HPSS Courses
HPSS S101-01
TOPICS: HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY, & THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Topics in History, Philosophy, and the Social Sciences is an introductory course in which students are encouraged to develop the skills in critical thinking, reading, and writing that are common to the disciplines represented in the Department of History, Philosophy, and the Social Sciences (HPSS). Sections focus on the topics typically addressed within the department's disciplines; through discussion about key texts and issues, students are introduced to important disciplinary methodologies and controversies. All sections have frequent writing assignments, which, combined with substantial feedback from HPSS faculty, afford students the opportunity to develop the strategies and techniques of effective writing. There are no waivers for HPSS-S101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S101-02
TOPICS: HISTORY, PHILOSOPHY, & THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Topics in History, Philosophy, and the Social Sciences is an introductory course in which students are encouraged to develop the skills in critical thinking, reading, and writing that are common to the disciplines represented in the Department of History, Philosophy, and the Social Sciences (HPSS). Sections focus on the topics typically addressed within the department's disciplines; through discussion about key texts and issues, students are introduced to important disciplinary methodologies and controversies. All sections have frequent writing assignments, which, combined with substantial feedback from HPSS faculty, afford students the opportunity to develop the strategies and techniques of effective writing. There are no waivers for HPSS-S101 except for transfer students who have taken an equivalent college course.
Major Requirement | BFA
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S139-01
DIGITAL CULTURE: HOW COMPUTERS TOOK OVER THE WORLD
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course provides a framework for understanding how and why digital technology came to define the modern world. We will first explore the history of “reasoning machines” from ancient robots to analogue computers, before turning to modern digital media. Readings will contextualize the past 100 years of digital history, introducing students to the cultural legacy of the personal computer, the internet, and artificial intelligence. We’ll ask: How are computers unlike other technologies? How does digital media shape our perceptions? And how much of culture can we capture in data. Students will write weekly reading responses, give oral presentations, and complete a final research project.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Computation, Technology, Culture Concentration
HPSS S156-01
THE MEANING OF LIFE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The question, What is the meaning of life? is unclear in large measure because the word "meaning" is ambiguous. The various ways "meaning" can be construed, both objectively and subjectively, in everyday life and in the philosophical arena will be explored. Literature, film, and philosophical texts will be used as vehicles to illuminate how reflection, experience, and transitions through life's stages influence assignment of value to one's existence.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
HPSS S158-01
FOOD AND CITIES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course examines the historical, social, and cultural interrelationships between cities, regions, and food systems. How have urban regions produced, processed, and distributed food across space and time? How have foodways influenced public and private life? Major course topics will include the meanings of food in human societies; the role of science and technology in nutrition and diet; food security and sovereignty; sustainability and resilience in food systems; and community-based food planning and policy governance.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S173-01
FROM OPIUM TO ATOMIC BOMB: THE MAKING OF MODERN EAST ASIA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
East Asia has the largest population and one of the most vital economies in the world today. While serving as an economic powerhouse, the region also faces persistent social, cultural, and political challenges. Many of those challenges, such as the tension on the Korean peninsula and across the Taiwan strait, could be traced to the earlier history. This course provides an introduction to the histories of East Asia over the last four centuries. It would examine significant events in the region's history, including the encounter with the West, colonialism and imperialism, the rise of nationalism and Communist revolution, decolonization, World War Two, and the impact of the Cold War. We will explore the historical forces behind the changes of East Asian politics, society and cultures. Furthermore, through analyzing the historical complexity of East Asian affairs, we hope to contribute to the fostering of a peaceful, rational, and dynamic mechanism in the region.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HPSS S173-02
FROM OPIUM TO ATOMIC BOMB: THE MAKING OF MODERN EAST ASIA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
East Asia has the largest population and one of the most vital economies in the world today. While serving as an economic powerhouse, the region also faces persistent social, cultural, and political challenges. Many of those challenges, such as the tension on the Korean peninsula and across the Taiwan strait, could be traced to the earlier history. This course provides an introduction to the histories of East Asia over the last four centuries. It would examine significant events in the region's history, including the encounter with the West, colonialism and imperialism, the rise of nationalism and Communist revolution, decolonization, World War Two, and the impact of the Cold War. We will explore the historical forces behind the changes of East Asian politics, society and cultures. Furthermore, through analyzing the historical complexity of East Asian affairs, we hope to contribute to the fostering of a peaceful, rational, and dynamic mechanism in the region.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HPSS S178-01
THE ART OF HEALING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Welcome to The Art of Healing. We will begin with a general overview and introduction to counseling techniques, with specific attention to the therapeutic applications of art making. Students will be introduced to the foundational aspects of art therapy, creative expression and the use of art media to treat both emotional and physical illness.
This is an experiential course that will emphasize practice as well as didactic information. This course will review how the creative arts can be used in the counseling process, focusing on music, dance and movement, imagery, visual arts, literature and writing. Students will be provided information on the history, rationale, and benefits of using artistic methods, as well as trends in the use of the arts in counseling. Course meetings include lectures, class discussions, films, and peer exchanges.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S223-01
CONTEMPORARY GENDERS IN POP CULTURE
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Tradwives, alpha males, clean girls, femboys, bimbos…There is a seemingly endless supply of labels for contemporary versions of femininity and masculinity, all with their own norms, aesthetics, and critics. This course acts as an introduction to gender studies through the modern internet’s taxonomy of gendered labels. We will learn about the systems of power that led these trendy genders to emerge, how they relate to race, economy, and sexuality, and how they challenge and uphold structures of domination. Using feminist and queer theory, we'll analyze digital objects like TikToks and memes as we think critically about the present and future of gender.
Elective
HPSS S227-01
INDIGENOUS GLOBAL CINEMA CLASSICS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course presents Indigenous-produced, -directed, and -acted productions from all over the world. It provides a cultural and artistic framework for world Indigenous filmmaking and centers classic cinema and film pieces that are foundational works. Through lectures, screenings, discussion, project work, and guest speakers the students will learn how to identify various narratives, aesthetics, styles, approaches and delivery of story from indigenous groups from around the world.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S228-01
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INFLATION
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Inflation is usually associated with retail price increases. While this is a commonly accepted indicator, it only reflects certain symptoms of inflation. The root causes of inflation are deeper and more complex. In this course we will unravel the complexity and examine the main components of the inflation pyramid, from the prices we pay at the store, to the cost of investment goods and labor, to monetary policies, to cultural perceptions, to social forces that use inflation as a vehicle to achieve their goals. We will investigate inflation as a phenomenon that spans economics, politics, and sociology. The purely quantitative aspects of inflation are not included in our discussion, we leave them to econometricians. Instead, we concentrate on social forces, political power, and economic exchange.
Familiarity with formal economics, while useful, is not a prerequisite for this course. In the first three meetings we will discuss the basics of the economic frame of reference. The remaining time will be devoted to establishing connections between inflation (both visible and hidden), political power, collective action, and normative-value preferences of the social groups that are in position to benefit from inflation. After taking this course, the students will be able to recognize socio-political changes that are likely to produce inflation or change the existing inflationary regime.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S232-01
PSYCHOLOGY OF AGING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The Psychology of Aging provides an overview of human development from early adulthood through elderhood and death. Topics include behavior-biology interactions and perceptual, cognitive, and intellectual functioning. The goal of the course is to establish a basis for understanding the processes of change through which humans progress. We do this by reviewing the physical, cognitive, and psychosocial aspects of human development as it applies to others and ourselves.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S236-01
HISTORY OF LISTENING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will examine the ways that listening can be understood historically. Using North America as a context for study, we will explore changing listening practices and their meanings over the last three centuries, including ideologies of sound and hearing in settler-colonialism; the politics of attention in 19th-century church and theater; sectional reactions to Civil War soundscapes; the emergence of acoustic technologies, from telephony to radio; 20th-century noise abatement movements, and the manipulable auditory experiences of the digital age. Throughout, we will situate listening in culture, law, materiality, and the body. Work will include primary source research and short writing assignments.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S236-02
HISTORY OF LISTENING
SECTION DESCRIPTION
This course will examine the ways that listening can be understood historically. Using North America as a context for study, we will explore changing listening practices and their meanings over the last three centuries, including ideologies of sound and hearing in settler-colonialism; the politics of attention in 19th-century church and theater; sectional reactions to Civil War soundscapes; the emergence of acoustic technologies, from telephony to radio; 20th-century noise abatement movements, and the manipulable auditory experiences of the digital age. Throughout, we will situate listening in culture, law, materiality, and the body. Work will include primary source research and short writing assignments.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S252-01
THE AMERICAN WAY OF DEATH
SECTION DESCRIPTION
How we die says as much about us as how we live. As a result, much can be learned by exploring America's changing attitudes toward death and dying, funeral rites, burial practices, and mourning rituals. Part personal tragedy, part communal experience, and part political event, our individual and collective responses to death should be treated as socially constructed artifacts, offering valuable insight into complex cultural, historical, and socio-economic forces. Buried within the American way of death are clues to understanding how this nation's physical, spiritual, economic, scientific, and political landscapes have changed over time. Rituals and practices surrounding death reflect the realities of class conflict, gender politics, race relations, and an increasingly diverse population. So often, deathcare has often been at the forefront of major cultural shifts and national debates over who belongs here, the role of government, the shape of our cities and towns, patterns of consumption, and, more recently, the future of our planet. Growing interest in green burials suggests not only a burgeoning concern with the carbon footprint of human remains, but shifting ideas about our individual legacies and what we leave behind. A discussion-based course, student engagement and active participation are key. Each student will be required to select a portion of the assigned reading to present to the class. In addition, students will work in small groups to craft a 20-minute oral presentation that examines and contextualizes the funeralization practices of a particular segment of the American people. Finally, each student will complete a 5 - 7 page research paper using a combination of primary and secondary sources (to be approved by the instructor) that elucidate and interrogate a specific aspect of the American way of death.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HPSS S253-01
NATIVE AMERICAN ORAL TRADITIONS
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Native American oral traditions, which include storytelling, teachings, family and tribal history, and contemporary Indian literature, lie at the heart of tribal culture. It is mainly through oral tradition that American Indian cultures have been preserved and transmitted through the generations. American Indian stories, teachings, and oral histories are rich in cultural context. They provide great insight into the worldview, values, and lifestyle, which are an integral part of the heritage of American Indians. This course examines the cultural and historical contexts of Native American and Indigenous oral traditions with a focus in North America and other Indigenous traditions.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Administrative :: Seminar Requirement
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HPSS S255-01
FEMINIST THEORIES AND ACTIVISM
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Feminist movements have changed the world in profound ways, despite often radical resistance to and backlash against those movements. Primarily through readings and film, this course will consider the ways in which the various strands of feminism have theorized and acted around reproductive justice, environmental justice, and anti-militarism. We will situate contemporary issues within a historical context and examine and critique the methods by which feminist activists and scholars question, challenge, and reshape structures of power.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S272-01
PHENOMENOLOGY AND ART
SECTION DESCRIPTION
What is phenomenology, and why does it matter for art? This course will serve as an introduction to phenomenology and some of its central methods, themes, and questions. Working within and between philosophy, art, and design, we will explore how phenomenology can enliven and enrich artistic practices, and how artistic practices can broaden and enrich our understandings of perception, sensation, and embodied experience. We will consider a range of philosophical views, from canonical figures in the field (Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Maurice Merleau-Ponty) to key insights from critical phenomenologists (Alia Al-Saji, Mariana Ortega, Lisa Guenther) who question how socially and historically contingent systems of power shape our experiences in and of the world. Students will be required to complete weekly readings and participate in class discussions. The course will also include long and short form writing assignments as well as student presentations.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
HPSS S275-01
WOMEN IN THE MIDDLE AGES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
Leaders, teachers, writers, artisans, laborers, mothers. While this brief list may look like a small selection of roles available to women today, it also represents positions held by women in the Middle Ages. In taking the broadest possible chronological approach to this time period from the years 500 to 1500, this course will examine the lives of medieval women. From queens to peasants, nuns to wives, and mystics to proprietors, we will explore the wide variety of roles and statuses that these women had. Over the course of the semester, we will investigate whether these figures were marginalized members of society, powerful agents, or a combination of both.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration
- Nature-Culture-Sustainability Studies Concentration
HPSS S279-01
BONDAGE & ENSLAVEMENT IN LATIN AMERICA
SECTION DESCRIPTION
The course examines the human experience of enslavement and bondage in Latin America. Students will read about pre-Columbian forms of human bondage, the early modern Latin American enslavement and trafficking of Native and African peoples in various forms, and bondage as it existed after the independence movements in Central and South America and the Caribbean nations. The course also will address current instances of labor bondage and human trafficking in the region in recent decades. The course will include lecture, discussion, and either group or individual research projects on the course topics.
Elective
COURSE TAGS
- History, Philosophy & the Social Sciences Concentration