UNIVERSITY CATALOG: 2024-2025

Courses

AAS 100. Introduction to Asian American Studies (3)

Survey of research on Asians in America, including: history, community life, language experience, arts, education, politics and economics. Emphasizes research on Americans of Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, Southeast Asian, South Asian and Pacific Island ancestry. Available for Section B of the Multicultural Requirement for Credential Candidates. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, …

AAS 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases shall include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax …

AAS 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases shall include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as …

AAS 114A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases shall include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well …

AAS 114B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 114A. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of prose …

AAS 115. Approaches to University Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases shall include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

AAS 151. Fundamentals of Public Speaking (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing, or completion of 113A or 114A, or completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course is an introduction to public speaking and oral communications processes, with particular emphasis on issues related to Asian American Studies and Asian Pacific American communities. In addition to basic skills, students will be introduced to …

AAS 201. Race, Racism and Critical Thinking (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement and GE section B4 Mathematics. Introduction to the process of critical thinking through the lens of race-based theories and selected historical and contemporary discourse of African Americans, Asian Americans, European Americans and Latinos on race relations and multiculturalism in American society. Examines contemporary social issues through the …

AAS 210. History of Asians in America (3)

Introduction to the history of Asian Americans in the United States from the 1800s to the present. Students review the historical forces affecting immigration of the following communities: Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Korean, South Asian, Southeast Asian and Pacific Islander. Analysis of problems resulting from limited access to the social, political and economic institutions of American …

AAS 220. Survey of Asian American Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of Asian American literature from the late 19th century to the present. Introductory study of prose fiction and nonfiction, poetry and drama written by Americans of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, Southeast Asian, South Asian and Pacific Islander ancestry. Regular writing assignments required. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. …

AAS 230. Asian Americans and the Media (3)

Study of the effects of mass media on the history and development of Asians in America. Particular attention to Asian American images in film, television, the Internet and advertisements. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, E Lifelong Learning.) (ES)

AAS 296A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Asian American Studies (1-3)

Experimental courses in Asian American Studies with course content to be determined.

AAS 311. Research Methods in Asian American Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Completion of an AAS course. This course is designed to introduce students to the fundamentals of developing qualitative community-based research projects within Asian American communities. Students will learn theories used in Asian American Studies, develop a short-term research project, practice data collection methods, analyze qualitative data …

AAS 321. Asian American Fiction (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of Asian American fiction written by Americans of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, South Asian and Southeast Asian ancestry. Regular writing assignments required. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (ES) (WI)

AAS 340. Asian American Women (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Multidisciplinary analysis of women in the diverse Asian American communities. Study of the historical, social, political and economic factors that have impacted the role and status of Asian Pacific American women in U.S. society. Regular writing assignments required. Available for Gender and Women’s Studies Minor, Ethnic Studies and …

AAS 345. Contemporary Issues in Asian American Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Critical analysis of contemporary issues confronting Asian Americans in the U.S. Emphasis placed on social and economic issues such as immigration, education, employment, health and inter-ethnic and intra-Asian conflict. Regular writing assignments required. Available for Section B, Multicultural Requirement for Credential Candidates. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available …

AAS 347. Asian American Politics and the Law (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Recommended: Prior completion of an AAS course. Advanced course on the legal and political history and contemporary struggles of Asian Americans. Overview of American political system through the examination of basic texts, including the U.S. Constitution. Examines the history and formation of Asian communities in the U.S., …

AAS 350. Asian American Personality and Mental Health (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Analysis of psychological issues from an Asian American perspective. Specific topics include the impact of minority status on personality development, cross-cultural comparisons of Asian Americans and introduction to problems in the assessment, diagnosis and treatment of mental health problems in Asian Americans. Available for Section B of the …

AAS 355. Biracial and Multiracial Identity (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Interdisciplinarily studies the socio-historical realities, identities and political maintenance of people with multiple racial and ethnic heritages; examines the binary racial structure of the U.S., social and legal customs of racial designation and membership; focuses on multiracial populations such as Creoles, mulattos, mestizos, Black-Indians, Eurasians, Afroasians, Amerasians, …

AAS 360. Asian American Immigration–Global Perspective (3)

Prerequisites: Completion of the lower division writing requirement and Junior or Senior standing. Examines Asian immigration to the U.S. from a world systems perspective. Examines immigration process and the implication of this process for contemporary interest in the Pacific Rim. Topics include origins of Asian Immigration, major U.S. immigration legislation, demographic structure of contemporary Asian …

AAS 361A-Z. Asian American Experience of Selected Groups (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Intensive study of the immigration/incorporation history and experience of a specific Asian Pacific American sub-group. Each course examines the nexus between historical events and contemporary issues facing a particular Asian Pacific American community and their experiences in various sectors of U.S. society: labor, family, politics, education and …

AAS 362. Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Experience (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Recommended Preparatory: Another course in AAS (not writing or speech). This upper division course examines the experiences, realities and identities of an Asian ethnic American group or a subgroup of Asian American Pacific Islander Desi Americans (e.g., Filipino Vietnamese, Korean, Indian, Chinese, Japanese, South Asian, Pacific Islander) …

AAS 390/F. Asian American Communities: Field Practicum (2/1)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Recommended Corequisite or Preparatory: Concurrent enrollment in AAS 345 or other related course. A seminar on field study, observation and participation in selected community institutions and agencies. This course will also offer a community service opportunity with activities relating to concepts and theories presented. 15 hours of …

AAS 396A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Asian American Studies (1-3)

Experimental topics in Asian American Studies with course content to be determined.

AAS 417. Equity and Diversity in Schools (3)

Prepares teacher candidates to examine principles of educational equity, diversity and the implementation of curriculum content and school practices for elementary/secondary students. Focuses on the history and culture of a specific ethnic experience and a comparative analysis is made with other ethnic groups in California. Engages students to examine, critique and reflect on their personal …

AAS 440. Urbanization and Asian American Communities (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirements and AAS 100. Examination of the development of Asian American communities in the U.S. from 1850 to present. Particular attention to the impact of Asian American communities on the economic, social, cultural and political development of urban Southern California and on the relationship between Asian American communities …

AAS 450. Asian American Child and the Schools (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the development of the Asian American child with particular emphasis on bicultural and bilingual issues that may influence educational progress. Culturally relevant socialization patterns of children from Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino and Southeast Asian backgrounds examined. Intended for students interested in teaching and human services. Regular …

AAS 453. Asian American Families (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Overview of the demographic, social cultural, structural and historical aspects of Asian American families in the United States. Examines comparative family features among Asian American ethnic groups and other cultural and ethnic groups in the U.S. Parenting styles, communication styles, values, traditions and beliefs examined across ethnic backgrounds, …

AAS 455. Asian American Sexuality (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Explores the personal, social and political identities of Asian Americans as expressed from the lens of sexuality; interdisciplinarily examines current topics in Asian American sexuality, such as gender roles, cultural beliefs and sexual mythology, sexual practices, media images, literary representations, sexual violence and abuse, sex-related health, sex work …

AAS 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Asian American Studies (3)

Preparatory: AAS 100 or AAS 210 or instructor consent. Intensive study of selected themes and issues in Asian American Studies. Topics change from semester to semester. May be repeated for credit with instructor consent.

AAS 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Asian American Studies (1-3)

Experimental topics in Asian American Studies with course content to be determined.

AAS 497. Senior Seminar in Asian American Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Senior standing or instructor’s consent. An integrative seminar serving as a capstone to the degree major in Asian American Studies. Provides a general review of the theories, methods and substantive conclusions covered in Asian American Studies courses and provides guidance and assistance in the writing of the senior thesis.

AAS 499A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Prerequisite: Limited to upper division students with written permission from the department chair and the sponsoring faculty person. No more than 3 units of Independent Study may be applied to the minor in Asian American Studies.

AIS 101. Introduction to American Indian Studies (3)

Introduction to traditional and contemporary American Indian cultures with an interdisciplinary approach to the history, social institutions, religion, literature, arts and inter-ethnic relations of First People Nations. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (ES)

AIS 210. Thinking About Knowing (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement is recommended. Introduction to critical thinking through the lens of American Indian Studies and the examination of knowledge production and reproduction. Examine selected historical and contemporary discourse/philosophies of American Indian nations and contemporary social issues, particularly the complex relationship between American Indians and the United States federal …

AIS 222. Gender, Sexuality, and American Indian Communities (3)

Recommended Preparatory: AIS 101, GWS 100. A survey course that examines the concepts of gender and sexuality as they are politically, economically, socially and culturally constructed in American Indian communities. Special attention is given to the role settler colonialism plays in shaping these constructions. Explores the degree to which Indigenous articulations of gender and sexuality …

AIS 250. American Indians and U.S. History (3)

A survey of selected major events in U.S. history from the perspective of American Indians, especially as they relate to key concepts in American Indian Studies, such as settler colonialism, nationhood, sovereignty, citizenship, racialization, and treaty rights vs. civil rights. Examines the relationship of American Indian nations to state and federal governments, including the impact …

AIS 301. American Indians and Popular Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Analysis and interpretation of representations of American Indians in popular culture, which may include art, literature, advertising, cinema, television, sports, and music. Examination of the historical, racial, political, and cultural contexts of these representations in various periods of U.S. history, including the present. Promotes critical media literacy. …

AIS 304. American Indian Law and Policy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: AIS 101. Examines the impact of the multi-jurisdictional indigenous social control mechanisms on U.S. state and federal law and policies. Major focus is on the unique legal relationship that exists between Indian governments and state and federal governments. Issues, including criminal justice, child welfare, education, gaming, healthcare, art, …

AIS 318. American Indian Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of American Indian literatures, which may include traditional oral forms, autobiographies, and contemporary poetry and prose. Students who have taken AIS 314 will not receive credit for AIS 318. (Cross-listed with ENGL 318.) (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities or F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

AIS 333. American Indian Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. A survey of American Indian philosophy from issues arising out of oral traditions, to early colonial Indigenous impacts on American democracy and pragmatism, to recent work on knowledge, value, and being as well as applied issues such as tribal sovereignty and the environment. (Cross-listed with PHIL 333.) (Available …

ARAB 101. Elementary Arabic I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Arabic was the language of instruction. This is an elementary course on the fundamentals of Arabic, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

ARAB 102. Elementary Arabic II (4)

Prerequisite: ARAB 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Arabic was the language of instruction. ARAB 102 is the continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Arabic: grammatical structures, reading, practice in spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General …

ARMN 101. Elementary Armenian I (3)

Prerequisite: Not open to students who have attended schools where Armenian is the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Armenian, including alphabet and additional sounds, grammatical structure, reading, writing and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

ARMN 102. Elementary Armenian II (3)

Prerequisite: ARMN 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students who have attended schools where Armenian is the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Armenian. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

ARMN 201. Intermediate Armenian I (3)

Prerequisite: ARMN 102 or equivalent. Intensive practice in pronunciation, conversation and writing. Brief review of grammar and study of more advanced grammatical concepts. Introduction to reading of literature and study of Armenian culture.

ARMN 310. Armenian Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Covers all aspects of the Armenian culture from ancient civilization to modern day life both in Armenia and in the diaspora. Introduces the Armenian culture, including language, literature, history (including waves of immigration to the U.S. and the genocide of 1915), religion, political parties, music, visual and …

ARMN 360. Changing Roles of Armenian Women (3)

Prerequisites: Upper division standing; Completion of the lower division writing requirement. The course explores changing roles of Armenian women with particular emphasis on new definitions and options in the family, community and society. The course perspective is international and comparative, with significant focus on Armenia and the diaspora. Also, the course concentrates on the educational, …

ARMN 380. Contemporary Issues in Armenia and the Diaspora (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of contemporary domestic and international issues in Armenia and the Armenian diaspora, with emphasis on Armenians in America. Includes an analysis of Armenian genocide as a historical issue having contemporary relevance, and a focused examination of current-event issues such as immigration, assimilation, social and political activities …

ARMN 417. Equity and Diversity in School (3)

Prepares teacher candidates to examine principles of educational equity, diversity and the implementation of curriculum content and school practices for elementary/secondary students. Focuses on the history and culture of a specific ethnic experience, and a comparative analysis is made with other ethnic groups in California. Engages students to examine, critique and reflect on their personal …

ARMN 440. Armenian American Child (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the development of the Armenian child with particular emphasis on bicultural and bilingual issues that may influence educational progress. Culturally relevant socialization patterns of children from Armenia and the Armenian diaspora are examined. Intended for prospective teachers and students interested in human services. (Available for …

CAS 100. Introduction to Central American Studies (3)

Comparative, historical introduction to political, cultural and socioeconomic aspects of the Central American experience both in Central America and in the United States. Considers the question of whether there can be a single Central American identity in light of the great variety of experiences of race, gender, ethnicity and social class in the Central American …

CAS 102. The Salvadoran Experience (3)

Introduction to the political, economic, social and cultural realities of Salvadoran life in El Salvador and in the U.S. Emphasis is on various aspects of the institutional and private life of Salvadoran communities. The course is framed by historical and contemporary comparisons with other Central American national groups with respect to their experiences of race, …

CAS 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax …

CAS 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the …

CAS 114A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well …

CAS 114B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 114A. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of prose …

CAS 115. Approaches to University Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

CAS 151. Fundamentals of Public Speaking (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing, or completion of 113A or 114A, or completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course will introduce students to the fundamentals of public speaking and verbal communication, with particular emphasis on issues related to the Central American experience. Lectures and class assignments will focus on intensive practice …

CAS 201. Survey of Central American Literature (3)

Analysis of literary traditions throughout the history of Central America from pre-Hispanic times to the present. The course will focus on 20th and 21st century literary movements, with the main emphasis placed on the historical and political elements and the ideological proposals of these works. It includes a discussion of the relationship between literary creation …

CAS 202. Survey of Central American Visual, Installation and Performance Arts (3)

Analysis of artistic traditions throughout the history of Central America from pre-Hispanic times to the present. The course will focus on the cultural and sociopolitical construction of Central American identities through historical and contemporary artistic creation and representation. The main emphasis will be placed on the historical and political elements, Central American ethnic and cultural …

CAS 270/F. Fieldwork in Central American Communities (1/2)

Preparatory: CAS 100 or CAS 102. Field study in a selected Central American community. By reflecting on their work experience, students learn how the needs of the community can best be met and how the well-being of the community is impacted by its relationships to state and local governments, community organizations and private institutions. Faculty supervisor …

CAS 309. Ancient to Pre-Modern History of the Central American People (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of the history of Central Americans from pre-Hispanic times to the pre-Independence days. Major topics include: Indigenous cultures (complex and single societies); Indigenous and European (Spanish and Anglo) relations; religion, family and land tenure; language and education; disease, labor and population; local and global trading; Indigenous …

CAS 310. Modern History of the Central American People (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of the history of Central Americans from Independence times to the present. Major topics include: Independence movements; 19th and 20th century dependency; state-nation and identity formation; politics of mestizaje; indigenous resistance; imperialism and economic growth; relations with the U.S. and Europe; politics of development; contemporary social …

CAS 311. The Central American Diaspora (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Comparative survey of the socioeconomic conditions and cultural life of Central American peoples in the U.S. today, particularly in California. Issues of immigration, employment, income, education, gender, family, language, national identity, acculturation and political participation will be examined. Discussion of Central American diaspora communities in other parts …

CAS 350. Urbanization in Central America (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement; either CAS 100, CAS 102 or permission of the instructor. During the second half of the 20th century the Central American societies were transformed from an agrarian to an urban-based service economy. As a result of this process and the political instability in Central America, the Central …

CAS 355. Environment, Development and Social Exclusion in Central America (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement; either CAS 100, CAS 102 or permission of the instructor. The focus of this course will be the origins and ramifications of environmental degradation that stems from developmental policies that have historically impoverished Central American peoples. It examines the sociocultural, demographic, economic, political and environmental problems experienced …

CAS 356. Afro-Caribbean Central American Cultures and Identities (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement; either CAS 100, CAS 102 or permission of the instructor. This interdisciplinary course examines the history of colonization and racism, as well as the socioeconomic, political and religious conditions that Afro-Caribbean peoples in Central America have endured since the time of their arrival as part of the …

CAS 365. Changing Roles of Central American Women (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Either CAS 100 or CAS 102. Comparative examination of the shifting cultural, political, economic and sex/gender roles that have shaped the lives of Central American women, including women’s roles prior to and after the revolutionary movements. Also includes discussions of women activists and women’s movements in …

CAS 368. Central American Revolutionary Movements (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Either CAS 100 or CAS 102. Examines the historical and socioeconomic conditions that have shaped the Central American revolutionary movements. Major topics of discussion include the history of Central America leading up to these movements, the role of U.S. policy in the region before and during …

CAS 369. Contemporary Social Movements in Central America (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Either CAS 100, CAS 102 or permission of the instructor. Designed to provide students with a basic theoretical and practical understanding of the contemporary social movements that shape Central American life in both Central America and the U.S. Emphasizes the transnational nature of Central American social …

CAS 410. The Central American Child (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course examines the educational experience of the Central American child within the context of immigration in the U.S.. At the same time, it compares the educational experience of the Central American child with that of children from other ethnic groups. This perspective provides insight into the …

CAS 421. Central American Literature Seminar (3-3)

Examines Central American literary traditions with emphasis on the 20th and 21st centuries. Focuses on the aesthetic proposals, the historical and political context in which Central American literature is produced, the Central American transnational experience and the ways in which literary production contributes to the construction of a contemporary version of Central American identity. Emphasizes …

CAS 440. Research Seminar on Central American Culture (3-3)

Preparatory: Upper division standing; 6 units in Central American Studies, including CAS 201. Techniques and practice of the critical analysis of culture. Develop and implement a comparative research project that explores in-depth some aspect of Central American cultures. Variable content. Possible topics include the role of literature in the construction of national identity, the creation …

CAS 460. Research Seminar on Central American Political Issues (3)

Preparatory: Upper division standing; 6 units in Central American Studies, including CAS 201. The purpose of this seminar is to acquaint students with the techniques and practices of theoretical research. Students will develop and implement comparative research projects that explore in-depth some aspect of the Central American political experience. Variable content. Possible topics include Sandinismo …

CCE 200. Introduction to Civic and Community Engagement (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduces students to the rewards, opportunities and challenges of collaborating with community service partners, which can include charitable or nonprofit organizations and government offices or agencies. Students will learn how to identify opportunities for civic and community engagement, how to locate resources for such projects, and how …

CCE 490. Civic and Community Engagement Capstone (3)

Prerequisites: CCE 200; Upper division standing. Through coursework and a collaborative project with a community partner, students complete requirements for the Civic and Community Engagement minor. The collaborative project can include community service, fieldwork or an internship with a government or nonprofit agency, with the approval of the CCE advisor. Requires up to 40 hours of …

CHIN 101. Elementary Mandarin Chinese I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Mandarin was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Mandarin Chinese, including grammatical structure, alphabet, writing and practice of the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

CHIN 102. Elementary Mandarin Chinese II (4)

Prerequisite: CHIN 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Mandarin was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Mandarin, including grammatical structures, reading, writing, practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F …

CHS 100. Chicana/o Culture (3)

Introductory study of cultural, economic, educational and political issues as they impact the Chicana/o in the U.S. Includes a study of the contributions that Chicana/os have made in these areas. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (ES)

CHS 101. Spanish for Heritage Speakers I (3)

CHS 101 is designed for students who have had some exposure to Spanish, either at home or in their community. While these students may have a higher degree of communicative proficiency than those whose first and primary contact with Spanish occurs in the classroom, they sometimes lack critical exposure to and training in Spanish morphology, …

CHS 102. Spanish for Heritage Speakers II (3)

CHS 102 is developed specifically to address language learning for heritage speakers. This course provides such training through a variety of activities that focus on further development of speaking, reading, and writing skills beyond the level attained in CHS 101. This course will also help students understand the history, character, and importance of the Hispanic …

CHS 111. The Chicana/o and the Arts (3)

Survey of Chicana/o visual art, music and drama and their role in Chicana/o culture. Offers a historical approach to Chicana/o contributions in the arts. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C1 Arts.) (ES)

CHS 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax …

CHS 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the …

CHS 114A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as …

CHS 114B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 114A. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of prose …

CHS 115. Approaches to University Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

CHS 151. Freshman Speech Communication (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing, or completion of 113A or 114A, or completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of the principles essential to effective verbal communication skills through the study and practical application of basic speech forms. Attention given to individual and group communication activities designed to improve one’s ability to …

CHS 201. Survey of Mexican Literature in Translation (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Comprehensive overview of the literary heritage of Mexico from pre-Colombian times to the present. Includes an analysis of its historical, technical and lyrical dimensions and its relationship with other Hispanic literature in order to develop a critical appreciation of literary art. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available …

CHS 202. Race, Racism and Critical Thinking (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the process of critical thinking through the lens of race-based theories and selected historical and contemporary discourse of African Americans, Asian Americans and Chicanos/Latinos on race relations and multiculturalism in American society. Examines contemporary social issues through the use of scholarly studies and a range …

CHS 214. Guitar Music of the Southwest and Mexico (3)

Develops the fundamental skills for guitar. Incorporates the study of various regional musical styles of the Southwest and Mexico. (Credit/No Credit only)

CHS 230. Introduction to Research Methods in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to research methods and writing skills through class lectures and hands-on assignments requiring the use of basic information sources and tools. Focuses on the development of basic research strategies and reinforcement of appropriate writing skills necessary to a wide spectrum of research and writing assignments. Includes …

CHS 245. History of the Americas (3)

Comparative analysis of significant political and social events in the U.S. from colonial times to the present. Emphasis placed on the historical development of American institutions and ideals as they have been affected by regional dynamics within the U.S. and by international, socio-political and economic relationships, particularly with Latin America. (Available for General Education, C3 …

CHS 246. Contemporary Issues of the Chicana (3)

Using a sociological framework for understanding the contemporary experiences of Mexican American women in the U.S., focuses on the sexual division of labor in families, the workplace and community. Each section explores the variation and heterogeneity in women’s class, ethnic/racial and gender identity. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural …

CHS 260. Constitutional Issues and the Chicana/o (3)

Study of important constitutional issues and cases that have affected the Chicano community. Examines how American political institutions, operating under the framework of the U.S. Constitution, have influenced the civil and political rights of Chicanos. (Available for General Education, D3/D4 Constitution of the United States/State and Local Government.)

CHS 261. Race, Racism and the Sciences (3)

This course will provide a survey of different schools of thought within the natural sciences with special attention to historical and contemporary debates around race and racism. Students will learn about how intelligence testing, forced sterilization, eugenics movements, modern psychiatry, and environmental conservation have impacted Chicana/o communities from a social science interdisciplinary approach. With this …

CHS 270SOC/F. Fieldwork in Barrio Studies (1/2)

Students will engage in and practice the skills, methods, and awareness necessary for social change in the barrio. The course will focus on connections between students’ life experiences, community institutions, and social justice issues in the Chicana/o/Latina/o community. Freire’s problem-posing processes, cooperative learning, grant writing, and reflection are used to deepen student’s understanding of Chicano/Latina …

CHS 296A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Selected topics in Chicana/o Studies with course content to be determined.

CHS 306. The Chicana/o in Films (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division requirement. Analysis of the image of the Chicana and Chicano as presented in films and documentaries. Includes historical background, content analysis and social implications of selected feature films and documentaries. Students prepare a written analysis of each film viewed. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 308D/DL. Days of the Dead: Chicana/o Perspectives on Death, Spirituality and Art and Lab (2/1)

Preparatory: Upper division standing; completion of one or more introductory courses in Chicana/o Studies, Religious Studies or Art; or by consent of the instructor. This lecture/studio course examines the concepts inspiring the Dias de los Muertos celebration from ancient Mesoamerican mythology and worldview to contemporary expressions of the Days of the Dead in the Chicana/o …

CHS 310. Regional Music of Mexico (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the cultural, instrumental and musical aspects of predominant regional musical styles of Mexico from Pre-Cuauhtemoc to contemporary times. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C1 Arts.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 331. Chicana/o Decolonizing Research Methods (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Course addresses how critical and indigenous methodologies and research can be used to promote racial and social justice within the Chicana/o/x community. Students practice using a language of critique in examining research methods, epistemology and ethics, theory, concepts and practices within the context of research in the …

CHS 333. Language and Society: Chicanas/os and Other Language Minority Children (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Overview of social, educational and linguistic factors that influence language development among Chicanas/os and other language minority children. Introduces students to theories and processes of first and second language acquisition and relates these to the language development and educational needs of Chicana/Latino and other immigrant children. The course …

CHS 345. History of the Mexican Peoples (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. History of the development of the Mexican peoples from the beginning of Spanish colonization (1521) to the present. Analysis of the interaction between politics and economics and the factors underlying Mexico’s economic underdevelopment also presented. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences.) (ES) …

CHS 346. History of the Chicana/Mexicana (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Appraisal of past and contemporary socio-political and economic contributions by Mexican women and Chicanas to developments in Mexico and the U.S. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 347. Indigenous Intellectual History (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the Intellectual history of Indigenous societies of the Americas and highlights the 15,000-year legacy of Indigenous Knowledge held by today’s Indigenous communities with roots in Latin America. The course employs anti-colonial and decolonizing theoretical frameworks that center student attention on Indigenous Intellectual history and Indigenous people’s …

CHS 350. Religions and Spiritualities in Chicana/o Communities (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Comparative historical study of Mexican Catholicism and American Protestantism and their influence on Chicanas/os in the U.S. Examination of issues involving church, religion, and politics in Chicana/o communities including analysis of theologies of liberation, faith-based community organizing, and feminist, queer, and indigenous spiritualities. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. …

CHS 351. Survey of Mexican Philosophical Thought (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the intellectual life of Mexico from its indigenous pre-Colombian roots through the Spanish and European influences up to its own distinctive present-day perspectives and philosophical outlook. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 360. Political Organizations and Social Movements of the Barrio (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the origin and development of Chicana/o organizations, such as the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA), League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) and La Raza Unida Party (LRUP), and their emergence of social movements emphasizing their role in the electoral process and in the development of …

CHS 361. Urbanization and the Chicana/o (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study and critical analysis of the urban Chicana/o community in the U.S. Includes theory, demography, spatial dynamics, leading economic and political issues, key institution issues, trends, and urban policy and planning. Intended for, but not limited to, prospective elementary and secondary school teachers. Available for Section B of …

CHS 362. Contemporary Indigenous Migrations and Diasporas (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Recommended Preparatory: CHS 364. This course provides an interdisciplinary approach to critically understanding indigeneity in Latin American communities as well as contemporary Indigenous migration movements from Latin America to the United States. Students examine varied theoretical frameworks as well as specific case studies of Indigenous diasporic communities …

CHS 364. World Migration and the Chicana/o (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Explores the historical and material causes of world migration from underdeveloped countries. Compares Mexican immigration to the U.S. with those of other underdeveloped and developing nations. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 365. Third World Women and the Chicana (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Comparison of Chicana and Third World women in the U.S. and the world community. Effects of colonialism, changes in the mode of production and liberation movements are studied within the U.S. and the Third World communities. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural …

CHS 366. Women in Latin America (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the political, economic, social and cultural changes that have affected women in Latin America. Regular written assignments are required. (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences.) (WI)

CHS 380. Chicana/o Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of major Chicana/o writers. Includes an analysis of Chicano novels, short stories, theater and poetry. Students develop analytical skills through class discussions, written assignments and readings. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 381. Contemporary Chicana Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the literature produced by contemporary Chicana writers. Reading and discussion of narrative works, poetry and drama, as well as socio-historical criticism, literary theory and biography. Socio-critical and textual analysis. Regular written assignments required. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 382. Literary Constructions of Chicanx Identity (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of lower division writing requirement. Chicano/a/x literary representations of the self will be examined historically and within their own literary and intellectual traditions. Parallel literary works of other ethnic groups will also be explored. The ideas of a lived experience, self-determination and decolonization will be covered as they pertain to a construction of …

CHS 390. Alternative Chicano Press (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Includes techniques of planning, writing, editing, designing and the publishing of an alternative newspaper. Analysis of the Chicana/o press and the role of Chicanas/os in the mass media. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (Available for General Education, E Lifelong Learning.) (ES) (WI)

CHS 396A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Selected topics in Chicana/o Studies with course content to be determined.

CHS 401. Pre-Cuauhtemoc Meso-American Civilizations (3)

General survey of civilized life in Mexico and Central America prior to 1519. Examines the Meso-American variant of world civilization and directs special attention to the societies of central Mexico during the 13th-16th centuries. Available for graduate credit. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 405. Chicanas/os and the Media (3)

Analysis of the portrayal of Chicanas and Chicanos in the media, including newspapers, magazines, television, film and advertising. Examination of sources and techniques of reporting events in the barrio is also studied. Field study included and designed for the non-professional student. Available for graduate credit. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 409. Chicana/o Art Studio in Painting (3-3)

Prerequisite: Introductory course in Chicana/o Studies or ART 124A. Recommended: Previous art/drawing experience. Through the medium of painting/art practice, introduction to Mexican and Chicana/o world views and aesthetics. Painting assignments provide experience working in various media, including a choice of oils, acrylic and/or watercolor, with styles/approaches to subject matter ranging from representational to expressive and …

CHS 417. Equity and Diversity in Schools (3)

Prepares teacher candidates to examine principles of educational equity, diversity and the implementation of curriculum content and school practices for elementary/secondary students. Focuses on the history and culture of a specific ethnic experience and a comparative analysis is made with other ethnic groups in California. Engages students to examine, critique and reflect on their personal …

CHS 420. Chicana/o in the U.S. Economy (3)

Examines and studies Chicanas/os in relation to the U.S. economy. Study of the development of the capitalist state and its relationship to the U.S society. Includes analysis of labor history in the U.S with a specific emphasis on Chicano labor history. Available for graduate credit.

CHS 430. The Chicana/o Child (3)

Review of the cognitive, affective and psychomotor development of Chicana/o and Latina/o children. Examines patterns of school adjustment and achievement of Chicana/o and Latina/o children and other language minority students. Explores the sociocultural and linguistic aspects of learning and current theoretical frameworks and standards of implementation related to programs for language-minority students. Available for Section …

CHS 431. The Chicana/o Adolescent (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Explores patterns of selection, innovation and recreation of ethnic and gender identity and theories of adolescent formation among Chicana/o and other Latina/o adolescents. Fieldwork/observation and regular written assignments required. For prospective elementary and secondary school teachers. Available for Section A of the Multicultural Requirement for credential candidates. Available …

CHS 432. Counseling the Chicana/o Child (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Overview of social, cultural and educational factors that impact the psychological development of Chicana/o and other Latina/o children. Studies the nature of psychological issues associated with the immigrant and acculturation process and the role of the teacher, counselor and family in dealing with these issues. Primarily for prospective …

CHS 433. Language Acquisition of the Chicana/o and ESL Speakers (3)

An introduction to the study of language acquisition, specifically focusing on the linguistic factors that influence language development among Chicanas/os and other language-minority children. The course provides an introduction to the structure and function of language and to theories of first and second language acquisition. We will relate these theories to monolingual language acquisition as …

CHS 434. Current Educational Theories of Chicana/os in the Schools (3)

Prerequisite: CHS 270. Review of research on issues and problems affecting Chicano students adapting to the schools and the teacher’s response to them. Includes observation of school facilities and classroom techniques. Available for graduate credit. Academic Internship course. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 445. History of the Chicano (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. History of the Mexican people in the U.S. presented in the context of American history and government. Examines American institutions and ideals as developed by the framers of the U.S. and California constitutions and how they have affected the role of the Mexican American in U.S. society. Available …

CHS 448. Chicana/o Public History (3)

Explores the ways in which public historical places gain their meaning and how this has shaped public narratives and imaginaries. The roles of Chicanos/as/xs as creators and consumers of public historical narratives are examined through the theoretical application of a Palimpsest—multiple historical narratives that at once affirm contemporary meanings while simultaneously erasing previous ones. Available …

CHS 453. Theory and the Chicana/o Experience (3)

Study of contemporary political, social and cultural theories and their relationship to the Chicana/o experience in the U.S. Emphasis on theories developed by Chicanas and Chicanos. Questions on the role of praxis, democracy and the transformation of society are also examined. Available for graduate credit. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 460. Politics of the Chicana/o (3)

Critical study of Chicana/o issues, organizations, political models, participation, behavior and the electoral process in the U.S. Includes an examination of race, gender and class dynamics and their relationship to Chicana/o Politics. Available for graduate credit. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 467. Environmental Justice and Chicana/o Communities (3)

This course will provide students with the knowledge to understand how built environments, ecological degradation, water privatization and land confiscation have structured racial inequality in the 20th and 21st centuries. Students will read about the contingent relationships between race, class and economic development that have made Chicana/o, Latina/o, Asian American, African American and Native American …

CHS 470. Cultural Differences and the Chicana/o (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the processes, effects and possible causes of social and cultural differences and conflict among Chicanos. Includes a study of preventive measures and plans to ameliorate the situation. Intended primarily for elementary and secondary school teachers. Available for Section B of the Multicultural requirement for credential candidates. Available …

CHS 473. The Chicana/o and Social Institutions (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the interaction between the Chicano Community and the educational and social institutions of the dominant society. Topics such as institutional racism, segregation and abuse of authority are analyzed along with a focus on the Chicano community’s organized attempts to advocate for their values and interests. Intended …

CHS 480/F. Chicana/o-Latina/o Children’s Literature in Communities (2/1)

Preparatory: Completion of a lower division literature course or CHS 380. Critical analysis of themes and meanings of U.S.-based Chicana/o-Latina/o children’s literature using contemporary literary and cultural theory tools. Students explore and practice the use of Chicana/o-Latina/o children’s literature in school communities to promote cultural awareness and humanization among children and families. Course requires fieldwork in …

CHS 482. Language of the Barrio (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines the origin and current features of informal spoken Spanish in the Southwestern U.S. Includes an analysis of common colloquial forms, slang, profanity and code-switching. Addresses English usage among Chicanas/os. Available for Section C of the Multicultural requirement for credential candidates. Available for graduate credit.

CHS 486A. Nahuatl I (3)

Study of the basic structures of the Nahuatl language as it is reflected in written manuscripts. Phonology, syntax and lexicon of Classic Nahuatl is examined with the purpose of enabling the student to translate passages from primary sources. Available for graduate credit. Meets the Ethnic Studies requirement. (ES)

CHS 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Senior or graduate status or permission from instructor. In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Chicana/o Studies. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue. Critical writing and reading required. Offered for …

CHS 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Chicana and Chicano Studies (3)

Selected topics in Chicana/o Studies with course content to be determined. Available for graduate credit.

CHS 497. Senior Seminar in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Senior standing or instructor consent. Integrative seminar serving as a capstone to the interdepartmental major in Chicana/o Studies. Intensive study of selected topics relating to the Chicana/o and the preparation of papers by members of the class.

CHS 500. Seminar in Chicana/o Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Graduate standing. Investigation of the various disciplines that comprise Chicana/o Studies (e.g., history, literature, etc.). Study of methods and techniques of research used in the various disciplines and their application to Chicana/o Studies are included.

CHS 501. Seminar in the Social Sciences and the Chicana/o (3)

Prerequisite: CHS 500. Seminar in the methods of analysis and writing of the social sciences. Review of the major works written by social scientists on the Chicana/o, with a critical evaluation of the racial, cultural and environmental models used to study the Chicana/o. Students survey and evaluate social science research as well as participate in a …

CHS 502. Seminar in the Humanities and the Chicana/o (3)

Prerequisite: CHS 500. Seminar in the humanities, comparing the Western European tradition with that of Meso-America. Study of theories of aesthetics and philosophies from both perspectives and their influence on current Chicana/o thought, literature and folklore. Emphasis on the various approaches to literary analysis of the different literary genres.

CHS 503. Seminar on Chicana/o and the Arts (3)

Study of the music, drama and graphic arts produced by Chicanas/os as an expression of the Chicana/o experience in the U.S. Emphasizes Chicana/o artistic expression that has its roots and inspiration in Mexican art forms, often combined with U.S. or European influences.

CHS 504. Xicana Visual Art (3)

Prerequisite: Graduate status or permission from instructor. The course examines the mytho-historical influences, “altar-native” spiritualities, oppositional politics, hybrid realities and complex “transforming” identities that inform Chicana visual expression/creative production and cultural activism. Visual art studied includes painting, printmaking, mixed-media, altares/nichos, muralism, photography, installation, video and other diverse forms where relevant to Chicana art.

CHS 505. Advanced Fieldwork in the Barrio (3)

Advanced field study. Students are exposed to rigorous analysis of behavioral studies of the Chicano community and techniques in fieldwork.

CHS 506. Studies in the Education of the Chicana/o (3)

Evaluation of the American educational system. Emphasizes school organizational structure, administrative theory and application, multicultural curriculum and instruction, parent involvement and community relations. Designed to give graduate students an opportunity to explore strategies for promoting change in our educational institutions to benefit Chicana/o and other language-minority students.

CHS 507. Seminar in Chicana/o Studies Research Methods (3)

Prerequisite: Graduate status. This course introduces students to quantitative and qualitative methods and methodology. It provides an intensive exploration of research tools and techniques relevant to Chicano/a Studies. The course provides a basic introduction to research methods and tools. Students will complete a research proposal that will include a literature review, statement of research problem …

CHS 508. Seminar in Chicana/o Studies Pedagogy (3)

Advanced Chicana/o Studies theoretical models and pedagogical approaches to the teaching of Chicana/o Studies in secondary and post-secondary education environments are addressed. Students will gain greater knowledge of the epistemology, content and cultural knowledge, and praxis needed to establish classrooms that are community responsive and social justice oriented.

CHS 509. Chicanas and Feminism (3)

Critical examination of the origin and development of Chicana feminism(s) from an interdisciplinary perspective and review of the ways Chicana feminist thought, visions of social justice, and the construction of knowledge may inform research.

CHS 514. Performance and Identity (3)

Introduction to issues of identity in popular Chicana/o performance. The course explores current theories of identity formation and uses performance methodologies to create solo and group performances that reflect contemporary issues in the Chicana/o Community.

CHS 517. Advanced Educational Equity and Diversity (3)

Prerequisite: CHS 417 or equivalent. This advanced study course is designed for educators enrolled in the Ethnic Studies Certificate with a focus on Chicana/o Studies. Students in this course identify, analyze, and discuss the impact of the structural, cultural, and political aspects of education on the Chicana/o. This course is an in-depth examination of theoretical, …

CHS 518. Seminar in Chicanx/Latinx Literature (3)

Prerequisite: CHS 508. This course focuses on literary criticism, theory, and its application to the teaching of Chicanx/Latinx literature in secondary and community college settings. Students in this course will read, analyze, and discuss/apply pedagogical practices associated with classical and contemporary Chicanx/Latinx literary works.

CHS 584. The Novel of the Mexican Revolution (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 104 or instructor consent. Study and text analysis of selected novels that describe the revolutionary struggle during the years 1910-1915 and the profound changes that the revolution produced in Mexican society. Emphasis on the novelists’ disillusion with many of the revolutionary governments. Conducted in Spanish. (Cross-listed with SPAN 484.)

CHS 587. The Contemporary Mexican Novel (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 104 or instructor consent. Study of the recent trends in the Mexican novel through the reading of selected works by the best-known contemporary Mexican male and female novelists. Conducted in Spanish. (Cross-listed with SPAN 587.)

CHS 596A-Z. Selected Graduate Topics in Chicana/o Studies (3)

In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Chicana/o Studies. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue in Chicana/o Studies.

CHS 599A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Prerequisite: Graduate status. Investigation of a significant problem in Chicana/o Studies. Project selected in conference with graduate faculty sponsor prior to enrollment.

CHS 697. Directed Comprehensive Studies (3)

Prerequisites: Classified graduate status; Instructor consent. Enrollment is required in the semester in which the comprehensive exam is taken.

CHS 698C. Thesis or Graduate Project (3)

Prerequisite: Classified graduate status; Instructor consent. Enrollment is required in the semester in which the thesis or project is completed.

CLAS 101L. Elementary Latin I (3)

Introduction to the structure of Latin, with emphasis on reading Latin and on the role of Latin to the development of English. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

CLAS 315. Greek and Roman Mythology (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the myths of Greeks and Romans, and of their impact on the literature of the Western world. Conducted in English. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

CLAS 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Classics (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing. Selected topics in classics, with course content to be determined.

DCDL 500. Theories of Community Development, Social Justice and Structures of Inequities (3)

In this course, students will be introduced to an intersectional approach to understanding community development, social justice and structural inequities from interdisciplinary perspectives. Students will learn critical theories regarding race, class, gender and indigeneity, which will enable them to understand and interrogate systems of power as they manifest in multiple community contexts. Students will also …

DCDL 510. History of Diverse Urban Communities (3)

In this course, students will be introduced to an interdisciplinary and comparative approach to understanding how structural factors have shaped the experiences of various racial and ethnic groups in urban America. The course is organized thematically according to several historiographical debates central to the study of urban history, including race, immigration, and spatial segregation; religion …

DCDL 520. Issues in Community Development and Empowerment (3)

In this course, students will analyze how community development partners align themselves with community-centered approaches to tackling some of the most prominent issues in urban centers. Students will learn about how social and environmental justice issues intersect with community-based organizations. Students will learn about case studies from different regions about the development of policies that …

DCDL 530. Applied Leadership (3)

In this course, students will be provided with an overview and examination of applied leadership. Leadership in diverse context(s) often operates differently from traditional conceptualizations of top-down, individual-based leadership models. Exploring the theories, histories and issues presented in leadership studies, we will pay particular attention to diverse leadership styles and their effectiveness in various community …

DCDL 600. Methods: Qualitative and Quantitative (3)

In this course, students will be introduced to key quantitative and qualitative methods from an interdisciplinary approach. Students will learn how to collect, manage and assess data necessary for effective management and leadership of diverse community organizations and to address community needs. Qualitative methodologies, such as community-based participatory action research, grounded theory and case study, …

DCDL 610. Communication Skills in Community Development (3)

In this course, the capacity of students to apply communication strategies to create and present a proposal in support of diverse communities will be promoted. Students will be introduced to signature aspects of communication, including interpersonal and public speaking, marketing, public relations and positioning. Students then apply those skills in the creation of one advocacy …

DCDL 620. Building Community-Government-Private Partnerships (3)

In this course, students will explore how to build partnerships between community, public and private organizations for the purposes of fundraising, grant writing and community advocacy. Emphasis will be on negotiating complexities and controversies between partners in the adoption, implementation and evaluation of policy. Students will explore sources of funds and resources required for fundraising/grant …

DCDL 630. Organizing in Diverse Communities (3)

In this course, students will be provided with a theoretical and practical overview of community organizing in a U.S. context. Students will explore various models and approaches related to community organizing and social movements within diverse communities, using historical and contemporary case studies. Community outreach, leadership development and capacity building processes will be emphasized as …

DCDL 698. Capstone Graduate Project (6)

In this course, students will implement their approved community development capstone proposal. Under faculty supervision, students collaborate with the community partner to determine the scope of work to address a specific community issue. Students apply research to make evidence-based decisions to develop and evaluate alternative proposals for the community partner. Using appropriate communication strategies, students …

DH 320. Perspectives on Digital Humanities (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. The course helps students understand how digital technologies are changing the ways we produce, preserve, share and disseminate knowledge in the humanities. Students will learn about major projects, theories and developments in the field of digital humanities, including text encoding, data analysis, visualization and/or digital archiving. The …

DH 480. Digital Humanities Studies and Projects (3)

Preparatory: DH 320. The course guides students in the application of topics, theories and tools to one major area of digital humanities work specified by the instructor. Students participate in a range of intellectual and hands-on activities that involve computation-enhanced research in the humanities and might involve web technologies, computational textual analysis, content management, metadata …

ENGL 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax …

ENGL 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

ENGL 114A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases shall include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as …

ENGL 114B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 114A. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of prose …

ENGL 115. Approaches to University Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of …

ENGL 205. Business Communication in Its Rhetorical Contexts (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: GE section A1 Oral Communication; COMP 100 or equivalent. Development of critical writing, thinking, research and technology skills in the context of business. Through substantial writing and other work, students will hone their written, oral and visual communication skills, and their ability to find, synthesize and …

ENGL 208. Creative Writing (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introductory workshop course in creative writing. Students have the option of concentrating on one of three modes: prose fiction, poetry or drama. Part of the Creative Writing option in English. (Available for General Education, C1 Arts.)

ENGL 215. Critical Thinking About Research Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course will focus on composing and reading practices appropriate to research writing tasks. Students will practice writing effectively and using information technologies. There will be a focus on comprehending and using quantitative and qualitative data and students will be introduced to generating qualitative or quantitative data. …

ENGL 250FE. Perspectives on English Studies for Teachers (3)

Introduces students to the issues of reading and writing in the context of examining their own first-year experiences with reading and writing, and connects these experiences to the curricular content of 9th grade English classes and pupils. Students will meet with a CSUN instructor 1.5 hours per week. A 20-hour field experience in a 9th …

ENGL 255. Introduction to Literature (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introductory study of the genres of imaginative literature—prose fiction, poetry and drama—with special emphasis on the interrelationships between form and theme. The course will feature a specific cultural tradition (e.g., Western, Postcolonial, African American, etc.) to be chosen by the instructor. Critical writing is an integral part …

ENGL 258. British Literature from the Middle Ages to the Early Age of Empire (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of works of literature produced in Britain, its surrounding islands, and its colonial spaces from the Middle Ages to the early British Empire, with attention to literary, cultural, and sociopolitical movements from diverse peoples and cultures. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

ENGL 259. British Literature from the Age of Empire to the Present (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of works of literature produced in Britain, its surrounding islands, and its colonial spaces from the early British Empire to its dissolution and legacies, with attention to literary, cultural, and sociopolitical movements from diverse peoples and cultures. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

ENGL 275. Survey of U.S. Literature (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of representative works of U.S. literature from the precolonial to contemporary eras, with attention to literary, cultural, and sociopolitical movements of diverse groups. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

ENGL 300. Contemporary Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Upper division standing. Study and analysis of selected major works of fiction, poetry, drama and major authors since approximately the end of World War II in England and America. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

ENGL 301. Language and Linguistics (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to linguistic science, its background, development and relation to other fields of study, as well as recent developments in the study of language. (Linguistics and Language Study requirement of the English Subject Matter Program.)

ENGL 302. Introduction to Modern Grammar (3)

Basic course in grammar—traditional, structural and trans-formational. Some applications of linguistics to the teaching of English and the language arts are suggested.

ENGL 303/L. Introduction to Language, Grammar and Linguistics for Teachers and Lab (2/1)

Corequisite: ENGL 303L. Introduction to the study of human language(s) and to major scientific approaches in linguistics: phonetics (properties of sound in spoken language and manual and non-manual elements in signed languages), phonology (sound systems of particular spoken languages, and manual and non-manual systems in signed languages), morphology (word and sign formation processes), syntax (word …

ENGL 305. Intermediate Expository Writing (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Intermediate course in written expository writing includes a study of the style of competent writers and extends the writing skills acquired by students in the Freshman Composition course. Emphasis on developing writing that exhibits clarity, coherence, style and a clear purpose.

ENGL 306. Report Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Approaches to writing scientific, technical, professional, business or general-information reports and articles for various audiences and contexts. Emphasis on awareness of discursive practices of particular fields to achieve purpose, coherence and effective style. Culminates with research project and presentation. (Available for General Education, E Lifelong Learning.) (WI)

ENGL 308. Narrative Writing (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 208 or demonstrated proficiency. Intensive practice in narrative writing, with emphasis on short fiction. Analysis and criticism of students’ work, as well as analysis of selected published writings. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 309. Verse Writing (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 208 or demonstrated proficiency. Intensive practice in writing poetry. Analysis and criticism of students’ work, as well as some critical study of published verse. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 310. Playwriting (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 208 or demonstrated proficiency. Intensive practice in writing drama for stage, radio and television. Analysis and criticism of students’ work, including lab production through college facilities. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 311. African American Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of representative works of African American literature with attention to major genres and historical periods from early African American literature to the contemporary era including, but not limited to, slave narratives, the Harlem Renaissance, the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Arts Movement, and more recent literature. …

ENGL 312. Literature, Film, and Media (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the theory and practice of adaptation between media, including literary works and films; analysis of adapted works or genres, including shifts in emphasis, meaning, or style when works or genres are translated from one medium to another. Coursework may also focus on the varied cultural …

ENGL 313. Studies in Popular Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Cultural studies course focusing on the interpretation of American popular culture. Course methodology may include Marxist, psychoanalytic, semiotic or culturally eclectic scholarly points of view. Designed for students who may want to enter the fields of entertainment or advertising, or future teachers who may want to use …

ENGL 315. Digital Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course focuses on production of an array of digital texts, such as podcast, website, documentary, e-portfolio, blog, and collaborative online article. Other topics include social media, digital identity, and ethical questions surrounding the production and distribution of texts in digital environments. The course underscores the expanded …

ENGL 316. Shakespeare (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Upper division standing. Introductory study of representative poems and plays. Attendance at performances and/or films is required. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

ENGL 318. American Indian Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of American Indian literature, which may include traditional oral forms, autobiographies, and contemporary poetry and prose. Students who have taken ENGL 314 will not receive credit for ENGL 318. (Cross-listed with AIS 318.) (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities or F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

ENGL 322. Disability in Literature and Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the study of historical and/or contemporary portrayals of disability in literature and/or popular culture. Focus on thinking about disability as a rhetorical and cultural phenomenon. Critical thinking and writing are an integral part of the course. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

ENGL 333. Comics and Graphic Novels (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of comics, including comic strips, comic books and graphic novels, from literary and cultural studies perspectives. Emphasis on both history and form, including image-text relationships. Topics also may include fan culture, particular genres of comics and connections between comics and other forms of visual text. Critical …

ENGL 345. Recursive Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This class focuses on writing as a recursive process. Students read about—and put into practice—process-oriented writing. Throughout the semester, students write well-researched essays in varied genres on a topic of their choosing. This culminates in a final portfolio to showcase these combined efforts, which, cumulatively, equals approximately …

ENGL 355. Writing About Literature (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement and two lower division English courses. Intensive study of the literary genres of poetry, prose, fiction and drama. Emphasis on written analysis of selected works in each genre. Development of criteria for responsible judgment.

ENGL 360. The English Bible as Literature (3)

Preparatory: Upper division standing. Study of form, theme and style in the King James Version of the Bible.

ENGL 364. The Short Story (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: Upper division standing. A study of the short story, beginning with careful examination of some classics in the genre, followed by analysis of more contemporary works. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

ENGL 368. Gay Male Writers (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines works in British and American literature that: (a) were written by gay men; and (b) portray the lives of gay individuals. Focusing primarily on texts written since the late 19th century and traces the development of gay male self-representation in poetry, novels, short fiction, drama and …

ENGL 369. Lesbian Writers (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Primarily focuses on the work of lesbian writers of the 20th century. Using the approaches of current feminist literary theorists, the course explores the diversity and intersections of lesbian literary traditions, and examines the extent to which lesbian writers have followed and/or altered genre conventions in fiction …

ENGL 370. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror: Fantastic and Speculative Fiction (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of traditions in speculative fiction, including science fiction, fantasy, and/or horror. May incorporate historical, theoretical, philosophical, sociopolitical, or scientific frameworks; may focus on particular themes or subgenres, such as feminist SF, Afrofuturism, ecofiction, utopian/dystopian fiction, or epic fantasy. Texts may include films, graphic narratives, games, and …

ENGL 371. Issues in Jewish-American Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of Jewish writing in America as it affects the relationship between Jewish issues and themes and American culture, based on the works of such authors as I. B. Singer, Roth, Bellow, Malamud, Cahan, Paley, Olsen, Shapiro, Ozick and Potok. Critical writing required. (Available for General Education, …

ENGL 392. Junior Honors Seminar I (3-3)

Preparatory: Admission to the Honors Program. May be taken in any sequence with ENGL 393. Introduction to literary history with emphasis on the role of tradition and influence.

ENGL 393. Junior Honors Seminar II (3-3)

Preparatory: Admission to the Honors Program. May be taken in any sequence with ENGL 392. Introduction to practical criticism through a study of critical methods and their application to various literary works, with some attention to bibliography and scholarly method.

ENGL 400. History of the English Language (3)

Developments in the English language from Old English through Middle English, Early Modern English and Modern English. American English and its heritage. Influences from other languages as well as internal linguistic processes in English itself. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 406. Advanced Expository Writing for Teachers (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Required of candidates working for the Single Subject Credential in English; an option for candidates in Liberal Studies working for the Multiple Subjects Credential. Advanced course in written composition and recent composition theory extends the student’s writing skills, explores the kind of writing required of California public …

ENGL 407. Composition and the Professions (3)

Preparatory: Demonstrated proficiency; Instructor consent. Advanced composition, logical thinking and coherent expression designed particularly for students who want to use their writing and analytic skills in the professions of law or medicine, government or community services, business, industry, or nonteaching educational and research services. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 408. Advanced Narrative Writing (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 308. Continued practice in the writing of prose fiction, with a concentration on experimentation in style and structure. Analysis and criticism of students’ work. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 409. Advanced Verse Writing (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 309. Continued practice in the writing of poetry, with emphasis on formal poetic patterns. Analysis and criticism of students’ work, as well as study of selected published verse. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 410. Advanced Dramatic Writing (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 310. Continued practice in dramatic writing leading to the completion of a full-length drama. Analysis and criticism of students’ work as well as study of selected plays. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 412. Literary Magazine (3-3)

Preparatory: Upper division standing. Theoretical overview of literary publishing; practice in close reading and in the exercise of literary and aesthetic judgment; and editing and publishing of the Northridge Review, a literary magazine. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once with instructor’s consent. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 414. Chaucer (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of The Canterbury Tales and other selected poems. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 416. Shakespeare: Selected Plays (3)

Close study of three to five plays. ENGL 416 and ENGL 417 may be taken separately or in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 417. Shakespeare: A Survey (3)

Study of eight to fifteen of the major plays. ENGL 416 and ENGL 417 may be taken separately or in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 419. English Drama 1660-1880 (3)

Study of significant plays in England, 1660-1880, with special emphasis on such major dramatists as Wycherley, Dryden, Congreve, Otway and Sheridan. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 420. Milton (3)

Study of Paradise Lost, other poems and selected prose. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 421A-Z. Selected Topics in Popular Culture (3-3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: ENGL 313. Intensive study of a particular topic in popular culture as seen from historical and critical perspectives. Topics will change from semester to semester. Coursework may include fieldwork and creative projects; critical reading and critical writing required. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once …

ENGL 428. Children’s Literature (3)

Preparatory: One lower division course in literature. Study of form, content and theme in children’s literature, classic and contemporary, from preschool through 9th-grade level. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 429. Literature for Adolescents (3)

Critical analysis of selected literary works of interest to adolescents, including works commonly used in secondary schools (grades 7-12). Development of principles for the evaluation of literature for adolescents. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 430. Literature and the Visual Arts (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of relationships between written texts and visual art, or between word and image, from theoretical, historical, and/or ideological perspectives, including study of hybrid or intermedial forms and the works of diverse peoples and cultures. Topics may include, for example, illustration, design, visual poetry, visual narrative, Sister …

ENGL 434. 19th Century Women Novelists (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of selected novels by important 19th century women novelists, both British and American, including such writers as Alcott, Austen, C. Brontë, E. Brontë, Chopin, Eliot, Gaskell, Gilman and Stowe. Examines both text and context for each novel …

ENGL 436. Major Critical Theories (3)

Study of major texts of literary criticism from Plato to the present. Emphasis on application of critical theories. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 443. English Literature of the Middle Ages (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature of England to 1500, including representative Old and Middle English works such as Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Works studied may include …

ENGL 455. Literacy, Rhetoric and Culture (3)

Study of current and past theories of literacy, including the nature of literacy itself; connections between rhetoric and literacy; the ways literacy is shared and used by individuals, families and cultures; and the political, social and personal ramifications of literacy. Core course for English Department minor in Writing and Rhetoric. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 456. Age of Revolutions (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the transatlantic literary and cultural world of from 1660-1820, with an emphasis on key revolutions (Glorious, American, French, Haitian), imperialism and the rise of the British Empire. Authors may include Behn, Swift, Equiano, Prince, and …

ENGL 457A-Z. Selected Topics in Creative Writing (3-3)

Prerequisite: ENGL 308, ENGL 309, ENGL 310 or permission of instructor. Intensive consideration of a focused area of study as it proceeds from a literary or critical tradition that informs creative writing. Creative and critical writing required. Topics will change from semester to semester. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated one time for credit.

ENGL 458. Romanticism, Revolution, and Rights (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of literary experimentation in print and visual culture during the Romantic era of 1780-1832 as framed by multiple revolutions (American, French, and Haitian) and radical political activity (1790s …

ENGL 459A-Z. Selected Topics in Writing and Rhetoric (3-3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Intensive study of a topic relevant to literacy, composition or rhetoric. Analytic or critical writing required. Topics will change from semester to semester. May be repeated one time. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 460. Literatures of the British Empire in the Victorian Age (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature and culture of the British Empire and its global imperial influence from the 1830s to the 1910s. Reading may include poetry, short stories, novels, plays, …

ENGL 461. Modernism in Britain (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of British literature and the cultural forces that shaped its forms and techniques from the 1890s through the beginning of World War II. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 462. Contemporary British Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses and ENGL 355. Study of British literature in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, focusing on such historical and cultural forces as post-war immigration, the decolonizing Empire, and globalism and how those forces have shaped literary genres, content, …

ENGL 463B. Contemporary Poetry (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of post-1955 poems of major English-language authors inclusive of diverse peoples and cultures. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 464. Theories of Poetry (3)

Intensive study of the theories and craft of poetry. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 465. Theories of Fiction (3)

Intensive study of the theories and craft of fiction. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 466. Major British Novelists I: 1700-1815 (3)

Study of selected major novels by such authors as Defoe, Richardson, Fielding, Sterne and Austen. ENGL 466, ENGL 467 and ENGL 468 may be taken separately or in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 467. British Novels of the Nineteenth Century (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of selected nineteenth-century novels focusing on such trends and genres as, for example, realism, the novel of manners, industrial fiction, the sensation novel, the New Woman novel, imperial fiction, Aestheticism, detective fiction, and the gothic novel. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 470A-Z. Major Authors (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. In-depth study of a single author or a comparative study of two authors, such as Swift, Hawthorne, Woolf, Morrison/Faulkner, and Williams/Lawrence. The author(s) studied will change from semester to semester. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 473. American Literature: 1607-1860 (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature and the culture of the colonial, early republic and romantic periods. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 474. American Literature: 1860-1912 (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature and the culture of the age of realism. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 475. American Literature: 1912-1945 (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature and culture of early 20th century America, from the poetic renaissance through World War II. Emphasis on such major writers as Frost, Hemingway, Eliot, Wharton, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Stevens, Cather, Moore and Porter. Available for …

ENGL 476. Contemporary American Literature (3)

Preparatory: 6 units of lower division literature courses, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355. Study of the literature and culture of America from 1945 to the present. Emphasis on such major writers as Bellow, Albee, Lowell, Williams, Welty, Morrison, Rich, O’Connor and Pynchon. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 477. Major American Novelists I: The 19th Century (3)

Study of selected works by such major American writers as Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, Chopin and James. ENGL 477 and ENGL 478 may be taken separately or in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 478. Major American Novelists II: The 20th Century (3)

Study of selected works by such major American writers as Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Cather, Wharton, Faulkner, McCullers, Bellow, Morrison, O’Connor and Updike. ENGL 477 and ENGL 478 may be taken separately or in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 487. Latina/o/x Literatures of the Americas (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: ENGL 275, ENGL 436. Study of selected works by Latina/o/x writers and cultural producers from the U.S., Latin America, and the Caribbean, through frameworks of Latina/o Studies and Latin American Studies. Interdisciplinary analysis of literary, filmic, and cultural production may include pertinent fields such as Cultural …

ENGL 490. Senior Seminar in Narrative Writing (3)

Preparatory: Senior standing. Preparation of a collection of short stories or of a single longer work of narrative fiction. Students complete, revise and supplement their work to produce a finished manuscript of narrative fiction. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 491. Senior Seminar in Verse Writing (3)

Preparatory: Senior standing. Preparation of a collection of poems or of a single long poem. Students complete, revise and supplement their work to produce a finished manuscript of poetry. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 492A-Z. Senior Honors Seminar I (3-3)

Preparatory: Senior honors standing. Intensive study of a literary figure, age, movement or problem. May be repeated once for credit. ENGL 492 and ENGL 493 may be taken in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 493A-Z. Senior Honors Seminar II (3-3)

Preparatory: Senior honors standing. Intensive study of a literary figure, age, movement or problem. May be repeated once for credit. ENGL 492 and ENGL 493 may be taken in any sequence. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 494/IP. English Intern Program (1/2)

Preparatory: ENGL 407. Students are placed by the faculty supervisor with sponsoring organizations, where they work for 90 hours per semester while meeting for 15 hours in the classroom. Specific duties associated with technical and professional writing are assigned by sponsors. Students compile a portfolio of writing done for the sponsor and a term report …

ENGL 495A-Z. Senior Seminar in Literature (3-3)

Preparatory: Either two lower division courses in literature, or 3 units of lower division literature and ENGL 355; Senior standing. Intensive study of a major British or American author, or of a literary theme or sub-genre. Reports and seminar papers required. Topics change from semester to semester. Available for graduate credit. May be repeated once for …

ENGL 495ESM. Multigenre Literacy in a Global Context (3)

The capstone course for English Subject Matter students, focuses on literacy in multiple genres (poetry, myth, short fiction, and media). Its multigenre, multimedia, and transnational compass fulfills State Standards and grounds this fulfillment in cutting edge scholarship in the fields of English studies. Available for graduate credit.

ENGL 497A. Honors Revision Seminar (3)

Preparatory: Senior honors standing; Preparation of an article-length manuscript, to be a revised version of a seminar paper from honors seminars ENGL 392, ENGL 393, ENGL 492 or ENGL 493. Students will have the opportunity to experience a full and rewarding revision process, through which they will develop an existing paper into a more sophisticated …

ENGL 499A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Preparatory: Upper division standing; Normally, a 3.0 GPA in English; Prior approval of sponsoring instructor and department chair.

ENGL 501A-Z. Activities in Creative Writing Studies (1-1)

Recommended Preparatory: ENGL 208. Intensive writing in a focused area of study. This is an activity-based series of courses and may include off-campus meetings. Topics will change from semester to semester. Check with department for specific offerings. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 502A-Z/F. Activities in Creative Writing Studies (1/1)

Recommended Preparatory: ENGL 208. Intensive writing in a focused area of study. This is an activity-based series of courses and may include off-campus meetings. Topics will change from semester to semester. Check with department for specific offerings. May be repeated once for credit.

ENGL 507. An Introduction to Graduate Studies in English (3)

This course introduces students to graduate‑level research and writing skills across the three options in the program: Literature, Creative Writing, and Rhetoric and Composition. The course also requires experiential learning in the field. This course should be taken in the first year of coursework.

ENGL 512. Writing for Performance (3-3)

Throughout the semester, students will engage in writing exercises, participate in workshopping and develop new texts for performance. Students will also read several published plays and other types of performance texts. A final portfolio—which will include an introduction, rough drafts and revised texts—will be required. This course is available both for graduate and undergraduate credit. …

ENGL 513. Composition Studies (3)

Study of core topics in composition studies, including process, invention, revision, rhetoric, audience, argument, genre, assessment, and linguistic diversity.

ENGL 525A-Z. Topics in English and Cultural Studies (3-3-3)

In-depth study of a topic in English and Cultural Studies that is not bound by the areas covered by other English department graduate-level seminars (specific author, literary period or the literary genres of poetry, prose, or drama). Regardless of topic, all iterations of the course will employ a consistent methodological framework based in Cultural Studies …

ENGL 595A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in English (1-3)

Topics will be announced each semester in the Schedule of Classes.

ENGL 600A/B. College Composition: Theory and Pedagogy (3-3)

Prerequisite: Restricted to teaching associates or at the discretion of the director of composition. Study of theoretical and pedagogical issues that impact the teaching of writing at the college level. Review of current studies in rhetoric, composition and literacy. ENGL 600B also entails faculty observation of student teaching.

ENGL 600BF. College Composition: Theory and Pedagogy Field Experience (1)

Prerequisite: ENGL 600A and ENGL 600B/F are restricted to teaching associates or at the discretion of the director of composition. Corequisite: ENGL 600B. Study of theoretical and pedagogical issues that impact the teaching of writing at the college level. Review of current studies in rhetoric, composition and literacy. ENGL 600B also entails faculty observation of …

ENGL 601. Seminar in Scholarly Methods and Bibliography (3)

Study of traditional and electronic methods of scholarly research. Investigation and evaluation of major areas of bibliographic study, such as literature and “new historicism,” the editing of texts and literary influence studies and intertextuality.

ENGL 604. Seminar in Language and Linguistics (3)

An introduction to linguistics for graduate students.

ENGL 608. Seminar in Narrative Writing (3-3)

Prerequisite: Qualified standing in the graduate Creative Writing option or instructor consent. Intensive practice in advanced writing and analysis of the short story and the novel. Course may be repeated once for credit. One enrollment in ENGL 608 or ENGL 609 may be used in the Rhetoric and Composition option.

ENGL 609. Seminar in Poetry Writing (3-3)

Prerequisite: Qualified standing in the graduate Creative Writing option or instructor consent. Intensive practice in the writing of poetry, with attention to both contemporary and historical techniques. Analysis and criticism of students’ work. May be repeated once for credit. One enrollment in ENGL 608 or ENGL 609 may be used in the Rhetoric and Composition …

ENGL 617. Studies in Shakespeare (3)

Prerequisite: ENGL 417 or equivalent. Advanced study of several of Shakespeare’s works, including formal, textual or historical aspects. Topics will change from semester to semester.

ENGL 620A-Z. Seminar in Individual Authors (3-3-3)

In-depth study of a major British or American author, such as Swift, Hawthorne or Woolf. The author studied will change from semester to semester.

ENGL 622. Seminar on Aspects of Poetry (3-3)

Intensive critical study of the province of poetry, providing opportunity for the scrutiny of individual poets as well as for concentration on the wider historical perspective.

ENGL 623. Seminar in Studies in Prose Fiction (3-3)

Seminar in the theory, forms, traditions and techniques of prose fiction. Topics will vary from semester to semester.

ENGL 624. Studies in Dramatic Literature (3)

Advanced study in drama considered as literature, with special emphasis on historical developments and their relationship to literary periods and movements in other genres.

ENGL 630A-Z. Seminar in Literary Periods (3-3-3)

Study of a period of British or American literature with wide readings in a range of authors and their intellectual backgrounds.

ENGL 638. Seminar in Critical Approaches to Literature (3)

Study of major critical approaches to literature and their application to selected literary texts.

ENGL 651. Rhetoric and Composition Theory (3)

Intense discussion and analysis of theories of rhetoric and composition.

ENGL 652. Creative Writing Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Qualified standing in the graduate Creative Writing option or instructor consent. Introduction to the theoretical, professional and institutional concerns of creative writers, especially in an academic context. Intensive practice in creative writing (multi-genre). Workshop format.

ENGL 653. Literary and Rhetorical Genre Theory (3)

Examination of scholarship concerned with genre, both the traditional concept of genre, which focuses on formal categories of literary texts and the rhetorical notion of genre, which focuses on the rhetorical purpose and function of non-literary texts. Through extensive reading, class discussions and research projects, students will explore the function of genre, the communities that …

ENGL 654. Advanced Topics in Rhetoric and Composition (3-3)

Preparatory: ENGL 651. Intense advanced study of a specialized area, topic, question or problem in the field of rhetoric and composition. Topics vary from semester to semester. May be repeated once for credit, provided topic is different.

ENGL 697C. Directed Comprehensive Studies (3)

Focused reading and research followed by comprehensive exam.

ENGL 698D. Graduate Project (3)

This course is one of the available choices for the culminating experience in the English department M.A. program. In significantly revising existing written work, students will practice the tools of research used in the field of English Studies. While students in the Literature and the Rhetoric and Composition options will focus on revising and developing …

ENGL 699A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Prerequisites: At least one graduate course in English; Consent of department chair. Investigation of a significant problem in language or literature. Project selected in conference with sponsor.

FLIT 150. Gateways to Western Civilization: Greece and Rome (3)

Prerequisite: May not be taken by students who have completed FLIT 350. Basic elements of modern civilization have their origins in Greece and Rome. Emphasis on historical development and on their impact on contemporary society. Conducted in English. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

FLIT 151. Introduction to Modern Chinese Culture and Literature (3)

This course provides a survey of social and cultural patterns in modern China from 1911 to the present, focusing on the post-socialist period. Broad in scope, the course will examine the main areas of contemporary Chinese life: culture, visual arts, literature, politics, society, and the environment. In the realms of popular culture, literature, and film, …

FLIT 234. Virtual Study Abroad (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course will give students a simulated experience of studying abroad via technology mediation and exposure to people and products from international cultures. Through the virtual exposure to global cultures and research projects, students will learn to use technology to access information sources, develop strategies to evaluate …

FLIT 250. Traditional Culture of Japan (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. The course explores the traditions that inform the values and aesthetics of present-day Japan and make one of the most technologically advanced nations distinctly Asian and traditional. It also examines the foreign influences on Japan, the modifications that were made to suit Japanese taste and influences of …

FLIT 325. Social Issues in Modern China (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course provides an in-depth analysis on some of the key social problems in China in the context of rapid urbanization, economic growth and social policies. Students will learn about the diversity of people in modern China (i.e., socioeconomic, age, generation, urban/rural, gender, regional, ethnic, religious), will …

FLIT 331. Literary Masterpieces of Italian Humanism and Renaissance Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. No background of Italy or knowledge of the language required. This course offers students an in-depth study of major Italian literary masterpieces (fiction, poetry and drama) and aesthetic theories developed during the period of Humanism and Renaissance (1380-1550). Such a study allows students to appreciate the importance …

FLIT 370. Modern Japanese Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: No background knowledge of Japan or the language is required. Explores the country that quickly modernized and Westernized to become an economic and industrial force in the world and yet remains distinctly Asian. Examines the Japanese people and culture, their recent changes and the current critical issues …

FLIT 371. Modern Italian Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of contemporary Italy. Captures the major literary and cultural aspects and examines the social relations, customs, traditions and productive forces that have contributed to the emergence of Italy as a leading industrial European country. Conducted in English. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

FLIT 380. Cultural Development of Modern Russia and Eastern Europe (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines the cultural history and current developments of the Slavic people in the Russian States and Eastern Europe, and traces the role of these people in American culture and society. Conducted in English. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

FLIT 381. Aspects of the Italian-American Experience in Cinema, Literature, Philosophy and Music (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course will examine different individuals within the Italian-American experience, exploring their contributions in the fields of cinema, literature, philosophy and classical music, and how through each we see an additional paradigm offered in and to the mainstream artistic and humanistic endeavor in the U.S. Conducted in …

FLIT 391. Cultural Theories and Methodologies (3-3)

Preparatory: FLIT 234. Intensive interdisciplinary study of an age, movement, problem or theme, with emphasis on the practices and methodologies of intercultural study. The topic of the seminar varies. May be repeated once for credit. (Cross-listed with HUM 391.)

FLIT 402. Japanese Literature (3)

Survey of Japanese literature from earliest times to the present, with particular emphasis on Japanese cultural values as applied to Western literary forms. Conducted in English.

FLIT 491. Capstone Seminar (3-3)

Prerequisite: FLIT 391. Intensive interdisciplinary study of an age, movement, problem or theme, with emphasis on the application of cultural theory in interdisciplinary study. The topic of the seminar varies. Students will complete a senior project, such as a research paper or a creative performance, that demonstrates the integrated knowledge, understanding and linguistic skills they …

FLIT 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing. Selected topics in Foreign Literature in Translation with course content to be determined. Conducted in English.

FREN 101. Elementary French I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where French was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of French, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

FREN 102. Elementary French II (4)

Prerequisites: FREN 101. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where French was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of French, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural …

FREN 495A-Z. Topics in Francophone Studies (3-3)

Prerequisite: FREN 204 or FREN 208. This course explores problems faced on a daily basis in Francophone countries through a selection of short stories and films. Intensive study of selected themes and issues in Francophone countries will change from region to region such as the Maghreb (Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia), the Sub-Saharan region (Mali, Chad, Cameroon, …

FREN 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in French Literature (3)

Prerequisites: Senior standing; One upper division course in French literature. Selected topics in French literature with course content to be determined.

GWS 100. Introduction to Gender and Women’s Studies (3)

Interdisciplinary study of women in American society, including such topics as social conditions, laws, symbols, values, communication and power. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities or F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

GWS 110. Women, Work, and Family (3)

Focuses on historical and contemporary relationship between home and community work and the marketplace within which women perform. Examines the differences in experience of work and family as these are shaped by race, class, gender and sexuality. (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences or F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

GWS 205/CS. Gender and Women’s Studies Community Service and Seminar (1/2)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Corequisite: GWS 205CS. Students work in a variety of community settings—educational, political and/or social service agencies—to apply theoretical understanding of gender and women’s studies to practical and concrete community situations that affect women’s daily lives. Includes regular class meetings. Offers a community service opportunity with activities relating …

GWS 220. Men, Masculinity and Patriarchy (3)

Recommended Preparatory: GWS 100. This course provides a multidisciplinary investigation of ways in which masculinity is constructed in the context of fatherhood, media, sports, fraternities, law, militarization, racialization, state violence and men’s movements. The course evaluates and critically analyzes how male identities are created, negotiated and explicated in theories of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, race and …

GWS 222. Gender, Sexuality, and American Indian Communities (3)

Recommended Preparatory: AIS 101, GWS 100. A survey course that examines the concepts of gender and sexuality as they are politically, economically, socially and culturally constructed in American Indian communities. Special attention is given to the role settler colonialism plays in shaping these constructions. Explores the degree to which Indigenous articulations of gender and sexuality …

GWS 230. Women and Entertainment (3)

Preparatory: GWS 100. Women and Entertainment is a broad, introductory examination of women’s experience and interface with the entertainment arena, including but not limited to, film, music, and other popular cultural sites of knowledge production, from a uniquely feminist lens that focuses on the intersectionality of gender, race, class and sexuality. The course explores women’s roles …

GWS 300. Women as Agents of Change (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: GWS 100 or GWS 110, or consent of instructor. New definitions and options for women within the family, community and society. Students study and report on women’s resources and organizations for change within the local community, as well as on the national and international scene. (Available …

GWS 301. Feminist Theories (3)

Prerequisite: GWS 100, or GWS 110 or GWS 300 or instructor consent. This required course for Gender and Women Studies majors and minors concentrates on the multitude of feminist theories, from the early feminist theories to the more contemporary and complex theories by a diversity of theorists, within the U.S. and globally.

GWS 302. Feminist Methods (3)

Prerequisite: GWS 100 or GWS 110 or GWS 300 or instructor consent. In this course, students will be introduced to qualitative and quantitative research methods. The course will provide an overview of some of the critical concepts in the history of feminist research (e.g., feminist empiricism, feminist standpoint, inclusion of difference) and debates surrounding epistemology …

GWS 320. Women and Urban Life/Urban Space (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines the gendered use of space and how women have balanced and crossed public and private spheres. Examines women and urban issues from the micro-level (community-based organizations and grassroots mobilizations) to the macro-level (national and international states and corporate entities). (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences.) …

GWS 340. Women, Gender and Global Development (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines women’s roles and concerns in socioeconomic and political development processes. Positive and negative effects of colonization, post-colonial modernization, democratization and capitalist and socialist development strategies on women in the “Third,” “Second,” and “First” World countries are examined. (Available for General Education, D1 Social Sciences.) (WI)

GWS 351. Gender, Race, Class and Sexuality (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines historical and contemporary issues surrounding the diversity of women living in the U.S. and other cultures. Gender, race, socioeconomic class and sexuality are presented as central theoretical concepts and as conditions of experience that affect all women and men, as well as being primary categories of …

GWS 370. Women and Violence (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course focuses on dimensions of violence women experience in the U.S. and internationally. It provides an overview of sexual violence, including rape in intimate partnerships, childhood sexual assault, sexual harassment, sex trafficking and violence against women under foreign occupation. Varied feminist scholarship around three broad areas will …

GWS 380. Sexual and Reproductive Health (3)

The course employs a gender-based analysis of the global problem of sexual health and examines the cultural, social and economic variables associated with sexual and reproductive health disparities in the U.S. and abroad. The course provides a feminist approach to understanding issues pertaining to the nature of women’s and men’s social roles; women’s symbolic meaning …

GWS 400. Senior Seminar in Gender and Women’s Studies (3)

Prerequisite: GWS 302. Recommended Preparatory: GWS 301. This course is a culmination (capstone) of the students’ undergraduate studies and will not necessarily introduce new topics. Instead, students reflect on and review important women’s studies theories, key principles and questions. Each student conducts a research project applying feminist methodology and writes a research paper on a …

GWS 410. Sex, Lies and Media (3)

In this course, students employ critical perspectives to examine narrow definitions of gender/sexuality constructed in media representations. Students deconstruct norms of masculinity and femininity generated by industries such as television, film and advertising that perpetuate and naturalize the commodification of women’s bodies. Special attention is paid to bodies and modes of sexuality that transgress (representations …

GWS 420. Women and Gender in Islamic Societies (3)

This interdisciplinary and cross-cultural course explores how religious authorities, and scriptural and legal sources have contributed to the status and legal rights of women and to the construction of theories, laws and practices concerning gender roles and sexuality in the Islamic tradition. Students study how these constructed gender roles, sexual norms and attitudes have reflected, …

GWS 430. Global Sexualities (3)

Neoliberal globalization is as fundamental to understanding contemporary discourses of sexuality as sexuality is key to understanding global issues. The course will foreground a wide range of theoretical perspectives of feminist, queer and globalization theories that help students understand how the emergence of sexuality as an intellectual and social arena is concurrent with specific characteristics …

GWS 440. Latin American Feminisms (3)

Recommended Preparatory Courses: GWS 100 or GWS 110. Students study the situation of women and the different types of feminisms that have emerged in Latin America in contemporary times. The course examines how feminism and the status of women in Latin America have been impacted by factors such as colonialism, imperialism, modernization, democratization, Latin American …

GWS 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Gender and Women’s Studies (3)

Intensive study of selected themes or figures in Gender and Women’s Studies. Topics change from semester to semester.

HEBR 101. Elementary Hebrew I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Hebrew was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Hebrew, including grammatical structure, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

HEBR 102. Elementary Hebrew II (4)

Prerequisite: HEBR 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Hebrew was the language of instruction. HEBR 102 is the continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Hebrew: grammatical structures, reading, practice in spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General …

HUM 101. Forms and Ideas in Humanities (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing or completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introductory course provides instruction in the interdisciplinary analysis and interpretation of meaning in art, music and literature ,and in the understanding of philosophical ideas in their own right and as they influence styles and themes in works of art. (Available …

HUM 105. Cultural Eras in Humanities I (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing or completion of the lower division writing requirement. Interdisciplinary study of major eras of humanistic development from the ancient world to the 15th century through representative works of visual art, architecture, music, philosophy, religion and oral and written literature. (Available for General Education, C1 Arts or C2 Humanities)

HUM 106. Cultural Eras in Humanities II (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing or completion of the lower division writing requirement. Interdisciplinary study of major eras of humanistic development from the 16th to 20th century through representative works of visual art, architecture, film, music, philosophy, religion and oral and written literature. (Available for General Education, C1 Arts or C2 Humanities.)

HUM 391. Cultural Theories and Methodologies (3-3)

Preparatory: HUM 105 or HUM 106. Intensive interdisciplinary study of an age, movement, problem or theme, with emphasis on the practices and methodologies of interdisciplinary study. The topic of the seminar varies. (Cross-listed with FLIT 391.)

HUM 491. Capstone Seminar (3-3)

Preparatory: HUM 391 or FLIT 391; At least one course in intellectual history, cultural theory or critical methodologies. Intensive interdisciplinary study of an age, movement, problem or theme, with emphasis on the application of cultural theory in interdisciplinary study. The topic of the seminar varies. Available for graduate credit. (Cross-listed with FLIT 491 and LRS 491.)

HUMA 501. Gateway to the Humanities (3)

This first course in the Humanities masters degree program introduces students to the interdisciplinary area referred to as “the humanities.” Students will read and work in subfields, developing knowledge and overall understanding about the range of subject matter in the humanities–as well as the conversations about its traditions and evolution–and about the methods of inquiry …

HUMA 510. The Sacred (3)

An examination and critique of the idea that there is a “sacred.” Exploring influential concepts of the sacred, the course analyzes some representative historical efforts to institutionalize the sacred in symbols, myths, rituals and spaces that influence people’s lives and choices. Finally, the course analyzes two conflicting trends of the present day: on the one …

HUMA 520. The Self: Body and Mind (3)

This is a course introducing students in the Humanities master’s program to the history of ideas focusing fundamentally on the study of ourselves, our bodies and our minds from a variety of perspectives. Students will consider conceptualizations of the body, conceptualizations of the mind (psyche, spirit, soul, animus/a), and conceptualizations of the relationship between body …

HUMA 530. Family and Life Cycle (3)

Through the lenses of literature, art, philosophy and history, the fourth course explores the nature and place of family and the lifecycle in a human’s sense of self, identity, values and understanding of life’s purpose, understanding these in part as cultural constructions that vary according to historical time and geographic place.

HUMA 600. Identity, Meaning and Culture (3)

This course will address the manner in which culture creates meaning by examining texts from literature, film, philosophy, cultural studies and ethnic studies. The starting concept will be that culture produces ideas and that ideas are linked to power struggles. Culture is a field of contending ideas and historical contingencies, and the task will be …

HUMA 610. Space, Place and Geography: Mental Mapping (3)

This course examines how the conceptualization of space and place have contributed to a variety of different cultural understandings of the human condition. The course looks at the conceptions underlying the creation and representation of space and the role of landscape in determining the human condition. The course attempts to assess why differing conceptions of …

HUMA 620. Science and Magic (3)

In this course, the focus of the humanities lens is on the putative divisions between what is defined as “science” and what is seen as “magic” in studies of human inquiry and discovery. The present course foregrounds the old and continuing tensions between ideas referred to as magical on the one hand and scientific on …

HUMA 630. Nation and Empire, Law and Government (3)

This course examines the formation of the modern nation-state in 17th and 18th century Europe. Exploring the origins of nation-states in ethnic, linguistic, cultural and other identities and the principles that hold them together (e.g., moral, religious and legal systems), the course will focus in particular on how they are constructed or problematised textually through …

HUMA 640. Norms and Knowledge (3)

This course will examine questions of knowledge, norms and values as they are represented in philosophy, literature, religion and cultural studies. It traces the development and transformation of these norms and considers the manner in which ideas and ways of knowing change with time and across cultures and different forms of representation. It examines how …

HUMA 650. Capstone: The Good Life (3)

The final course reflects on the programmatic theme, captured in Socrates’ dictum that “The unexamined life is not worth living.” HUMA 650 is an examination of and reflection on that which may matter in order to live a good life, with special emphasis on how particular worldviews (specially those the participants’ might identify as their …

HUMA 696A. Directed Comprehensive Studies (1)

Prerequisites: Graduate standing; Admission to candidacy. HUMA 696A prepares students to write their final comprehensive exams as well as to meet the writing requirements of the program. The comprehensive exam itself (HUMA 697) is completed during the semester in which students complete all of the requirements for the degree. (Credit/No Credit only)

HUMA 696B. Directed Comprehensive Studies (1)

Prerequisites: Graduate standing; Admission to candidacy. HUMA 696B prepares students to write their final comprehensive exams as well as to meet the writing requirements of the program. The comprehensive exam itself (HUMA 697) is completed during the semester in which students complete all of the requirements for the degree. (Credit/No Credit only)

HUMA 697. Comprehensive Exam (1)

Prerequisite: Graduate standing. Students will work toward the completion of the comprehensive examination with guidance from faculty. Comprehensive exams are completed during the semester in which students complete all the requirements for the degree. (Credit/No Credit only)

HUMA 699. Graduate Independent Study (3)

Prerequisites: Consent of instructor; Consent of director of the graduate program; Consent of department chair. Maximum of 3 units may be applied to the student’s program. May be substituted for one course with program director’s permission.

HUMN 300. Career Readiness and Professional Career Development (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course prepares students for successful transitions into meaningful careers. The focus is on personal development, professional development and career readiness, with an emphasis on the wide variety of careers available to students with a focus on humanities-based careers. Topics include self-assessment, major and career exploration, critical …

INDS 250. Introduction to Interdisciplinary Studies (3)

This course introduces students to research, literacy, knowledge production and knowledge organization. This course will also examine how knowledge has been organized in different settings and in different fields (such as the sciences and the humanities) and how its reorganization processes relate to social, historical and cultural issues, such as power, identity and ideology. Students …

INDS 300. Frameworks for Interdisciplinarity (3)

This course explores how systems of knowledge evolve and discusses creativity practices through a selection of representative examples of intellectual enterprises pursued outside disciplinary boundaries. These creative practices may involve artistic, literary, religious, scientific, philosophical, cultural or political paradigm shifts (among others) reviewed in the context of knowledge creation theories.

INDS 350. Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies (3)

Prerequisite: INDS 250. This course exposes students to interdisciplinary research by using two main approaches: interdisciplinarity as both multidisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity. Students will recognize the constraints of disciplinary boundaries and create disciplinary connections in order to integrate different perspectives.

INDS 400. Interdisciplinary Studies Projects (3)

Prerequisite: INDS 350. This course teaches students both how to develop their own individual interdisciplinary project proposal and how to collaborate in an interdisciplinary research team to produce an interdisciplinary group project proposal. Students research and propose interdisciplinary projects and present them for class evaluation. The written proposals will require the identification of an interdisciplinary …

INDS 490. Interdisciplinary Studies Capstone (3)

Prerequisite: INDS 400. This capstone requires students to complete a group interdisciplinary project on a topic of their choice by using scholarly expertise and expertise available in their class. Projects may come from ideas developed in previous INDS classes and can include a paper, an app, an artifact, a community project, an installation, a performance, …

ITAL 101. Elementary Italian I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Italian was the language of instruction.  Study of the fundamentals of Italian: grammatical structures, reading, practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

ITAL 102. Elementary Italian II (4)

Prerequisite: ITAL 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Italian was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Italian, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, …

ITAL 201. Intermediate Italian I (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 102. May not be challenged if principal schooling has been in Italian. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

ITAL 204. Intermediate Italian Grammar and Composition (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 201 or instructor consent. Recommended Corequisite: ITAL 202. One-semester course for non-native speakers consisting of extensive grammar review and literary composition. May not be challenged if principal schooling has been in Italian.

ITAL 290. Intermediate Reading and Conversation (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 202 or equivalent. This course offers the opportunity to increase functional language competence. Reading comprehension and communicative skills will be fostered with the use of active vocabulary, media presentations and performances. Guided conversations, reading, and pronunciation will emphasize the development of accurate idiomatic expressions. Use of Internet resources and multimedia materials will be …

ITAL 300. Advanced Conversational Italian (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 204. One-semester course intended to encourage students to further develop their ability to express themselves in the Italian language.

ITAL 306. Translation and Style (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 204 or permission of the instructor. This course is designed to help students enhance their mastery of the Italian language through translation from English into Italian and Italian into English. This course is a study of the syntactic, morphemic and semantic structures of both languages. Texts to be translated will include literary excerpts, …

ITAL 396A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Italian Literature (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 204 or equivalent. Experimental topics in Italian literature or linguistics, with content to be determined.

ITAL 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Italian Literature (3)

Prerequisite: ITAL 315. Selected topics in Italian literature, with course content to be determined.

JAPN 101. Elementary Japanese I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Japanese was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Japanese, including grammatical structure, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

JAPN 102. Elementary Japanese II (4)

Prerequisite: JAPN 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Japanese was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Japanese, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, …

JAPN 201. Intermediate Japanese I (4)

Prerequisite: JAPN 102 or equivalent. Japanese students with sufficient oral fluency and knowledge of fewer than 100 kanji may enroll in 201 only. Study of grammar, sentence patterns and writing. May not be challenged. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

JAPN 202. Intermediate Japanese II (4)

Prerequisite: JAPN 201 or equivalent. Students with sufficient oral proficiency and knowledge of fewer than 250 kanji may enroll in 202 only. May not be challenged. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

JAPN 204. Kanji II (3)

Prerequisite: JAPN 102 or equivalent. Can be taken concurrently with JAPN 201. Students learn to read and write 500 basic kanji characters, and learn to use them in context. The course will provide students with the opportunity to further their study of Japanese language and culture and to increase functional language competence. Reading comprehension and …

JAPN 205. Kanji III (3)

Prerequisite: JAPN 201 or equivalent. Can be taken concurrently with JAPN 202. Students learn to read and write 750 kanji, and learn to use them in context. The course will provide students with the opportunity to further their study of Japanese language and culture and to increase functional language competence. Reading comprehension and writing skills …

JAPN 300. Advanced Japanese Conversation (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of second year sequence in Japanese. Designed to develop further the students’ ability to express themselves in spoken Japanese. Strongly recommended for students planning to participate in study abroad programs in Japan.

JAPN 304. Advanced Grammar and Composition (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of second year sequence in Japanese. Consisting of advanced studies in grammar, syntax, and kanji characters, with composition exercises designed to develop the students’ command of the written language.

JAPN 305. Language and Culture in Japanese (3)

Prerequisite: JAPN 300 or equivalent. Practice in communication utilizing grammatical and socio-linguistic studies. Through video presentation, role play, interpretation exercises and other activities, the students describe the situation, identify any problems and practice solving problems or accomplishing goals in a non-confrontational manner appropriate in the Japanese social context.

JAPN 306. Advanced Reading and Composition (3)

Prerequisite: JAPN 304 or equivalent. Aims to increase balanced skills in reading and writing. Focuses on various aspects of Japanese society and values. Designed to develop ability to address intercultural differences and resulting problems.

JAPN 400. Japanese Language and Society (3)

Prerequisite: JAPN 304 or equivalent. The goal of this course is for students to learn how the Japanese people and society are depicted in the media, and to use Japanese skills for authentic communication purposes. The course will focus on advanced grammar, idioms and reading comprehension skills, enabling students to become better able to express …

JS 100. Jewish Religion and Culture (3)

This course explores Jewish religious concepts and practices, as well as Jewish culture in international contexts from the ancient period to the present. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

JS 151. Natural Environment in Judaism (1)

Corequisite: RTM 151F. An examination of teachings on the natural environment found in Jewish literature and oral teachings, with an emphasis on values and practices related to respect for natural life and environmental conservation. Arranged wilderness field trips are required.

JS 210. History of the Jewish People (3)

Study of the Jewish people from their beginning in the ancient Near East to the establishment of the modern state of Israel. (Cross-listed with HIST 210.) (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

JS 220. Critical Thinking About Jews on Film (3)

An introduction to the process of critical thinking through analysis of how Jews are represented in the medium of film. In particular, students will consider how this representation is affected by ideologies of race, class, gender and sexuality. Emphasis on the modern history and culture of Jews in America, Europe, Israel and elsewhere. (Available for …

JS 255. Great Books of Jewish Culture (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introductory study of the genres of imaginative literature—prose fiction, poetry and drama—with special emphasis on the interrelationships between form and theme. The course will feature Jewish literature from the biblical period to the present. All readings will be in English. Critical writing is an integral part of …

JS 300. Ancient and Medieval Jewish Arts and Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This class explores how ancient and medieval Jews expressed themselves in literature, art and architecture, law, music, philosophy and science. It also explores how distinctive Jewish genres, styles and creative processes are related to similar expressions in non-Jewish cultures. Regular written assignments are required. (Available for General …

JS 306. Sociology of Jewish Families and Communities (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: SOC 150. This course uses the perspectives and tools of sociology to explore how different cultural and social structures affect Jewish families and communities throughout the Jewish diaspora. (Cross-listed with SOC 306.) (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

JS 318. Applied Jewish Ethics (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Applies Jewish teachings to contemporary social problems. Case studies may involve wealth and work, sexuality, food, war, the environment, and other topics. Students apply appropriate social scientific methods to collect data, analyze, evaluate, explain, and/or solve problems in social relations and human behavior. (Available for General Education, …

JS 320. Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) (3)

Study of the literature and religion of ancient Israel through the Hellenistic period. No knowledge of Hebrew language is required; all texts will be in English translation. (Cross-listed with RS 320.)

JS 330. Women in the Jewish Experience (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines a minority culture–women in Jewish communities from antiquity to the present. Course perspective is international, with significant focus on Mediterranean, West Asian and African Jewish societies. Contemporary topics such as sexuality, creative ritual, Israeli/Palestinian politics, and body image also are discussed. (Cross-listed with GWS 330.) (Available …

JS 333. The Jewish Graphic Novel (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of comics, including comic strips, comic books and graphic novels, from literary and cultural studies perspectives. Emphasis on both history and form, including image-text relationships. Topics also may include fan culture, particular genres of comics and connections between comics and other forms of visual text. This …

JS 335. Jewish Identity in the U.S. (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Preparatory: SOC 150. This course is a social-scientific study of American Jewish religious and ethnic identity. It focuses on the social institutions and processes involved in Jewish identity, and compares the experience of Jews with other religious, ethnic, and cultural groups in the U.S. (Cross-listed with SOC …

JS 357. History of the Holocaust (3)

Learn about how and why the Nazis and their collaborators persecuted and murdered Jews and other groups they deemed inferior. Survey long-term causes such as anti-Semitism as well as short-term factors including World War I and II. Read about Hitler’s racial ideology; delve into the world of Auschwitz and the concentration camps; analyze the actions …

JS 378. American Jewish Experience (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Seeks to describe the experience of the Jewish religion-ethnic community in America with reference to its own historic background and development and the relationship of the community to the general American culture and to other particular subcultures or ethnic groups. Emphasizes distinctive Jewish values and customs and …

JS 390CS. Nonprofit Internship in the Jewish Community (3)

Prerequisites: Instructor consent; Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Work experience in Jewish schools, synagogues, social welfare or political organizations. Faculty supervisor assists students in obtaining appropriate work placements. Work experience is complemented by academic study and written assignments. Offers a community service opportunity with service learning activities relating to concepts and theories presented. …

JS 427. Israel’s History and Peoples (3)

A history of the modern State of Israel, from the emergence of modern Jewish nationalism to the present time. The conflicts between Jews, Palestinians, and imperial and regional powers will be examined, as well as the relations between the diverse peoples that constitute Israel’s multicultural, multireligious, and multinational society. (Cross-listed with HIST 427.)

JS 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Jewish Studies (3-3)

In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Jewish Studies. Topics will change from semester. Critical writing and reading is required. This course may serve as the capstone experience for the B.A. degree in Jewish Studies. Available for graduate credit.

JS 496A-Z. Experimental Topics in Jewish Studies (3)

Course content to be determined.

JS 546. The Holocaust and Genocide for Educators (3)

An overview of the Holocaust and the concept of genocide, with a focus on the analysis and evaluation of varied resources for educators, including film, photographs, literature, art, music, documents and other primary source materials. (Cross-listed with HIST 546.)

KM 610. Theories of Knowledge Management (3)

This course introduces students to the basic principles of knowledge management; to the historical, political, cultural, and epistemological dynamics related to the production, preservation, and dissemination of knowledge; and to the specific characterization of knowledge in individual, organizational, and community-based contexts. It provides students with foundational notions and terminology; introduces IT-based approaches to knowledge in …

KM 611. Legal and Ethical Aspects of Knowledge Management (3)

This course focuses on the legal and ethical implications inherent in the knowledge management field, providing a thorough analysis of intellectual property law; including trademark, copyright, patent, and trade secret law, with a focus on practical application. In addition to the exploration of these legal issues, the course addresses various ethical frameworks relevant to a …

KM 620. Information Organization and Knowledge Access (3)

The ease with which users navigate knowledge systems and resources is critical to an organization’s success. This course studies the interaction of people with information technologies, especially those through which organizational knowledge is accessed. Through the systematic testing of human-user interfaces (HUI), students will understand how to mitigate issues and barriers—both humanistic and technological—associated with …

KM 625. Research Methods, Mapping and Modeling for Knowledge Workers (3)

This course reviews techniques and tools that support strategic development and decision making through all phases of knowledge discovery, knowledge capture, and knowledge analysis. It prepares students to build a relational database and apply machine learning to model organizational entities, consumer profiles, behaviors and preferences in support of knowledge needs analyses. Students will: learn to …

KM 631. Knowledge Leadership (3)

This course focuses on designing, determining, organizing, directing, facilitating, and monitoring the knowledge-related practices and activities that are required to achieve an organization’s desired business strategies and objectives. Adopting a management perspective on the KM field, this course will critically examine: team management and communication, especially cross-cultural communication; the promotion of a fair and supportive …

KM 633. Communication in the Knowledge Environment (3)

This course explores the fundamentals of communication theory, processes, and rhetoric in knowledge environments. Students review communication strategies with attention to cultural, political, social, and economic context and practice the transmission of information and knowledge in various modalities. Emphasis is placed on dynamics of power in intra- and inter-organizational communication (including issues of influence, authority, …

KM 635. Knowledge Systems (3)

This course studies the basic technological and physical systems used to manage internal information, assets, records, and institutional memory. Students will analyze the needs of various organizational types and communities of knowledge, making recommendations regarding the mock deployment of knowledge systems in order to mediate organizational needs and knowledge flows. Special emphasis is placed on …

KM 642. Organizational Culture and Change Management (3)

This course focuses on the study of specific issues critical to knowledge management success. It examines the topics of organizational culture and climate, current research in organizational change management, as well as best practices to effectively and ethically lead innovation and change through proven strategic initiatives.

KM 643. Competitive Intelligence (3)

This course challenges students to design a practical research project that will responsibly utilize public and proprietary information assets to provide knowledge solutions applicable to complex business needs. It captures the latest techniques and technologies to conduct business analysis while using strategy development frameworks, with special attention paid to understanding an industry’s internal operating conditions; …

KM 645. Statistics and Data Analytics (3)

This course provides a comparative analysis of statistical methods and tools, demonstrating how different analytic methods can be used to address the critical data issues faced by organizations in a digital age. Students learn to apply those methods across various communities of practice in support of strategic initiatives. Students also analyze a range of issues …

KM 650. Knowledge Management Technologies (3)

This course provides students with the theoretical and practical resources to enable knowledge production, representation, and communication, equipping students to analyze multiple datasets (Big Data) and textual corpuses that support organizational decision-making processes. The course thoroughly examines techniques of data visualization with an emphasis on ethical and faithful visual representations that avoid the distortion of …

KM 698. Graduate Project (3)

In this course, students create a major independent assignment or research project that demonstrates an advanced understanding of the knowledge management best practices relevant to their particular professional setting, including the historical, social, and political factors that inform and shape those practices. By offering a structured learning environment in which students can tailor their project …

KOR 101. Elementary Korean I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Korean was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Korean: alphabet and additional sounds, grammatical structure, reading, writing and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

KOR 102. Elementary Korean II (4)

Prerequisite: KOR 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral proficiency or who attended schools where Korean was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Korean, including alphabet and additional sounds, grammatical structure, reading, writing and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F …

LING 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form designed with international non-native speakers of English in mind. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering …

LING 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

LING 200. (How) Language Matters (3)

This course draws heavily from current issues in society to highlight the role of language. It explores strategies used to construct and reflect our identities (as skaters, rappers, school girls, nerds, etc.), to form new meanings and to accommodate popular new technologies (e.g., texting). This course also examines personal and societal perceptions and attitudes toward …

LING 230. Forbidden Language: Swearing and Taboo Language (3)

Study of the meaning, role, and use of forbidden language in English and other languages, including understanding the many types (swearing, obscenity, taboo, etc.), its grammar and where it is processed in the brain, how these words have changed over time, societal attitudes towards those who use it, comparing its use in other cultures and …

LING 240. Language and Music (3)

This course explores language and music, and their co-occurrence in human societies and cultures. Is it a mere coincidence or is there an underlying reason? Is our innate ability to develop language related to how we create and experience music? Is our brain “wired” for both music and language? Are they related to each other …

LING 250. Language(s) in California (3)

What are the languages of California? Who speaks them? What can discovering and examining the range of indigenous, diasporic and emerging languages in California tell us about our own relationships to language and languages, individually and collectively? This course looks at these questions, investigating, through its survey of California’s languages, some fundamental linguistic and sociolinguistic …

LING 300. Approaches to Linguistic Analysis (3)

This course provides a comprehensive, in-depth and data-driven introduction to the questions that are raised in the major subfields of linguistics and to the prevailing scientific approaches that are applied to answer those questions. Students will learn foundational concepts of the field and learn to analyze linguistic data. Students also will learn how to describe …

LING 303. Human Language: Defining Our Biological Identity (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course addresses two areas at once: the nature of human language and how linguistics and its practitioners study it. It provides students with opportunities to systematically examine and analyze aspects of human language, of which–as we all are–they have been largely unaware. From learning, applying, and …

LING 309. Language and Social Interaction (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course explores a range of topics related to the study of language and social interaction in both casual and professional settings (such as clinical settings, 911 call centers, news interviews, classrooms). It examines how language affects our social lives and how social organization affects our use …

LING 310. Forensic Linguistics: Language and the Law (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Determining what a written text or spoken utterance exactly conveys is nowhere more important than in the area of the law where subtle differences in wording can have drastic consequences in people’s lives. This course examines how language is used and interpreted in legal settings by applying …

LING 325. Language, Gender, and Identity (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course studies language as a major factor in our formation of our self-identity and our conceptualization of ourselves and others as male or female. It provides a comprehensive introduction from a linguistic perspective to issues of language, gender, identity and power. (Available for General Education, F Comparative …

LING 330. Fundamentals for TESL (3)

Introduces students to the fundamentals of TESL (Teaching English as a Second Language). Students will explore the skills and conditions involved in successful second and foreign language learning. Students will use this knowledge to understand the foundations related to second and foreign language instruction, specifically for adults in Intensive English Programs, adult schools, community colleges …

LING 331. Grammar for Teaching English as a Second Language (3)

Introduction to English grammar pedagogy that is essential to become effective teachers of English as a second or foreign language. This course allows students to acquire knowledge of English grammatical forms, meanings, and uses, as well as to explore issues related to grammar teaching in the language classroom. Students in this course will develop skills …

LING 402. Phonetics and Phonology (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 300 or ENGL 301. Study of the physical and acoustical properties of sound in a variety of natural languages, as well as phonological analysis and rule formation in phonological systems. Available for graduate credit.

LING 403. Introduction to Morphology (3)

Preparatory: LING 300 or equivalent. This morphology course introduces students to the range of questions that the field of linguistics asks about speakers’ knowledge of word structure and to the methods that linguists use both to respond to such questions and develop additional ones. Students will become acquainted with central insights from the field and learn …

LING 404. Syntax (3)

Preparatory: LING 300. LING 404 takes students into the field of syntactic inquiry, learning about the tools used to develop representations of what speakers of a language know about the structural relationships among the meaning-bearing elements in their language, and about how such representations are evaluated, in pursuit of the representations telling us the most about …

LING 408. Semantics and Pragmatics (3)

Linguistic study of meaning and context of discourse and the relationship of such study to grammar. Available for graduate credit.

LING 411. Introduction to Historical Linguistics (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 300 or ENGL 301. LING 411 investigates the ways languages emerge and evolve. The course looks at gradual changes in vocabulary (lexicon), sounds (phonetics and phonology—hence, spelling), and grammar (morphology and syntax). Topics include the comparative method, the genealogical and typological classification of languages, language universals and the historical development of …

LING 417. Language Development and Acquisition (3)

Required for both ITEP and Linguistics/TESL students and addresses topics linked to language arts and (T)ESL methods courses for students preparing to teach. Introduces students to the study of language development and acquisition, including such topics as approaches to the development of children’s grammars, the development of communicative competence, definitions of bilingualism and multilingualism, relationships …

LING 427. Languages in Contact (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 300 or ENGL 301. This course examines various effects of language contact–the occurrence of lexical and grammatical borrowing, such as borrowings between English and Spanish; the emergence of pidgins, creoles and mixed languages; and the process of language attrition or death in the context of a dominant language. The course also …

LING 441. Sociolinguistics (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 300 or ENGL 301. Examines linguistic behavior patterns as determined by such factors as age, gender, class, ethnicity, sexual orientation, region and social context. Available for graduate credit.

LING 447. Bilingualism in the U.S. (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 300 or ENGL 301. Upper division course dealing with concepts and controversies regarding bilingualism in the U.S. Students will gain an understanding of bilingual language acquisition (e.g., when children acquire more than one language in the home or at school); bilingual language phenomena such as code-switching, linguistic borrowing, transfer, and interlanguage, …

LING 455. Computational Linguistics (3)

This is an intensive seminar on computational data processing in linguistics. While computers have no minds of their own, researchers are increasingly able to harness computational methods to understand natural language, which is often ‘messy’ and unpredictable. The focus of this course is the creation of working computer code that can help us answer questions …

LING 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Linguistics (3-3-3)

Recommended Preparatory: LING 300. In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Linguistics that is not covered in other Linguistics undergraduate courses. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue in Linguistics. Critical writing and reading required. Up to three different courses …

LING 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses (1-3)

Preparatory: Consent of instructor and Linguistics/TESL department chair. Experimental courses in linguistics offered in other departments are subject to approval by the Linguistics/TESL department chair.

LING 499A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Preparatory: Consent of instructor and Linguistics/TESL department chair.

LING 500. Seminar in Phonetics (3)

Prerequisite: LING 402. This course focuses on articulatory phonetics. In depth study of current issues in the articulatory and physical properties of sounds in natural languages; typology of sound inventories in world languages; perception, transcription, and production of sounds.

LING 501. Seminar in Phonology (3)

Prerequisite: LING 506 or equivalent. Current issues in phonological theory.

LING 502. Seminar in Research on Second Language Acquisition (3)

Critical historical examination of research on second-language acquisition. Study of analytical approaches, such as contrastive analysis, error analysis, performance analysis and discourse analysis, showing how different approaches reflect changing conceptions of language and the nature of language learners.

LING 503. Seminar in Cognitive Linguistics (3)

Prerequisite: LING 510 or equivalent or consent of the instructor. Examination of recent theoretical developments in linguistics from the general perspective of cognitive science. Focus on three major areas: cognitive grammar, semantics and pragmatic dimensions of linguistic categorization, as well as the interface of cognition, experience and grammar in natural discourse.

LING 505. Seminar in Discourse Analysis (3)

Seminar in the theoretical and methodological aspects of discourse analysis in a linguistic perspective.

LING 506. Foundational Concepts of Phonetics and Phonology (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 510 or equivalent. This course introduces graduate students in Linguistics and TESL to key concepts from the fields of phonetics and phonology. The phonetics component of the course focuses on the articulatory description and classification of speech sounds and provides practice in using the International Phonetic Alphabet. The phonology component of …

LING 510. Foundational Concepts in Linguistics (3)

This course introduces graduate students in Linguistics and TESL to the central questions and findings that guide linguistic research in phonetics and phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics, discourse analysis, sociolinguistics and historical linguistics. This data rich and research focused course emphasizes analysis, reasoning, and argumentation in the context of these subfields of linguistics and …

LING 515. Survey of Applied Linguistics (3)

An introduction to multiple definitions of the field of applied linguistics and insight into the ways that scholars identify and define the concerns of the discipline. Included in the course will be an introductory survey of several specific areas of study that fall under the heading of Applied Linguistics.

LING 517. Foundational Concepts of Language Development and Acquisition (3)

This course introduces graduate students in Linguistics and TESL to key findings from the fields of first and second language acquisition. Topics include the acquisition and processing of phonology, morphology, syntax, and discourse and the parallels and differences between first and subsequent language acquisition. The course emphasizes a critical analysis of diverging frameworks and models …

LING 520. Issues in ESL Reading and Writing (3)

Preparatory: LING 530. Provides students with a foundation for understanding the processes of reading and writing—as well as the relationships between them—as they are experienced by adult second-language learners. Topics in the area of reading include skills and strategies that contribute to the second language learner’s ability to read and to comprehend a variety of …

LING 521. Issues in ESL Listening and Speaking (3)

Preparatory: LING 530. Provides students with a foundation for understanding the processes of listening and speaking as these are experienced by adult second-language learners. While the course focuses on the academic environment, it includes an examination of skills necessary for learners to comprehend a variety of speakers in a range of spoken discourse types, covering …

LING 525. English Structures for ESL/EFL Teaching (3)

Preparatory: LING 530. Provides a systematic description of the structures and usages of English grammar from the perspective of someone learning English as an additional language. Students focus on ways that such material may most effectively be presented to non-native speakers of English.

LING 530. Introduction to TESL (3)

This course prepares students for coursework offered in the M.A. degree in TESL program and for careers in the TESL field. Students will learn the goals of an M.A. TESL student—acquire practical planning skills, examine the history of second and foreign language teaching, develop a basic knowledge of second language acquisition, use research tools in …

LING 541. Seminar in Sociolinguistics (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 510 or equivalent. This course is a graduate seminar on sociolinguistics with a focus on language variation description, theory, method, and application. The course will examine regional, social, ethnic and gender varieties. The class will study reports of research focusing on everyday social interaction as well as on larger scale patterns …

LING 555. TESL Classroom Practices in Postsecondary Academic Settings (3)

Prerequisite: LING 530. Prerequisite or Corequisite: LING 525. This course is designed to provide students knowledge of issues related to the teaching of English as a second language (ESL) to non-native speakers of English in postsecondary academic settings and also to provide students an opportunity to gain teaching experience through supervised practicum training. The focus …

LING 566. Research Methods for Linguistics (3)

Prerequisite or Corequisite for TESL Track: LING 530. Prerequisite or Corequisite for LING Track: LING 510. An introduction to research in linguistics, including quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods research. Data collection and analysis are covered, along with methods for writing research reports.

LING 568. TESL Testing and Assessment (3)

Prerequisite: LING 530. This course is intended for students interested in exploring and practicing educational assessment and pursuing a career in TESL. In this course, students not only learn about assessment practices, but more specifically they become aware of the types of pre-, post- and in-class language assessment required to run an effective English language …

LING 578. English for Specific Purposes (3)

This course examines current research, theories, practices, and instructional approaches to teaching English for Specific Purposes (ESP). Students will receive an introduction to ESP and its various sub-branches-English for Academic Purposes (EAP), English for Occupational Purposes (EOP), and English for Professional Purposes (EPP). This course prepares students to teach ESP in a variety of contexts …

LING 590A-Z. Selected Topics in Linguistics/TESL (3-3)

Prerequisite: LING 510 or equivalent or consent of the instructor. In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Linguistics/TESL that is not covered in other Linguistic/TESL graduate courses. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue in Linguistics/TESL. Critical writing and …

LING 604. Acoustic and Instrumental Phonetics (3)

Prerequisite: LING 506 or equivalent. This course focuses on acoustic phonetics. In depth empirical and theoretical study of the acoustic properties of speech production, perception, and audition. In addition, students will develop expertise in the use of laboratory equipment and instrumentation in the analysis of experimental phonetic data.

LING 610. Seminar in Syntax (3)

Prerequisite: LING 404. In-depth study of current approaches to syntactic analysis.

LING 697. Directed Comprehensive Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Consent of Linguistics/TESL department chair. Enrollment required in the semester that the comprehensive examination is taken.

LING 698D. Graduate Project (3)

This course serves as the culminating experience for students in the Linguistics and TESL M.A. programs. The focus of the course is on the development of a professional graduate project (a graduate project), which will demonstrate each student’s accomplishments and mastery of the relevant area (TESL or Linguistics). While the requirements for the graduate project …

LING 699A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Prerequisites: Classified graduate status; Consent of instructor and Linguistics/TESL department chair. Maximum of 6 units of 599 and 699 allowed in a student’s program.

LRS 100/F. Liberal Studies Freshman Seminar and Field Study (1/1)

Prerequisite: ITEP Freshman option students only. Recommended Corequisite: LRS 100F. Introduces first-time freshman students to university culture and expectations and to fieldwork methodology in elementary education. Students focus primarily on themselves as learners with a secondary focus on children as learners. Topics: how students learn; time management; diversity; information competence; introduction to technology; university literacy; …

LRS 150/F. Liberal Studies and Anthropology and Field Study (2/1)

Prerequisite: ITEP Freshman option students only. Recommended Corequisite: LRS 150F. Preparatory: LRS 100/F. Introduction to the study of cultural anthropology, with a focus on cultural issues that influence learning and education of multicultural populations. Students apply cultural concepts to understand themselves as learners and to children in elementary-school settings. Topics include gender, ethnicity and people …

LRS 200/L. Liberal Studies Seminar and Lab: Learning, Thinking, and Doing Physical Science (3/1)

Prerequisite: ITEP-Freshman Option students only. Corequisite: LRS 200L. This course provides aspiring elementary school teachers with an understanding of how young children construct and comprehend key facets of science including explanations, theories, models, and experiments. In tandem with learning and doing science, students think about the philosophical and cognitive underpinnings of these facets of science. …

LRS 250/F. Integrating Reason, Belief and Education and Field Study (3/1)

Prerequisite: ITEP Freshman option students only. Recommended Corequisite: LRS 250F. Introduction to the concepts essential to the identification, analysis and evaluation of arguments for students in the Integrated Teacher Education Program. Students examine the variety of sources of justification, evidence and warrant, such as argumentation, problem solving and perception. Emphasizes the application of these and …

LRS 300/F. Interdisciplinary Approaches for Future Teachers and Field Study (2/1)

Prerequisites: Course is limited to Pre-Credential and ITEP-Junior Option students; Junior Standing. Corequisite: LRS 300F. This course focuses on developing skills for successfully integrating subject matter knowledge from multiple disciplines in preparation for a career in teaching. It introduces students to knowledge integration theory and tools for integrated teaching including: basic notions of literacy, knowledge …

LRS 333. Perspectives on Literacy (3)

Prerequisite: ENGL 301. Corequisites: LRS 433/F. This course examines topics related to the development of reading and writing—what people frequently refer to as literacy. These topics range from how the organization of the human brain integrates its design for language with the cognitive demands of representing language in print to understanding the roles of human …

LRS 425A-Z. Selected Topics in Childhood Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Recommended Preparatory: ENGL 428 or ENGL 429. Intensive interdisciplinary study of a particular topic in childhood studies as seen from historical and critical perspectives, with emphasis on the application of cultural theory. Topics will change from semester to semester.

LRS 433/F. Practicum in Early Literacy (2/1)

Prerequisite: ENGL 301. Corequisite: LRS 333. This is a practicum designed to extend information and concepts presented in LRS 333. The focus of this course is on the application of research in language, development and early literacy. The role of early intervention in the prevention of learning difficulties and concepts related to individual differences in …

LRS 491. Capstone Seminar (3-3)

Preparatory: FLIT 391 or HUM 391. Intensive interdisciplinary study of an age, movement, problem, or theme, with emphasis on the application of cultural theory in interdisciplinary study. The topic of the seminar varies. Students will complete a senior project, such as a research paper or a creative performance that demonstrates the integrated knowledge, understanding and …

PERS 101. Elementary Persian I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Persian was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Persian, including grammatical structure, alphabet, writing and practice of the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

PERS 102. Elementary Persian II (4)

Prerequisite: PERS 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Persian was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Persian, including grammatical structures, reading, writing, practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, …

PHIL 100. Introduction to Critical Reasoning (4)

Prerequisites: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Not open to students who have completed PHIL 200. Introduction to the identification, analysis, and evaluation of arguments. Students will learn to critically assess a variety of kinds of arguments, with attention to deduction and induction in real-world critical reasoning. Questions may include: What is an argument? What …

PHIL 135. Reasoning with Numbers (3)

How is our everyday understanding of the world shaped by our encounters with data? How do you calculate a risk? Can numbers lie? This course is a critical assessment of the uses and misuses of numbers in popular media and everyday life. Students will learn how to handle quantitative data visually and creatively and will …

PHIL 150. Introduction to Philosophy (3)

Introduction to some of the main topics and methods of philosophy, with attention to both contemporary and historical texts. Questions may include: What is a self? What does it mean to live a good life? Is right and wrong just a matter of opinion? What is justice? What is freedom? Do we have free will? …

PHIL 165. Ethics for the 21st Century (3)

Introduction to the philosophical examination of contemporary ethical issues. Questions may include: When, if ever, should we boycott an institution? Is it OK to eat meat? Are fetuses or artificial intelligences persons? Is genetic enhancement a good idea? What are our responsibilities to the environment? Is there such a thing as a just war? (Available …

PHIL 170. Philosophy and Popular Culture (3)

Introduction to the philosophical analysis of popular culture, including the examination of philosophical themes in TV shows, music, games, film, or other popular media. Topics might include the moral, aesthetic, and political value of mass culture, or the philosophy of video games, comic books, food, fashion, or street art. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

PHIL 180. Human Nature and the Meaning of Life (3)

Examination of historical and contemporary theories of human nature and the meaning of life, with a view to examining ourselves and our relationship to the surrounding world. Questions might include: Are human beings naturally good or bad? Why are we here? What makes for a good or happy or meaningful life? Is it bad to …

PHIL 200. Critical Reasoning (3)

Prerequisites: Completion of the lower division writing requirement; GE section B4 Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning or MATH 210. Not open to students who have completed PHIL 100. Examination of the relationship between logic and language. Accelerated introduction to the concepts essential to the identification, analysis and evaluation of arguments, with attention to deduction, induction and common fallacies. …

PHIL 201. Ancient Western Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Critical examination of selected topics in ancient Western philosophical thought, such as ancient conceptions of the soul, virtue, and the good life; Greek and Roman political philosophy; or theories concerning the nature of mind, knowledge, or reality. Readings are drawn from texts, dialogues, and fragments from the …

PHIL 202. Modern Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Critical examination of philosophical writings from the 16th through the 19th centuries. Topics may include theories of knowledge, reality, or human nature; concepts of liberty and personhood; the rights of women; arguments against slavery; the relation between mind and body; and the rights and duties of citizens. …

PHIL 230. Introduction to Formal Logic (3)

Prerequisites: Completion of the lower division writing requirement; GE section B4 Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning or MATH 210. Introduction to modern deductive logic, including sentential and first-order logic. Students will learn how to translate from English to symbolic language, and will use truth tables, proofs, and other techniques to determine the validity of arguments and identify other …

PHIL 240. Environmental Ethics (3)

Examines the meaning and value of nature and the environment from a variety of ethical perspectives, including feminist and de-colonial perspectives. Questions can include: How should human beings relate to the natural world? How can we build sustainable interactions with the natural world? Do we have moral obligations toward non-human animals and other parts of …

PHIL 250. Philosophy of Technology (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the main issues in the philosophy of technology, such as the nature of technology, the distinction between technology and science, the relationship between technology and society, and feminist approaches to the philosophy of technology. Questions may include: What is technology? What factors have shaped technology …

PHIL 260. Sexual Ethics (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of ethical issues concerning sexuality and sexual conduct. Topics may include consent; pornography and sex work; kink; sexual and dating violence; the ethics of having children; gender and sexuality; monogamy and polyamory; and queer perspectives on sex and sexuality. Students who have taken PHIL 303 will …

PHIL 265. Medical Ethics (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the main issues in medical ethics, including the critical examination of the concepts of life, death, health, and dis/ability. Topics may include debates over reproduction, medical research, end-of-life decisions, genetics, racial disparities accessing and receiving medical care, and the doctor-patient relationship. (Available for General Education, …

PHIL 280. Philosophy of Sport and Games (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. An introduction to the history and central questions of the philosophy of sport and games. Topics may include the nature of play, games, and sport; the morality of sports, gamesmanship, and athletic enhancement; the relationships among gender, dis/ability, and athleticism; and the relationship between sports and art. …

PHIL 296A-Z. Experimental Topics in Philosophy (3-4)

Selected topics in philosophy, with course content to be determined.

PHIL 305. Business Ethics and Public Policy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of private and public economic institutions through the lens of moral philosophy. Emphasis on real-world issues that concern the conduct of individuals and businesses in contemporary society, such as hiring and job discrimination, unionization, exploitation, workplace conditions, automation, corporate responsibility, or the environment. Regular written assignments …

PHIL 314. Philosophy of Film and Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Investigation of philosophical concepts and problems relating to and expressed through film and literature. Questions may include: Why do we care about fictional characters? Do fictional characters exist? What is the relation of author to text? Do films have authors? Do creators’ intentions matter when we interpret …

PHIL 317. History of American Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Introduction to the history of American philosophy, with such emphases as American pragmatism, American transcendentalism, and American Indian and African American thought. Key themes may include the relationship between the individual and community; the meaning and value of nature; pluralism and democracy; the meaning of American identity; …

PHIL 325. Philosophy of Biology (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Addresses philosophical issues central to the life sciences, with particular attention to the social implications of contemporary biological theories. Topics may include the existence of biological laws, the distinction between natural and social kinds, and the relationship between biology and technology. The course also introduces basic concepts …

PHIL 330. Philosophy of Science (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Philosophical investigation of the nature of science and the ideas and practices used within the sciences. Questions may include: What is (a) science, and how does science differ from other disciplines? How do scientists explain and help us understand the world around us? How do they support …

PHIL 333. American Indian Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. A survey of American Indian philosophy from issues arising out of oral traditions, to early colonial Indigenous impacts on American democracy and pragmatism, to recent work on knowledge, value, and being as well as applied issues such as sovereignty and the environment. (Cross-listed with AIS 333.) (Available for General …

PHIL 337. Philosophy of Religion (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Philosophical examination of conceptual problems posed by religious claims. Questions may include: What is religion? What is distinctive about religious experiences like revelation and religious ecstasy? What is faith? Should we be skeptical about someone’s claims to have performed or experienced miracles? What is evil? Is there …

PHIL 343. Indian Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of key movements in Indian philosophy from the Vedic period to the modern era, with attention to relationships among India’s philosophies, history, and culture. Topics may include Hindu, Tantric, Vedic, or Brahminical philosophy, Jainism and Buddhism, or the social and political movements of Gandhi. Regular written …

PHIL 344. Chinese Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of Chinese philosophy from Confucius to the People’s Republic, with attention to relationships between China’s philosophies, history and culture. Regular written assignments required. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

PHIL 348. Feminist Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Critical study of issues and central concepts in feminist philosophy, such as the nature of oppression, intersectionality, equality and justice, liberation, resistance, and the relationships among sex, gender, and sexuality. Questions may include: How do cultural norms and values affect our understandings of sex and gender? How …

PHIL 349. Contemporary Social and Political Issues (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Philosophical examination of one or more issues of current public debate. Topics might include social and economic inequality, biotechnology, environmental justice, housing and homelessness, trans rights, or the abolition of prisons and police. Regular written assignments will be required. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (IC) (WI)

PHIL 350. Philosophy of Knowledge (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of key issues, positions, and controversies in the philosophical study of knowledge, such as the nature of belief; the reliability of the senses; refutations of skepticism; or the concept of epistemic injustice. Questions may include: What does it mean to know? What is the relationship between …

PHIL 352. Philosophy of Reality (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Philosophical examination of key issues concerning the nature and meaning of existence, such as personal identity; the reality of sex and gender; the existence of external reality; the existence of multiverses; or the reality of numbers and ideas. Attention is paid to both traditional and contemporary views, …

PHIL 353. Existentialism (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of philosophical and literary works of the major existentialist thinkers of the 19th and 20th centuries, with the aim of discovering the fundamental tenets of existentialism. Questions might include: What is the meaning of human existence? Is there such a thing as human nature? What is …

PHIL 354. Kierkegaard and Nietzsche (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of 19th century European philosophy through analysis of the lives and writings of Søren Kierkegaard and Friedrich Nietzsche. Compares their views on issues of central importance to both thinkers, such as: What is the role of the individual in society? What does it mean to lead …

PHIL 355. Philosophy of Mind (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of traditional and contemporary views concerning the mind and its relation to the brain, body, and world. Addresses issues and controversies in the field, such as the nature of consciousness; the prospects and limitations of artificial intelligence; the nature of mental causation; or the problem of …

PHIL 360. Ethical Theory (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of classical and contemporary theoretical approaches to moral philosophy. Covers major philosophical frameworks for the evaluation of human conduct, such as utilitarianism, deontology, virtue ethics, ethical relativism, or the ethics of care, and addresses topics such as the meaning of virtue, vice, and the good life; …

PHIL 365. Social and Political Philosophy (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Covers classical and contemporary theoretical approaches in the philosophical study of human social and political organization, addressing topics such as taxation, reparations, immigration, private property, voting, secession, or war. Questions may include: What is justice? Is governmental power legitimate? What is freedom? Does freedom require a certain …

PHIL 380. Aesthetics (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of key issues in the philosophical study of art and design, such as the nature of art and aesthetic experience, the concepts of beauty and ugliness, the relationship of art to morality, and the place of aesthetics in everyday life. Questions may include: What is art? …

PHIL 391. Philosophy of Law (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. An overview of philosophical questions arising from the analysis and evaluation of concepts and theories connected with law, including the nature of judicial reasoning and the relationship between law and society. Addresses major theories in normative jurisprudence, including legal formalism, legal realism, legal positivism, Natural Law theory, …

PHIL 396A-Z. Experimental Topics in Philosophy (3-4)

Selected topics in philosophy, with course content to be determined.

PHIL 401. Advanced Ancient Philosophy (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy, including PHIL 201. Recommended Preparatory: PHIL 350, PHIL 352, PHIL 355, PHIL 360, or PHIL 365. A detailed study of selected works by Ancient philosophers, with an emphasis on Plato and Aristotle.

PHIL 402. Advanced Modern Philosophy (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Detailed study of one or more significant works of modern philosophy, such as Descartes’ Meditations or Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, or advanced examination of a key issue or concept in modern thought, such as the relation of reason and the emotions, the rights and duties of citizens, or early …

PHIL 403. Contemporary Philosophy (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy, including PHIL 350, PHIL 352, PHIL 355, PHIL 360, or PHIL 365. An examination of selected contemporary philosophical writings.

PHIL 406. Advanced Topics in Sex, Gender or Sexuality (3)

Prerequisite: PHIL 260 or PHIL 348 or QS 301 or QS 302. Advanced examination of one or more issues in the philosophy of sex, gender, or sexuality, with emphasis on non-normative sex, gender, or sexuality. Topics may include trans philosophy, intersectionality, queer bioethics, gender performativity, the social construction of sex, or the ethics of kink.

PHIL 423. Continental Philosophy (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of coursework in philosophy. Overview of Continental Philosophy, including its roots in 19th-century thought. Emphasis on key methods and movements in the history of Continental thought, such as existentialism, phenomenology, deconstruction, Critical Theory, postmodernism, post-structuralism, de-colonial thought, Black philosophy, or French feminism. Key figures may include: G.W.F. Hegel, Karl Marx, Theodor Adorno, …

PHIL 425. Seminar in Philosophy of Biology (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy, including PHIL 325, PHIL 330, PHIL 350 or PHIL 355. An advanced study of key concepts and issues in philosophy of biology, including adaptation, complexity and self-organization, fitness, function, species, unit of selection and evolutionary development. Examination of the nature of biological sciences and its relation to other sciences and …

PHIL 439. Phenomenology (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Advanced introduction to phenomenology, which seeks to describe conscious experience from the first-person perspective. Topics may include the qualitative character of experience, the nature of consciousness, how conscious experiences can be meaningful, and the relationship between scientific and phenomenological descriptions of perception and the body. The focus will usually be …

PHIL 445. Philosophy of Language (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy including PHIL 350, PHIL 352 or PHIL 355. An examination of selected topics concerning the nature of language, such as sense and reference, theories of meaning, pragmatics and speech acts, meaning skepticism, the analytic/synthetic distinction and metaphor.

PHIL 446. Advanced Social and Political Philosophy (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Advanced analysis and evaluation of one or more selected topics in social and political philosophy, such as embodiment, property rights, reparations, racial capitalism, taxation, distributive justice, or political epistemology.

PHIL 450. Advanced Epistemology (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Advanced study of one or more selected topics in epistemology, such as epistemic disagreement, theories of knowledge and skepticism, the epistemology of perception, or the nature of epistemic injustice. The course may also focus on a specific epistemological framework or knowledge tradition, such as Buddhist epistemology, feminist or decolonial epistemology, …

PHIL 452. Advanced Metaphysics (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Advanced study of one or more selected topics in metaphysics, such as the nature of time, the metaphysics of sex and gender, or freedom of the will.

PHIL 455. Advanced Philosophy of Mind (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Advanced study of one or more selected topics concerning the mind and its relations to reality, such as the nature of consciousness, mental causation, embodied and extended cognition, or the language of thought.

PHIL 460. Advanced Ethical Theory (3)

Prerequisites: 6 units of Philosophy. Investigation of advanced topics in ethical theory, such as animal ethics, civility, moral responsibility, or the justification of punishment. The course may also focus on a specific ethical or metaethical framework, such as the ethics of care, Confucian ethics, emotivism, or moral realism.

PHIL 496A-Z. Experimental Topics in Philosophy (3-4)

Selected topics in philosophy, with course content to be determined.

PHIL 497. Senior Research Seminar (3)

Preparatory: Senior standing and least 21 units of Philosophy courses. Extended research project on a topic of the student’s choice. Team projects are encouraged. Focus is on formulating a thesis and pursuing appropriate means of developing it in a research project in philosophy. Class meetings focus on research methodologies and on students’ discussion of their …

PHIL 499A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Course may be repeated for credit.

QS 101. Introduction to Queer Studies (3)

Provides an introduction to the interdisciplinary field of Queer Studies, which aims to problematize rigid identity categories and destabilize essentialized norms of expression. The course will cover the history of how concepts such as gender and desire have been understood and articulated; heteronormativity and its relationship to capitalism, race, and gender roles; queer aesthetics; and …

QS 113A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Corequisite: UNIV 061. Expository prose writing with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax …

QS 113B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 113A. Corequisite: UNIV 062. Expository prose writing, with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

QS 114A. Approaches to University Writing A (3)

Prerequisite: Placement in a supported GE subarea A2 Written Communication course. Expository prose writing, with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as …

QS 114B. Approaches to University Writing B (3)

Prerequisite: Successful completion of 114A. Expository prose writing, with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements of prose …

QS 115. Approaches to University Writing (3)

Prerequisite: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing. Expository prose writing, with a focus on both content and form. Specific emphases include the exercise of logical thought and clear expression, the development of effective organizational strategies, and the appropriate gathering and utilization of evidence. Includes instruction on diction, syntax and grammar, as well as the elements …

QS 151. Fundamentals of QS Public Speaking (3)

Prerequisites: Multiple Measures Placement in GE-level writing, or completion of 113A or 114A, or completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course is designed to provide both an introduction to the principles of public speaking and a forum for practicing public speaking skills with particular attention to issues and contexts of significance to LGBTQIA …

QS 201. Race and Ethnicity in Queer Studies (3)

Preparatory: Completion of the lower division writing requirement is recommended. Introduction to the process of critical thinking through the lens of race, ethnicity and sexuality. QS 201 offers an exploration of race and ethnicity and its relationship to queer studies, emphasizing critical reading of theory, praxis, and artistic texts. This course also examines the specific …

QS 204. Queer Identity: Pop Music and Its Audience (3)

This course analyzes queer identity and its relation to pop music, focusing primarily on explicit representations of LGBTQ themes, experiences, characters, and communities in pop music. Course themes include positive images, creation of alternative space, AIDS, coming out, celebrity, and the gay audience. Through close readings of queer theory and criticism, we will analyze the …

QS 208. Issues in Queer Health (3)

Issues in Queer Health explores and analyzes various health and illness topics affecting individuals and communities in non-normative and non-heterosexist positions in society. We explore experiences in health and illness through an interdisciplinary approach to navigate critical constructs of identity, gender, and sexuality. Through this course, we examine the intersection of non-normative communities with health …

QS 301. Perspectives in Queer Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course introduces students to the current theories and histories in queer studies, including such closely related fields as transgender studies. The course also introduces students to the scope of queer studies, to scholarly, community-based and activist resources, and to the varied interdisciplinary, methodological and theoretical paradigms in …

QS 302. L.A. in Transit: Communities, Organizations and Politics (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course provides students with a broad understanding of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersexed and queer communities, organizations and politics in Los Angeles, with attention to how these are shaped by nationality, race, ethnicity, gender, class and other identifications. (Available for General Education, E Lifelong Learning.) (IC) (WI)

QS 303. Transgender Studies (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examines the interdisciplinary field of trans studies, tracing ongoing contestation over transgender identities in historical, medical, political, legal, social and cultural contexts. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities or F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

QS 304. Queering the Screen, Queering the Spectator (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course analyzes queer film and media since the 1970s, focusing primarily on explicit representations of LGBTQ characters and communities in cinema, television, and cyberculture. Themes include positive images, AIDS, coming out, celebrity, and the gay market. Through close readings of queer theory and criticism, we will …

QS 305. Queer Identity: Analyzing and Writing Fanfiction (3)

This class will survey the history and significance of queer fanfiction, from the early 1990s to the present, and examine a range of queer fan cultures and practices. Through an examination of the discourses of both pathology and empowerment that circulate around the cultural conception of the “queer fan,” this course will consider contemporary debates …

QS 369. The Nature of Queer (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course introduces students to the biology of sex, gender, and sexual orientation. Students will gain an understanding of the biological determinants of sex, including the role of specific genes on human development and how hormones influence gross anatomy as well as brain development. Students will learn …

QS 401A-Z. Advanced Topics in Queer Studies (3-3-3)

Intensive study of selected topics in queer studies, such as queer theory, transgender theory, queer issues in education, queer popular culture, the queer diaspora and the globalization and medicalization of sex and gender. Topics change from semester to semester. May be repeated for credit with instructor’s consent.

QS 499. Queer Studies Independent Study (3)

Queer Studies independent study is for advanced students who are interested in working on an independent project with a faculty sponsor. The student needs to complete an Independent Study Form with the approval signature from the faculty sponsor and the Queer Studies Coordinator.

RS 100. Introduction to Religious Studies (3)

Study of the elements of religion and selected contemporary religious issues. Examines such subjects as myth and ritual, the sacred and profane, dreams and theophanies, priests and prophets, science and religion, history and religion, and the possibility of religious faith today. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

RS 101. The Bible (3)

Survey of the basic content and major themes of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament), New Testament and Apocryphal writings. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.)

RS 150. World Religions (3)

Study of selected major world religions, with emphasis on tribal religions and the historic international faiths of Asia and the Near East. Investigates rituals, ethics, institutional structures and the cultural ethos of religions, as well as their myths, doctrines and sacred texts. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

RS 204. Religion, Logic and the Media (3)

This course introduces and guides students in the practical use of the basic concepts of deductive logic as a dimension of critical reasoning. Using these concepts, students will discuss, analyze and critique statements that appear in the media (in the U.S. and elsewhere) that have been expressed by religious people and by the media itself. …

RS 240. Approaches to the History of Religions (3)

An investigation of major and selected religions around the world using social-scientific tools such as history, sociology and anthropology. Students learn why various religions change over time and how they interact with their particular social and cultural environments. Examples are taken from ancient and modern religions, major and tribal religions, including new religious cults. (Available …

RS 255. American Political Institutions and Religion (3)

Examination of the development of U.S. and California political ideals, institutions and processes. The course focuses on the religious elements within political ideals, religious freedom, the relation between religion and state, and the role of religion in the public forum, including both politics and public education. (Available for General Education, D3/D4 Constitution of the United …

RS 256. American Religious History and Ideals (3)

Introduction to the historical development of the United States through a focus on ways that both religious and nonreligious agendas have shaped American institutions and ideals. (Available for General Education, C3 American History, Institutions and Ideals.)

RS 296A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Religious Studies (3)

Selected topics in religious studies, with course content to be determined.

RS 304. Women and Religion (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Examination of religious views of women in oral and literary cultures, focusing on the roles, symbols and concepts of women within an international and historical framework. Also addresses women’s own perspectives on religion, as reflected in historical sources and in contemporary theology and religious life. (Available for General …

RS 305. New Religious Movements in America (3)

Survey of some marginal religious groups in America. Presentation, analysis and critique of the classic church/sect/cult typology, including how these theories apply to actual groups and how groups maintain beliefs when rejected by dominant cultures.

RS 306. American Religious Diversity (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Survey of the religion of groups in America who are marginal to or outside of the historically dominant mainstream Protestant and civil religion ethos. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (IC) (WI)

RS 307. Religion in America (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. The study of the influence of religious traditions on the formation of American culture and the modification of religious traditions by the American context. Also addresses major American religious thinkers and movements, and religion’s role in shaping American thought, literature and ethos. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) …

RS 308. Native American Religions (3)

Seeks to understand the religions of Native Americans in their respective tribal contexts. Inquires to what extent a common religious outlook existed among the cultures occupying what is presently the U.S.

RS 310. Religion and Literature (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of literature to discover to what extent a religious tradition or the lack of one influences an author’s understanding of human existence. Writers who reflect religious traditions, as well as those who are informed by humanism or atheism, are read and interpreted. (Available for General Education, C2 …

RS 311. Religion and Film (3)

Examines how film artists address the major religious issues of our time, including the nature of reality, sources of transcendence, the nature of good and evil in the self and society, and the possibilities of renewal and hope.

RS 320. Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) (3)

Study of the literature and religion of ancient Israel through the Hellenistic period. No knowledge of Hebrew language is required; all texts will be in English translation. (Cross-listed with JS 320.)

RS 325. New Testament (3)

Study of the New Testament and its religious thought in context.

RS 327. Teachings of Jesus (3)

Literary and social analysis of the teachings of Jesus.

RS 345. Christianity (3)

Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Protestant and non-traditional forms of Christianity compared and contrasted with one another in their historical and social contexts.

RS 356. Contemporary Religious Thought (3)

Study of selected major writings in religious thought, with the aim of analyzing representative modern approaches to such questions as God and the world, faith and self-understanding, and belief and social consciousness. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

RS 357. Atheism (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course examines the history of atheism in Western history as well as its contemporary forms. Throughout history, many people in the West have claimed identities as atheists in reaction to organized religion and the notion of a transcendental God. In many cases, atheists respond to narrow …

RS 361. Contemporary Ethical Issues (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Emphasizes the development of skills in critical thinking through analysis of such contemporary ethical issues as abortion, euthanasia, genetic engineering, sexual behavior, racism, gender bias, punishment, animal rights, the environment and the relationships between religion and morality. (Available for General Education, C2 Humanities.) (WI)

RS 362. Race, Power, Religion (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course examines the intersection between race, power, and religion through the lens of colonialism. The main subject of inquiry will be the role that religion plays in the construction of the dominant ideas and politics of race and racial relations in the colonial/post‑colonial social contexts. Particular …

RS 365. Islam (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the varieties of Islamic civilization in their social contexts. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

RS 366. Science and Religion (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. The course is divided into three main sections. In section one, we consider some fundamental theoretical foundations that characterize the fields of science and religion, and then how they compare as means of knowing the world. Students learn and evaluate historical and contemporary depictions of the relationship …

RS 367. The Psychology of Religion (3)

What role does the human mind play in belief? Is religion a product of nature, nurture, or both? Why is religion so common around the world? If religion is natural, is it true or false? This course tackles questions such as these, attempting to understand the reasons why humans around the world and throughout history …

RS 370. Religion and Ecology (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course examines how religious beliefs and practices contribute to humans’ protection, utilization and/or damage of the natural world. Students explore the resources for environmental sustainability within at least two world religious and in new “green” theologies, nature mysticism and radical environmentalism. Particular attention will be paid to …

RS 378. American Jewish Experience (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Seeks to describe the experience of the Jewish religion-ethnic community in America with reference to its own historic background and development and the relationship of the community to the general American culture and to other particular subcultures or ethnic groups. Emphasizes distinctive Jewish values and customs and evaluates …

RS 380. Asian Religions: Communal Traditions and Transitions (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Explores Asian religions by comparing human and divine religious figures cross-culturally. Comparison of the figures from the various cultures provides a method to understand the nature of humanity and divinity in Asia. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

RS 383. Asian Religious Texts (3)

Explores Asian religions by comparing the primary sacred texts of Asian cultures. Sacred texts upon which Asian religious expressions are based are examined in the specific cultural contexts of Japan, China and India by a reading of primary texts. Comparison of the texts from the various cultures allows the generation of a model of Asian …

RS 384. Approaching the Qur’an (3)

A historical, thematic and analytical study of the Qur’an both in its content and form, with substantial focus on the Qur’an as a source of information in various disciplines in the light of traditional and contemporary methods of interpretation.

RS 385. Hinduism (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the religious life of India from the Indus Valley civilizations to the modern period. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (WI)

RS 390. Buddhism (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. Study of the fundamental concepts in Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism (e.g., nirvana, enlightenment, karma, dharma). Examines the historic development of these concepts in their various Asian cultural and geographic settings. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.) (IC) (WI)

RS 395. Theory and Method in Religious Studies (3)

Examines modern attempts to study religion objectively from the Western Enlightenment to the present, exploring and criticizing theories and methods from anthropology, sociology, feminist hermeneutics, evolutionary psychology and the history of religions.

RS 396A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Religious Studies (3)

Selected topics in religious studies, with course content to be determined.

RS 497A-Z. Proseminar in Religious Studies (3-3)

Reading and discussion in a specific field or on a specific topic in a small group. May be repeated for credit.

RUSS 101. Elementary Russian I (4)

Not open to students who have attended schools where Russian was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Russian grammatical structures, reading, practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

RUSS 102. Elementary Russian II (4)

Prerequisite: Completion of RUSS 101 or equivalent. Not open to students who have attended schools where Russian was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Russian grammatical structures, reading, practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

RUSS 380. Russian Civilization (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement or instructor consent. Study of the background of the salient features and institutions of contemporary Russian society.

RUSS 390. Russian Folklore: Slavic Myths and Traditions (3)

Prerequisite: Instructor consent. Epic ballads of early Russia, fairytale and folk tale, modern ballads and folk songs, folklore, with emphasis on the role of the folk element in Russian literature, art, and music.

RUSS 407. Russian for Business, Travel, and Recreation (3)

Study of the fundamentals of Russian business culture in the areas of commerce, travel, and recreation focused on linguistic, cultural, and historical aspects.

RUSS 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Russian Literature and Culture (3-3)

In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Russian language, literatures, and cultures that is not covered in other Russian undergraduate courses. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth in a particular issue of the Russian-speaking world. May be repeated once for credit, provided …

RUSS 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Russian Literature (3)

Selected topics in Russian literature, with course content to be determined.

SPAN 101. Elementary Spanish I (4)

Prerequisite: Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Spanish was the language of instruction. Study of the fundamentals of Spanish, including grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. (Available for General Education, F Comparative Cultural Studies.)

SPAN 102. Elementary Spanish II (4)

Prerequisite: SPAN 101 or instructor consent. Not open to students with oral and writing proficiency or who attended schools where Spanish was the language of instruction. Continuation of the study of the fundamentals of Spanish grammatical structures, reading and practice in the spoken language. May not be challenged by exam. Credit will not be given …

SPAN 103. Elementary Written Spanish I (3)

Prerequisite: Open only to those with oral fluency in Spanish. Preparatory: Instructor consent, subject to verification of oral skills at the beginning of the semester. Emphasizes the development of reading and writing skills, and includes the study of specific areas of grammar. Reading selections emphasize Hispanic culture. Taught in Spanish. May not be challenged. Credit …

SPAN 220A. Intermediate Spanish I (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 102 or SPAN 104 or equivalent. Recommended Corequisite: SPAN 210. Improves listening and speaking skills, although reading and writing skills are strengthened as necessary. Review of basic grammar and introduction of more advanced grammatical structures and syntax. Vocabulary expansion. May not be challenged if principal schooling has been in Spanish. (Available for General Education, …

SPAN 220B. Intermediate Spanish II (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of SPAN 220A or equivalent. Recommended Corequisite: SPAN 210. Improves reading and writing skills in Spanish and use of these skills in the context of an introductory study of Hispanic literature. Introduces critical theory as an essential to analysis. Reviews application of grammar skills to composition. Conducted in Spanish. May not be challenged …

SPAN 300. Advanced Conversational Spanish (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 220A or equivalent. Not open to students who have attended schools where Spanish was the language of instruction. Recommended Corequisite: SPAN 220B. Encourages majors and minors in Spanish engaged in the junior-year program to further develop their ability to express themselves in the Spanish language. Strongly recommended for prospective teachers of Spanish. May …

SPAN 304. Advanced Grammar and Composition (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. One-semester course consisting of the study of difficult problems of syntax unique to the Spanish language, with composition exercises that develop students’ command of the written language.

SPAN 306. Advanced Composition (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 304 or upper division standing in Spanish. Analysis and evaluation of types of Spanish style and the practical application of these type patterns in writing.

SPAN 307. Introduction to the Analysis of Hispanic Literature (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 220B or equivalent. Reading, discussion and practical analysis of selected works of Hispanic literature to acquire the basic knowledge of the genres, archetypes and movements that are unique to it. Introduction to the analytical tools (terminology, critical approaches, research methodology, and term-paper format) necessary to the study of the above. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 310. Language and Contemporary Hispanic Life (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Advanced conversation focused on aspects of contemporary culture.

SPAN 315A. Literature of Spain I (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Introduction to the highlights of Spanish literature from its origins to the Golden Age period, including Cervantes.

SPAN 315B. Literature of Spain II (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Introduction to the highlights of Spanish literature from the Golden Age period to the modern period.

SPAN 362. Introduction to Spanish Translation (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 304. A course designed to introduce students to written translation and prepare them to apply the basic techniques essential to translation in a wide range of fields. Discussion emphasizes the importance of cultural and linguistic differences that can affect meaning, and the role of the translator in the translation task. Practice includes speed-reading, …

SPAN 363. Literature of Latin America I (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. First part of a 2-semester course dealing with representative authors of Central and South America; the study of the cultural and social backgrounds of their work; and analysis of literary genres, such as native Indian elements and gauchesco literature.

SPAN 364. Literature of Latin America II (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Second part of a 2-semester course dealing with representative authors of Central and South America; the study of the cultural and social backgrounds of their work; and analysis of literary genres, such as native Indian elements and gauchesco literature.

SPAN 372. Introduction to Spanish Interpretation (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 304. A course designed to introduce students to the fundamentals of interpretation. The major goal is to familiarize students with basic methods and techniques of simultaneous, consecutive, and sight interpretation. These techniques include: active listening, memory enhancement, note taking, concentration and others. English into Spanish and vice versa. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 380. Latin American Civilization (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Evolution of Latin American civilization, with special reference to social, cultural and artistic elements.

SPAN 381. Spanish Civilization (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Study of Spanish customs and institutions in the light of their historical development.

SPAN 382. Literature and Society in Latin America (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Reading and discussion of selected works of fiction and nonfiction, with emphasis on their place in the development of Latin American literature, and their relationship to social and historical movements, the history of ideas and the development of the arts. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 383. Literature and Society in Spain (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Reading and discussion of selected works of fiction and nonfiction, with emphasis on their relationships to social and historical movements, the history of ideas and the development of the arts in Spain. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 400. Structure of the Spanish Language (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Scientific analysis of the structure of Spanish; comparison with traditional descriptions; and review of problems of usage in writing and speaking Spanish.

SPAN 401. Language and Culture (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Linguistic study of the Spanish language in a social and cultural context. Topics covered may include the study of cultural influences on the development of the language and its varieties, languages in contact with other languages, bilingualism and sociocultural factors in language use.

SPAN 402. Spanish for Healthcare Professionals (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course is appropriate for beginning-level Spanish learners pursuing a career in the medical healthcare profession who want to increase their effectiveness in communicating with the Spanish speaking communities. The course includes how to greet patients, brief conversations, preliminary patient information, checking into the hospital, at the …

SPAN 408. Literature of the Middle Ages (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of the literary and intellectual developments in Spain during the Middle Ages. Conducted in Spanish. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 409. Literature of the Renaissance (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of the literary and intellectual developments in Spain during the Renaissance. Analysis of the development of major genres. Conducted in Spanish. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 411. Literature of the Golden Age (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of the literary and intellectual developments in Spain from the end of the 15th century to the end of the 17th century. Study of the major trends in prose, poetry and drama. Conducted in Spanish. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 415. Literature of the 20th Century: Spain (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of the literary and intellectual developments in Spain during the 20th century. Study of the major trends in prose, poetry and drama. Conducted in Spanish. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 421. Central American Literature (3)

Prerequisites: For Spanish Majors: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. For CAS Minors: CAS 201; Upper division standing or instructor consent. Recommended Corequisite: SPAN 521. Examines Central American literary traditions, with emphasis on the 20th century. Focuses on the aesthetic proposals, the historical and political context in which Central American literature is produced, the Central American transnational …

SPAN 425. Spanish Phonetics (3)

Prerequisite: Upper division standing in Spanish. Improves pronunciation, and consolidates and supplements basic theoretical knowledge about sounds, sound relationships and sentence inflection. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 427. Literature of the 19th Century: Latin America (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Development of 19th century Latin American literature with emphasis on the historical and social context. Close examination of the post-independence ideologies that shaped the formation of the national identities and the modernization of the region. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 428. Literature of the 20th Century: Latin America (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Development of 20th century Latin American literature with emphasis on the major literary movements from the avant-garde through postcolonial and postmodern studies. Close examination of fiction and nonfiction texts that reflect the historical and political contexts, as well as the construction of the Latin American identity. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 462. Advanced Spanish Translation: Legal and Business (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 362. A course designed to train students in written translation of legal, administrative, commercial and business documents. Students will develop the skills necessary for the acquisition of more advanced terminology in those fields. Discussion will emphasize the importance of accuracy in translation as well as ethical considerations that arise in legal and commercial …

SPAN 463. Advanced Spanish Translation: Medical and Scientific (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 362. A course designed to train students in written translation of medical and scientific documents. Students will develop the skills necessary for the acquisition of more advanced terminology in those fields. Discussion will emphasize the importance of accuracy in translation as well as ethical considerations that arise in medical and scientific documentation. Practice includes …

SPAN 472. Advanced Spanish Interpretation: Legal and Business (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 372. A course designed to train students in interpretation in the legal, administrative, business and commercial fields. Students will develop the skills necessary for the acquisition of more advanced terminology in those fields, essential for consecutive, simultaneous and sight interpretation. Discussion will emphasize the importance of interpreting accuracy as well as ethical considerations that …

SPAN 473. Advanced Spanish Interpretation: Medical and Scientific (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 372. A course designed to train students in interpretation in the medical and scientific fields. Students will develop the skills necessary for the acquisition of more advanced terminology in those fields, essential for consecutive, simultaneous and sight interpretation. Discussion will emphasize the importance of interpreting accuracy as well as ethical considerations that arise in …

SPAN 495A-Z. Selected Topics in Hispanic Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics (3-3-3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307, SPAN 425. In-depth study of a selected theme or issue in Hispanic literatures, cultures, or linguistics that is not covered in other Spanish undergraduate courses. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue in the literatures, cultures, …

SPAN 496A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Hispanic Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics (3-3-3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Experimental topics in Hispanic literatures, cultures, and linguistics, with course content to be determined. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 497. Comparative Structure of Spanish and English (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 425 or instructor’s consent. Recommended for native speakers or near native speakers of Spanish and English. Comparative study of the Spanish and English linguistic structures at the phonemic, morphemic, syntactic and semantic levels as they interact in the bilingual learning process. Available for graduate credit.

SPAN 518. Spanish Neoclassicism and Romanticism (3)

Study of the aesthetic, social and philosophical ideas in the writings of major Spanish neoclassic and romantic figures. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 520. Latin American Cinema and Literatures (3)

Studies the relationship between film and literature in Latin America, focusing on cinematic adaptations of literary works. Films are viewed by the students outside of the classroom. Class time is devoted almost entirely to discussions of readings and films. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 521. Central American Literature (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Recommended Corequisite: SPAN 421. Examines Central American literary traditions, with emphasis on the 20th century. Focuses on the aesthetic proposals, the historical and political context in which Central American literature is produced, the Central American transnational experience, and the ways in which literary production contributes to the construction of a …

SPAN 530. Spanish Dialectology (3)

Study of the objective, methods and issues involved in Spanish dialectology. Exploration of major differences between Iberian and Latin American Spanish, and in-depth analysis of phonetic, morphosyntactic and lexical characteristics of regional and national varieties, including the Spanish of the U.S. Students conduct a research project that includes a small-scale linguistic survey involving native speakers …

SPAN 561. Spanish Women Writers (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Topical study of selected works of Spanish women writers, exploring women’s literary traditions and their relationship to mainstream literary movements. Application of recent trends in literary theories and critical methodologies are emphasized. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 580. Spanish Literature from 1898 to 1936 (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of social, philosophical and aesthetic issues as reflected in Spanish literature from 1898 to 1936. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 584. The Novel of the Mexican Revolution (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of selected novels that describe the revolutionary struggle during the years 1910-1915 and the profound changes that the revolution produced in Mexican society. Also emphasizes the novelists’ disillusion with many of the revolutionary governments. Conducted in Spanish. (Cross-listed with CHS 584.)

SPAN 587. The Contemporary Mexican Novel (3)

Prerequisites: SPAN 306, SPAN 307. Study of the recent trends in the Mexican novel through the reading of selected works by the best-known contemporary Mexican novelists. Conducted in Spanish. (Cross-listed with CHS 587.)

SPAN 594A-Z. Selected Topics in Hispanic Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics (3-3-3)

In-depth study of an advanced selected theme or issue in Hispanic literatures, cultures, or linguistics that is not covered in other Spanish graduate courses. Topics will change from semester to semester and be restricted in scope and aimed at gaining depth on a particular issue in the literatures, cultures, or linguistics of the Spanish-speaking world. …

SPAN 595A-Z. Experimental Topics Courses in Hispanic Literatures and Cultures (3-3)

Prerequisites: Two upper division courses in the major; Senior standing. Study of experimental topics in the discipline of Hispanic literatures and cultures, with course content to be determined each semester. May be repeated once for credit. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 600. History of the Spanish Language (3)

Development of Spanish from Latin to the present. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 603. Seminar in Romance Linguistics (3)

Major linguistic problems, with specific reference to Spanish. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 605. Advanced Translation (3)

Prerequisite: SPAN 505 or instructor consent. Further study of translation as it goes beyond the functional conveyance of meaning to the more complex tasks of transferring stylistic features of genre patterns. Analysis of texts already translated into English or Spanish and practice according to the student’s area of interest. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 606. Seminar in a Genre (3-3)

Topics vary from semester to semester. May be taken for credit for a total of two times, or for a maximum of 6 units. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 607. Seminar in a Literary Period (3-3)

Period studied varies from semester to semester. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 608. Seminar in Selected Authors (3-3)

This course will focus attention on a specific author or group of authors, either in Spanish or Latin American literature. This course may be repeatable for credit only if the topic for the semester changes.

SPAN 609. Seminar in Style (3)

Review of principal stylistic theories and their application to Spanish. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 620. Spanish Literary Criticism (3)

Historical development of Spanish literary criticism, including analysis of representative critics. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 680. Selected Topics in Latin American Culture (3)

Preparatory: SPAN 380 or its equivalent, or instructor consent. Detailed analysis of the complex interplay of political, artistic and intellectual forces at work at any given moment in history. Period or area treated varies from semester to semester. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 681. Topics in Spanish Culture (3)

Preparatory: SPAN 381 or its equivalent, or instructor consent. Detailed analysis of the complex interplay of political, artistic and intellectual forces at work at any given moment in history. Period treated varies from semester to semester. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 697. Directed Comprehensive Studies (3)

Required for comprehensive examinations. Taken in final semester. Conducted in Spanish.

SPAN 699A-C. Independent Study (1-3)

Conducted in Spanish.

SUST 111. Understanding Climate Change (3)

Severe global climate change will have disastrous consequences for Earth’s population. This course will develop the basic science behind the predictions for Earth’s climate, and explain why human activities, primarily the emission of greenhouse gases, is the main driver of global warming. Course topics include the causes of climate change, its impacts, projections for the …

SUST 111L. Understanding Climate Change Lab (1)

Corequisite: SUST 111. Laboratory exercises include climate prediction modeling, the use of proxy data, and examination of the impacts of climate change. 3 hours lab per week. Students receive credit for only one course chosen from either SUST 111L, GEOG 111L, or SCI 111L. (Available for General Education, B3 Science Laboratory Activity requirement provided SUST 111 is …

SUST 240. Environmental Ethics (3)

Examines the meaning and value of nature and the environment from a variety of ethical perspectives, including feminist and de-colonial perspectives. Questions can include: How should human beings relate to the natural world? How can we build sustainable interactions with the natural world? Do we have moral obligations toward non-human animals and other parts of …

SUST 300. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Sustainability (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. This course uses an interdisciplinary approach to help students understand concepts of sustainability from multiple perspectives. Students will build skills to apply theories to real-world problems of sustainability, and develop the ability to apply sustainability principles and critical thinking skills to their personal and professional decision-making processes. (Available for …

SUST 310. Best Practices in Sustainability (3)

Prerequisite: Completion of the lower division writing requirement. In this course, students will learn current and best practices for planetary sustainability on an individual, institutional, regional and global level. Topics focus on reducing carbon emissions and pollution, and supporting a healthy and sustainable planet.  These will include clean-energy technology, water conservation, agricultural-based strategies for sustainable farming, management …

SUST 401. Applied Sustainability (3)

Prerequisite: SUST 310 or permission of instructor. Preparatory: SUST 300. This course offers a practical application of sustainability knowledge and practices to address a community problem. Environmental, equity and economic impacts must be considered in performing situation analyses and developing recommendations. Course provides the opportunity to apply sustainability knowledge in a consulting capacity and evaluate …