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Requirements

Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Major

The major consists of nine courses.

Introductory/Foundation Requirement a1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101
Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies
´Ç°ùÌý³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103
Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103
Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies
Theory Requirement b1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2002
Living a Feminist Life
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2005
Queer Theory
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2014
Feminist Theory: Women of Color Feminisms and the Politics of Difference
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2020
Asian/American Feminisms: Culture, Power, and Global Asias
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2332
Queer Youth Cultures: Texts and Contexts
Methods Requirement b1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2100
Sex Workers and Sex Work: Archival Encounters
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2170
Chemical Bodies: Gender, Sexuality and Pharmaceutical Science
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2215
Sex Wars in the Americas
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2320
Gender and Sexuality in Teen Cinema
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2350
Disruptive Play: Approaching Video Games as a Queer Archive
Global Perspectives Requirement (courses satisfying this requirement can also include crosslisted courses that are not listed here) b1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2200
Gender, Race, and Citizenship in Brazil
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2233
Transnational Perspectives on Queer Politics
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2245
Girlhood and Empire: Girls, Power, and Resistance in Global Perspectives
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2290
Gender and Social Justice: The Art of Social Change
Intersectional Analysis Requirement b1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2303
Queer Latinidades in U.S. Fiction and Film
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2320
Gender and Sexuality in Teen Cinema
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý2381
Black Sexualities
GSWS Capstone Seminar c1
Select three additional courses in gender, sexuality, and women's studies d3
a

Only one of ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies or ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103 Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies can be counted towards major requirements.

b

Must be taken at the 2000-level to satisfy these requirements.

c

Must be a 3000-level course to satisfy this requirement.

d

These courses may be chosen from the set of GSWS courses at any level, any course cross-listed with GSWS, or approved courses from transfer credit. Courses that do not fit these categories will need to be submitted to the program committee for consideration.

Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies Minor

The minor consists of five courses.

Select one Introductory/Foundation course a1
³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101
Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies
´Ç°ùÌý³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103
Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies
Select one Theory course b1
Select one Global or Intersectional Analysis course b1
Select two additional courses in GSWS c2
a

Only one of ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's StudiesÌý´Ç°ù ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103 Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies can be counted towards minor requirements.

b

Must be taken at the 2000-level to satisfy this requirement.

c

These courses may be chosen from the set of GSWS courses at any level, any course cross-listed with GSWS, or an approved course from transfer credit. Courses that do not fit these categories will need to be submitted to the program committee for consideration.

Additional Information and Program Policies

  • One first-year writing seminar may count toward the major or minor.

  • With prior approval, GSWS allows up to two transfer courses to count toward the major; one toward the minor. All core courses must be taken at the College.

  • Courses count toward the major if grades of C- or better are earned. One course taken with the Credit/D/Fail grading option may count toward the major as long as a CR (credit) grade is earned for the course. No Credit/D/Fail courses may be counted for the minor.

  • Note that GSWS theory courses require prerequisites: GSWS 1000–2969 or GSWS 3000 or higher.

  • Only three of the six elective courses for the major may be from any single department outside of GSWS.ÌýOnly two of the three elective courses for the minor may be from any single department outside of GSWS.ÌýThe departmental affiliation of a course is considered the department of which the instructor is a member.

  • No more than two independent study courses may count toward the major requirements, unless the student is pursuing an honors project, in which case the limit is three independent studies. Normally, students may count up to two independent study courses toward the minor requirements.

  • Majors may double-count three courses with another department or program. Minors may double-count one course with another department or program.

  • Honors: during the spring of their junior year, students who wish to undertake an honors project must secure the agreement of a faculty member to supervise their independent study project. The honors project supervisor must be an affiliated faculty member with GSWS. If the student’s chosen supervisor is not an affiliated faculty member, the student may appeal for permission from the GSWS Program Committee. Two semesters of advanced independent work (GSWS 4050 and GSWS 4051) are required for an honors project in GSWS.

  • Departments and programs that offer GSWS classes include: Africana studies, anthropology, art, Asian studies, cinema studies, classics, economics, education, English, environmental studies, German, government and legal studies, history, Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx studies, music, philosophy, psychology, religion, romance languages and literatures, Russian, sociology, theater and dance, urban studies.

Information for Incoming Students

First-year students interested in GSWS have many courses available to them. There are a number of first-year writing seminars as well as ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's StudiesÌý which is an introductory course assumes no prior knowledge about the study of gender, sex, and sexuality that introduces key concepts, questions, and methods that have developed within the interdisciplinary fields of gender, sexuality, and women's studies. It explores how gender norms differ across cultures and change over time and examines how gender and sexuality are inseparable from other forms of identification--race, class, ability, and nationality. It also considers the role that gender, sexuality, and other identity knowledges play in resisting sexism, racism, homophobia, and transphobia. It is offered each spring and is not open to students who have taken or are enrolled in ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103 Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies.

³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1103 Foundations in Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies Ìýis an advanced introductory course intended for students with prior exposure, interest, or activism in gender and sexuality studies, and it prepares students for future course work in the major. Students are exposed to major areas of concerns for feminist and queer scholars. Students will read foundational texts that have led to the way that scholars now understand sex, gender, and sexuality along with its intersections with race, class, and disability. Students will understand the historic context in which foundational texts and theories emerged and ask how these ideas can be applied to contemporary anti-sexist, anti-racist, anti-homo-transphobic, and anti-ablist practice. It is offered each fall and is not open to students who have taken or are enrolled in ³Ò³§°Â³§Ìý1101 Introduction to Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies.

First-year writing seminars offered or cross-listed with GSWS this fall: GSWSÌý1032 Queering Video Games.


This is an excerpt from the official ³Õºº¾ãÀÖ²¿ College Catalogue and Academic Handbook.