Center for Women's Studies and Gender
Research
200 Ustler Hall
PO Box 117352
Gainesville FL 32611
Phone: (352) 392-3365
Fax: (352) 392-4873
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Spring 2009 Courses
NOTE: Letters in parenthesis indicate how the class
fills a
distribution requirement in the WST General Concenrtation and/or
whether it counts for the TPS or GID track in the major. If a
course fils a Gen Ed requirement, that is specified separately.
Interdisciplinary Perspectives in Women's Studies
Tace Hedrick
WST 3015 – Section 1358, MWF 4; TUR 1315
Amanda Davis
WST 3015 – Section 6895 T 9 and R 9-10; TUR
2306
Trysh Travis
WST 3015 – Section 4454 M 11-E2; MAT 0119 (Gordon Rule 4000)
3 Credits
Drawing on materials and methodologies from a variety of
disciplines, this class explores the diverse experiences of women, both
in past eras and in the present, in the U.S. and abroad. Required for
the Women's Studies major and minor; fulfills the General Education
requirement in international studies and diversity. (Gen Ed H,
SS, D)
Transnational Feminisms
Anita Anantharam
WST 3415– Section 5401
T 2-3 and R 3; Lit 207, Weim 1094
3 Credits
This course places women and feminism in a transnational
perspective, focusing on various theories and movements engendered by
women in contemporary national contexts. Development, reproductive
politics, women’s health, etc., will be examined. (Gen Ed H, SS,
N)
U.S. Latina/Chicana Literature and Culture
WST 3930 – Section 0472
MWF 6; TUR 1315
3 Credits
From the late 1960s through the 1970s, a Chicana/o and U.S. Latino/a
renaissance of the arts flowered, especially in the West, Southwest and
on the East Coast, but the writings were relatively unknown outside of
college ethnic literature courses. Then along came the so-called Latino
explosion of the '90s, and the market value of certain U.S. Latina
authors and artists began to increase. A select few Chicano and Latina
writers have been drawn into the mainstream of United States
publishing: writers like Sandra Cisneros, Cristina García, and
Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez are, if not household names, at least
better-known than their predecessors. In reading bestselling authors as
well as less well-known writers as well as the work now known as "chica
lit," we will examine the ways assumptions-esthetic, social, political,
and market-driven-about ethnicity, race, and gender have changed (and
in some ways remained the same) over the last decade or so, around
1998-2008. This course will require three take-home exams, regular
reading quizzes, and study questions. (WST: H)
Cultural Production of Masculinities
Timothy Fogarty
WST 3930 – Section 1390
MWF 7; TUR 2336
3 Credits
Gender
constructions are an integral component of cultural production and
masculinities are the hegemonic genders of many contemporary cultures.
This course will challenge us through readings, writings,
class discussions and ethnographic interviews to understand the matrix
of distinct values and practices that are embedded in various
masculinities from around the world. (WST: SS, TPS)
Sex, Race, Gender, and Society
Kendal Broad
WST 3930– Section 1421
MWF 6; NRN0331
3 Credits
This course will examine social and cultural constructions of
sexuality, race, gender, social class, and disability in the US.
Central to that analysis will be a focus on issues of power, inequality
and how oppressions interlock and intersect. (WST: SS, TPS)
African Women Writers
Rose Lugano
WST 3930 – Section 4929
T 7-8 and R 7; TUR 2349, TUR 2350
3 Credits
The course will enable students to explore African women
writers and critics, look at their theoretical priorities, literary
themes and cultural positions. It is designed to provide students with
both a specific and a general view of the status, achievements and
experiences of African women in fiction. Using different genres (novels
and plays) we will endeavor to understand how women’s literary
expression has been shaped by history, culture, and their experiences,
as well as see how they are addressing issues of gender in their
respective societies. Discussions will focus on issues of identity,
oppression, resistance, exile, language, translation and colonialism,
using as points of entry a diverse set of texts. Finally, students will
examine how African women writers are using writing itself as a tool
for social transformation and critique. (WST: H)
Motherhood in Modern Hebrew Fiction
Abraham Balaban
WST 3930 - Section 5331
T 5 and R 4-5; TUR 2349, TUR 2353
3 Credits
Israel was founded on expressed ideas of a complete equality
between the sexes. Yet, until the last two decades of the twentieth
century, Hebrew fiction was mainly a male domain, and women were rarely
depicted as full blown human beings. In the last two decades a new wave
of female writers started publishing their work, and the image of women
has become much richer and more diverse. The rationale of the course is
to explore the different manners women are depicted in Hebrew fiction
throughout the twentieth century. Special attention is given to the
changes that occurred in the last two decades, with the appearance of a
new wave of female writers. NO HEBREW KNOWLEDGE IS REQUIRED.
(WST: H)
Gender in the Hebrew Bible
Robert Kawashima
WST 3930 – Section 5542
T 4 and R 4-5; TUR 2346, TUR 2333
3 Credits
A critical examination of the literary representation and
historical realities of gender and sexuality in ancient Israel through
close readings of selected texts from the Hebrew Bible. (WST: H)
Sex in the Global City
Florence Babb
WST 3930 – Section 6674
WST 3930 - Section 8113
T 6 and R 6-7; LIT 0217, LIT 0233
T 6, R 6, R 7; LIT 0217, LIT 233, LIT 223
3 Credits
This course considers gender and urban space, drawing on
feminist, anthropological, and other literature. We will read
ethnographies (case studies) based in cities of the Global South and
North in an effort to understand how urban lives vary depending on
gender, social class, race, sexuality, and other social differences.
Some of the themes we will examine include the following: the growth of
urban centers and informal economic sectors as a result of
neoliberalism and globalization; the emergence of youth cultures as
populations expand; the growth of social movements including those
representing interests of women and sexual minorities; the development
of popular culture and new consumer practices. Students will have an
opportunity to carry out research projects on the gendered effects of
accelerated change in cities as diverse as New York, Bangkok, and
Mexico City. (WST: H, SS, TPS, GID)
Women in French Literature Seminar
Sylvie Blum
WST 3930 – Section 7466
M 9-11 and W E1-E3; TUR 2334, TUR2322
3 Credits
The courses examines the representation of
woman in literary,
cultural and filmic texts based in 20th century France.
There will be a segment devoted
to expatriate female artists living in France in the interwar and
post-WW2
period. Topics will include: visual representations, avant-garde
cinema, experimental
writing, fashion, performance, interwar period, postcolonial France,
expatriate writers, early women directors and contemporary
women directors. (WST: H)
Rethinking Globalization: Gender/Communities/Representation
Anita Anantharam
WST 4930 - Section 1902
WST 6935 - Section 4766
W 7-9; MAT 0113
3 Credits
Globalization is one of those buzzwords that has been debated
and scrutinized heavily in recent years. The term has been used to
designate a wide variety of practices from the movement of goods and
capital, to the migration of people across national boundaries, to an
imposed standardization of lifestyles. This class focuses on readings
that are critical of the uneven effects of globalization and neoliberal
global political economies. We will consider a variety of analytical
and theoretical frameworks with the intention of developing nuanced
approaches to today’s transnational political economies that are
sensitive to gender issues, local and communal practices, and politics
of representation. (WST: SS, GID)
Capstone Seminar in Women's Studies
Stephanie Evans
WST4935 - Section 8483
WST 6935- Section 2323
MWF 6; UST 108
3 Credits
This course (required for all majors) is the culmination
of
the Women’s Studies major. It explores some examples of past and
present scholarship to reaffirm the interdisciplinary nature of the
field and to
highlight the relationships among feminist theory, intellectual
practice, and social change. The bulk of the semester is devoted to a
full-length independent project on a topic of student’s own choosing.
Internship
Faculty
Variable Credits 1-3
WST 4940 – Section Department Controlled
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
For advanced undergraduate students who desire to supplement
the regular courses by independent reading or research. Online application.
Independent Study
Faculty
WST 4905 – Section Department Controlled
Can be repeated up to 6 credits
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor and department chair
and 1 Women's Studies course or course that counts for women's studies
Independent reading or research under guidance. Online application.
Honor's Thesis
Faculty
WST 4970 – Section Department Controlled
Students register for this course when pursuing an Honors
Thesis in the WST major. In accordance with the protocols
established by WST and the Honors Program, students design and pursue
an independent research project with guidance from an advisor.
Further information is available here.
Gender & Cultural Politics in Latin America
Florence Babb
WST 6935 – Section 7835
M 8-10; UST 108
3 Credits
This graduate seminar will consider recent and innovative work
that examines gender, culture, and politics in Latin America and the
Caribbean. We will draw on literature from gender and cultural
studies, anthropology, history, and other fields in order to consider
changing political economies and cultures on the one hand and lived
experiences of those of different gender, race, class, and sexual
identities on the other hand. We will read about and discuss
contemporary popular culture, everyday life, tourism, development,
social movements, and globalization. The class will have a
discussion format in which students participate actively.
Feminist Pedagogy (Feminist Challenges)
Trysh Travis
WST 6936 – Section 2255
T 8-10; UST 108
3 Credits
How
is feminist teaching different from just plain good teaching? Do feminist
women automatically become feminist teachers? How
can feminist teaching benefit male students (and
instructors)? Focusing on the United States,
we will look briefly
at the history of women’s education during the 19th and
early 20th
centuries, then turn to examine the feminist critiques of traditional
education
that developed during the 1960s and ‘70s and the utopian visions of
student-centered classrooms that arose out of that radical period. Feminist theories of curriculum development,
instruction, and evaluation will be considered. The
class will conclude by exploring the possibilities for
transformative teaching within the corporate educational institution. This course is relevant for prospective
educators in any subject area and at any level, K-16; individual
students may
tailor the research and writing assignments so that they are relevant
to their
subject specialty and to the age group with which they work.
Master's Internship
WST6946 -Section Department Controlled
For advanced students who desire to supplement
the regular courses by independent reading or research. Online application.
Faculty
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