| 201: Christ College Symposium.
Cr. 0.
R, 6:30-7:30 p.m. January 17-February 21, 2008 (S/U grade)
Christ College sophomores, juniors, and seniors are required
to register for the course and expected to attend each gathering
except in the case of a course conflict. Presentations
and discussions of topics of special interest to members of the
Christ College community. Only Christ College students may register,
but all students are welcome to attend.
215: The Christian Tradition Cr. 3.
Section A: MWF 9:05-9:55 Ms. Bunge
Section B: MWF 10:10-11:00 Mr. Huelin
(Fulfills THEO 200 requirement.)
This course will introduce students to central developments in
the history of the Christian tradition and to the nature and purpose
of Christian theology. It will also encourage students to practice
developing a "working theology" by examining primary texts
in the Christian intellectual and spiritual tradition. This work
will be reflected in three short papers and one longer research
paper. Readings include selections from the Bible, St. Thomas Aquinas,
Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer, as well as
selected writings by other classical and contemporary theologians.
The course aims at improving the student's (1) knowledge of Christian
theological and practical traditions; (2) ability to read theological
texts closely and to think critically about them; and (3) integration
and expression, oral and written, of critical reflection on the
readings.
255: Interpretation: Self, Culture, and Society Cr. 4.
Section A: TR 11:50-1:05 Mr. Schwehn
Section B: TR 1:20-2:35 Mr. Creech
Section C: TR 2:50-4:05 Mr. Murphy
Plenary: R 7:45-8:45 p.m. for all sections.
(Partially fulfills the Social Sciences requirement.)
(Replaces CC 250 Interpretation in the Humanities and CC 260 Interpretation
in the Social Sciences.)
This course introduces students to fundamental issues in the theory
and practice of interpreting our lives as individuals and as a community.
The course will draw its theoretical emphases from major figures
in the human sciences that might include Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx,
Max Weber, Clifford Geertz, R.G. Collingwood, and Michel Foucault.
The course will not, however, simply consider and examine social
and cultural theory in the abstract but rather show how it can be
applied to historical and contemporary phenomena. This will be approached
primarily by reading historical and other texts that incorporate
these theorists into tangible settings, and by practicing the craft
of cultural and social interpretation ourselves. The primary assignments,
along with weekly discussion, include sets of papers in one of the
following two patterns: two individual papers of approximately 2-4
pages, 1 longer paper of approximately 10 pages, and one collaborative
research project; OR three 5 page papers and one collaborative research
project. An additional plenary hour will be spent each week viewing
films, listening to lectures, or participating in research projects
and presentations.
270A: Interpretation in the Natural Sciences. Cr. 3.
Mr. Manweiler.
MWF 9:05-9:55
M 6:30-9:00 p.m. Laboratory meets every other Monday evening.
(Partially fulfills the Natural Sciences requirement.)
This course will explore the experimental, conceptual and philosophical
aspects of the natural sciences, primarily physical sciences. To
do so, we will examine two very broad thematic questions: (i) “What
are the planets and the stars?”, and (ii) “What is light?”
These grand themes provide great insight into how scientific knowledge
develops and evolves. They illustrate well the very human character
of a complex and fascinating endeavor. We briefly examine the discovery
of DNA’s double helical structure, as seen through the eyes
of its most famous co-discoverer.
As in any human endeavor, science has its creative and aesthetic
dimensions, as well as its monumental times of tension. It has also
often been influenced by both philosophical and religious ideas,
and we shall consider both as they relate to the issues at hand.
Overall, my hope is to deepen appreciation of the richness of the
scientific heritage we have, as well as to better understand its
limits.
While examining the above major themes, we will perform several
key experiments that played a critical role in their formation.
Hence, we will experience a bit of the praxis of experimental character
of science as well.
Some Course Goals:
Better understand and appreciate the complex character of scientific
endeavors.
Better understand the profound impact science has had on our culture
and worldview.
Become more aware of the profundity and strength of modern science,
as well as its limitations and challenges.
Better grasp the incredible intricacy and unity of nature as we
have come to understand it.
Readings: Selections from the following as well as other sources
Required texts:
Ralph Baierlein, Newton to Einstein, The Trail of Light,
Cambridge University Press, 1992.
Thomas Kuhn, The Copernican Revolution, Harvard University
Press, 1957, 1985.
Watson, The Double Helix.
Galileo Galilei, Letter to Christina and other short
articles.
Albert Einstein, Relativity, the Special and General Theory.
Grades: Regular reading, class participation, and serious intellectual
engagement are essential elements for success in this course. Grade
will be based on a research paper & presentation, essay exam,
essay final exam, and laboratory participation. The laboratory will
meet approximately every other week, and three visits to the VU
observatory will be required.
300AX: Homelessness in America. Cr. 3. Mr. Bloom.
MWF 10:10-11:00 (Cross-listed with HIST 492AX.)
This course will examine homelessness from historical and sociological
perspectives, as well as through literature. We will explore how
the meaning of homelessness-and the composition of the ranks of
the homeless-has changed in the United States over the centuries.
Moreover, we will analyze the different ways society has perceived
homelessness and sought to develop policies to address this issue.
Required Readings:
Kenneth Kusmer, Down and Out, On the Road: The Homeless in American
History
Stephen O’Connor, Orphan Trains: The Story of Charles
Loring Brace and the Children He Saved and Failed
Tom Kromer, Waiting for Nothing
Elliot Liebow, Tell Them Who I Am: The Lives of Homeless Women
Mike Yankoski, Under the Overpass: A Journey of Faith on the
Streets of America
Assignments include two five-page papers, a ten-page take-home
final, and a brief presentation.
300BX: The Politics of Education. Cr. 3. Mr. Trost.
TR 9:45-11:00 (Cross-listed with POLS 490BX and ED 490X.)
This course will provide an overview of the pressure groups, the
role of the public, political party positions and policy-making
at the national and state level in the highly-charged arena of educational
policy. Subjects to be covered include teacher preparation, school
curriculum, school and student improvement, school financing, church
and state issues, and higher education. A major case to be examined
is “No Child Left Behind.” It is hoped that the seminar
participants will develop the skills of critical analysis in viewing
current policy and proposals for reform. A research paper, a mid-term
exam, and a final exam will be required.
300CX: Cinema and Literature: Hollywood and Beyond. Cr.
3. Mr. Andrews.
MWF 12:55-1:45 (Cross-listed with ENGL 390AX.) *
Once the privilege of film buffs with access to archives or festival
circuits, world cinema has now become widely accessible through
technologies like high-speed internet and multi-region DVD players.
This course investigates the intersections between major film centers
in America and abroad by examining representative selections from
noteworthy movements and schools. Adding to this comparative analysis,
we will look at complementary literary texts that demonstrate shared
socio-political commitments and formal techniques. We will be less
concerned with cinematic adaptations of literary works than with
the exchange of ideas between media from similar regions and periods.
Movements and themes we will consider may include the following:
forging the American dream in studio-era Hollywood and American
literary modernism (Citizen Kane and The Great Gatsby);
post-World War II politics in Italian neo-realism (Rome: Open
City and The Path to the Spiders’ Nests); voyeuristic
horror in Britain (Peeping Tom and Psycho); and
post-colonial memory in Bollywood (Lagaan and The God
of Small Things).
Course assignments will include active in-class participation,
several one-page response papers, a short analytical essay, and
a longer research paper.
* Special Note: Because film viewing is crucial
to our course, we will have screenings on Friday afternoons with
mandatory attendance. Be prepared for extended three-hour periods
on these Fridays.
300DX: Land and Environment in the American West. Cr.
3. Mr. Skillen.
Weekly meeting TBA March 17-May 5. Travel seminar May 15-June
12.
(Cross-listed with GEO 385EVX and GEO 585EVX.)
(Partially fulfills the Social Sciences requirement for Christ College
students.)
(Instructor approval required.)
The federal government owns 653 million acres of land—much
of it in the American West—making it the single largest and
most important land owner in the nation. The federal government
is also, at times, the most schizophrenic land owner as it struggles
to meet the conflicting interests of 300 million citizens.
Decisions about western federal land and resources are fundamentally
political decisions with enormous ecological, economic, political,
and cultural implications, and they raise fundamental questions
about environmental protection. What constitutes wise use of federal
lands and resources? What “public” or “publics”
should be served? What standards should we use to determine land
health and quality? We will examine existing answers to these questions
and work with others in the West to identify new answers for the
21st century.
The class will meet once a week during the second half of the spring
semester, for lecture, discussion, and planning. With this foundation
in place, the class will travel west for one month to explore the
physical and political character of western federal lands first
hand, including the ways that this vast federal estate has contributed
to western economics, politics, and culture. Grades will be based
on one on-campus research paper, several short papers in the field,
field notes, and participation.
300EX: Studies in the Classical Epic. Cr. 3. Ms.
Taraskiewicz.
TR 9:45-11:00 (Cross-listed with CLC 411X.)
(Fulfills the Humanities Literature or Fine Arts Literature requirement.)
“Why endeavour after a long Poem? To which I should answer--Do
not the Lovers of Poetry like to have a little Region to wander
in where they may pick and choose, and in which the images are so
numerous that many are forgotten and found new in a second Reading:
which may be food for a Week's stroll in the Summer? Do not they
like this better than what they can read through before Mrs. Williams
comes down stairs? A Morning’s work at most. Besides a long
Poem is a test of Invention which I take to be the Polar Star of
Poetry, as Fancy is the Sails, and Imagination the Rudder. Did our
great Poets ever write short Pieces? I mean in the shape of Tales--This
same invention seems indeed of late Years to have been forgotten
as a Poetical excellence” (John Keats to Benjamin Bailey,
8 October 1817).
The epic poems of Homer, Virgil, and Ovid tell of struggles: the
wrath of Achilles, the homecoming of Odysseus, the foundation of
Rome, the necessity and difficulty of change. Each poem, in ways
appropriate to its own tradition and cultural contexts, offers answers
to questions about the human condition: What is a hero or a heroine?
What does mortality mean to humans? What is the relation between
human beings and gods? In this course we will try to gain an understanding
of the scope and development of a genre that has its roots in the
oral tradition but also exhibits the genius of the artist, and the
self-reflexivity of the written text. We will read each text closely,
and with the aid of some pertinent secondary literature, we will
try to appreciate each in its own context. As we complete each text,
we will also compare these poems and their unique visions of heroism
to each other, staying alert to how each poet responds to the epic
models of his predecessors, even as he crafts his own. Coursework
will include weekly short writing assignments, oral presentations
and a final paper based on the individual student’s interests.
Required Texts:
Homer, The Iliad. Trans. Robert Fagles. New York: Penguin
USA, 1998.
Homer, The Odyssey. Trans. Robert Fagles. New York: Penguin
USA, 1999.
Virgil, The Aeneid. Trans. Robert Fagles. New York: Viking,
2006.
Ovid, The Metamorphoses. Trans. Charles Martin. New York:
Norton, 2004.
300FX: African Politics and Literature. Cr. 3. Ms.
Juneja and Mr. Kingsland.
TR 1:20-2:35 (Cross-listed with ENGL 390X, POLS 490X.)
(May be used to fulfill the requirement for a course in Global Diversity,
Diversity, and part of the Social Analysis requirement.)
This course uses the social and historical basis as a vehicle to
achieve understanding of modern Africa and its literature. And it
uses the literature as a valuable resource to achieve this social
and historical understanding. We will begin with an analysis of
traditional (pre-colonial) society and history, then move to an
examination of European colonization and the African response, and
conclude with an analysis of contemporary Africa’s problems
and prospects. Even as we achieve this broad perspective on the
African experience, we will also have the opportunity to specialize
in an area of interest.
Readings will be supplemented with films on society and history.
The literary works, although they rely heavily on post-colonial
writing from Africa, will attempt to match the developmental perspective
we have sketched out here. Texts include: Tutola, The Palm Wine
Drinkard; Achebe, Things Fall Apart; Ngugi, A
Grain of Wheat; and a South African text, possibly Mda, The
Heart of Redness.
Teaching responsibilities will be shared by a professor of political
science and a professor of literature who do not always agree. Student
responsibilities will include an oral presentation, a critical paper
(6-7 pages) and a final examination.
325A: Freedom. Cr. 3-4. Mr. Murphy.
TR 11:50-1:05
(Fulfills the Social Sciences requirement.)
“Give me liberty or give me death!” “It’s
a free country!” The language of freedom permeates American
society, from the nation’s founding to yesterday’s news.
But we rarely seem to stop and contemplate what this notion is all
about, and what sorts of tradeoffs or drawbacks our national obsession
with freedom might entail. In this seminar, we shall consider a
few basic questions. Should we consider freedom primarily a negative
notion (removing obstacles to doing what we want), or does it necessarily
involve some sort of overarching ethical dimension? What sorts of
social or political institutions follow from these varying commitments
to human liberty? Most of the reading in this class will be in the
field of political theory, works that attempt to clarify the concept
of freedom and to think through its implications for social and
political life; but we shall also consider the ways in which literary
works and films might teach us about freedom.
Assigned texts may include the following:
Isaiah Berlin, “Two Concepts of Liberty.”
Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism and Human Emotions. Lyle
Stuart.
Nancy J. Hirschmann, The Subject of Liberty: Toward a Feminist
Theory of Freedom. Princeton.
Jack Kerouac, On the Road. Penguin.
Jean-Jacques Rousseau, On the Social Contract. Hackett.
Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom. Anchor.
Charles Fried, Modern Liberty and the Limits of Government.
Norton.
Stephen Breyer, Active Liberty. Vintage.
Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility.
325B: Poe and Baudelaire. Cr. 3-4.
Mr Olmsted.
MF 11:50-1:05
(Fulfills Humanities Literature or Fine Arts Literature requirement.)
We will conduct a seminar in comparative literature to the extent
that our linguistic limitations allow. Poe and Baudelaire are a
well-suited pair of writers, since they are linked by temperament
and style as well as by the fact that Baudelaire translated Poe
into French. Our emphasis will be on the prose writings of each
author, although Baudelaire's poems will also receive close attention.
The course aims to introduce students to these major authors and
to provide an opportunity for studying the intertextual properties
of their works, with special attention to their humor, supernaturalism,
misogyny, social satire and all-around weirdness.
Texts:
Poe, Poetry, Tales, & Selected Essays
Baudelaire, The Flowers of Evil
Baudelaire, The Parisian Prowler
Requirements: Regular class attendance and participation in discussion;
completion of three essays; one presentation.
325C: Seeing and Believing: American Religious Visual
Culture. Cr. 3-4. Mr. Morgan.
TR 2:50-4:05
(Fulfills Humanities Literature or Fine Arts Literature requirement.)
This seminar studies the history of religions in the United States
from the late eighteenth century to the present by focusing on the
images and visual practices used by different groups. Attention
will focus on a variety of visual media—illustrated books
and tracts, paintings, sculpture, monuments, panoramas, lithographic
prints, photography, film, and television. By examining the ways
of seeing and the images used by Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Pagans,
New Agers, Native Americans, Buddhists, and Hindus among others,
we will explore how seeing and believing become synonymous in the
teaching of children, proselytism, revivalism, devotional practices,
commemorative ritual, pilgrimage, civil religion, and in public
debates over national and ethnic identity.
Requirements:
3 papers—two short critical analyses and one research paper
with oral presentation in class.
Texts:
David Morgan, The Lure of Images: A History of Religion and
Visual Media in America. London: Routledge, 2007.
Photocopy packet
325DX: Kierkegaard. Cr. 3-4. Mr. Hoffman.
MWF 3:05-3:55 (Cross-listed with PHIL 375X.)
(Fulfills Humanities/Philosophy requirement.)
Born in 1813 Denmark, and raised by an intensely religious, successful
merchant of humble origins whose second wife gave birth just after
five months of marriage, Søren Aabey Kierkegaard entered
the University of Copenhagen in 1830 to study theology. But it would
be ten years before he took his final exams, during which time he
became alienated from his melancholy father and the Christianity
in which he was raised. Meanwhile he devoted himself to reading
literature and philosophy, attended the theatre, and otherwise lived
as a dandy about town. In 1838 Kierkegaard’s journals report
a prodigal’s return, in both an earthly and heavenly sense.
Two years later his formal education came to an end after defending
a dissertation on Socratic irony, at which point he broke off a
year-long, passionate engagement to Regina Olsen. Why exactly he
was convinced he could not go through with their marriage remains
an interpersonal puzzle. But what we do know is that the ordeal
triggered a vast and complex literary career, both signed and pseudonymous.
In bookstores, Kierkegaard is classified under “philosophy/religion.”
This is both accurate and misleading. He financed his own publications,
never held an academic post, and felt no obligation to make his
writing fit a particular disciplinary genre. For most authors this
would spell complete disaster, except that here we have a case of
unprecedented genius. Stages on Life’s Way, for example,
opens with a dinner party at which several bachelors give puzzling,
and tipsy, speeches about love, and ends with an equally puzzling,
though sober, commentary on an anonymous diary about a broken engagement
found locked in a box at the bottom of a pond with the key inside.
Fear and Trembling opens with four odd retellings of the
binding of Isaac and in the course of things distinguishes Abraham
from a guilt-stricken merman. Sickness unto Death is nothing
short of a diagnostic manual of the human spirit, the preface of
which proclaims, “in one sense this little book is such that
a college student could write it, in another sense, perhaps such
that not every professor could write it.”
In addition to not fitting a particular genre, Kierkegaard’s
work has inspired and influenced readers from a variety of academic
disciplines, such as theologians Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, and Reinhold
Niebuhr, novelists Albert Camus and Walker Percy, the cultural anthropologist
Ernest Becker, and psychologist Rollo May. His work has also been
used as an interpretive grid for analyzing other phenomena, such
as: “a Kierkegaardian reading of” Ivan Karamozov, the
film American Beauty, or the artistic and political career
of Václav Havel.
But what finally is this unusual literature about? In his first
publication Kierkegaard criticized his contemporary Hans Christian
Andersen for not having a “worldview.” And this is precisely
what he sought to include in his own work: a view of life, a vision
of our ethical, spiritual, psychological, and social circumstance,
of what it means to be an authentic human individual. This allowed
him to address classic themes of love and despair, religious faith
and doubt, ethical commitment, aesthetic detachment, and political
critique. And he does so in a literary form so earnest, yet so riddled
with irony, you will want to read it twice.
Course expectations include one 15-20 page or two 8-10 page essays.
Reading assignments will be roughly 15-30 pages for every 50-minute
session.
325E: Inventing the Body. Cr. 3-4. Mr. Olmsted.
MF 3:05-4:20
This course will introduce students to important modern and postmodern
attitudes and practices focused on the human body. The course begins
with an examination of young adult women’s “body practices,”
then looks at male sexuality and concludes with a scrutiny of the
process of dying. Our concerns will range over current discourses
about eating disorders, virginity, clothing styles, body images,
intergenerational mentoring, pornography, bisexuality, circumcision,
domestic violence, AIDS, cancer, Alzheimer’s Disease and other
topics. The connecting theme among these different topics is the
“invented” aspect of not only discourse about the body
but our actual experience of it.
As even the briefest survey of body practices indicates, they vary
enormously over different time periods, from one culture to another,
between generations, among different races and ethnicities, from
one religious group to another, etc. Thus, to cite one example,
“French kissing” is unfavorably regarded by most French
people while one Brazilian tribe regards kissing of any kind as
“a disgusting practice that contaminates the mouth”
(Kimmel 68). Despite these differences, however, the “invented”
quality of bodily practices does not mean that they cannot operate
with coercive power. Thus, “inventions” may seem arbitrary
in terms of their origins but can function in compulsory ways. Our
task will be to understand how the body came to be invented and
in what ways the invented body serves us usefully or, contrarily,
is in need of re-invention.
Requirements: In addition to regular attendance, the course requires
three papers of four to six pages in length. The first two papers
may, with the instructor’s permission, be rewritten in the
event of a grade of B or lower; rewrites must be completed within
two weeks and will be returned without comment. Written work should
observe the Honor Code and sources, including Internet sources,
must be indicated. Good participation in class discussions will
have a positive effect on the final grade. I encourage the taking
of class notes and keeping a journal that records your impressions
of the readings—this habit makes it easier to prepare for
discussion and to begin the paper-writing process.
Students who opt to write a Senior Honors Thesis will not be required
to write the third paper. A rough draft of approximately ten pages
will be due at the beginning of the twelfth week of class.
Texts may include:
Brumberg, The Body Project
Hornbacher, Wasted
Nuland, How We Die
Pascoe, Dude, You’re a Fag
325F: The Hermeneutics of Hospitality. Cr. 3-4. Mr.
Huelin.
TR 1:20-2:35
Is it possible to understand, truly understand, the other? In this
class we will explore two strategies for negotiating the distance
between same and other, and the relation of those two strategies.
The first is hospitality: the practice of welcoming and caring for
the needs of strangers, arguably the centerpiece of practical ethics
throughout the ancient world. The second is hermeneutics: the art
of understanding. One branch of this art deals, of course, with
the interpretation of texts: How can I possibly understand a text
written in another time and place, likely in a different language,
and almost certainly for a different audience? How do we identify
better and worse interpretations? Can texts have more than one legitimate
meaning? The difficulty of wrestling with such questions should
remind us that thoughtful people ask similar questions about far
more fundamentally human experiences: How do we make sense out of
worlds in which we live? How can we identify better and worse interpretations
of such worlds and of our place in them? Is there such a thing as
‘the’ meaning of life? In this class, students will
be introduced to the philosophical field of hermeneutics, in both
its specific (textual) and general (life) senses. Drawing on philosophers
such as Paul Ricoeur and Jacques Derrida, theologians such as Graham
Ward and Andrew Louth, and literary texts such as Homer’s
Odyssey, we will explore, develop, and practice a hermeneutics of
hospitality.
Students will be asked to lead seminar discussion at least once
and to write two to three essays of medium length.
Likely texts include the following:
Jacques Derrida, Of Hospitality
Jean Grondin, Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics
Homer, Odyssey
Scott Huelin, The Reader’s Odyssey: A Hermeneutics of
Hospitality
Alan Jacobs, A Theology of Reading
Andrew Louth, Discerning the Mystery
Paul Ricoeur, Interpretation Theory
Graham Ward, Christ and Culture
325GX: Cultural Memory in Japan. Cr. 3-4. Ms. Prough.
MWF 12:55-1:45 (Cross-listed with EAST 390AX.) Spring break travel
to Japan required.
(Fulfills the Global Diversity or Cultural Diversity requirement.)
(Instructor approval required.)
This seminar will focus on the ways that culture and history
are remembered in contemporary Japan. In order to target our discussions,
we will focus on four main sites of cultural memory: the samurai
spirit, the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, imaginings of the
family, and Kyoto as living history. Select readings from literature,
history, and anthropology will guide us through the issues inherent
in public memory and we will tack back and forth between historical
accounts and contemporary incarnations. The highlight of the class
will be a trip to Kyoto the first week of spring break, where we
will sightsee and think together about history and culture in contemporary
Japan. This class will be structured as a research class and part
of our time will be focused on research methods in Asian studies.
Following our trip to Japan significant class time will be spent
on student research culminating in a 20-25 page research paper on
a topic related to one of our four themes. Because the trip to Japan
will be significantly subsidized this course is limited to 8 students,
to be selected through an application process. Information on travel
arrangements, costs, and application deadlines is available from
the instructor.
Probable books:
Joy Hendry, Understanding Japanese Society. Nissan Institute/Routledge
Japanese studies series. London: Routledge, 2003. 3rd edition.
Merry I. White, Perfectly Japanese: Making Families in an Era
of Upheaval. Twentieth-century Japan, 14. Berkeley: University
of California Press, 2002.
Michael J. Hogan, Hiroshima in History and Memory. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Kenzaburo Oe, Fire from the Ashes: Short Stories about Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. London, Great Britain: Readers International,
1985.
Winston L. King, Zen and the Way of the Sword: Arming the Samurai
Psyche. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
Yukio Mishimi and Geoffrey W. Sargent, Patriotism. New
York: New Directions Books, 1995.
John Dougill, Kyoto: A Cultural History. Cityscapes. Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2006.
499A: Christ College Senior Colloquium. Cr. 1. Ms.
Franson and Mr. Piehl.
W 2:00-2:50
Christ College Senior Colloquium provides a capstone, integrative
experience for Christ College Associates and Scholars. Through class
conversations, readings, and written work, students will be led
to give shape to the substance of their lives through autobiographical
narrative, and they will be led to reflect upon the character and
meaning of their future work. The practical dimensions of these
reflections will include attention to the transition from college.
Registration is restricted to students who will graduate in May
or August or December 2008.
Summer
Session I—2008
300AX: Contemporary British Theatre. Cr. 3.
Mr. Orchard.
May 16-June 10, 2008
(Cross-listed with THTR 390X.)
(May fulfill the Fine Arts Literature or Humanities requirement.)
Come travel to England with theatre professor Dr. Lee Orchard and
learn about some of the most exciting plays currently being performed
on the London stage. Dr. Orchard has taught this study abroad course
for many years and has developed a class that features daily trips
to the theatre, including playhouses on the West End, the Royal
National Theatre, pub and fringe theatres, the Donmar Warehouse,
the Globe, and Stratford-on-Avon. Programmed activities consist
of play attendance, classroom discussion, and field trips to theatre
and non-theatre related sites (such as the Houses of Parliament,
Warrick Castle, the Museum of London, etc.). Course evaluation will
be based upon participation, two 3-5 page papers, and a final exam.
Special fees include transportation, lodging, field trips, and ticket
costs. Contact Dr. Lee Orchard, chair of the theatre department,
for further details.
300BX: Current Problems in Education: Dimensions of Culture,
the Theoretical Frameworks and Practice of Intercultural Effectiveness.
Cr. 3. Ms. Westrick.
May 19-June 25, 2008
Hangzhou, China International Study Center
This course will be taught in Hangzhou, China. See the schedule
of classes for details.
(Cross-listed with ED 490, EAST 390, COMM 490, SOC 390
and SOCW 391.)
(May fulfill the Diversity or Global Diversity component of the
General Education requirement.)
Participants leave for Shanghai, China, on May 19 or 20 and return
from Beijing to Chicago on June 24 or 25. The program starts with
a two-day tour of Shanghai before arriving at Hangzhou, the provincial
capital of Zhejiang, where all classes will be held. There will
be four full weeks of classes with several group field trips. The
program ends with a three-day visit to Beijing, the capital of China,
before returning to the U.S.
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