Intimate Histories: Topics in the History of Sex, Gender, and the Body
HIST 349
Spring 2012 not offered
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Crosslisting:
AMST 345, FGSS 349 |
Course Cluster: Disability Studies |
This upper-level seminar addresses the history of the body, as well as the regimes of power and normality that produce ideas of health, sexuality, and gender in time and space. It is intended to support students who wish to do interdisciplinary or historical research and writing in queer, trans, feminist, disability, and/or sexuality studies. Themes we will address include the role of formal and popular science in producing new identities, the political uses of gender and sexuality, methods of assigning gender and ability, the transformative power of pain, and the role of stigma in articulating similar bodies differently. |
Essential Capabilities:
Information Literacy, Interpretation Students will be asked to locate and interpret primary archival material that helps them make an argument about the history of contemporary condition of sexed, sexualized and/or gendered bodies.
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Credit: 1 |
Gen Ed Area Dept:
SBS HIST |
Course Format: Seminar | Grading Mode: Graded |
Level: UGRD |
Prerequisites: None |
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Fulfills a Requirement for: (AMST)(FGSS) |
Major Readings:
Don Kulick, TRAVESTI: SEX, GENDER AND CULTURE AMONG BRAZILIAN TRANSGENDERED PROSTITUTES Siobhan Somerville, QUEERING THE COLOR LINE: RACE AND THE INVENTION OF HOMOSEXUALITY IN AMERICAN CULTURE Robert McRuer and Michael Berube, CRIP THEORY: CULTURAL SIGNS OF QUEERNESS AND DISABILITY Kenny Fries, BODY, REMEMBER Sander Gilman, FAT: A CULTURAL HISTORY OF OBESITY Regina Kunzel, CRIMINAL INTIMACY: PRISON AND THE UNEVEN HISTORY OF MODERN AMERICAN SEXUALITY
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Examinations and Assignments: Students will choose one of the following options at the beginning of the semester: 1) Three 5-7 pp. critical papers, based on primary source materials; 2) Students may propose alternative writing projects that contribute more fully to a specific interest or major. Partial drafts would be turned in at two points during the semester, and a long final paper would be due at the end of the term. Students might use this option to develop a senior thesis or essay project, to complete the research requirement in the history major; or to write a piece of historical fiction or nonfiction based on primary sources. |
Additional Requirements and/or Comments: Course may be counted for the Gender and History Concentration (History), in the Queer Studies concentration (American Studies), and is part of the cluster of Disability Studies. |
Drop/Add Enrollment Requests | | | | | |
Total Submitted Requests: 0 | 1st Ranked: 0 | 2nd Ranked: 0 | 3rd Ranked: 0 | 4th Ranked: 0 | Unranked: 0 |
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