship between sports, war, and masculinity within the geopolitical context of military conflict. Prerequiste: One history credit or permission of Instructor.

[show more]

  • Thomas, Sabrina
HPR 15 8 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-360-01
Modern China
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ASI-260-01, HIS-262-01
History
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
1 course from HIS
ASI-260-01=HIS-262-01=HIS-360-01 Instructor consent and one previous credit in history. An introduction to modern Chinese history and cultural traditions from the late 1800s to the present, outlining themes such as nation-building, socialism, social movements, economic development, memory, gender, international relations, and the relationship between art and politics. The class will analyze a variety of primary sources (in translation), such as speeches, editorials, memoirs, fiction, film, documentary, photography, visual art, and popular music. All readings in English.

[show more]

  • Healey, Cara
HPR 1 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-370-01
Africa Since 1885
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BLS-280-06, HIS-272-01
History
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
.5 credits from HIS HIST
HIS-272-01=BLS-280-06=HIS-270-01
  • Warner, Rick
1 5 / -4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HIS-497-01
Historiography
OPEN
History
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
  • Morillo, Stephen
13 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HSP-252-01
Peoples & Nations of Lat Amer
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-252-01
Hispanic Studies
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
HSP-252-01=HIS-252-01
  • Warner, Rick
HPR 25 5 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HSP-300-01
Hispanic Democracy
CLOSED
History
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
0.5 credit from HIS
  • Rogers, Dan
1 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HSP-300-02
Return Migration in Mexico
CLOSED
History
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
0.5 credit from HIS
  • Hernandez, Ruth
1 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HSP-312-01
History of Mexican Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
SPA-312-01
Hispanic Studies
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 109 (more)...
SPA-312-01=HSP-312-01
  • Rogers, Dan
18 2 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HSP-312-02
Art and Social Practice
OPEN
cross-listed with
ART-225-02
Hispanic Studies
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room A124
PreReq SPA-301 and 302
The field of Social Practice blurs the line between life and art, emphasizing creative work that connects to current social and cultural issues. Students will develop projects in response to social and cultural issues that are relevant to them, once areas of interest are identified they will research various strategies for expression to create socially engaged art projects. The course pays particular attention to underrepresented artists to better understand the ways in which social practice artists use evocative and agitational strategies to subvert oppressive systems. Among other topics we will consider issues of place, identity, immigration, climate, the role of the global majority in the social fabric, the nature of public space, and using art as a conduit for creative transformation in our contemporary life.

[show more]

  • Strader, Annie
  • Corona-Aguilera, Hoesy
LFA 14 0 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
HUM-121-01
Language Variation and Change
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-121-01, MLL-121-01
Humanities
03/14/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
Prerequisite: ENG-122 or HUM-122 or MLL-122
MLL-121-01=HUM-121-01=ENG-121-01 2nd half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 2 / 14 / 0 0.50
23/SP
HUM-122-02
Modern Linguistics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-122-01, MLL-122-01
Humanities
01/17/2023-03/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
MLL-122-01=HUM-122-02=ENG-122-01 1st half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 2 / 7 / 0 0.50
23/SP
HUM-176-01
Religion and Film
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HUM-295-01, REL-194-01, REL-294-01
Humanities
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
REL-194-01=HUM-176-01
  • Nelson, Derek
30 3 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
HUM-295-01
Religion and Film
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HUM-176-01, REL-194-01, REL-294-01
Humanities
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
REL-294-01=HUM-295-01
  • Nelson, Derek
30 0 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
LAT-102-01
Beginning Latin II
OPEN
Latin
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 111
Prerequisite: LAT-101,
or LAT-102 placement
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
WL 15 12 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
LAT-102L-01
Beginning Latin Lab II
OPEN
Latin
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Detchon, Room 111
CoReq LAT-102
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
5 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
LAT-102L-02
Beginning Latin Lab II
OPEN
Latin
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 111
CoReq LAT-102
  • Hartnett, Jeremy
7 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
LAT-303-01
Advanced Latin Reading: Virgil
OPEN
Latin
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 128
Prerequisite: LAT-201
  • Gorey, Matthew
WL, LFA 10 6 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
LAT-400-01
Senior Seminar
OPEN
Latin
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Days to be Announced, Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
LFA 4 2 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-103-01
Probability
OPEN
Math
01/16/2023-03/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
1st half semester course.
  • Westphal, Chad
QL 20 6 / 14 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MAT-111-01
Calculus I
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Hays Science, Room 003
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement,
or permission of the instructor
  • Pervenecki, Timothy
QL 22 18 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-111-02
Calculus I
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
MAT-100 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-111 placement,
or permission of the instructor
  • Poffald, Esteban
QL 22 20 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-112-01
Calculus II
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
Prerequisite: MAT-110 or MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-, or MAT-112 placement
  • Surina, FNU
QL 20 18 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-112-02
Calculus II
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisite: MAT-110 or MAT-111 with a minimum grade of C-, or MAT-112 placement
  • Surina, FNU
QL 30 8 / 22 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-219-01
Combinatorics
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Hays Science, Room 001
MAT-223
  • Ansaldi, Katie
24 9 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-223-01
Linear Algebra
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
Prerequisite: MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
or MAT-223 placement.
  • Westphal, Chad
QL 20 16 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-224-01
Differential Equations
OPEN
Math
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-223.
  • Pervenecki, Timothy
24 15 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-225-01
Multivariable Calculus
CLOSED
Math
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MAT-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-223
  • Poffald, Esteban
QL 2 2 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-254-01
Statistical Models
OPEN
Math
01/16/2023-03/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
MAT-112
1st half semester course.
  • Pervenecki, Timothy
20 10 / 10 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MAT-277-01
Image Processing
OPEN
cross-listed with
CSC-271-01
Math
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Hays Science, Room 003
Prerequisites: CSC-111 and MAT-223.
MAT-277-01=CSC-271-01 This course provides an introduction to basic concepts and techniques in digital image processing. Topics may include intensity transformations, spatial filtering, filtering in the frequency domain, image restoration and reconstruction, color image processing, wavelets and multiresolution processing, image compression, and image segmentation.

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  • Surina, FNU
30 3 / 21 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-331-01
Abstract Algebra I
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Hays Science, Room 002
Prerequisite: MAT-223 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Ansaldi, Katie
24 20 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-344-01
Complex Analysis
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 006
MAT-223
  • Poffald, Esteban
15 4 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MAT-355-01
Regression Models
OPEN
Math
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 101
MAT-223,
MAT-253,
and MAT-254
2nd half semester course.
  • Pervenecki, Timothy
20 11 / 9 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MLL-121-01
Language Variation & Change
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-121-01, HUM-121-01
Modern Languages
03/14/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
Prerequisite: ENG-122 or HUM-122 or MLL-122
MLL-121-01=HUM-121-01=ENG-121-01 2nd half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 3 / 14 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MLL-122-01
Modern Linguistics
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-122-01, HUM-122-02
Modern Languages
01/17/2023-03/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 209
MLL-122-01=HUM-122-02=ENG-122-01 1st half semester course
  • Hardy, Jane
LS 30 4 / 7 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MSL-001-01
Leadership Lab (ROTC)
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 03:30PM - 05:20PM, Room to be Announced
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Spring semester dates are January 9 - April 29, 2023. Purdue's Spring Break is March 13-18, 2023 (Monday - Saturday).
  • Staff
8 5 / 3 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MSL-102-01
Foundations of Leadershp ROTC
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Thursday 12:30PM - 01:20PM, Room to be Announced
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Spring semester dates are January 9 - April 29, 2023. Purdue's Spring Break is March 13-18, 2023 (Monday - Saturday).
  • Staff
4 3 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MSL-202-01
Army Doctrine/Decis Mkng ROTC
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:30PM - 02:20PM, Room to be Announced
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Spring semester dates are January 9 - April 29, 2023. Purdue's Spring Break is March 13-18, 2023 (Monday - Saturday).
  • Staff
4 0 / 4 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MSL-302-01
App Ldrshp Small Unit Op ROTC
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:30PM - 02:45PM, Room to be Announced
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Spring semester dates are January 9 - April 29, 2023. Purdue's Spring Break is March 13-18, 2023 (Monday - Saturday).
  • Staff
4 1 / 3 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MSL-402-01
Company Grade Ldrshp ROTC
OPEN
Military Science & Leadership
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 10:30AM - 11:45AM, Room to be Announced
This is a course for ROTC students at the campus of Purdue University and follows Purdue's term dates. Purdue's Spring semester dates are January 9 - April 29, 2023. Purdue's Spring Break is March 13-18, 2023 (Monday - Saturday).
  • Staff
4 2 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-052-01
Chamber Orchestra (No Credit)
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
  • Abel, Alfred
3 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-053-01
Glee Club (No Credit)
CLOSED
Music
03/20/2023-05/04/2023 Fieldwork Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 04:15PM - 06:00PM, Room to be Announced
  • Williams, Sarin
1 2 / -1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-055-01
Jazz Ensemble (no Credit)
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
  • Pazera, Christopher
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-101-01
Music in Society: A History
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
  • Ables, Mollie
LFA 20 18 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MUS-107-01
Music Fundamentals
WAITLISTED
Music
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
  • Ables, Mollie
LFA 20 19 / 1 / 1 1.00
23/SP
MUS-152-01
Chamber Orchestra
OPEN
Music
03/20/2023-05/01/2023 Lecture Monday 04:00PM - 06:30PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Abel, Alfred
20 4 / 16 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-153-01
Glee Club
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 04:15PM - 06:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Williams, Sarin
LFA 50 23 / 27 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-155-01
Jazz Ensemble
OPEN
Music
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday 07:00PM - 09:00PM, Room to be Announced
  • Pazera, Christopher
20 8 / 12 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-156-01
Wamidan World Music Ensemble
OPEN
Music
01/18/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Wednesday, Friday 04:15PM - 05:30PM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
  • Makubuya, James
LFA 20 4 / 16 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-160-01
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission
  • Abel, Alfred
0 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-160-03
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission
  • Everett, Cheryl
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-160-05
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission
  • Norton, Diane
3 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-160-06
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or departmental exam,
or instructor permission
  • Pazera, Christopher
5 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-161-01
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or department placement exam,
and MUS-160,
or instructor permnission.
  • Abel, Alfred
2 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-161-03
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or department placement exam,
and MUS-160,
or instructor permnission.
  • Everett, Cheryl
1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-161-04
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or department placement exam,
and MUS-160,
or instructor permnission.
  • Pingel, Colleen
2 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-161-05
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or department placement exam,
and MUS-160,
or instructor permnission.
  • Norton, Diane
0 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-161-06
Beginning Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
MUS-107 or department placement exam,
and MUS-160,
or instructor permnission.
  • Pazera, Christopher
0 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-202-01
Instruments & Culture
OPEN
Music
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
  • Makubuya, James
12 1 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MUS-204-01
Teaching Jazz Improvisation
OPEN
cross-listed with
EDU-230-01
Music
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room CONC
MUS-204-01=EDU-230-01 This course will focus on learning how to improvise with the Blues, and then teaching that improvisational skill to K - 12 school-age students in their native educational environment. Students will spend the first six weeks of the course on the Wabash campus learning, first, how to improvise with the blues and, second, how to teach this skill to younger students. Wabash students will be divided up into groups of 2 - 3 who will then be placed in a classroom corresponding with their age-level interests. The second half of the course will then be spent in an area K - 12 music classroom, teaching school-age students these improvisational skills. Wabash students will receive specific pedagogical methods appropriate for the age group in which they will be working, and the instructor will be able to observe their in-classroom teaching several times throughout the second half of the semester. While the ability to read music is not a requirement for this class, the willingness to sing for others (for teaching and demonstration) is a necessity.

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  • Williams, Sarin
LFA 12 2 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MUS-204-03
The Beatles
OPEN
cross-listed with
HIS-230-03
Music
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
The four lads from Liverpool were arguably the most significant cultural event of the mid-20th c, from popular music to fashion, politics, and religion. This course will study the Beatles in their social, political and cultural context, from post-war Britain of the 1940s, through the economic and social recovery of the 50s, and the swinging and turbulent 60s. We will use a range of methods including social and cultural history as well as musicology.

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  • Royalty, Bob
25 7 / 10 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MUS-206-01
European Music Since 1750
OPEN
Music
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
  • Ables, Mollie
15 11 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
MUS-260-01
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: Take MUS-161,
or two semesters of MUS-160.
  • Abel, Alfred
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-260-05
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: Take MUS-161,
or two semesters of MUS-160.
  • Norton, Diane
2 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-260-06
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: Take MUS-161,
or two semesters of MUS-160.
  • Pazera, Christopher
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-261-02
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-260.
  • Wilson, Barbara
1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-261-03
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-260.
  • Everett, Cheryl
2 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-261-04
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-260.
  • Pingel, Colleen
1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-261-05
Intermediate Applied Music I
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-260.
  • Norton, Diane
2 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-360-05
Intermediate Applied Music II
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-261 or two semesters of MUS-260.
  • Norton, Diane
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-361-03
Intermediate Applied Music II
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-360.
  • Everett, Cheryl
1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-361-04
Intermediate Applied Music II
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-360.
  • Pingel, Colleen
1 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
MUS-460-06
Advanced Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: take MUS-361,
or two semesters of MUS-360.
  • Pazera, Christopher
1 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
MUS-461-06
Advanced Applied Music
OPEN
Music
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: Take MUS-460.
  • Pazera, Christopher
0 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
NSC-204-01
Principles of Neuroscience
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-204-01
Neuroscience
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
NSC-204-001=PSY-204-01
  • Gunther, Karen
25 4 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
NSC-310-01
Molecular Endocrinology
OPEN
cross-listed with
BIO-371-01
Psychology
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 001
NSC-310-01=BIO-371-01 Hormones, the chemical signals of the endocrine system, rely on receptors and signal transduction pathways to carry out their powerful physiological, neural, and behavioral effects. This course will examine the molecular and cellular mechanisms of hormone action through primary scientific literature analysis and extensive writing. Students will learn to integrate concepts from molecular biology, cell biology, neuroscience, physiology, and pharmacology while emphasizing the contributions basic endocrine research to human health. This course counts as an elective for the Biology and Biochemistry majors and the Neuroscience minor.

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  • Walsh, Heidi
16 1 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
NSC-332-01
Rsrch in Sensation & Percept
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSY-332-01
Neuroscience
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
Prerequisite: PSY-232.
NSC-332-01=PSY-332-01
  • Gunther, Karen
BSC 12 0 / 9 / 0 0.50
23/SP
OCS-01-01
Off Campus Study
OPEN
Off Campus Study
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
  • Staff
13 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PE-011-01
Advanced Fitness
OPEN
Physical Education
01/18/2023-05/04/2023 Fieldwork Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 06:00AM - 07:00AM, Room to be Announced
  • Riordan, Joseph
88 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHI-105-01
Intr to Philosophy: Videogames
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PHI-105-01SR
Philosophy
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 15 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-105-01SR
Intr to Philosophy: Videogames
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PHI-105-01
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 5 5 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-106-01
Intro to Phil: Humans & Robots
OPEN
Philosophy
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 18 14 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-110-01
Philosophical Ethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-110-01F
Philosophy
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
  • Rognlie, Dana
HPR 23 19 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-110-01F
Philosophical Ethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-110-01
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
  • Rognlie, Dana
HPR 7 3 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-124-01
Philosophy and Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-124-01F
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 216 (more)...
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR 18 12 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-124-01F
Philosophy and Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-124-01
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 216 (more)...
Freshmen only
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR 7 3 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-144-01
Introduction to Existentialism
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-144-01F
Philosophy
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 301
  • Rognlie, Dana
HPR 10 4 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-144-01F
Introduction to Existentialism
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-144-01
Philosophy
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 301
Freshmen only
  • Rognlie, Dana
HPR 8 2 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-218-01
Philosophy
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 216
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR 30 20 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-242-01
Foundations Modern Philosophy
OPEN
Philosophy
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 30 11 / 19 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-249-01
19th Cent. European Philosophy
OPEN
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Room to be Announced
This course approaches 19th-century European philosophy through the treatment of four major figures whose influence continues to be felt: Hegel, Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche. Responding to Hegel's precedent, the three later thinkers must grapple with the relationship between systematic knowledge and history. Hegel produces a unified system of philosophy by articulating the history of knowledge in a way that denies the division of knowledge into various sub-disciplines (logic, ethics, metaphysics, epistemology, politics, and so forth). This insight into the history of knowledge guides the three other thinkers who follow even as they find various positions from which to criticize Hegel. Marx wants a more materialist philosophy, and so turns Hegel's dialectic on its head. Kierkegaard begins to expose the cracks in the project of universal systematic thinking, showing its limits by affirming the singularity of religious experience. Nietzsche makes the system break by developing a critique of metaphysics, which is to say, of any philosophical thinking purporting to operate outside of history, context, and particular motivations. So, the course begins by laying out a system of metaphysics and ends by considering why that very project might be a problem. The course will provide historical context that enriches students' understanding of existentialism and continental philosophy, but it presupposes no philosophical background.

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  • Trott, Adriel
HPR 18 3 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-270-01
Elem Symbolic Logic
OPEN
Philosophy
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR, QL 35 26 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-272-01
Philosophy of Science
OPEN
Philosophy
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Hays Science, Room 321
  • Carlson, Matthew
HPR 20 11 / 9 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-319-01
Bioethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-304-01, GHL-310-01, PPE-329-01
Philosophy
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
Recommended prerequisite: BIO-101 or BIO-111.,
Required prerequisite: one credit from FRC-101,
PHI-110, PHI-216,
or PHI-217. Interested students who don't satisfy the prerequisites should seek instructor permission.
PHI-319-01=GHL-310-01=PPE-329-01=GEN-304-01 Controversies in bioethics have become a regular part of contemporary life. We are in the midst of a biological and technological revolution that raises interesting and important ethical, political, and philosophical questions. Focused especially on concepts of autonomy and dependency, we will explore asking: When does life begin? How do we define death? What life is worth living, who decides, and how? What does it mean to suffer from disease and disability? Should we mandate vaccination for disease? Should we use new technologies for human enhancement? What is a good relationship between a patient and caregivers? What is informed consent and how do we decide who is competent to give it? What is trauma-informed care? Gender-affirming care? Who should take care of our elders and how should we approach end-of-life care? What is our responsibility for providing a just distribution of health-care resources in our communities, both local and global? We'll consider these questions and more in a seminar discussion format. Background in biology suggested. Interested students who don't satisfy the prerequisites should contact the instructor.

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  • Rognlie, Dana
HPR 18 7 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHI-319-02
Social Morality
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-329-02
Philosophy
01/16/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
Prerequisite: Take one of the following: PHI-110 PHI-218 PHI-240 or PHI-242
PHI-319-02=PPE-329-02 In order to enjoy the benefits of social cooperation, we need to live under common social rules. But, since many of us disagree about moral matters, living under common social rules risks subjecting some to the authority of others, which would threaten their freedom. How, then, can we live under moral norms that are justifiable to all (i.e., norms that are publicly justifiable)? In this course, we will closely investigate this question with the help of both classical and contemporary philosophical texts. (Readings will draw from the work of philosophers such as Gerald Gaus, Thomas Hobbes, John Stuart Mill, David Schmidtz, Peter Strawson, and Kevin Vallier.) In addition to grappling with the aforementioned question, we will address related topics such as: What role does freedom of expression play in allowing those who disagree about morality to live together without pushing each other around? What is the relationship between public justification and social trust?

[show more]

  • Salomon, Aaron
18 2 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-101-01
Astronomy
WAITLISTED
Physics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
  • Ross, Gaylon
QL, SL 40 40 / 0 / 4 1.00
23/SP
PHY-101L-01
Astronomy Lab
WAITLISTED
Physics
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 205
Co-Requisite: PHY-101
  • Ross, Gaylon
20 20 / 0 / 2 0.00
23/SP
PHY-101L-02
Astronomy Lab
WAITLISTED
Physics
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 205
Co-Requisite: PHY-101
  • Ross, Gaylon
20 20 / 0 / 2 0.00
23/SP
PHY-110-01
Physics II - Algebra
OPEN
Physics
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
Prerequisite: PHY-109 or PHY-111,
or approval of instructor
  • Tompkins, Nate
QL, SL 40 17 / 23 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-110L-01
Physics II - Algebra Lab
OPEN
Physics
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 201
Corequisite: PHY-110
  • Tompkins, Nate
20 7 / 13 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHY-110L-02
Physics II - Algebra Lab
OPEN
Physics
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 201
Corequisite: PHY-110
  • Tompkins, Nate
20 10 / 10 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHY-112-01
Physics II - Calculus
OPEN
Physics
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 104
Prerequisite: PHY-111 with a minimum grade of C-
  • Krause, Dennis
QL, SL 40 13 / 27 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-112L-01
General Physics Lab
OPEN
Physics
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 201
Corequisite: PHY-112
  • Krause, Dennis
20 1 / 19 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHY-112L-02
General Physics Lab
OPEN
Physics
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 201
Corequisite: PHY-112
  • Krause, Dennis
20 12 / 8 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHY-210-01
Intro Quantum Theory & Apps
OPEN
Physics
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 310
Prerequisite: PHY-209 with a minimum grade of C-,
and MAT-223
  • Brown, Jim
10 4 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-210L-01
Intro Quantum Theor & App Lab
OPEN
Physics
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 306
Corequisite: PHY-210
  • Brown, Jim
10 4 / 6 / 0 0.00
23/SP
PHY-220-01
Electronics
OPEN
Physics
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 09:50AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 307
This a class/lab period combined.
  • Brown, Jim
QL, SL 10 8 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-314-01
Electromagnetic Theory
OPEN
Physics
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Goodrich Hall, Room 305
Prerequisite: PHY-112 with a minimum grade of C-,
MAT-224, and MAT-225
  • Ross, Gaylon
10 6 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PHY-381-01
Advanced Laboratory I
OPEN
Physics
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 305
Prerequisite: PHY-210
  • Tompkins, Nate
10 1 / 9 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PHY-382-01
Advanced Laboratory II
OPEN
Physics
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Thursday 01:10PM - 04:00PM, Goodrich Hall, Room 305
Prerequisite: PHY-381
  • Tompkins, Nate
10 5 / 5 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PPE-200-01
Introduction to PPE
WAITLISTED
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 213
Prerequisite: completion or concurrent enrollment in ECO-101,
PHI-110,
and one of the PSC intro courses,
each with a minimum grade of C-,
or consent of the instructor.
  • Snow, Nick
  • Salomon, Aaron
BSC 14 14 / 0 / 1 1.00
23/SP
PPE-200-02
Introduction to PPE
OPEN
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 215
Prerequisite: completion or concurrent enrollment in ECO-101,
PHI-110,
and one of the PSC intro courses,
each with a minimum grade of C-,
or consent of the instructor.
  • McCrary, Lorraine
  • Salomon, Aaron
BSC 13 12 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-218-01
Philosophy of Commerce
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PHI-218-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 216
PHI-218-01=PPE-218-01
  • Gower, Jeff
HPR 30 10 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-234-01
The Poor and Justice
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-212-01, HIS-240-01, PSC-212-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-212-01=HIS-240-01=PPE-234-01=GHL-212-01 The economic impact of the COVID pandemic, including the evictions it caused, reflects a harsh reality: tens of millions of Americans still live in poverty although this is the richest nation on earth. What should government do about this? From the New Deal to the present, have our federal, state and local poverty initiatives done more harm or good? Have government benefits lifted citizens out of poverty or created dependency that traps them in poverty? Has government integrated citizens or continued to segregate them based upon race or wealth? Or should the focus instead be on our courts? Do they extend equal justice to the poor, or do they favor landlords and others with whom the poor do business? This is a critical time to ask these questions. Even before the pandemic struck, America had one of the highest levels of economic inequality and one of the lowest levels of economic mobility in its own history and among other industrialized nations. In addition, while the poor are participating less in politics, wealthy Americans are participating and funding politics more and more. Given the importance and difficulty of these issues, we will consider a wide variety of views including those of liberals, conservatives, and libertarians. We will ground our study not only in history but also in the present, lived experience of the urban poor as reported in Matthew Desmond's Evicted and the rural poor as reported in JD Vance's Hillbilly Elegy.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
20 9 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-238-01
Protest & Policy in the Us
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BLS-280-05, PSC-210-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
PSC-210-01=PPE-238-01-BLS-280-05 This course examines the role of protest as a means of political expression that has been used by a variety of political actors seeking to change the policies and political practices of the United States throughout its history. The focus will be on two overarching questions: Why has protest been such a fixture of American politics? And to what extent does it actually influence public policy outcomes? In addition to considering frameworks for making sense of the role of protest in the development of US public policy in general, we'll take a close look at the experiences of three specific protest movements: the mid-twentieth-century Civil Rights Movement; the Tea Party, and the contemporary Environmental Justice Movement. Students will also have the opportunity to research the policy impact of a US-based protest initiative of their choosing.

[show more]

  • Gelbman, Shamira
18 9 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-251-01
Law & Economics
CLOSED
cross-listed with
ECO-231-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
ECO-101
ECO-231-01=PPE-251-01
  • Snow, Nick
BSC 25 7 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-264-01
Econom & Political Development
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-224-01, GHL-224-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
ECO-101
ECO-224-01=PPE-264-01=GHL=224-01
  • Burnette, Joyce
BSC 25 1 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-329-01
Bioethics
OPEN
cross-listed with
GEN-304-01, GHL-310-01, PHI-319-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
PHI-319-01=PPE-329-01=GHL-310-01=GEN-304-01 Controversies in bioethics have become a regular part of contemporary life. We are in the midst of a biological and technological revolution that raises interesting and important ethical, political, and philosophical questions. Focused especially on concepts of autonomy and dependency, we will explore asking: When does life begin? How do we define death? What life is worth living, who decides, and how? What does it mean to suffer from disease and disability? Should we mandate vaccination for disease? Should we use new technologies for human enhancement? What is a good relationship between a patient and caregivers? What is informed consent and how do we decide who is competent to give it? What is trauma-informed care? Gender-affirming care? Who should take care of our elders and how should we approach end-of-life care? What is our responsibility for providing a just distribution of health-care resources in our communities, both local and global? We'll consider these questions and more in a seminar discussion format. Background in biology suggested. Interested students who don't satisfy the prerequisites should contact the instructor.

[show more]

  • Rognlie, Dana
18 2 / 7 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-329-02
Social Morality
OPEN
cross-listed with
PHI-319-02
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
03/20/2023-05/03/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 300
Pre-requiste: Take one of the following: PHI-110,
PHI-218, PHI-240,
or PHI-242;
PHI-319-02=PPE-329-02 In order to enjoy the benefits of social cooperation, we need to live under common social rules. But, since many of us disagree about moral matters, living under common social rules risks subjecting some to the authority of others, which would threaten their freedom. How, then, can we live under moral norms that are justifiable to all (i.e., norms that are publicly justifiable)? In this course, we will closely investigate this question with the help of both classical and contemporary philosophical texts. (Readings will draw from the work of philosophers such as Gerald Gaus, Thomas Hobbes, John Stuart Mill, David Schmidtz, Peter Strawson, and Kevin Vallier.) In addition to grappling with the aforementioned question, we will address related topics such as: What role does freedom of expression play in allowing those who disagree about morality to live together without pushing each other around? What is the relationship between public justification and social trust?

[show more]

  • Salomon, Aaron
18 10 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-330-01
Internatnl Political Economy
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PSC-340-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequiste:Take PSC-121 or PSC-141 or Instructor Permission.
PSC-340-01=PPE-330-01 This course will introduce students to the study of international economic relations and the relationship between political and economic behavior and decision-making. Under this broad umbrella, we will examine a number of issue areas, such as trade and financial flows, monetary and fiscal policy, growth and global inequality, and economic crises. At the conclusion of the course, students will possess an understanding of 1) how domestic political institutions and partisan incentives shape international economic policy and outcomes, 2) how international economic flows influence domestic policymaking, and 3) how international economic institutions affect economic policy and outcomes.

[show more]

  • Irons, Dylan
BSC 12 11 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-338-01
Religious Freedom
OPEN
cross-listed with
PSC-315-01, REL-280-02
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-315-01=PPE-338-01=REL-280-02 May a football coach pray at the 50-yard line at the end of a public school's football game? Is a state required to fund religious schools if it funds private secular schools? May the US Air Force Academy display a banner declaring "I am a member of Team Jesus Christ" in its football locker room? Are businesses required to provide health benefits like the morning after pill if doing so conflicts with their owners' religious beliefs? Should we prosecute Christian Scientist parents whose critically ill child dies because the only treatment he received was prayer? Can we accommodate the religious practices of every American in our schools, workplaces, and other institutions? If not, can we accommodate anyone's? The collision of religion, politics, and the law generates many sensitive and difficult questions. We will work through these kinds of questions to determine what our Constitution means when it forbids government from establishing religion and protects our right freely to exercise our many religions. We will also explore whether religion can play a productive role in politics without debasing itself or causing strife. This course is offered to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
BSC 20 7 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-338-02
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GEN-209-01, PSC-330-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
GEN-209-01=PSC-330-01=PPE-338-02 Learn from a polymath, pioneering social reformer-a woman who was also an economist, sociologist, novelist, lecturer, and feminist. In this class, we will read Gilman (1860-1935) on eugenics, utopia, architecture, clothing, children, the family, and more. We will study her as a Machiavellian, a pragmatist, and a pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps American. Students will conduct original research into The Forerunner, a magazine Gilman wrote from front to back-even the advertisements. Students will read sections of The Forerunner and come together to discuss the political ideas they encounter there, before developing their own original analysis of those sections.

[show more]

  • McCrary, Lorraine
12 11 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PPE-358-01
Crime and Punishment
OPEN
cross-listed with
ECO-358-01
Philosophy, Politics, Economic
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisites: ECO-101 with a minimum grade of C- and one 200 level ECO course with a minimum grade of D,
OR with the consent of the instructor
PPE-358-01=ECO-358-01 This class will investigate the social phenomena of crime and punishment through the analytical tool kit of political economy. Students will learn a variety of theoretical approaches and apply them to understand and explain historic and contemporary trends of crime and punishment. Theoretical approaches will include rational and strategic decision making, public goods theory, bureaucratic incentives, comparative institutional analysis, and industrial organization. Key applied topics covered during the semester will include criminal behavior, the historic origins of criminal law and law enforcement services, the potentials and limits of both public and private provisions of policing and punishment, and the historic and contemporary patterns of crime and punitive trends across social contexts. Finally, students will assess the viability of historic and current criminal justice reform movements.

[show more]

  • D'Amico, Daniel
BSC 25 6 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-121-01
Intro to Comparative Politics
OPEN
Political Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
  • Valdez, John
BSC 30 17 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-131-01
Intro to Political Theory
OPEN
Political Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Center Hall, Room 215
  • McCrary, Lorraine
BSC 30 15 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-141-01
Intro to Intn'l Relations
OPEN
Political Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
  • Irons, Dylan
BSC 30 24 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-200-01
Political Inquiry & Analysis
CLOSED
Political Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
One credit from PSC-111,
or PSC-121,
or PSC-131,
or PSC-141. Permission from instructor required for enrollment.
This course is for students who are planning to major in Political Science. No distribution credit. No freshmen or seniors. Enrollment by instructor permission, email gelbmans@wabash.edu for permission to enroll
  • Gelbman, Shamira
12 14 / -2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-201-01
Sociology & Politics of Health
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-201-01, SOC-201-01
Political Science
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
This course is open to sophomore, juniors and seniors by Instructor permission. PSC-201=SOC-201=GHL-201.
  • Gelbman, Shamira
BSC 30 0 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-210-01
Protest & Policy in the Us
CLOSED
cross-listed with
BLS-280-05, PPE-238-01
Political Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
PSC-210-01=PPE-238-01=BLS-280-05 This course examines the role of protest as a means of political expression that has been used by a variety of political actors seeking to change the policies and political practices of the United States throughout its history. The focus will be on two overarching questions: Why has protest been such a fixture of American politics? And to what extent does it actually influence public policy outcomes? In addition to considering frameworks for making sense of the role of protest in the development of US public policy in general, we'll take a close look at the experiences of three specific protest movements: the mid-twentieth-century Civil Rights Movement; the Tea Party, and the contemporary Environmental Justice Movement. Students will also have the opportunity to research the policy impact of a US-based protest initiative of their choosing.

[show more]

  • Gelbman, Shamira
BSC 18 7 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-212-01
The Poor and Justice
WAITLISTED
cross-listed with
GHL-212-01, HIS-240-01, PPE-234-01
Political Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-212-01=HIS-240-01=PPE-234-01=GHL-212-01 The economic impact of the COVID pandemic, including the evictions it caused, reflects a harsh reality: tens of millions of Americans still live in poverty although this is the richest nation on earth. What should government do about this? From the New Deal to the present, have our federal, state and local poverty initiatives done more harm or good? Have government benefits lifted citizens out of poverty or created dependency that traps them in poverty? Has government integrated citizens or continued to segregate them based upon race or wealth? Or should the focus instead be on our courts? Do they extend equal justice to the poor, or do they favor landlords and others with whom the poor do business? This is a critical time to ask these questions. Even before the pandemic struck, America had one of the highest levels of economic inequality and one of the lowest levels of economic mobility in its own history and among other industrialized nations. In addition, while the poor are participating less in politics, wealthy Americans are participating and funding politics more and more. Given the importance and difficulty of these issues, we will consider a wide variety of views including those of liberals, conservatives, and libertarians. We will ground our study not only in history but also in the present, lived experience of the urban poor as reported in Matthew Desmond's Evicted and the rural poor as reported in JD Vance's Hillbilly Elegy.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
BSC, HPR 20 8 / 0 / 1 1.00
23/SP
PSC-242-01
American Foreign Policy
OPEN
Political Science
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
  • Valdez, John
BSC 18 12 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-300-01
Research/Stats Political Sci
OPEN
Political Science
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
  • Irons, Dylan
BSC, QL 15 4 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-315-01
Religious Freedom
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-338-01, REL-280-02
Political Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-315-01=PPE-338-01=REL-280-02 May a football coach pray at the 50-yard line at the end of a public school's football game? Is a state required to fund religious schools if it funds private secular schools? May the US Air Force Academy display a banner declaring "I am a member of Team Jesus Christ" in its football locker room? Are businesses required to provide health benefits like the morning after pill if doing so conflicts with their owners' religious beliefs? Should we prosecute Christian Scientist parents whose critically ill child dies because the only treatment he received was prayer? Can we accommodate the religious practices of every American in our schools, workplaces, and other institutions? If not, can we accommodate anyone's? The collision of religion, politics, and the law generates many sensitive and difficult questions. We will work through these kinds of questions to determine what our Constitution means when it forbids government from establishing religion and protects our right freely to exercise our many religions. We will also explore whether religion can play a productive role in politics without debasing itself or causing strife. This course is open to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
BSC, HPR 20 9 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-330-01
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GEN-209-01, PPE-338-02
Political Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Lilly Library, Room LSEM
GEN-209-01=PSC-330-01=PPE-338-02 Learn from a polymath, pioneering social reformer-a woman who was also an economist, sociologist, novelist, lecturer, and feminist. In this class, we will read Gilman (1860-1935) on eugenics, utopia, architecture, clothing, children, the family, and more. We will study her as a Machiavellian, a pragmatist, and a pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps American. Students will conduct original research into The Forerunner, a magazine Gilman wrote from front to back-even the advertisements. Students will read sections of The Forerunner and come together to discuss the political ideas they encounter there, before developing their own original analysis of those sections.

[show more]

  • McCrary, Lorraine
BSC 12 1 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-340-01
Internatnl Political Economy
CLOSED
cross-listed with
PPE-330-01
Political Science
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 201
Prerequisite: PSC-121 or PSC-141 or Instructor Permission
PSC-340-01=PPE-330-01 This course will introduce students to the study of international economic relations and the relationship between political and economic behavior and decision-making. Under this broad umbrella, we will examine a number of issue areas, such as trade and financial flows, monetary and fiscal policy, growth and global inequality, and economic crises. At the conclusion of the course, students will possess an understanding of 1) how domestic political institutions and partisan incentives shape international economic policy and outcomes, 2) how international economic flows influence domestic policymaking, and 3) how international economic institutions affect economic policy and outcomes.

[show more]

  • Irons, Dylan
BSC 12 3 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSC-347-01
Conflict, War, and Peace
OPEN
Political Science
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-141
  • Valdez, John
12 2 / 10 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-101-01
Introduction to Psychology
CLOSED
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
  • Abel, Emily
BSC 40 40 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-101-02
Introduction to Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
  • Horton, Bobby
BSC 40 22 / 18 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-101-03DCS
Introduction to Psychology
CLOSED
Psychology
01/16/2023-03/03/2023 Distance Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
This course is not available for additional enrollment to Wabash students.
  • Staff
BSC 1 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-107-01
Health Psychology
OPEN
cross-listed with
GHL-107-01
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
PSY-107-01=GHL-107-01
  • Gunther, Karen
BSC 25 12 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-110-01
Happiness
OPEN
Psychology
03/21/2023-05/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
The Declaration of Independence asserts that the "pursuit of Happiness" is a fundamental right, endowed by none other than the Creator. Great news! But what exactly are we pursuing? And how do we catch it? This course will introduce students to the science of well-being and its implications for the everyday pursuit of happiness. Course activities will include exercises for increasing a sense of well-being.

[show more]

  • Bost, Preston
BSC 25 23 / 2 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-201-01
Research Methods & Stats I
OPEN
Psychology
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Prerequisite: PSY-101
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
BSC, QL 30 17 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-202-01
Research Methods & Stats II
OPEN
Psychology
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 214
Prerequisite: PSY-201
  • Bost, Preston
BSC, QL 30 10 / 20 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-204-01
Principles of Neuroscience
OPEN
cross-listed with
NSC-204-01
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
PSY-204-01=NSC-204-01
  • Gunther, Karen
25 5 / 16 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-214-01
Psychology and Law
OPEN
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 301
  • Bost, Preston
BSC 25 13 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-222-01
Social Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
Prerequisite: PSY-201 (may be taken concurrently).
  • Horton, Bobby
25 10 / 15 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-223-01
Abnormal Psychology
CLOSED
Psychology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 114
Prerequisite: PSY-101.
  • Abel, Emily
BSC 25 25 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-233-01
Behavioral Neuroscience
OPEN
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Baxter Hall, Room 311
Prerequisite: PSY-204,
NSC-204,
BIO-101,
or BIO-111.
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
BSC 25 5 / 20 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-301-01
Literature Review
OPEN
Psychology
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
Prerequisite: PSY-201
  • Gunther, Karen
10 7 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
PSY-320-01
Research Developmental Psychol
OPEN
Psychology
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
Prerequisites: PSY-202 and PSY-220.
  • Abel, Emily
12 5 / 7 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-331-01
Research Cognitive Psychology
OPEN
Psychology
03/23/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Baxter Hall, Room 301
PSY-202 and 231
  • Bost, Preston
12 10 / 2 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-332-01
Rsrch in Sensation & Percept
OPEN
cross-listed with
NSC-332-01
Psychology
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 312
Prerequisite: PSY-232.
PSY-332-01=NSC-332-01
  • Gunther, Karen
BSC 12 3 / 9 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-496-01
Senior Project
OPEN
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: PSY-495.
  • Bost, Preston
4 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-496-02
Senior Project
OPEN
Psychology
01/24/2023-05/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Room to be Announced
Prerequisite: PSY-495.
  • Gunther, Karen
3 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-496-03
Senior Project
OPEN
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: PSY-495.
  • Horton, Bobby
4 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-496-04
Senior Project
OPEN
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: PSY-495.
  • Schmitzer-Torbert, Neil
3 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
PSY-496-05
Senior Project
OPEN
Psychology
01/16/2023-05/06/2023
Prerequisite: PSY-495.
  • Abel, Emily
2 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
REL-104-01
Religions of China and Japan
CLOSED
Religion
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Center Hall, Room 216
  • Blix, David
HPR 50 50 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-162-01
New Testament
OPEN
cross-listed with
CLA-162-01
Religion
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 216
CLA-162-01=REL-162-01
  • Reed Jay, Jeff
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR, LFA 50 14 / 21 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-172-01
Reformation to Modern Era
OPEN
Religion
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Center Hall, Room 216
  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 50 10 / 40 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-194-01
Religion and Film
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HUM-176-01, HUM-295-01, REL-294-01
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
REL-194-01=HUM-176-01
  • Nelson, Derek
30 27 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-210-01
Issues in Contemporary Islam
OPEN
Religion
01/17/2023-01/19/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Center Hall, Room 305
REL-103,
or permission of instructor
What is the shape of Islam in the contemporary world? How did it get this shape? To what extent can Islam accommodate the contemporary world, and vice versa? These are some of the questions that we'll try to answer in this course. We'll start by looking at some key moments in Islamic history. Beginning with the fall of the Abbasids in 1258, we'll look at the reconfiguration of the Abode of Islam among the Mughal, Safavid, and Ottoman empires, and move from there down to the early 1700s. We'll then read a number of primary texts by Islamic reformers from the 1700s down to the present. We'll pay special attention to the rise of so-called Islamic fundamentalism; the recent conflicts associated with Islam in the Middle East and the Asian subcontinent; ISIS, al-Qaeda, and the Taliban; Islamophobia; the status of women in Islam; and living as a Muslim in the industrial societies of modern Europe and the United States.

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  • Blix, David
HPR 20 16 / 4 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-275-01
Nonviolence & Social Change
OPEN
Religion
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Center Hall, Room 304
Nonviolence is a powerful way of life for courageous people committed to building peaceful communities. It remains a thriving force in contemporary America. We will study this philosophy and its religious roots in the thought and lives of Jesus, Martin Luther King, Jr., and M. K. Gandhi. We will also study, meet, and interact with current nonviolent public servants around the country who pursue nonviolent projects in public schools, prisons and disadvantaged neighborhoods and who have contributed powerfully to building movements for social and environmental justice. We will learn and practice employing nonviolent techniques and skills including restorative justice, nonviolent communication, conflict management, and conflict de-escalation and study the principles and skills of nonviolence as they have come to us from Dr. King's co-workers and successors, with whom we will also interact.

[show more]

  • Reed Jay, Jeff
  • Nelson, Derek
HPR 15 7 / 8 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-280-01
Religion & Sports in America
CLOSED
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Center Hall, Room 304
This seminar examines the relationship between religion and sports in American history and the contemporary United States. The world of American sports overflows with religious elements: players praying after games and speaking openly about their faith; the elevation of superstar athletes to modern gods; sports as a means of acculturation and character formation; the creation of sacred space, time, and rituals; the devotion which some fans give to their teams; the cultural worship of youth, health, and fitness; the historic connections between religious ceremonies and athletics; and much more. Drawing upon a range of disciplinary methods, we will investigate the ways religion and sports uphold similar ideals as well as the ways they are in competition with one another for the hearts, minds, bodies, and resources of their devotees.

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  • Baer, Jonathan
HPR 20 20 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-280-02
Religious Freedom
OPEN
cross-listed with
PPE-338-01, PSC-315-01
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Baxter Hall, Room 212
PSC-315-01=PPE-338-01=REL-280-02 May a football coach pray at the 50-yard line at the end of a public school's football game? Is a state required to fund religious schools if it funds private secular schools? May the US Air Force Academy display a banner declaring "I am a member of Team Jesus Christ" in its football locker room? Are businesses required to provide health benefits like the morning after pill if doing so conflicts with their owners' religious beliefs? Should we prosecute Christian Scientist parents whose critically ill child dies because the only treatment he received was prayer? Can we accommodate the religious practices of every American in our schools, workplaces, and other institutions? If not, can we accommodate anyone's? The collision of religion, politics, and the law generates many sensitive and difficult questions. We will work through these kinds of questions to determine what our Constitution means when it forbids government from establishing religion and protects our right freely to exercise our many religions. We will also explore whether religion can play a productive role in politics without debasing itself or causing strife. This course is offered to Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors.

[show more]

  • Himsel, Scott
BSC, HPR 20 3 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-290-01
Ritual in Rel. & Everyday Life
CLOSED
Religion
01/17/2023-03/02/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
1st half semester course "All rites begin in simplicity, are brought to fulfillment in elegant form, and end in joy." So says Xunzi, the great Confucian writer of antiquity. Is he right? What are rituals? Are they routine acts, which we do simply because we've always done them? Or are they meaningful acts, which we do because they actually signify something? If the latter, what do they signify? Can we say that all rituals somehow religious? If so, why? If not, why not? In this half-course, we'll read selections from various writers on ritual. Using film and other media, we'll also look at a variety of ritual activities from different cultures, including College rituals, religious ceremonies, holidays like Thanksgiving, and the "little rituals" of everyday life in, e.g., media, sports, or politics.

[show more]

  • Blix, David
HPR 20 20 / 0 / 0 0.50
23/SP
REL-290-02
Symbol and Myth in Religion
OPEN
Religion
03/14/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
2nd half semester course Do myths and symbols belong in the skill-set of people living in a modern scientific world? Or are they playthings for nerds or soft-minded romantics? What exactly are symbols? Myths? What do they do? Are they socially constructed? Archetypal? Something else? How important are they for religion? Can you have a religion that's "demythologized"? Should you? These are some of the questions that we'll tackle in this half-course. We'll read selections from, among others, Mircea Eliade and Wendy Doniger, as well as their critics. Using film and other media, we'll also read or look at a variety of myths, both ancient and modern.

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  • Blix, David
HPR 20 17 / 3 / 0 0.50
23/SP
REL-290-03
Uncovering Greek Religion
CLOSED
cross-listed with
CLA-212-01
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Immersion Component Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 128
CLA-212-01=REL-290-03 The Greeks were a polytheistic society: they worshipped numerous gods. Moreover, they did so in a variety of modes and for a multitude of reasons. Using ancient literature and archaeological remains, we will consider the nature and function of the gods of the Greek pantheon, as well as the sacred spaces, festivals, dedications, and rituals through which the Greeks worshipped their deities from the Bronze Age through the Hellenistic period and the rise of Christianity. As we explore these topics, we will situate religion within the changing social and historical contexts of the ancient world. This entails analysis of the relation between cults and the state, especially Athenian democracy; the impact of deities and festivals on warfare, the economy, athletics, and literature; and the role of refugees, slaves, women, and other marginalized groups. The course is discussion oriented; most class periods will be spent in conversation about assigned readings. An intensive immersion component rounds out the course: we will travel to Greece from May 7-17, 2023.

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  • Wickkiser, Bronwen
HPR, LFA 16 2 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-294-01
Religion & Film
CLOSED
cross-listed with
HUM-176-01, HUM-295-01, REL-194-01
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Baxter Hall, Room 101
REL-294-01=HUM-295-01
  • Nelson, Derek
30 0 / -- / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-298-01
Sociology of Religion
OPEN
Religion
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Center Hall, Room 300
  • Baer, Jonathan
BSC, HPR 20 10 / 10 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-370-01
Contemporary Theology
OPEN
Religion
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Center Hall, Room 300
REL-171,
REL-172,
REL-173,
REL-270,
or PHI-242
  • Nelson, Derek
16 4 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
REL-373-01
Anti-Racist Christian Theology
OPEN
cross-listed with
BLS-300-01
Religion
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 09:15AM, Center Hall, Room 300
REL-373-01=BLS-300-01 "Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. Sometimes we must interfere." -- Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor. The world is finally understanding that there can be no teaching about race that is not also teaching against racism. This course will compare the Black experience in the United States, and theological reflection thereon, with Black experience under the brutal Apartheid regime in South Africa. We begin by examining first-person narratives from Black and White Americans on the harms done by racism. We will do the same with Black (Bantu), White and the so-called "Cape-Coloured" South Africans. Then we will look at histories told about how the parallel systems of oppression were conceived, installed and how they functioned. The last half of the class explores arguments made by James Cone on how the cross of Jesus Christ looks like (and unlike) a lynching tree; by South African Allan Boesak on the dangerous but tantalizing specter of "hope"; and by the womanist theologian Kelly Brown Douglas on theology in the wake of the killing of teenager Trayvon Martin.

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  • Nelson, Derek
16 4 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
RHE-101-01
Public Speaking
WAITLISTED
Rhetoric
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room S206
  • Clark, Jordin
LS 20 20 / 0 / 1 1.00
23/SP
RHE-101-02
Public Speaking
CLOSED
Rhetoric
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room S206
  • Clark, Jordin
LS 20 20 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
RHE-101-03
Public Speaking
CLOSED
Rhetoric
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room S206
  • Proszek, James
LS 20 20 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
RHE-140-01
Argumentation & Debate
WAITLISTED
Rhetoric
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room S206
  • Drury, Jeffrey
LS 20 20 / 0 / 2 1.00
23/SP
RHE-280-01
Deliberation & Democracy
OPEN
Rhetoric
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Monday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 209 (more)...
  • Anderson, Christopher
LS 16 14 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
RHE-320-01
Classical Rhetoric
WAITLISTED
Rhetoric
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 02:40PM - 03:55PM, Fine Arts Center, Room S206
  • Proszek, James
LFA 16 16 / 0 / 5 1.00
23/SP
RHE-370-01
US Presidential Rhetoric
OPEN
Rhetoric
01/16/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Malcolm X Institute, Room 109
The U.S. president has become, by many estimates, the most powerful person in the world. This course considers how such power in contemporary mediated society is connected to the president's use of rhetoric. Specifically, students will explore how contemporary presidents use rhetoric to govern, with particular attention to the relationship between presidents and the American people. The course material will include presidential rhetoric but also theoretical and rhetorical criticism essays that explore the operations of that rhetoric. This course focuses on the discourse of elected presidents who speak in an official capacity, not on election campaigns or fictional portrayals of U.S. presidents. Students should expect this to be a seminar course, meaning that our class sessions will be largely student-driven discussion from assigned material. By taking this course, students will cultivate a more nuanced understanding of the operations of U.S. presidential rhetoric, culminating in a research project that analyzes a significant historical instance of presidential rhetoric.

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  • Drury, Jeffrey
LFA 16 13 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
RHE-370-02
Rhetoric in the Field
WAITLISTED
Rhetoric
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Detchon, Room 212
Over the last 30 years, rhetoric scholars have turned their attention to in situ rhetoric-rhetoric that happens in the moment. From major events like protests, concerts, live sports, or community gatherings to everyday places such as neighborhoods, museums and memorials, or commercial sites, their research strives to understand our lived, everyday rhetorical experiences. This class will engage with this disciplinary turn through rhetorical fieldwork, which focuses on how rhetoric and the study of rhetoric, through forms of power and resistance, influences how we create a more just and livable world for all. The central questions guiding this rhetorical fieldwork are: How are material/symbolic/embodied resources practiced, contested, and mobilized in these moments? And what influences and consequences does this have in shaping our social, political, and cultural worlds? Students will learn and critically consider the various methodological approaches to rhetorical fieldwork through facilitated discussions, site visits, multi-methodological mini-projects, and a final community-engaged research project.

[show more]

  • Clark, Jordin
LFA 16 15 / 1 / 2 1.00
23/SP
SOC-201-01
Sociology & Politics of Health
CLOSED
cross-listed with
GHL-201-01, PSC-201-01
Sociology
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:25PM, Baxter Hall, Room 202
This course is open to sophomore, juniors and seniors by Instructor permission. PSC-201=SOC-201=GHL-201.
  • Gelbman, Shamira
BSC 30 31 / -3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-102-01
Elementary Spanish II
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
Prerequisite: SPA-101 or SPA-102 placement.
  • Welch, Marc
WL 18 15 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-102L-01
Elementary Spanish II Lab
CLOSED
Spanish
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 128
Co-requisite: SPA-102.
  • Gobo, Dante
6 6 / 0 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-102L-02
Elementary Spanish II Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
Co-requisite: SPA-102.
  • Gobo, Dante
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-102L-03
Elementary Spanish II Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 02:40PM - 03:30PM, Detchon, Room 226
Co-requisite: SPA-102.
  • Gobo, Dante
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-103-01
Accelerated Elementary Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Rogers, Dan
WL 18 15 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-103L-01
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 128
  • Gobo, Dante
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-103L-02
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 128
  • Gobo, Dante
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-103L-03
Accelerated Elem Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Gobo, Dante
6 5 / 1 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201-01
Intermediate Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Detchon, Room 211
Prerequisite: SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement
  • Hardy, Jane
WL 18 5 / 13 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-201-02
Intermediate Spanish
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Detchon, Room 211
Prerequisite: SPA-102 or SPA-103,
or SPA-201 placement
  • Hardy, Jane
WL 18 6 / 12 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-01
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 3 / 3 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-02
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/16/2023-05/01/2023 Laboratory Monday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 109
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 0 / 6 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-03
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 3 / 3 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-04
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/17/2023-05/02/2023 Laboratory Tuesday 02:40PM - 03:30PM, Detchon, Room 128
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-05
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
03/22/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
8 1 / 7 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-201L-06
Intermediate Spanish Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/18/2023-05/03/2023 Laboratory Wednesday 03:10PM - 04:00PM, Detchon, Room 109
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 0 / 6 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-202-01
Span Lang & Hispanic Cultures
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Detchon, Room 209
Prerequisite: SPA-201,
or SPA-202 placement
  • Greenhalgh, Matt
WL 18 12 / 6 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-202L-01
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 212
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-202L-02
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/19/2023-05/04/2023 Laboratory Thursday 02:40PM - 03:30PM, Detchon, Room 128
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-202L-03
Span Lang/Hisp Cultures Lab
OPEN
Spanish
01/20/2023-05/05/2023 Laboratory Friday 08:00AM - 08:50AM, Detchon, Room 112
  • Velazquez Mendoza, Rodrigo
6 4 / 2 / 0 0.00
23/SP
SPA-301-01
Conversation & Composition
OPEN
Spanish
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 109
Prerequisite: SPA-202,
or SPA-301 placement
  • Greenhalgh, Matt
WL 18 16 / 2 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-302-01
Intro to Literature
OPEN
Spanish
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Lecture Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Detchon, Room 212
Prerequisite: SPA-301 or SPA-321,
or SPA-302 placement.
  • Rogers, Dan
LFA 18 7 / 11 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-312-01
History of Mexican Film
OPEN
cross-listed with
HSP-312-01
Spanish
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Tuesday 01:10PM - 03:55PM, Detchon, Room 109 (more)...
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
and SPA-302,
Must have taken SPA-302 previously
SPA-312-01=HSP-312-01
  • Rogers, Dan
LFA 18 11 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
SPA-313-01
Adventures of Don Quijote
OPEN
Spanish
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 11:00AM - 11:50AM, Detchon, Room 109
SPA-301 or SPA-321,
Take SPA-302
  • Greenhalgh, Matt
LFA 18 13 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-101-01
Introduction to Theater
OPEN
Theater
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 10:00AM - 10:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 30 25 / 5 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-104-01DCS
Introduction to Film
CLOSED
Theater
02/13/2023-03/25/2023 Distance Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday Times to be Announced, Room to be Announced
This course is not available for additional enrollment to Wabash students.
  • Staff
LFA 1 1 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-106-01
Stagecraft
CLOSED
Theater
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 09:00AM - 09:50AM, Fine Arts Center, Room BALL
  • Whittredge, Adam
LFA 15 15 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-201-01
Theater Magic and Manipulation
OPEN
Theater
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 08:00AM - 11:00AM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
Class will start between 8-9am, depending on the day's activities. Students will be notified in advance of the meet time per day.
  • Bear, Andrea
LFA 8 7 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-204-01
World Cinema
OPEN
Theater
01/16/2023-05/06/2023 Lecture Monday, Friday 02:10PM - 03:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room M120 (more)...
  • Abbott, Mike
30 29 / 1 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-205-01
Acting for the Camera
OPEN
Theater
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Studio Tuesday, Thursday 01:10PM - 02:25PM, Fine Arts Center, Room EXP
Prereq THE-105.
  • Vogel, Heidi
LFA 14 4 / 10 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-208-01
Games and Interactive Media
CLOSED
cross-listed with
THE-208-01SR
Theater
03/21/2023-05/04/2023 Seminar Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
  • Abbott, Mike
10 10 / 0 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-208-01SR
Games and Interactive Media
OPEN
cross-listed with
THE-208-01
Theater
01/17/2023-05/04/2023 Seminar Tuesday, Thursday 09:45AM - 11:00AM, Lilly Library, Room LGL
Senior only section
  • Abbott, Mike
5 2 / 3 / 0 1.00
23/SP
THE-215-01
The Classic Stage
OPEN
cross-listed with
ENG-310-02
Theater
03/20/2023-05/05/2023 Lecture Monday, Wednesday, Friday 01:10PM - 02:00PM, Fine Arts Center, Room TGRR
THE-215-01=ENG-310-02
  • Cherry, Jim
LFA 15 5 / 9 / 0 1.00
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