ENROLL Course Search
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Your search for courses for 22/FA and with code: EUSTTRANNATL found 12 courses.
ARTH 101.00 Introduction to Art History I 6 credits
Closed: Size: 25, Registered: 20, Waitlist: 0
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9:50am11:00am | 9:50am11:00am | 9:40am10:40am |
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CAMS 211.00 Film History II 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 14, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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Extra Time required. Evening Screenings.
ENGL 350.00 The Postcolonial Novel: Forms and Contexts 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 10, Waitlist: 0
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1:50pm3:00pm | 1:50pm3:00pm | 2:20pm3:20pm |
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Authors from the colonies and ex-colonies of England have complicated our understandings of the locations, forms and indeed the language of the contemporary English novel. This course will examine these questions and the theoretical and interpretive frames in which these writers have often been placed, and probe their place in the global marketplace (and awards stage). We will read a number of major novelists of the postcolonial era from Africa, South Asia, the Caribbean and the diaspora as well as some of the central works of postcolonial literary criticism.
Prerequisite: One English foundations course and one additional 6 credit English course
EUST 100.00 Allies or Enemies? America through European Eyes 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
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11:10am12:20pm | 11:10am12:20pm | 12:00pm1:00pm |
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During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, America often served as a canvass for projecting European anxieties about economic, social and political modernization. Admiration of technological progress and political stability was combined with a pervasive anti-Americanism, which was, according to political scientist Andrei Markovits, the "lingua franca" of modern Europe. These often contradictory perceptions of the United States were crucial in the process of forming national histories and mythologies as well as a common European identity. Accordingly, this course will explore the many and often contradictory views expressed by Europe's emerging mass publics and intellectual and political elites about the United States during this period.
Held for new first year students
GWSS 243.07 Women's and Gender Studies in Europe Program: Situated Feminisms: Socio-Political Systems and Gender Issues Across Europe 7-8 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
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This course examines the history and present of feminist and LGBTQ activisms across Western and East-Central Europe. We study the impact of the European colonial heritage on the lives of women and sexual/ethnic minorities across European communities, as well as the legacies of World War II, the Cold War, and the EU expansion into Eastern Europe. Reproductive rights, LGBTQ issues, “anti-genderism,” sex work, trafficking, and issues faced by ethnic minorities are among topics explored. These topics are addressed comparatively and historically, stressing their ‘situated’ nature and considering their divergent sociopolitical national frameworks.
Prerequisite: Acceptance into the WGST Europe OCS Program required
OCS GEP GWSS Program in Europe
GWSS 244.07 Women's & Gender Studies in Europe Program: Cross-Cultural Feminist Methodologies 7-8 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
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This course explores the following questions: What is the relationship between methodology and knowledge claims in feminist research? How do language and narrative help shape experience? What are the power interests involved in keeping certain knowledges marginalized/subjugated? How do questions of gender and sexuality, of ethnicity and national location, figure in these debates? We will also pay close attention to questions arising from the hegemony of English as the global language of WGS as a discipline, and will reflect on what it means to move between different linguistic communities, with each being differently situated in the global power hierarchies.
Prerequisite: Acceptance into the WGST Europe OCS Program required
OCS GEP GWSS Program in Europe
GWSS 325.07 Women's & Gender Studies in Europe Program: Continental Feminist, Queer, Trans* Theories 7-8 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
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Addressing the impact of Anglo-American influences in Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, this course examines European, including East-Central European, approaches to key gender and sexuality topics. It raises questions about the transfer of feminist concepts across cultures and languages. Some of the themes explored include nationalism and gender/sexuality, gendered dimensions of Western and East-Central European racisms, the historical influence of psychoanalysis on Continental feminist theories, the implications of European feminisms in the history of colonialism, the biopolitics of gender, homonationalism, as well as Eastern European socialist/communist theories of women’s emancipation.
Prerequisite: Acceptance to WGST Europe OCS Program
OCS GEP GWSS Program
HIST 100.03 Exploration, Science, and Empire 6 credits
Closed: Size: 15, Registered: 15, Waitlist: 0
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11:10am12:20pm | 11:10am12:20pm | 12:00pm1:00pm |
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This course provides an introduction to the global history of exploration. We will examine the scientific and artistic aspects of expeditions, and consider how scientific knowledge--navigation, medicinal treatments, or the collection of scientific specimens--helped make exploration, and subsequently Western colonialism, possible. We will also explore how the visual and literary representations of exotic places shaped distant audiences’ understandings of empire and of the so-called races of the world. Art and science helped form the politics of Western nationalism and expansion; this course will explore some of the ways in which their legacy remains with us today.
Held for new first year students
POSC 120.00 Democracy and Dictatorship 6 credits
Open: Size: 35, Registered: 34, Waitlist: 0
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9:50am11:00am | 9:50am11:00am | 9:40am10:40am |
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Sophomore Priority
Waitlist for Juniors and Seniors: POSC 120.WL0 (Synonym 65075)
POSC 253.00 Welfare Capitalisms in Post-War Europe 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 4, Waitlist: 0
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9:50am11:00am | 9:50am11:00am | 9:40am10:40am |
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In this course students will explore the different kinds of welfare states that exist in Europe, the political economic and social conditions that made them possible and the debates about their strengths, weaknesses and prospects. We will review the so-called “varieties of capitalism” literature along with key welfare policies such as social insurance, health care, education, unemployment insurance, family and income support, and pensions. Welfare states use combinations of these policies differently to insure citizens against “old” and “new” risks. Finally, the course looks at how welfare regimes have responded of migration, financial, and public health crises.
POSC 276.00 Imagination in Politics: Resisting Totalitarianism 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 13, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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10:10am11:55am | 10:10am11:55am |
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Ideological fanaticism is on the rise today. Individuals prefer the incantation of slogans and clichés to autonomous thinking, moderation, and care for the diversity and complexity of circumstances and of human beings. The results are the inability to converse across differences and the tendency to ostracize and exclude others in the name of tribal and populist nationalism, as well as of racism. Hannah Arendt called totalitarianism this form of ideological hypnosis, which characterizes not only totalitarian political regimes, but can also colonize liberal-democracies. In this class we will read some of the works of Arendt to better understand the power of imagination to enhance critical and independent thinking and resist totalitarianism.
POSC 358.00 Comparative Social Movements* 6 credits
Open: Size: 15, Registered: 10, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:15pm3:00pm | 1:15pm3:00pm |
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Extra Time Required
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