Art History
- AHIS 121gp: Foundations of Western Art: Renaissance to Contemporary
Instructor: Samantha Burton
Description: European art its legacy in the Americas. Painting, sculpture, architecture and other visual media considered in relation to social and cultural history.
- AHIS 128gp: The Arts and Society in Latin America, Colonial to Contempor
Instructor: Daniela Bleichmar
Description: Survey of the art, architecture, and visual culture of Latin America from colonial period to the present, focusing on connections to culture and society.
- AHIS 368: Modern Art I: 1700-1850
Instructor: Hector Reyes
Description: A culture and historical examination of European art and architecture from 1700 (Rococo) to 1850 (Realism), focusing on the beginnings of modernism in the age of revolution.
Classics
- CLAS 101gp: State and Society in the Ancient World
Instructor: Maya Maskarinec
Description: Achievement of the near East, Greece, and Rome with emphasis on the development of ideas, arts, and institutions which have influenced modern man.
- CLAS 150gp: The Greeks and their Legacies
Instructor: Lucas Herchenroeder
Description: Introduction to the culture of ancient Greece and its influence on contemporary ideas, institutions, values, and literary and artistic works of the imagination.
- CLAS 349gp: Ancient Empires
Instructor: Brandon Bourgeois
Description: History and cultures of the ancient empires of southwest Asia, from Cyrus the Great to the establishment of Islam.
Comparative Literature
- COLT 312: Heroes, Myths and Legends in Literature and the Arts
Instructor: Mia Du Plessis
Description: Study of transformations of characters and themes from myth, legend or fairytale (Oedipus, Antigone, Faust, Don Juan, Cinderella, Comic and Tragic Twins, Hero and Monster)
English
- ENGL 174g: Reading the Heart: Emotional Intelligence and the Humanities
Instructor: Thomas Gustafson
Description: A study of emotional intelligence through literature, history and the hearts with a focus on anger, happiness, love and empathy.
- ENGL 230g: Shakespeare and Hist Times
Instructor: Thea Tomaini
Description: Close study of Shakespeare's plays and poems to introduce his language, stagecraft, literary "genius," social and literary contexts, precusors and rivals, and legacy.
- ENGL 261g: English Literature to 1800
Instructor: Thea Tomaini, David Rollo, Anthony Kemp
Description: Intensive reading of major writers to 1800.
- ENGL 299g: Introduction to the Genre of Poetry
Instructor: Christopher Freeman
Description: Historical survey of the traditions of lyric poetry from Shakespeare to the contemporary, examining the genre's multiple forms of literary, visual, and aural expression.
- ENGL 304: Introduction to Poetry Writing
Instructor: Molly Bendall
Description: Introduction to the techniques and practice of writing poetry.
- ENGL 420: English Literature of the Middle Ages
Instructor: David Rollo
Description: Selected studies in the major figures, genres, and themes of Middle English literature to Malory, with special emphasis on Chaucer.
History
- HIST 103g: The Emergence of Modern Europe
Instructor: Karin Amundsen
Description: Political, intellectual, and cultural developments in Europe, 1300-1815. Renaissance and Reformation; absolute monarchy, scientific changes, Enlightenment; French Revolution and Napoleon.
- HIST 314: Rome Through its Monuments from Antiquity to the Middle Ages
Instructor: Maya Maskarinec
Description: Urban history of Rome from its beginnings through the 14th century focusing on select sites in the city.
Instructor: Aro Velmet
Description: Beliefs of European heretics 1000 - 1400 and practices of religious persecution, with special consideration given to problems of evidence gained through interrogation or torture.
- HIST 431: Histories of the Apocalypse
Instructor: Aro Velmet
Description: A historical overview of apocalyptic hopes and fears, from Revelations to the present. New World exploration, utopian communes, nuclear war, zombies, climate change.
International Relations
- IR 150xg: Environmental Issues in Society
Instructor: Jill Sohm
Description: Exploration of the major social, political, economic, religious, and philosophical disagreements that exist between scholars, leaders, and citizens concerning today's most serious environmental issues and problems.
- IR 310: Peace and Conflict Studies
Instructor: Douglas Becker
Description: Interdisciplinary study of the pursuit of peace, including causes of war, arms races, conflict resolution, peace movements, nonviolent resistance, and peace with justice.
Judaic Studies
Instructor: Joshua Garroway, Leah Hochman
Description: Major ideas, personalities, and movements in Jewish history from antiquity to the present in light of interaction of the Jews with the general culture.
Instructor: Reuven Firestone
Description: Jewish beliefs, practices, and history from the biblical period to the present; Judaic contributions to Western civilization.
Instructor: Wolf Gruner
Description: Historical background and responses to the Holocaust, with special emphasis on ethical implications.
- JS 315g: Anti-Semitism, Racism and Other Hatreds
Instructor: Benajmin Ratskoff, Leah Hochman
Description: History and contexts of anti-Semitism, racism and other discourses about difference examined through religious, national and cultural forms in Europe and in the US.
Philosophy
- PHIL 168g: The Meaning of Life
Instructor: Edwin Mcann
Description: Explores philosophical treatments of the problem of the meaning or purpose of human life.
- PHIL 174gw: Freedom, Equality, and Social Justice
Instructor: Jonathan Quong
Description: Explores the nature of justice, and how apparently conflicting ideals, such as freedom and equality, are able to be balanced within a just society.
- PHIL 288gp: Love and its Representation in Western Literature, Film, and Philosophy
Instructor: Edwin McCann
Description: Key works that have shaped the European and American cultural inheritance, with a special focus on the nature of love.
- PHIL 314: Origins of Free Market Thought in Early Modern Europe
Instructor: Jacob Soll
Description: The varied history of ideas of a free market at Cicerom through the Middle Ages and Renaissance, to the Enlightenment, Adam Smith, Colbert and beyond.
Religion
- REL 141g: Global Religions in Los Angeles
Instructor: Varun Soni
Description: Congregational and individual expressions of religion in Los Angeles.
- REL 146gp: Spirituality in America
Instructor: Arjun Nair
Description: Examination of the historical continuities and disjunctions between "spiritual but not religious" Americans; the relationship between spirituality, politics and social change, and the role of media.
- REL 147g: Religion, Media and Popular Culture
Instructor: Diane Winston
Description: Exploration of the manner in which the media frame discussions and understandings of ethical issues, moral dilemmas, spirituality and religious imagination,
- REL 334g: Religion and Colonial Encounter
Instructor: Kelsey Moss
Description: Survey of religious responses to colonial encounter in the Americas. Emphasis given to a study of religious innovations of Amerindians, Africans and Europeans.
- REL 338: Mysticism and Religious Desire
Instructor: David Albertson
Description: How human appetite for sex, food, community or immortality are articulated as mystical desires in different religions, either within institutional structures or working against them.
Slavic Languages and Literature
- SLL 344g: Tolstoy: Writer and Moralist
Instructor: Peter Winsky
Description: Tolstoy's major works in the context of his ethical views. Readings and lectures in English.
Thematic Option
- Core 104: Change and the Future: Thematic Option Honors Program
Instructor: David Albertson
Description: Critical readings of a series of texts in the liberal arts designed to promote discussion of important themes, theoretical approaches, research directions, and interdisciplinary connections.
- Core 200: Liberal Arts Reading Salon
Instructor: Amy Cannon
Description: Critical readings of a series of texts in the liberal arts designed to promote discussion of important themes, theoretical approaches, research directions, and interdisciplinary connections.