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Cross-Cultural Studies Concentration (CCST)

Director: Professor Sigi D. Leonhard

Committee Members: Scott D. Carpenter, Clifford E. Clark, Jr., Van Dusenbery, Roger R. Jackson, Sigi D. Leonhard, Arjendu K. Pattanayak, Kathryn Sparling

The Cross-Cultural Studies Concentration objectives are: 1) to bring together American and international students in a program of study and interaction that will prepare them to live and work productively in a culture different from their own; 2) to provide a forum for studying problems and issues, such as pollution, disease, and human rights, that cut across traditional national or cultural boundaries and that tend to be excluded in traditional disciplines or area studies; 3) to enable students to come to a sharper understanding of their own and their academic focus culture by making comparisons explicit; 4) to create an arena for faculty whose work focuses on different parts of the world to address common issues and problems in a comparative, collaborative framework.

Requirements for the Concentration:

Language is fundamental to understanding other societies and it is therefore fundamental to the concentration. Each concentrator will fulfill the Carleton language requirement in the language of the focus area, or will study in a language-intensive program in the focus area. Upper level language study is encouraged.

Concentrators will select a nation or region of the world on which to focus their cultural and linguistic study. This area will then be examined from three out of the following four perspectives:

In binary comparison with another culture

In regional perspective (i.e., beyond national borders)

In relation to global issues

Relating to ethnic diversity and diaspora

Core courses:

CCST 100: Growing Up Cross-Culturally (recommended but not required)

CCST 210: Global/Local Perspectives

CCST 275: I’m a Stranger Here Myself

Electives:

Four courses from a least three of the four comparative categories listed above, to be selected from the list of pertinent courses available on the department Web site. Students who have participated in the first-year seminar, Growing Up Cross-Culturally, are required to take only three additional courses from any three categories.

American students will also participate in an approved international program (one or more terms), in an area where a language related to their focus is spoken. International students are exempt from this requirement since Carleton is an off-campus experience for them, but they are also encouraged to go off campus.

Cross-Cultural Studies Courses

CCST 100. Growing Up Cross-Culturally First-year students interested in this program should enroll in this seminar. The course is recommended but not required for the concentration and it will count as one of the electives. From cradle to grave, cultural assumptions shape our own sense of who we are. This course is designed to enable American and international students to compare how their own and other societies view birth, infancy, adolescence, marriage, adulthood, and old age. Using children's books, child-rearing manuals, movies, and ethnographies, we will explore some of the assumptions in different parts of the globe about what it means to "grow up." 6 cr., WR; AI, WR1, IS, FallS. Carpenter, S. Leonhard

CCST 210. Global/Local Perspectives How do global processes affect local cultures (and vice versa)? How do transnational movements of people, goods, capital, images and ideas affect identities? Is it really possible to translate, compare, and converse across cultures? Such questions animate this course, which aims to expose Cross-Cultural Studies concentrators, as well as interested students in related majors and concentrations, to theories and methods in the interdisciplinary field variously called global studies or cross-cultural studies. To model interdisciplinary conversation and methods of inquiry, the course incorporates co-instructors and guest presenters from the humanities and social sciences and includes readings drawn from multiple disciplines. 6 cr., ND, RAD; SI, IS, SpringV. Dusenbery, R. Jackson

CCST 275. I'm A Stranger Here Myself Designed for students who are returning from off-campus studies or who have lived abroad, and for anyone who has had the experience of being an outsider, this course will explore theories and models of intercultural competence and intercultural transition. Using the actual experience of the students in class as its evidence, it will first develop theories about the nature of intercultural contact and then test their usefulness by applying them to the analysis of specific historical and literary evidence. 6 cr., ND, RAD; SI, IS, WinterS. Leonhard


Pertinent courses are available in a wide range of disciplines, including: Art History, Economics, History, Music, Area Studies, Political Science, Religion, and Sociology and Anthropology. For questions about particular courses, please check the department Web site or contact the director.

Binary Comparison:

ARTS 275 Studio Art Seminar in the South Pacific: Physical/Cultural Environment of Australia and New Zealand

FREN 235 Francophone Literature of Africa and the Caribbean

POSC 326 America's China Policy*


Regional Perspective:

AMST 240 The Midwest and the American Imagination (not offered in 2010-2011)

ARTH 164 Buddhist Art (not offered in 2010-2011)

BIOL 210 Global Change Biology

ENGL 238 African Literature in English

FREN 241 The Lyric and Other Seductions

HEBR 221 Israeli Literature in the Middle East

HEBR 222 Discovering Literary Tel Aviv and Jerusalem (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 137 Before Europe: The Early Medieval World, 250-c. 1050 (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 139 Foundations of Modern Europe (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 140 Modern Europe 1789-1914

HIST 141 Europe in the Twentieth Century (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 169 Colonial Latin America 1492-1810 (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 170 Modern Latin America 1810-Present

HIST 180 An Historical Survey of East Africa (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 182 A Survey of Southern African History (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 204 Crusade, Contact and Exchange in the Medieval Mediterranean (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 232 Renaissance Worlds in France and Italy

HIST 233 Cultures of Empire: Byzantium, 710-1453

HIST 236 Women's Lives in Pre-Modern Europe (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 259 Women in South Asia: Histories, Narratives, and Representation (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 260 The Making of the Modern Middle East (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 265 Central Asia in the Modern Age (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 283 Farm and Forest: African Environmental History (not offered in 2010-2011)

LTAM 200 Issues in Latin American Studies

POSC 221 Latin American Politics (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 241 Ethnic Conflict

POSC 255 Post-Modern Political Thought

POSC 263 European Political Economy

POSC 322 Political Economy of Latin America* (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 383 European Political Economy Seminar in Madrid and Maastricht: Politics of the European Union

RELG 150 Religions of South Asia

RELG 251 Theravada Buddhism (not offered in 2010-2011)

RELG 253 Tibetan Buddhism

SOAN 250 Ethnography of Latin America (not offered in 2010-2011)

SOAN 256 Ethnography of Africa (not offered in 2010-2011)

SOAN 259 Comparative Issues in Native North America

SPAN 238 Images of the Indian in Spanish American Literature (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 242 Introduction to Latin American Literature

SPAN 255 Women Dramatists in Latin America: Staging Conflicts (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 260 Forces of Nature (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 336 Genealogies of the Modern: Turn of the Century Latin America


Global Issues:

BIOL 210 Global Change Biology

BIOL 212 Australia Program: Biology Field Studies and Research (not offered in 2010-2011)

BIOL 221 Ecosystem Ecology

BIOL 352 Population Ecology

BIOL 361 Tropical Rainforest Ecology

CHEM 328 Environmental Analysis

ECON 224 Cambridge Program: British Cultural Exports

ECON 245 Economics of Inequality (not offered in 2010-2011)

ECON 281 International Finance

ENTS 112 Conservation Biology (not offered in 2010-2011)

ENTS 215 Environmental Ethics

ENTS 244 Conservation and Development in Tanzania: Biodiversity Conservation and Development

HIST 360 Muslims and Modernity (not offered in 2010-2011)

MUSC 111 Western Art Music and Western Civilization

MUSC 210 Medieval and Renaissance Music (not offered in 2010-2011)

MUSC 245 Music of Africa

PHIL 242 Environmental Ethics (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 120 Comparative Political Regimes

POSC 255 Post-Modern Political Thought

POSC 259 Justice Among Nations (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 265 Politics of Global Economic Relations (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 268 International Environmental Politics and Policies (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 281 Global Society: An Approach to World Politics (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 355 Identity, Culture and Rights*

POSC 358 Comparative Social Movements*

POSC 360 Political Economy Seminar*

PSYC 358 Cross-Cultural Psychology Seminar in Prague: Cross-Cultural Psychopathology

PSYC 384 Psychology of Prejudice

RELG 111 Judaism, Christianity, Islam (not offered in 2010-2011)

RELG 121 Introduction to Christianity

RELG 227 Liberation Theologies (not offered in 2010-2011)

RELG 258 Women and Buddhism (not offered in 2010-2011)

RELG 263 Sufism

SOAN 226 Anthropology of Gender (not offered in 2010-2011)

SOAN 234 Ecology, Economy, and Culture

SOAN 262 Anthropology of Health and Illness (not offered in 2010-2011)

SOAN 302 Anthropology and Indigenous Rights (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 220 Magical Realism in Latin American Narrative


Ethnic Diversity and Diaspora:

AMST 115 Introduction to American Studies: The Immigrant Experience

AMST 115 Introduction to American Studies: Placing Identities

AMST 127 Introduction to U.S. Latino/a Studies

AMST 239 Introduction to Asian American Studies (not offered in 2010-2011)

EDUC 353 Schooling and Opportunity in American Society

ENGL 119 Introduction to U.S. Latino/a Literature (not offered in 2010-2011)

ENGL 235 Asian American Literature (not offered in 2010-2011)

ENGL 258 Contemporary American Playwrights of Color

FREN 243 Cultural Reading

HIST 276 The African Diaspora in Latin America (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 322 Civil Rights and Black Power (not offered in 2010-2011)

HIST 360 Muslims and Modernity (not offered in 2010-2011)

POSC 355 Identity, Culture and Rights*

PSYC 384 Psychology of Prejudice

RELG 130 Native American Religions

RELG 243 Native American Religious Freedom

RELG 271 Religious and Moral Issues of the Holocaust

SOAN 259 Comparative Issues in Native North America

SOAN 302 Anthropology and Indigenous Rights (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 238 Images of the Indian in Spanish American Literature (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 326 Writers in Exile (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 340 Latin American Prose: Dictatorships and Revolution in the Latin American Narrative (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 344 Women Writers in Latin America: Challenging Gender and Genre (not offered in 2010-2011)

SPAN 350 Recent Trends in Latin American Narrative: Pop Culture and Testimony