Humanities (minor) Courses
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Issues in the Humanities
- HUM 20 / Current Issues in the Humanities (2-4)
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A multidisciplinary introduction to ideas, forms, values, and forces that affect our lives in such fields as anthropology, art, classics, history, literature, music, philosophy, religion and allied areas of study. Each half-semester offering of the course presents a topic in contemporary cultures as represented in materials from a variety of disciplines. Topics have included "What Is/Was Postmodernism?", "Politics and the Humanities", "Globalism and the Humanities", "Crossing-Disciplines: Science and the Humanities", "The Body: Materiality and Metaphor", "Freedom", and "The Family".
Amount of credit established at time of registration.
Course may be repeated.
Offered first half of spring semester.
- HUM 21 / Culture and Exchange (2)
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This course introduces students to the idea of exchange as the basis for all human interaction by comparing ideas about and principles of exchange through different disciplinary lenses: exchange in the arts (patronage, sales, publication, criticism), economics (barter and money economics, credit), anthropology (gift-giving, marriage, ritual) and linguistics (language per se) are all possible avenues of investigation and comparison.
Offering to be determined.
Western Humanities
A series of four interdisciplinary introductions to the life of the humanities in the West. Each course presents its historical and cultural period through representative works from the fields of art, architecture, classics, history, literature, music, and philosophy. Surveying major ideas, forms, and forces in their historical and aesthetic contexts, the courses ask new questions of established works and broaden traditional canons. Team taught by faculty from two humanities disciplines.
- HUM 11 / Classical Antiquity (4)
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The courses in the Western Humanities sequence offer rich possibilities for study. While the time frame for each course (Classical period, Middle Ages, Renaissance to Enlightenment, Modernity) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester.
Offered fall semester in odd-numbered years.
Fulfills:
BH BI
- HUM 12 / The European Middle Ages (4)
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The courses in the Western Humanities sequence offer rich possibilities for study. While the time frame for each course (Classical period, Middle Ages, Renaissance to Enlightenment, Modernity) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester.
Offered spring semester in even-numbered years.
- HUM 13 / Forms of Humanism: Renaissance to Enlightenment (4)
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The courses in the Western Humanities sequence offer rich possibilities for study. While the time frame for each course (Classical period, Middle Ages, Renaissance to Enlightenment) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester.
Offered fall semester in even-numbered years.
- HUM 14 / The Modern Age in the West: Self and Society in the West, 1848 to the Present (4)
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The courses in the Western Humanities sequence offer rich possibilities for study. While the time frame for each course (Classical period, Middle Ages, Renaissance to Enlightenment, Modernity) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester.
Offered spring semester in odd-numbered years.
Comparative Humanities
Each of these courses places two or more humanities disciplines in cross-cultural perspective. By examining humanities fields in a comparative, global manner, each team-taught course seeks further understanding of elements of Western, especially North American, cultural practices within the context of world culrtural practices. Literature, music, religion, history, anthropology, art, and other fields provide the material and the issues for this comparative study of the humanities. Taught by faculty from two different humanities disciplines.
- HUM 16 / The Humanities and Islam (4)
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The courses in the Comparative Humanities group offer rich possibilities for study. While the cultural and geographical frame for each course is a constant (Islam/Middle East, Africa/African-American, Asia, Latin America) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester. Offered once every four years in the fall semester. Next offered fall 2007.
- HUM 17 / The Humanities and Africa (4)
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The courses in the Comparative Humanities group offer rich possibilities for study. While the cultural and geographical frame for each course (Islam/Middle East, Africa/African-American, Asia, Latin America) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester. Offered once every four years in the fall semester.
- HUM 18 / The Humanities and Asia (4)
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The courses in the Comparative Humanities group offer rich possibilities for study. While the cultural and geographical frame for each course (Islam/Middle East, Africa/African-American, Asia, Latin America) is constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty who currently teach the course. Please check the course announcements each semester. Offered once every four years in the fall semester.
- HUM 19 / The Humanities and Latin America (4)
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The courses in the Comparative Humanities group offer rich possibilities for study. While the cultural and geographical frame for each course (Islam/Middle East, Africa/African-American, Asia, Latin America) is a constant, the emphasis on specific themes and materials will be determined by the faculty currently teaching the course. Please check the course announcements each semester. Offered once every four years in the fall semester.