| Humanities
As the world enters the 21st century, flexibility
in career goals and the ability to adapt to change will be essential
to success. Great human questions are never addressed from narrow
perspectives. Studies in the humanities challenge students to creatively
engage issues and to devise innovative answers. Thus prepared, graduates
will be able to adapt to the changing circumstances of the modern
world.
Verbal and nonverbal texts are situated historically,
socially, intellectually, produced and consumed at particular times,
with particular cultural, personal, gender, racial, class, and other
perspectives. The following interdisciplinary categories available
for special topics therefore indicate pedagogical perspectives rather
than fixed categories.
HUM 396 Cultural Studies
Special Topics
Courses taught under this heading focus on the way social relations
of power are constructed in and by cultural practices and the workings
and consequences of those relations and practices. These courses
examine through verbal and non verbal texts what seems natural and
familiar in order to unmask these representations and to critically
examine the implications of these cultural practices in everyday
life.
HUM 397 Ethnic Studies
Special Topics
Courses taught under this heading focus on the distinctive social,
political, cultural, linguistic and historical experiences of ethnic
groups in the United States. These courses explore through verbal
and non verbal texts the ways places are represented as home, exile,
or myth, and how these representations affect the sense of self,
gender, family, community, history, memory, and nationalism. Additionally,
special topics courses taught in this category include those grounded
in postcolonial theory, i.e., examining texts as an assertion of
power against colonialism and as agencies for exploring experimental
or alternative forms of artistic expressions.
HUM 398 Gender Studies
Special Topics
Courses taught under this category focus on the construction and
role of gender in culture. These courses examine verbal and non
verbal texts which, through representations, shape gender identity
by historical and cultural practices. These courses also examine
gendered identities in terms of their construction, codification,
representation, and dissemination within society.
HUM 399 Genre Studies Special Topics
Courses taught under this category focus on what contemporary theorists
tend to call "family resemblances" or what psycholinguists
would describe in terms of "prototypicality." The courses
examine texts as familiar, codified, conventionalised and formulaic
structures located within specific cultural contexts and, as such,
influence and reinforce social conditions.
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