ENROLL Course Search
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Your search for courses for 21/sp and with code: POSI-AREAS2 found 11 courses.
ARBC 144.00 Arabic Literature at War 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 19, Waitlist: 0
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2:30pm3:40pm | 2:30pm3:40pm | 3:10pm4:10pm |
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Arabic literature is a vibrant and humane tradition. At the same time, several Arab societies have experienced periods of exceedingly violent conflict throughout the twentieth and into the twenty-first centuries. In this course, we will investigate the ways these two currents—war and the literary—converge in several Arab societies. As members of societies at war, but also as literary artists, how do authors represent these conflicting narratives? What sorts of war stories do they tell, how do they tell them, and what sort of literary practice is produced? We will study the birth of the Lebanese Civil War novel as a bona fide genre in the 1970s and 80s, how literature informed anti-colonial struggles in Palestine and Algeria from the 1950s to the present, and read some works of genre-bending horror and science fiction that have appeared in the wake of Iraq’s recent destruction. Taught in English, no knowledge of Arabic is required.
In translation
EUST 249.00 The European Union from Constitution to Crisis 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 14, Waitlist: 0
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11:30am12:40pm | 11:30am12:40pm | 11:10am12:10pm |
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It has become commonplace to say that Europe is in crisis--yet what does that mean? It is difficult to overestimate the importance of crises considering that the European Union played a large part in overcoming Europe’s “Long Civil War” between 1914 and 1945. The collective decision-making processes created by European treaties are often credited with bringing peace and prosperity to Europe. Yet they have also instituted idiosyncrasies, asymmetries and inequities that stand in the way of solving the continent’s most pressing problems. We will examine decision-making processes in the European Union and the much-debated “democratic deficit” of its institutions. These debates about the foundations of the Union will be rounded off by an overview and brief history of Euroscepticism. The course will include a discussion of a number of case studies that confront member states of the European Union across the board: the reconstruction of the welfare state, immigration and the refugee crisis, and the rise of the far right.
HIST 139.00 Foundations of Modern Europe 6 credits
Closed: Size: 30, Registered: 27, Waitlist: 0
Weitz Center 236 / Leighton 304
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:45pm3:30pm | 1:45pm3:30pm |
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HIST 153.00 Modern China: China with Mao 6 credits
Open: Size: 30, Registered: 11, Waitlist: 0
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11:30am12:40pm | 11:30am12:40pm | 11:10am12:10pm |
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This survey course of twentieth-century China examines how ordinary people interacted with Mao, the chief architect of Communist China. We will scrutinize social change over time by looking at patterns of contestations and negotiations between Mao and his rivals among peasants, workers, students, women, intellectuals, ethnic minorities, and local cadres. Topics include the operation of the new democracy, social classification and distribution, food and famine politics, the changing meaning of family and education, body and biomedicine, mass science and archaeological projects, and Mao’s exhibition culture. Students will engage with images, memoirs, autobiographies, interviews, oral histories, films, “garbage materials,” and archival sources.
HIST 183.00 History of Early West Africa 6 credits
Closed: Size: 30, Registered: 27, Waitlist: 0
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1:00pm2:10pm | 1:00pm2:10pm | 1:50pm2:50pm |
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HIST 240.00 Tsars and Serfs, Cossacks and Revolutionaries: The Empire that was Russia 6 credits
Closed: Size: 25, Registered: 17, Waitlist: 0
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11:30am12:40pm | 11:30am12:40pm | 11:10am12:10pm |
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HIST 383.00 Africa's Colonial Legacies 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 10, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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7:00pm8:45pm | 7:00pm8:45pm |
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This course deepens understanding of the causes, manifestations, and implications of warfare in modern Africa by highlighting African perspectives on colonialism's legacies. Drawing from cases in South Africa, Uganda, Kenya, Algeria, and Sudan, the course questions whether Britain's policy of indirect rule, France's direct rule, and South Africa's apartheid rule were variants of despotism and how colonial rule shaped possibilities of resistance, reform, and repression. Students also will learn how different historical actors participated in and experienced war as well as produce an original research paper that thoughtfully uses primary and secondary resources.
POSC 264.00 Politics of Contemporary China 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 19, Waitlist: 0
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1:00pm2:10pm | 1:00pm2:10pm | 1:50pm2:50pm |
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POSC 324.00 Rebels and Risk Takers: Women and War in the Middle East* 6 credits
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 17, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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7:00pm9:30pm | 7:00pm9:30pm |
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How are women (and gender more broadly) shaping and shaped by war and conflict in the Middle East? Far from the trope of the subjugated, veiled, and abused Middle Eastern woman, women in the Middle East are active social and political agents. In wars and conflicts in the Middle East region, women have, for example, been combatants, soldiers, activists, spies, homemakers, writers, and political leaders. This course surveys conflicts involving Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Israel, Jordan, and Iraq--along with Western powers like the U.S., UK, and Australia--through the wartime experiences of women.
RELG 152.00 Religions in Japanese Culture 6 credits
Closed: Size: 25, Registered: 24, Waitlist: 0
Language & Dining Center 244 / Language & Dining Center 335
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1:45pm3:30pm | 1:45pm3:30pm |
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SOAN 353.00 Ethnography of Latin America 6 credits
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 11, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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7:00pm8:45pm | 7:00pm8:45pm |
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This course explores the origins and development of contemporary lived experiences in Latin America as interpreted through ethnographic works in anthropology. We will examine and analyze the structural processes that have shaped contact among indigenous, European, and non-European immigrants (e.g. African and Asian peoples) in Latin America since the Conquest and through colonial periods to understand today's Latin American societies. We will pay special attention to the impacts of global capitalist expansion and state formation, sites of resilience and resistance, as well as the movement of Latin American peoples throughout the world today. Course themes will address gender, identity, social organization, indigeneity, immigration, social inequality and environment.
Prerequisite: The department strongly recommends that Sociology/Anthropology 110 or 111 be taken prior to enrolling in courses numbered 200 or above
Not open to students who have taken SOAN 250
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