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Term
Time & Day Offered
Level
Credits
Course Duration

The Problem of Sylvia Plath — LIT2122.02

Instructor: Mark Wunderlich
Credits: 2
Sylvia Plath is one of the most widely-read and influential poets of the 20th century, yet her work has been read through the lens of her biography in ways that have serious consequences of interpretation. Knowing what we do about the life of this important artist, how can we read the poems and prose in ways that counter the received narratives of tragedy and self-destruction?

The Process and Ethics of Using Hacked and Leaked Data — CS4139.01

Instructor: Michael Corey
Credits: 4
The advent of big data has also led to the advent of big data leaks. As the size of data leaks the ability to research, learn from, and report on these leaks has likewise become increasingly complicated. Beyond the technical ability to analyze this data, there are questions of cyber security when dealing with data of unknown provenance. Thirdly, there is the thorny question of

The Prose Poem — LIT4280.02

Instructor: Phillip B. Williams
Credits: 2
The prose poem challenges the very notion of genre—but what are the implications of this challenge and how does it reframe the perceived disciplinary limits of literature itself? Students will learn the history of the prose poem beginning in 19th-century France through its contemporary usage. Reading a book a week, there will be discussion about form and function, the nuance of

The Prose Poem — LIT4280.01

Instructor: Phillip Williams
Credits: 2
The prose poem challenges the very notion of genre—but what are the implications of this challenge and how does it reframe the perceived disciplinary limits of literature itself? Students will learn the history of the prose poem beginning in 19th-century France through its contemporary usage. Reading a book a week, there will be discussion about form and function, the nuance of

The Prose Poem — LIT4280.02

Instructor: Michael Dumanis
Credits: 2
The prose poem challenges the very notion of genre—but what are the implications of this challenge and how does it reframe the perceived disciplinary limits of literature itself? Students will learn the history of the prose poem beginning in 19th-century France through its contemporary usage. Reading a book a week, there will be discussion about form and function, the nuance of

The Prose Poem — LIT4280.01) (day/time updated as of 10/9/2023

Instructor: Michael Dumanis
Credits: 2
Is a poem still a poem when it replaces line and stanza with sentence and paragraph? If so, what components are essential to a poem? What is the distinction between a prose poem and a flash fiction? In this course, we will read a wide range of paragraphs and book-length collections of paragraphs as we familiarize ourselves with the history and range of the prose poem. We will

The Psychology of Class — PSY4224.01

Instructor: Ella Ben Hagai
Credits: 4
In recent years there has been renewed interest among psychologists regarding how individuals' socio-economic position shape their psychology. In this class we will explore how class background shapes people's emotions, tastes (for food, music or art), and political ideologies. We will study these questions using both classical sociological theories (Marx, Weber, and Bourdieu)

The Psychology of Feelings and the Social Construction of Emotions — PSY4105.01

Instructor: Ella Ben Hagai
Credits: 4
This advanced course provides a general introduction to the basic science of feelings and emotions, including evolutionary, neurophysiological, and cognitive approaches. In addition to examining the psychological processes with which emotions are privately felt, we will examine the social construction of emotions. We will explore how culture, gender and class backgrounds shape

The Puppet Project — DRA4244.01

Instructor: Tilly Grimes
Credits: 4
Part performance, part design, part construction, this class will center around the creation of characters, fabricating them, and then bringing them to life. We will also explore an overview of the history and use of puppets in storytelling and different forms of puppet performance. We will also look at different Puppetry practitioners practicing today. Although we will

The Question of Art in the Twentieth Century — AH2232.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Credits: 4
What is art? This question proved central to the evolution of artistic practice in the West during the twentieth century. The push to define and redefine art was entangled with several other queries: What cannot be considered art? What does an artist do (or not do)? What (or who) is “modern”? What distinguishes art from life itself? Looking at the social histories from

The Real Betty Parsons — VA4121.02

Instructor: Anne Thompson
Credits: 2
Gallerist Betty Parsons was every bit as maverick as the Abstract Expressionist painters she so famously debuted. An artist in her own right and a lesbian, she championed women, gay and bisexual artists and other practitioners outside the white, macho midcentury scene. A reconsideration of this history shapes a course that positions Parsons within today’s discourse as a hybrid

The Real Housewives of Lit — LIT2528.01

Instructor: Manuel Gonzales
Credits: 4
Beginning with Medea and Lysistrata, we will look at various women, 'housewives' you might say (though I wouldn't, not to their faces) through literature, possibly moving into Taming of the Shrew and MacBeth, skipping ever so lightly into the 19th century to pop in on Jane Austen and Charlotte Brontë, before moving firmly into the modern literature of the early- and mid- and

The Recording Studio as a Magical Escape Pod — MSR4367.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Credits: 4
In this course, students will learn how to take a simple song and develop it, over the course of the semester, into a maximalist, through-composed “freewave” masterpiece. Students will learn all of the basics of studio recording and become comfortable using the space to explore their wildest aural creativity. A focus will be given to learning how to use EQ, compressors,

The Refugee Crisis: Where Can I Go? — MOD2156.03

Instructor: Susan Sgorbati and David Bond
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 1
In response to the burgeoning crisis of migration-- people fleeing their homes in war-torn Syria and Afghanistan, in countries roiling with decades long upheaval like Libya, Ethiopia, Eritrea and the Sudan, drug lord tyranny and violence in Central America, and even new climate change refugees--CAPA will offer a Pop-Up course this term to examine how our global community has

The Regeneration Generation: Rebuilding the Natural Abundance of Earth — APA2329.01

Instructor: Susan Sgorbati
Credits: 2
Practical steps can be taken today to reverse the major environmental, social, health, and political downward-spirals that have defined the previous few decades on Earth. The growing global tragedies are born from a system of industrial resource management that creates scarcity—empowering the few—as opposed to creating abundance—empowering the many. A movement is growing around

The Renaissance — HIS2341.01

Instructor: Carol Pal
Credits: 4
This course is a survey of the cultural, social, and religious movements that transformed Europe between 1350 and 1600. These revolutions in Western thought gave birth to the Enlightenment and the intellectual outlook that still characterizes our culture today. Using primary source materials such as letters, literature, court records, diaries, and paintings, we examine both

The Renaissance — HIS2341.01

Instructor: Carol Pal
Credits: 4
This course is a survey of the cultural, social, and religious movements that transformed Europe between 1350 and 1700. These revolutions in Western thought gave birth to the Enlightenment, and the intellectual outlook that still characterizes our culture today. Using primary source materials such as letters, literature, court records, diaries, and paintings, we examine both

The Renaissance — HIS2341.01

Instructor: Carol Pal
Credits: 4
This course is a survey of the cultural, social, and religious movements that transformed Europe between 1350 and 1600. These revolutions in Western thought gave birth to the Enlightenment, and the intellectual outlook that still characterizes our culture today. Using primary source materials such as letters, literature, court records, diaries, and paintings, we examine both

The Return of All Things — MUS2031.01

Instructor: Nicholas Brooke
Credits: 2
In The Return of All Things, we are activated to investigate the Ź College Archive as source material for the creation of sound works. These new works can take on a multitude of forms including collaborative cross-media projects, improvisations, variously notated compositions, radio plays, or installations. We will look at other ways in which the archeological dig of

The Right/Wrong/Right Dance: Breaking the Rules of Composition — DAN2147.02

Instructor: Dana Reitz
Credits: 1
In this lab we will look at certain (so-called) traditional aspects to a (good) dance and then attempt to break it down and reframe this tradition with a discipline that evokes creative (aleatoric) accidents and the inexplicable nature of the creative process.  A lab that examines how performance is thought about, considered and looked upon, watched, inside and out. 

The River in Literature — LIT2507.01

Instructor: Akiko Busch
Credits: 4
The river may be the geographic feature of the earth that speaks to us most deeply.  It divides and it connects; it is what takes us to things and away from things.  And it comes naturally to us to find some metaphor for human experience in the strength or flow or velocity of a river, to find the familiar in the sight of two rivers peaceably merging, or to imagine a

The River, The Forest, The Glacier: Classics of American Environmental Literature — LIT4139.02

Instructor: Akiko Busch
Credits: 2
How to take measure of place is a question that has long resonated in the American imagination, and this course considers both the geography and the voices that provide the foundation for current environmental writing. The Exploration of the Colorado River and its Canyons by John Wesley Powell, The Maine Woods by H. D. Thoreau, and Travels in Alaska by John Muir offer occasion

The Romantic Poets — LIT2249.01

Instructor: Michael Dumanis
Credits: 4
This course provides an immersion into the work of a group of late 18th century and early 19th century British poets and thinkers who reacted against the rationalism of Enlightenment thought, the tumultuous politics of the day, and the birth of the Industrial Revolution by valorizing imagination over reason, mystery over certainty, nature over artifice, and the sensuous over

The Romantic Poets — LIT2249.01

Instructor: mark wunderlich
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 4
Toward the end of the 18th century, writers, thinkers and artists began to react against the rationalism of the Enlightenment, the coming Industrial Revolution and the political claustrophobia of Europe, and they set out on a new path. The result was the Romantic movement, and it gave us some of the most enduring poetic works. In this course, we will look at both the German and