300
Prerequisite: Open to sophomores, juniors or seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructors. An interdisciplinary study of issues of gender in art, religion and society, with emphasis on the major cultural traditions of West and East. The course examines images of women from prehistoric times until about 1500 and considers the way in which these images change from period to period and from culture to culture.
Credits
3.0
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisite: completion of the Literature area of the Core or permission of the instructor.
The interaction of a “cultural landscape” and literature from the turn of the century to the year 2002 will be studied in works by Alfred Döeblin, Nelly Sachs, Bertolt Brecht, Christa Wolf, Zehra Cirak, etc. Movies will be used to provide a visual background and further topics for discussion.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
GER 301
Offered
Offered As Needed
Prerequisite: Fulfillment of Literature section of the Core.
Study of major works of Greek and Roman literature, their use of history and myth and their influence in the Western world.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
CL 302
Offered
Offered Spring Even Years
Prerequisites: Completion of the Laboratory Course portion of Scientific Thought. Open to sophomores, juniors, or seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor.
From global climate change to pollution to decreasing biodiversity, our society faces a wide range of environmental issues. This course will look at a range of these issues and what we can do to mitigate these challenges. The course will focus on the role STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) disciplines play in understanding and finding solutions to both local and global environmental issues, but it will also incorporate political, legal, ethical, and social dimensions of environmental issues.
Credits
3.0
Offered
Term As Needed
Prerequisite: Open to sophomores, juniors or seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. An interdisciplinary study of the Third World that uses aspects of literature, culture, politics, biology, demography, history and economics to understand how the world works for most of humankind. The course features field trips, guest speakers and a team approach to investigating problems of the developing world.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
SPAN 302
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisite: Open to sophomores, juniors or seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. This course examines the historical and contemporary aspects of censorship in America, paying particular attention to government and societal attempts to repress speech, press and the arts.
Credits
3.0
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisite: Concurrent enrollment in ENSP 210 and ENSP 212 or permission of instructor. Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors in the Honors Program. The natural history of the Chesapeake Bay region will be examined in the context of society’s exploitation of a natural system. Scientific topics will be combined with historical, sociological, and economic perspectives to form a coherent portrait of the interplay between society and the environment.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
ENSP 307
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisite: Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. An interdisciplinary study of the institution of motherhood and its representations in modern cultural productions of the Western world. Students will examine the myth and reality of mothering by analyzing readings in social, political and psychoanalytical theory as well literary and filmic texts. This course may be used for credit in the women’s studies minor.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
SWAG 312
Offered
Fall Semester (Every 3 Years)
Prerequisites: Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. This course analyzes great political trials that have reflected the political controversies of their time. Western tradition of law and legal analysis through trials held in the United States, France and England will be examined and contrasted and compared with trials held under socialist, Islamic and indigenous political systems.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
PSCI 313
Offered
(As Needed)
Prerequisite: Prerequisites: Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. Through analysis and discussion of works of great literature, students will examine questions concerning human nature and ethical responsibility. Authors may include Tolstoy, Greene, Hurston, Marx, Golding, Camus, Sophocles and C.S. Lewis.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
PHIL 315
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisites: Completion of the Scientific Thought and Philosophical Inquiry areas of the Core. Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the Honors Program or with permission of the instructor. This course examines basic advances in genetics, reproductive medicine and in combating infectious diseases and explores their ethical implications, particularly for non-Western cultures. Students use a case study approach to consider topics like genetics, epidemics, euthanasia and reproductive technology from a global, non-Western perspective.
Credits
3.0
Core
Global Perspectives
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
PHIL 316
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisites: Completion of the Literary Analysis and the Visual and Performing Arts areas of the core. Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors in the Honors Program or with permission of the instructor. In this class we will survey the writings of philosophers, artists and other figures who attempted to explain why music appeals to us and what the musical experience says about human nature. Readings will be taken from antiquity, the distant past, and the present day. Our goal will be: (1) to study how philosophers have attempted to explain what the musical experience says about human nature; (2) to study what these explanations say about the time periods and cultures from which they came.
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
MUSC 318
Offered
Fall Semester (Odd Years)
Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors in the Honors Program, or with permission of the instructor. Exploration of the legal and technology issues that arise with the emergence and use of digital technologies throughout society. Topics include: relevancy, investigation, prosecution and enforcement and jurisdiction of existing laws in cyberspace, online vices, internet bullying, identity theft cyberterrorism, hacking and digital forensics.
Credits
3.0
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisites: One course from the Scientific Thought section of the Core. This course takes a philosophical and scientific approach to understanding current ethical issues in medicine and covers topics such as abortion, euthanasia, genetic engineering, genetic testing, informed consent, organ transplantation and experimentation with human subjects.
Credits
3.0
Core
Philosophical Inquiry
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as PHIL 319
Offered
As Needed
Prerequisite: Open to juniors or seniors in the Honors Program, with permission of the instructor and the Honors Director. An opportunity for juniors or seniors in the Honors Program to assist instructors in FYS 101H, HON 102 or HON 201 by attending classes, helping to lead discussions and assisting with class-related projects and peer review. May not be repeated or substituted for required courses in the Honors Program. Grading is on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
Credits
2.0
Offered
Either Semester
Prerequisites: Completion of the Literary Analysis requirement, ENGL 222 or ENGL 223 or ENGL 311; or permission of the instructor. A study of utopian thought from Plato's Republic through contemporary science fiction. Texts may include St. Augustine's City of God, The Rule of St. Benedict, Campanella's City of the Sun, More's Utopia, Bellamy's Looking Backward, Gilman's Herland, Huxley's Brave New World, as well as films such as Gattaca and Minority Report. The course will also include a study of experimental utopian communities. (CT)
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
ENGL 364
Offered
Spring Semester (Odd Years)
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. How does the American landscape function in our imagination, our policies, our lives? This reading-intensive course covers a wide range of environmental works: political, scientific, philosophical, autobiographical. Authors include Thoreau, Aldo Leopold, Leslie Marmon Silko, Annie Dillard, Gary Snyder, Jack London, and Eddy Harris. (H2, CT)
Credits
3.0
Cross Listed Courses
Also offered as
ENGL 368
Offered
Fall Semester (Odd Years)
Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor. Independent work in a topic selected by the student and faculty adviser. Conferences.
Credits
1.0 - 3.0
Offered
Either Semester
An upper-level special topics course offered at the discretion of the department. The content and methods vary with the interest of students and faculty members
Credits
3.0
Offered
As needed