Fall 2017

Course System Home Course Listing Fall 2017

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Showing 25 Results of 249

Senior Projects — MPF4104.01

Instructor: Kitty Brazelton
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
Salon-style, seniors will meet to discuss advanced work, whether composition- and performance-related to senior concerts or other culminating work. Critical exchange and support between salon members is required, along with practical help in planning productions.

Senior Projects in Dance — DAN4796.01

Instructor: Terry Creach
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
This is an essential course for seniors in dance involved in making work for performance this term. Attention is given to all of the elements involved in composition and production, including collaborative aspects. Students are expected to show their work throughout stages of development, complete their projects, and perform them to the public by the end of the term.

Senior Seminar in Society, Culture, and Thought — SCT4750.01

Instructor: Karen Gover; David Bond; Lopamudra Banerjee
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This advanced research seminar offers students the opportunity to conduct culminating work in Society, Culture and Thought (SCT) in the form of an independent research project. For most students, this will be a one-semester project. For other students, this will be the first half of a year-long project that involves fieldwork, archival research, and/or the collection of data.

Shipwrecked — LIT2289.01

Instructor: Akiko Busch
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Alienation, deprivation, solitude, and starting anew may be prevalent ideas in contemporary dystopian storytelling, but the physical and psychological circumstances of running aground, along with its rewards, have long been fertile ground for writers. The course would reflect on the precursors of such narratives, beginning in the eighteenth century with Robinson Crusoe and

Silkscreen/Serigraphy Workshop — PRI2210.02

Instructor: Michael Smoot
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
This course will focus on the basic technical processes of screen printing including, idea generation, image development, screen preparation, registration, paper handling, and printing multi-color prints. Through demonstrations and hands on experiences, students will complete a series of projects using various methods of creating stencils on screens including, direct block

Social Kitchen: Ceramics, Food, and Community — APA2269.01

Instructor: Yoko Inoue
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This course will provide an opportunity to learn about creative community engaged practices of contemporary art and ethical processes in the context of local food insecurity. Through direct dialog and face-to-face interaction with local residents and by investigating creative interventions devised by artists/activists dealing with issues of food sovereignty and social justice,

Sociology of Education — SOC2205.01

Instructor: Debbie Warnock
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
What is the purpose of schooling in modern society? Does everyone have access to equal educational opportunities? How do experiences of education vary by race, class, and gender? What role does education policy play in maintaining or reducing social inequalities? How has and how might education policy change under the leadership of Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos? In this

Software, Algorithms and Computability — CS4131.01

Instructor: Ursula Wolz
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This course covers essential material from three traditional upper level courses in computer science: Data Structures/Software Design, Analysis of Algorithms, and Computability. The first half of the course provides an intensive immersion in these areas as either introduction or review, while students define a personal direction for study in the second half of the course to

Solving The Impossible: Breaking Bread — MED2118.01

Instructor: Susan Sgorbati
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
Why are certain conflicts so difficult to resolve? This course will examine conflicts that are long-standing and elude resolution. We will explore the factors that contribute to complex disputes and the conditions that allow groups to begin to address them. Can individuals like Martin Luther King, Jr., Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela transform historical conflict? What role

Sports — FV4105.01

Instructor: Karthik Pandian
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This intermediate video production course will explore the relationship between moving image and athletics. Students will examine the work of pivotal figures from Leni Riefenstahl to O.J. Simpson in an effort to understand the role sports play in society, art and life. Studio projects will focus on formal issues from camera movement, stabilization, resolution, depth

Stage Management — DRA2241.01

Instructor: Michael Giannitti
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
The key role of the stage manager as both collaborative artist and manager in the production process is explored by students in this class. Readings, discussions, and projects on topics including scheduling, play breakdowns, prompt book preparation, blocking notation, ground plan and theatre layout, and the running of rehearsals and performances are included. The relationship

Stars, Planets, Life — PHY2107.01

Instructor: Hugh Crowl
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
In the last twenty-five years, the study of life beyond our own planet has gone from science fiction to legitimate science. The course will initially focus on how stars form and evolve, starting from the formation of the universe, and continuing to a discussion of stars as both the synthesizers of heavy elements and the central energy source for solar systems. From there, we

Structural Geology and Field Methods — ES4104.01

Instructor: Tim Schroeder
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Students in this course will learn to visualize and analyze the three-dimensional, dynamic complexity of the solid Earth. Understanding how our planet works requires knowing how to extrapolate limited surface data downward to unseen depths using geometric tools and logical abstractions. The class includes a significant field component to learn data collection techniques. In

Style in Motion — DRA4310.01

Instructor: Charles Schoonmaker
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
We will be designing costumes that are unrealized ‘paper’ projects as well as realized costumes for new works. Class members may work with student choreographers, utilizing this class as a resource in the creative process. We will also work, as a group, on designing and realizing costumes for specific pieces to be presented at the end of the term. Registration for this course

The Actor’s Instrument — DRA2170.01

Instructor: Kirk Jackson
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
An actor honors and bears witness to humanity by embodying and giving voice to the human element in the landscape of theatrical collaboration. Investigating the impulses and intuitions that make us unique as individuals can also identify that which constitutes our shared humanity. Through exploration of the fundamentals of performance, students address the actor’s body, voice,

The Anglo-Irish Novel — LIT2167.01

Instructor: Annabel Davis-Goff
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
The contribution to British literature by the politically powerful, Protestant, land owning, Anglo-Irish is substantial and important. We will read Maria Edgeworth, Elizabeth Bowen, and Somerville Ross as representatives of the Ascendancy, as well as novels that reflect the political changes of the 1920s, and life, after Irish independence, for the descendants (actual and

The Art of Mediation and Negotiation — MED2107.01

Instructor: Peter Pagnucco
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
Conflict exists everywhere—with friends and roommates, within the family, between nations—but is conflict inevitable?  In this class we will explore the basic elements of conflict resolution, focusing on the process of Mediation.  We will learn and observe the differences between mediation, negotiation, and court processes.  We will examine which behaviors

The Art of Mediation and Negotiation — MED2107.02

Instructor: Peter Pagnucco
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
Conflict exists everywhere—with friends and roommates, within the family, between nations—but is conflict inevitable?  In this class we will explore the basic elements of conflict resolution, focusing on the process of Mediation.  We will learn and observe the differences between mediation, negotiation, and court processes.  We will examine which behaviors

The Baroque Imaginary — AH4117.01

Instructor: Vanessa Lyon
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
The concept of the Baroque has long fascinated—and incensed—historians, literary critics, and philosophers. Often aligned with an artistic ‘Golden Age’ exemplified by the complex and discomfiting works of Bernini, Rubens, Velázquez, and Vermeer, the Baroque has also been associated with ruinous decadence and excess, irrationality, preciosity, and effeminacy—rhetorically charged

The Body Acoustic: Toward a Sense of Place — DAN2112.01

Instructor: Dana Reitz
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
How do we physically understand the spaces we are in? How is each of us affected by them? How do we develop a deeper sense of place? The Body Acoustic aims to heighten awareness of the reciprocal relationship between the built environment and our senses. Light and sound, distances, height, volume, surfaces, angles/curves and a/symmetries all affect our movement through interior

The Film Trailer Project — FRE4603.01

Instructor: Noëlle Rouxel-Cubberly
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
In this course, French films are used as linguistic and cultural textbooks. While honing their language skills (listening, reading, speaking and writing), students will focus their critical skills on selected cultural topics (food, clothes, history, gestures, etc.). Students will create film trailers that reflect their understanding of the French language and cultural realities

The Grand Vessel — CER4319.01

Instructor: Barry Bartlett
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
In this class we will investigate the history of vessels made to impress, awe, and celebrate the technical as well as symbolic meaning of culture in different countries. Large and small in scale these vessel have been made for millennia to be used in tombs, in palaces, industrial expositions as well as the private home. These vessels often go to unimagined

The History of English Prosody — LIT2276.01

Instructor: Phillip Williams
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This class explores the history and development of poetry in the English language. We will investigate the evolution of poetic techniques, forms, and tropes across history. We will begin with meter, syllabics, received forms such as the sonnet and villanelle, the ode, lyrical versus narrative poetry, accentual verse, structure versus form, prose poetry, and free verse. We will

The Language of Persuasion — SPA2103.01

Instructor: Sarah Harris
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Students with little or no background in Spanish will learn the language through an immersion in the study of political propaganda, tourist campaigns, and advertising from the Spanish-speaking world. An examination of Spanish and Latin American print, radio, film, and television advertisements, as well as political cartoons and speeches, will allow students to consider

The Magical Object — DRA2116.01

Instructor: Sherry Kramer
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
There is a great difference between a prop and an object on stage that is built or filled with the dramatic forces of a play. Such objects become metaphors, they become fresh comprehensions of the world. In the theater, we believe in magic. Our gaze is focused on ordinary objects…a glass figurine, a pair of shoes, a wedding dress…and then our attention is shaped, and charged,