Related Courses: Spanish Across the Curriculum
|
Art 222 - Caves to Cathedrals: European and Middle Eastern Art from
Prehistory to 1400 C.E
3 hours
From the earliest painting on cave walls, to the soaring cathedrals of
the Gothic Period, this course offers an historical approach to the art and
architecture of the western world before the Renaissance. Art is approached
as a text with which one can examine religion, history, technology, and many
other aspects of society. NOTE: This course fulfills the Historical Mode of
Inquiry requirements of the LSP.
|
ART 223 - Art in Europe and America from the Renaissance to the Present
Day
3 hours
From Renaissance chapels to the most contemporary multimedia works this
course covers the history of art in Europe and the United States from 1400
to the present day, tracing the various and changing ways in which the world
is represented by artists during this period. Art is examined not only as a
physical and visual object, but also as a record of the interaction between
images and diverse historical and cultural fields. NOTE: This course
fulfills the Fine Arts: Aesthetic Mode of Inquiry requirements of the LSP.
|
ART 323 - Medieval Art
3 hours
Medieval Art explores a millennium of European monuments (4th-15th
centuries). Within a feudal system of Christians, artisans and builders
create or react to vigorous church, state, and civic patronage; the
continuity, cooptation and perennial renewal of pagan Roman forms; German
migrations, Nordic raids, Islamic and Hungarian incursions; the Crusades and
pilgrimages of Christian knights and commoners. Medieval works exhibit
sustained stylistic developments and erratic formal shifts. Monuments of art
and architecture make visible the clash and synthesis of Western European
and Mediterranean traditions with those of insular Christianity and the
Byzantine East. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
ART 324 - Renaissance Art
3 hours
Origin, development, and characteristics of Renaissance art. NOTE:
General Honors Course.
|
ART 332 - Baroque Art
3 hours
This course covers the history of Art in Europe from 1600-1700; issues
such as the effect of the Catholic Reformation on art, changes in patronage
and the art market, styles, materials and individual artists will be
examined. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
ENG 226 - World Literatures: The Western Tradition
3 hours
A study of literary works that constitute what is often called the
Western Tradition. Works read will be by such authors as: Homer, Sappho,
Vergil, Dante, Cervantes, de Pizan, Shakespeare, Moliere, Sand, Ibsen,
Eliot, Brecht, Mann, Yeats.
|
ENG 226 - World Literatures: Women’s Roles and Women Playwrights
3 hours
A critical reading of literary representations of women in plays by
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, Racine, Ibsen, Williams, Noh plays,
Lorca, and a number of women playwrights such as Treadwell, Churchill,
Gambaro, Hernandez, Sachs, Fornes, Deveare, Hellman.
|
ENG 308 - Mythology
3 hours
Myths and mythic patterns inherent in world cultures and literatures,
including classical Greek and Roman, South American, North American,
African, Asian, Sumerian, and Germanic civilizations. Students should take
ENG 208 Writing about Literature either before or in conjunction with this
course. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
GEOG 313 - Geography of Europe
3 hours
Topical and regional study of Europe. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 140 - Latin America During the National Period
3 hours
A survey of Latin American history from the Independence Era to the
recent past from a comparative perspective. NOTE:General Honors Course.
|
HIST 348 - Topics in Medieval and Early Modern Europe
3 hours
A topical approach to medieval and/or early modern Europe, focusing on a
particular theme throughout the semester. The themes will vary, but possible
offerings include: The Renaissance, The Reformation, Science and Culture in
Medieval and Early Modern Europe, Europe in the Fifteenth Century. Students
will analyze historical interpretations and do research in appropriate
secondary and primary sources. This course may be repeated for credit as
long as there is no duplication of previous topics. NOTE: General Honors
Course.
|
HIST 350 - Medieval History
3 hours
Political, social, economic, religious, cultural, and scientific trends
in Europe from c. 300 AD to c. 1400 AD. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 353 - Medieval and Early Modern European Women’s History
3 hours
This course explores the history of European women form approximately 200
to 1700. Major themes include the impact of Christianity, politics, the
economy, the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the law on the lives of
women. Changing attitudes towards womanhood, sexuality, reproduction, and
the family will also be discussed, as will women’s power and independence.
NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 354 - Modern European Women’s History
3 hours
This course explores the history of European women from approximately
1700 to the present. Major themes include: the impact of political and
economic change on the lives of women; changing attitude towards womanhood,
sexuality, reproduction and the family; individual and collective struggles
for women’s liberation. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 379 - Survey of Modern Europe I
3 hours
Europe from c. 1400 to 1789, a synthesis of political, social, economic,
and cultural developments form the Renaissance to the outbreak of the French
Revolution. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 380 - Survey of Modern Europe II
3 hours
Europe from 1789 to the present. Political, social, economic, and
cultural trends in the history of Europe from the outbreak of the French
Revolution to the present. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 443 - Absolutism and Enlightenment
3 hours
Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries-an era of dynastic rivalry,
economic expansion, and philosophical creativity. Students will read a
combination of secondary and primary sources illuminating the principal
developments of the years between the Protestant Reformation and the French
Revolution. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 444 - Revolution and Reaction
3 hours
Developments in the history of Europe from 1789, the era of the French
Revolution and Napoleon, to 1871, the age of Bismarck and the
Franco-Prussian War. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 445 - Europe in an Era of World Wars
3 hours
Developments in the history of Europe from 1871 to 1945, an age of
imperialism, revolution, totalitarianism, world conflict, and prelude to
superpower rivalry. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
HIST 536 - Seminar in 20th Century Latin America
3 hours
Directed study in selected periods/topics in 20th Century Latin American
history with emphasis on the development of oral and written reporting
techniques including the writing of a research paper. Prerequisite: Senior
with a 3.00 GPA or above and permission of instructor. NOTE: General Honors
Course.
|
HIST 630 - Seminar in 19th Century Europe
3 hours
Readings and research on selected topics of European history, 1815-1914.
|
HIST 631 - Seminar in 20th Century Europe: 1900-1945
3 hours
Directed study in the issues and problems of Europe from the World War I
era to 1945.
|
HIST 634 - Graduate Survey of Modern Europe
3 hours
A critical historiographical examination of the major themes and
methodologies that currently preoccupy scholars in the field of Modern
European History. The course explores a series of themes that are pivotal
for thinking about this field, focused around major texts that constitute
key points of reference for historians, laying out and evaluating the
categories currently employed in historical understanding.
|
JINS 300 - Cultural Crossroads: The Many Faces of Spain
3 hours
A panoramic view of the origin and evolution of the many cultures of
Spain, as well as its contemporary society. Students will examine the
history, tradition, art, music, literature, geography, politics and
economics of Spain through topical discussions to reflect on today’s Spanish
cultural mosaic.
|
JINS 300 - Cultural Crossroads: Peruvian Culture
3 hours
A detailed examination of the culture of Peru, its origins, evolution,
and present-day composition. In this course we will read pages on customs,
history, literature, anthropology, archaeology, politics, and economics.
Students will analyze, discuss and write about the readings. They will also
view slides and videos, visit web sites, read the daily news from Peru, and
engage in a lively discussion about issues.
|
JINS 316 - Portrayals of Women: The Middle Ages
3 hours
This course will focus on depictions of women and women’s roles in
Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East from the fifth to the fifteenth
centuries C.E. These depictions may come from the women authors themselves,
from male contemporaries, or from less literary portrayals in sources such
as canon law, visual art, musical compositions, medical treatises, etc.
|
JINS 328 - Exploration and Discovery: The Renaissance Age of Exploration
3 hours
This course examines the controversies of European expansion from
1200-1600. Students will learn of the benefits and tragic costs associated
with the contacts between Europeans and native peoples. Students will do
this through studying the period and events, but also in reflecting on
travel and exploration in their own lives as well as points where they come
in to contact with the “new.”
|
JINS 338 - Race and Ethnicity: Latin America
3 hours
This course begins with a theoretical discussion of race and ethnicity,
and then proceeds to an evaluation of their creation in a Latin American
context. This course will stress the rich racial diversity in Latin America
(Indian, European, African, Asian, etc.), the emergence of new forms of
ethnic identity in Latin America (such as the Mestizo and Mulatto peoples),
and the politicization of these identities (with the emergence of Black
consciousness and Indigenous ethno-nationalist movements). Throughout this
entire process we will constantly critique our assumptions of racial and
ethnic categories in order to understand better the purposes they play in
society.
|
JINS 338 - Race and Ethnicity: Latino Health Care in America
3 hours
Latino Health Care in America presents interdisciplinary perspectives of
health care for Latin cultural groups in America. Students will analyze
health care issues for selected cultural groups within Mexico and the United
States from the theoretical and investigative modes for nursing and
anthropology. Some issues to be addressed include health care disparities,
access to health care, and delivery systems. Orientation to these modes, as
they pertain to health care, will be provided within the course.
|
JINS 342 - I-E: i.e., the Indo-Europeans
3 hours
This course uses evidence from linguistics, archaeology, and history
(among other disciplines) to explore the origins and identity of the
speakers of Indo-European, a language spoken over five millennia ago, which
gave rise to modern languages such as English, Russia, Hindi, the Romance
Languages, etc.
|
PHRE 337 - History of Philosophy II: Philosophy of the Modern Period
3 hours
A survey of 17th and 18th century European philosophy emphasizing primary
readings from the Rationalists, the British Empiricists, and Kant. Major
themes of the course are the fundamental nature of reality and the
possibility of grounding of knowledge. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
PHRE 347 - Studies in Religion I: Christianity
3 hours
An intensive study of the Christian tradition, with special attention
give to themes, figures, and developments of major importance for the
history and contemporary state of Christianity, such as the Trinity, Thomas
Aquinas, and the Reformation.
|
PHRE 354 - Medieval Philosophy
3 hours
A critical examination of Western and Middle-Eastern philosophy from the
fifth through the fifteenth centuries. NOTE: General Honors Course.
|
PHRE 371 - History of Christian Thought I: The First 600 Years
3 hours
The rise and development of Christianity is set against the backdrop of
the theologies and conflict, the personalities and formative events that
shaped the emerging Church. People and movements are analyzed in the light
of the spiritual, social, political, and economic forces of the day.
|
PHRE 372 - History of Christian Thought II: Medieval through Reformation
3 hours
Proceeding from the pontificate of Gregory the Great, major developments
are traced, highlighting monastic, missionary, and restoration movements,
papal growth and reaction, scholasticism and the quest for reform. The
ensuing division and new alignments in the world of the Reformation are
studied through the end of the sixteenth century.
|
PHRE 373 - History of Christian Thought III: 1650 to the Present
3 hours
A survey of developments in modern Christianity as well as a detailed
analysis of selected thinkers such as Blaise Pascal, Friedrich
Schleiermacher, Soren Kierkegard, and Simone Weil. Includes critical
examination of proposals that reconstruct the meaning of Christianity in the
face of challenges to religion arising in recent centuries.
|
POL 461 - European Politics
3 hours
The governments and politics of the major European nations, with a stress
on the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and the former Soviet Union. NOTE:
General Honors Course.
|