Course Offerings (CAS Bulletin)


Introduction to Gender and Sexuality Studies
V97.0010  Identical to V57.0013 and V93.0022. Offered every fall. 4 points.
Designed to interest and challenge both the student new to the study of gender and sexuality and the student who has taken departmental courses focusing on women, gender, and/or sexuality. Through a focus on particular issues and topics, this course explores the construction of sex, gender, and sexuality; gender asymmetry in society; sexual normativity and violations of norms; and the interactions of sex, gender, sexuality, race, class, and nation. This interdisciplinary course engages materials and methodologies from a range of media and disciplines, such as literature, the visual arts, history, sociology, psychology, and anthropology. Examines both feminist and nonfeminist arguments from a variety of critical perspectives.

Studying Gender, Studying Sexuality
V97.0011  Formerly V97.0658. Identical to V57.0658 and V13.0011. Offered every spring. 4 points.
Designed as a historical introduction, this course traces the intertwined and uneven development of the fields of women’s studies; gender studies; men’s and masculinity studies; lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender studies; and queer studies in the U.S. Students read polemical writings, popular tracts, and scholarly investigations that have contributed to these fields and are encouraged to evaluate critically how a canon is formed around these classic texts. Students also explore the relationship of these fields to institutionalizations of the study of race, class, and nation, including ethnic studies, area studies, colonial and postcolonial studies, and investigations of globalization.

Language and Society
V97.0015  Identical to V61.0015. 4 points.
See description under Linguistics (61).

Minorities and the Media
V97.0016  Identical to V54.0016 and V11.0016. 4 points.
See description under Journalism (54).

Anthropology of Language
V97.0017  Identical to V14.0017. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology (14).

Sex and Gender
V97.0021  Identical to V93.0021. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).

Family and Kinship
V97.0041  Identical to V14.0041. Beidelman, Blu, Lynch, Myers. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology (14).

Gender Roles and Behavior
V97.0072  Identical to V89.0072. 4 points.
See description under Psychology (89).

Psychology of Marriage
V97.0079  Identical to V89.0079. 4 points.
See description under Psychology (89).

Race, Gender, and Citizenship
V97.0092  Identical to V57.0092. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Topics in American History: Masculinities
V97.0094  Identical to V57.0094. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Re-Imagining the City: People, Place, and Power
V97.0102  Identical to V99.0102. 4 points.
See description under Metropolitan Studies (99).

Gender, Race, and Sexuality: Peoples of Latin America
V97.0103  Identical to V14.0103. Prerequisite: V14.0001 or V55.0515. Abercrombie. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology (14).

Women and Men: Anthropological Perspectives
V97.0112  Identical to V14.0112. Beidelman, Ginsburg. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology (14).

Sex, Gender, and Language
V97.0121  Identical to V61.0021. 4 points.
See description under Linguistics (61).

Literature of the Americas: Women’s Self-Figuration
V97.0122  Identical to V29.0122. 4 points.
See description under Comparative Literature (29).

Gay and Lesbian Performance
V97.0138  Identical to V30.0137 and H28.0624. 4 points.
See description under Dramatic Literature, Theatre History, and the Cinema (30).

Topics in 20th-Century Literature: Global Women’s Writing
V97.0190  Identical to V29.0190. 4 points.
See description under Comparative Literature (29).

Women in European History Since 1750
V97.0196  Identical to V57.0196. Nolan. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Social Movements, Protest, and Conflict
V97.0205  Identical to V93.0205. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).

Poverty and Income Distribution
V97.0233  Identical to V31.0233. 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).

Sexual Identity and the Urban Community
V97.0245  Identical to V99.0245. 4 points.
See description under Metropolitan Studies (99).

Women in the Economy
V97.0252  Identical to V31.0252 and C31.0252. Prerequisite: V31.0002. 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).

Seminar: Women in Medieval and Renaissance Europe
V97.0270  Identical to V57.0270. Johnson. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Women in the Urban Environment
V97.0290  Identical to V99.0270. 4 points.
See description under Metropolitan Studies (99).

Sex and the City in Ancient Greece
V97.0293  Identical to V27.0293. 4 points.
See description under Classics (27).

In Her Own Image: Representations of Asian American Women
V97.0302  Identical to V15.0302. 4 points.
See description under Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).

Law and Society
V97.0335  Identical to V53.0335 and V99.0372. Harrington. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).

Gender in Law
V97.0336  Identical to V53.0336. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).

Queer Cultures
V97.0419  Prerequisite: V97.0010 or V97.0011 or permission of instructor. 4 points.
Develops concepts of queerness and queer cultures through historical and theoretical research. Topics might include the historical shift from an emphasis on homosexual acts to homosexual persons; the history of the study of gays and lesbians by the medical, psychology, and sexology professions; intersections of race, ethnicity, class, gender, sex, and sexual orientation in literary and visual texts; homophobia; hate crimes; outing; activism; and performativity.

The Family
V97.0451  Identical to V93.0451. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).

Sexual Diversity in Society
V97.0511  Identical to V93.0511. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).

Gender(s) and Sexualities in Asian America
V97.0604  Identical to V15.0604. 4 points.
See description under Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).

Feminism and Theatre
V97.0623  Identical to V30.0240 and H28.0623. Martin. 4 points.
See description under Dramatic Literature, Theatre History, and the Cinema (30).

Women in American Society
V97.0635  Identical to V57.0635. Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Women’s Writing in Latin America
V97.0640  Identical to V95.0640. Taught in Spanish. 4 points.
See description under Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literature (95).

Race, Gender, and Sexuality in American History
V97.0655  Identical to V57.0655 and V11.0655. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Women and Slavery in the Americas
V97.0660  Identical to V57.0660. Krauthamer. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Women and War: Contemporary Arabic Literature and Film
V97.0714  Identical to V77.0714 and V29.0714. Dallal. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (77).

Gender and Judaism
V97.0718  Identical to V78.0718 and V90.0815. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and Judaic Studies (78).

Women and the Media
V97.0720  Identical to V54.0720. 4 points.
See description under Journalism and Mass Communication (54).

Gender, Identity, and Society in the Middle East
V97.0729  Identical to V77.0729. Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011 and one introductory-level course in the social sciences, or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
Explores the historical and contemporary conditions of Middle Eastern women, including the effects of colonialism, decolonization, nationalism, revolution, and war. Looks at the political economies, religious movements, and cultural norms that seek to define, restrict, or expand women’s roles and rights. Interrogates the ways in which different groups of Middle Eastern women express themselves, struggle for their lives, and negotiate their identities.

Theories of Gender and Sexuality
V97.0742  Prerequisite: V97.0010 or V97.0011 or V97.0021 or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
Allows students to explore theoretical issues in gender and sexuality studies on an advanced level. Theoretical arenas vary and may include feminist theory; queer theory; psychoanalysis; postcolonial theory; border theory; social movements; postmodernism; performativity; theories of history, culture, and representation; intersectionality. See course schedule for current description.

Gender, Nation, and the Colonial Condition
V97.0744  Prerequisite: V97.0010 or V97.0011 or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
This advanced-level course is an interdisciplinary and comparative inquiry into the historical and contemporary linkages between gender dynamics, the culture of nationalism, and the politics of colonialism on an international scale. The course studies different perspectives on the national question—as a liberation movement, as a political ideology, and as a mechanism for inclusion/exclusion.

Queer Literature
V97.0749  Formerly V97.0700 and V41.0700. Identical to V41.0749. Prerequisites: one course in literature, V97.0010 or V97.0011, or permission of instructor. Offered every fall. 4 points.
This course develops notions of queerness—deviation from a sexed and gendered norm—through detailed exploration of literary texts in a variety of genres. Historical period and national focus (British, American, Commonwealth) may vary; consult the schedule of classes for current focus.

Representations of Women
V97.0755  Identical to V41.0755. 4 points.
See description under English (41).

Israeli Women Writers
V97.0783  Identical to V78.0783. Taught in Hebrew. Feldman. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and Judaic Studies (78).

Women in Islamic Law
V97.0784  Identical to V77.0783. Haykel. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (77).

Border Crossing: Gender, Sexuality, and Migration
V97.0817  Identical to V57.0817. Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011 and one introductory-level course in the social sciences, or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
This advanced-level course, a cross-cultural and comparative seminar, examines how border crossing in the age of accelerated globalization shapes the gendered construction of exiled/displaced communities. A combination of conceptual frameworks and case studies places the experiences of displaced and refugee women at the center of intellectual enquiry.

Topics in Women’s History
V97.0820  Identical to V57.0820. 4 points.
See description under History (57).

Women and the Novel
V97.0830  Identical to V29.0830. 4 points.
See description under Comparative Literature (29).

Sex, Gender, and Globalization
V97.0833  Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011 and one introductory social sciences course, or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
If pushed to choose a single term to describe this historical moment, many might choose “globalization” to describe the contemporary world. Everything seems to be “going global”—media, markets, movements. Have sex and gender “gone global” as well? This course approaches this question by identifying key concepts and frameworks in the field of feminist geography. Specific issues include transnational queer communities, international reproductive politics, sex tourism, and cybersex.

Theory of the Avant-Garde: Writing for Their Lives—Women and Modernism
V97.0841  Identical to V29.0841. 4 points.
See description under Comparative Literature (29).

Transgender: Histories, Identities, Politics
V97.0848  Identical to V14.0848. Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011 and one introductory-level course in the social sciences, or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
This course investigates transgender identities, movements, and communities as they have arisen in particular historical, political, social, and cultural conditions. At the heart of this course is a series of questions about transgender’s origins, enabling functions, exclusions, problems, and possibilities.

Gender and Development: The Political Economy of Sex and Gender
V97.0849  Identical to V14.0849. Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011 and one introductory-level course in the social sciences, or permission of instructor. Offered every year. 4 points.
This advanced-level course tackles development theory and the effects of development policies on people’s lives, including such questions as whether developmental policies are gender-neutral and whether the study of “development” should be the exclusive domain of the Third World. Focusing on rethinking development, we examine the intellectual roots of development theory to understand how this socioeconomic process has been conceptualized and implemented.

Sexual Rights, Sexual Wrongs: Sex Work, Pornography, and Other Controversies
V97.0853 Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011. Offered every year. 4 points.
This course introduces undergraduate students to the central concepts of “sexual rights,” which have emerged recently from both community action and multidisciplinary academic perspectives. Through an exploration of academic, legal, and activist perspectives, students are encouraged to formulate analyses of a variety of themes, such as women’s sexual rights, migration and sexuality, heterosexuality, HIV and public health, gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender rights, sex work, and pornography and the “sex wars.”

Women Writers in France
V97.0935  Identical to V45.0935. When conducted in English, this course is numbered V97.0835 and is identical to V45.0835. 4 points.
See description under French (45).

Seminar: Gender and Deviance
V97.0938  Identical to V93.0938. Prerequisite: four courses in sociology or written permission of instructor. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).

Topics in French Literature: The Image of Women in French Literature
V97.0968  Identical to V45.0968. 4 points.
See description under French (45).

Internship in Gender and Sexuality Studies
V97.0980 (fall), 0981 (spring)  Open to gender and sexuality studies majors and minors only. Prerequisites: permission of the director of undergraduate studies and the professor who will supervise the internship, plus completion of at least one gender and sexuality studies course. 2 or 4 points per term.
Students are placed with an organization or business specializing in gender and sexuality issues and develop a reading list in context of which they evaluate their experience in a final paper. Students wishing to pursue honors in gender and sexuality studies must take a 4-point internship. See “Honors,” above.

Topics in Gender and Sexuality Studies
V97.0996  Offered every semester. 4 points.
In-depth study of a particular problem or research area within gender and sexuality studies. See course schedule for current topic.

Independent Study
V97.0997 (fall), 0998 (spring)  Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. 2 or 4 points per term.

Senior Seminar
V97.0999  Prerequisites:V97.0010 or V97.0011, senior status in the major, or permission of instructor. Offered every spring. 4 points.
An advanced interdisciplinary course in theory and research, exploring tensions, debates, and methodologies in the study of gender and sexuality. Culminates in a research project.