|
|
Apr 06, 2025
|
|
|
|
Course Catalog 2009-2010 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Gender, Sexuality. and Feminist Studies
|
|
Return to: College of Arts and Sciences
Anuradha Dingwaney Needham, Director, 2009-10
Affiliate Faculty:
Zeinab Abul-Magd, Asst. Professor, History
Ann Cooper Albright, Professor, Theatre and Dance
Laura Baudot, Asst. Professor, English
Pamela Brooks, Assoc. Professor, African American Studies
Jennifer Bryan, Assoc. Professor, English
Ana Cara, Professor, Hispanic Studies
Cynthia Chapman, Asst. Professor, Religion
Hsui-Chuang Deppman, Assoc. Professor, East Asian Studies
Pawan Dhingra, Associate Professor, Sociology
Eric Estes, Director of Multicultural Resource Center
Jennifer Fraser, Asst. Professor, Ethnomusicology, Conservatory of Music
Meredith Gadsby, Assoc. Professor, African American Studies
Frances S. Hasso, Assoc. Professor, Sociology
Harry Hirsch, Professor, Politics
Karla Hubbard, Assoc. Professor, Geology
Yumi Ijiri, Professor, Physics
Daphne John, Assoc. Professor, Sociology
Gillian Johns, Assoc. Professor, English
Shelley Lee, Asst. Professor, Comparative American Studies
Margaret Kamitsuka, Assoc. Professor, Religion
Wendy Kozol, Professor, Comparative American Studies
Claudia Macdonald, Professor, Ethnomusicology, Conservatory of Music
Shulamit Magnus, Assoc. Professor, Jewish Studies
Greggor Mattson, Asst. Professor, Sociology
Pablo Mitchell, Assoc. Professor, History and Comparative American Studies
Patrick O’Connor, Assoc. Professor, Hispanic Studies
Gina Perez, Assoc. Professor, Comparative American Studies
Meredith Raimondo, Assoc. Professor, Comparative American Studies
Renee Romano, Assoc. Professor, History
Annemarie Sammartino, Asst. Professor, History
Ann Sherif, Assoc. Professor, East Asian Studies
Rebecca Whelan, Asst. Professor, Chemistry
Ellen Wurtzel, Asst. Professor, History
The Institute for Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies (GSFS) is an interdisciplinary academic program committed to transnational and cross-cultural perspectives on gender, sexuality, and feminism. The Institute is comprised of a Director and Affiliate Faculty from throughout the College of Arts and Sciences and from the Conservatory of Music. The GSFS major and minor provide students with methodological, theoretical, and research training in gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. The Institute also supports disciplinary, cross-disciplinary, and interdisciplinary projects and events related to gender, sexuality, and feminist studies for faculty and students.
|
Major (30 Credits)
The GSFS major is comprised of three requirements (one gateway course, Feminist Research Methodologies, and a capstone final project) and additional GSFS elective courses that build depth and breadth in areas of student interest. Of the 30 credits for the major, no more than 15 may come from one department or program. Designated GSFS gateway courses (100 and 200 levels) come from throughout the curriculum and explore a range of theoretical and methodological approaches in gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. GSFS majors are required to take at least one gateway course in the first or second year of study, although no more than two 100-level courses can count toward the GSFS major. Feminist Research Methodologies (300 level) focuses on disciplinary and cross-disciplinary approaches to knowledge, and prepares students to complete an independent research project pertaining to gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. Feminist Research Methodologies is optimally taken in fall of the junior year and is only offered during fall term. For the GSFS capstone requirement, each major completes an original research, creative, or artistic final project that engages with gender, sexuality, and feminist studies appropriate to senior-level expectations within a discipline or interdiscipline. This capstone requirement should be completed no earlier than spring term of the junior year in one of three ways: (1) as the final project in a GSFS 300- or 400-level capstone course; (2) as a GSFS honors project (see below); or (3) through successful petitioning of the Director to allow completion of the GSFS final project in an alternative course. Majors must (a) inform the faculty member teaching a course that they plan to count the final project in that course toward the GSFS capstone requirement; (b) concurrently enroll in GSFS 400, a zero credit Pass/Fail course, during the add/drop period – this course requires consent from the Director of GSFS; and (c) fulfill all course requirements. Capstone course and final project grades are determined by instructors according to regular course criteria and expectations. During the grading period, the Director of GSFS inserts a P or F evaluation (also determined by instructors) for GSFS 400. As appropriate to the (inter)discipline and focus of the project, GSFS final projects are expected to: - be significantly informed by and engaged with gender, sexuality, and feminist theories, methods, and scholarship;
- be alert to methodological, representational and/or epistemological issues informed by gender, sexuality and feminist scholarship;
- attend to (and complicate, if necessary) issues of identity, positionality and intersectionality as relevant;
- be interdisciplinary or cross-disciplinary in approach;
- have analytical and/or creative depth;
- demonstrate clarity and polish in expression and presentation; and
- demonstrate thoroughness in research and/or preparation.
Students wishing to declare a Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies major should select a faculty advisor from the list of approved advisors for the GSFS Institute. After consultation with her/his advisor, each student submits a rationale and list of courses for approval to the Institute’s Standing Committee on Majors. This Committee reviews student requests to count up to two courses that do not necessarily have a gender or sexuality focus but that provide students with background in their areas of specialization. To request permission to cross-designate Oberlin courses that are not currently on the approved GSFS list but deal with gender, sexuality, or feminism, students or instructors must submit a Request Form and a class syllabus to the Director of the Institute. See the GSFS website for details and forms. A minimum grade of C- is required for a course to fulfill the major. A maximum of 10 credits from other institutions or study away programs can be approved toward the major. Honors
The Institute offers senior GSFS majors the opportunity for recognition of distinguished achievement in research and writing in gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. Students will be considered for honors in spring of junior year based on their performance in the major and the quality of the honors proposal. Students applying for GSFS honors must complete Feminist Research Methodologies in fall term of the junior year unless they make a case for an exceptional circumstance. (See the GSFS website for more information on deadlines and criteria for honors.) Minor (15 Credits)
The GSFS minor consists of 15 credits of GSFS approved courses, at least one of which must be a gateway course. No more than one course at the 100 level can count toward the minor. No more than five credits may be transferred toward the minor. Minors are encouraged to include a gender-related Winter Term project in their course of study. Winter Term
When GSFS Affiliate Faculty members are on duty for Winter Term, they sponsor GSFS-related Winter Term projects. Project focus and requirements (beyond college guidelines) are determined between the student and faculty member in advance. Field Experience and Study Away
A range of off-campus, study away, volunteer, and study abroad options offer excellent opportunities to GSFS students during Winter Term or full semesters and are highly encouraged. Gateway Courses
GSFS courses designated as “gateway” are also “electives.” Feminist Research Methodologies
Feminist Research Methodologies also counts as an elective course. Capstone Courses
GSFS courses designated as “capstone” are also “electives.” *ENGL 400: Only the tutorial taught by Prof. Needham is cross-listed as a GSFS capstone. Elective Courses
- AAST 220 - Doin’ Time: A History of Black Incarceration Semester Offered: Second Semester
- AAST 228 - Katrina and the Black Freedom Struggle in Louisiana Semester Offered: First Semester
- AAST 347 - Culture, History, and Identity: Caribbean Literature and the Politics of Survival Semester Offered: First Semester
- CAST 208 - The Latinidad Question: Comparative Latin@ and Latin American Literature Semester Offered: Second Semester
- CAST 243 - Race, Gender, and American Social Movements Semester Offered: Second Semester
- CAST 260 - Asian American History Semester Offered: First Semester
- CAST 316 - From Equal Rights to Human Rights: Feminist Perspectives on Social Justice Semester Offered: First Semester
- CAST 326 - Performing Sovereignty: Reservations, Militarism, and the Politics of Native America Semester Offered: Second Semester
- CAST 368 - Voicing Otherness Through Contemporary Film and Literature : Being Fat, Queer, and “Colored” in America Semester Offered: Second Semester
- DANC 132 - Contact Improvisation Semester Offered: First Semester
- EAST 135 - Masculinity in Modern Japanese Fiction and Film Semester Offered: First Semester
- EAST 245 - Avant Garde: Japan Film, Literature Semester Offered: Second Semester
- ENGL 212 - Wits, Rakes, Madmen, and Jane: A Survey of Eighteenth-Century Literature Semester Offered: First Semester
- ENGL 362 - Partition, War, Dislocation: Mid-Twentieth-Century South Asia and Historic Palestine Semester Offered: Second Semester
- ENGL 394 - Selected Authors: Jane Austen Semester Offered: Second Semester
- FYSP 103 - Bridging the Body/Mind Divide Semester Offered: First Semester
- FYSP 117 - Nature and the Environment in East Asian Culture Semester Offered: Second Semester
- FYSP 143 - Athletics, Identity, and Culture in America Semester Offered: First Semester
- GERM 350 - Feminist Perspectives on German Cinema Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HISP 349 - Latin American Icons: Che, Evita, Frida, Pancho Villa Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 217 - Women and Gender in Islamic Law and Arab Legal Codes Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 234 - Good and Evil: Ethics and Decision Making in the Holocaust Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 235 - Inside the Pale: East European Jewry, 1772-1939 Semester Offered: First Semester
- HIST 236 - Defining Jewishness: Drawing Boundaries, Constructing Identity Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 243 - Race Gender, and American Social Movements Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 260 - Asian American History Semester Offered: First Semester
- HIST 265 - American Sexualities Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 270 - Latina/Latino Survey Semester Offered: First Semester
- HIST 301 - The Politics of Gender in Medieval and Early Modern Europe Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 327 - Borderlands Semester Offered: Second Semester
- HIST 328 - American Mixed Blood Semester Offered: First Semester
- HIST 343 - Crisis of Confidence: American History and Culture in the 1970’s Semester Offered: First Semester
- JWST 234 - Good and Evil: Ethics and Decision Making in the Holocaust Semester Offered: Second Semester
- JWST 235 - East European Jewry, 1772-1939 Semester Offered: First Semester
- JWST 236 - Defining Jewishness: Drawing Boundaries, Constructing Identity Semester Offered: Second Semester
- POLT 202 - American Constitutional Law Semester Offered: Second Semester
- POLT 271 - Gender, Sexuality and the Law Semester Offered: First Semester
- RELG 108 - Introduction to Religion: Women and the Western Traditions Semester Offered: Second Semester
- SOCI 215 - Contemporary Asian American Experience Semester Offered: Second Semester
- SOCI 264 - American Families: Comfort, Conflict, and Criticism Semester Offered: Second Semester
- SOCI 338 - Prostitution and Social Control: Governing Loose Women Semester Offered: Second Semester
- SOCI 362 - Partition, War, Dislocation: Mid-Twentieth Century South Asia and Historic Palestine Semester Offered: Second Semester
- SOCI 450 - Beyond Us vs. Them: How We Manage Contradictory Categories Semester Offered: First Semester
|
Return to: College of Arts and Sciences
|
|
|