International Studies
What kind of global society will evolve in the 21st century? Linked by worldwide organizations and communications, yet divided by histories and ethnic identities, people everywhere are involved in the process of re-evaluation and self-definition. To help students better understand the complex forces that will determine the shape of the 21st century, Sarah Lawrence College offers an interdisciplinary approach to International Studies. Broadly defined, International Studies include the dynamics of interstate relations; the interplay of cultural, ideological, economic, and religious factors; and the multifaceted structures of Asian, African, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and European societies. A variety of programs abroad further extends students’ curricular options in International Studies. The experience of overseas learning, valuable in itself, also encourages more vivid cultural insight and integration of different scholarly perspectives. The courses offered in International Studies are listed throughout the catalogue in disciplines as diverse as Anthropology, Art History, Asian Studies, Economics, Environmental Science, Geography, History, Literature, Politics, and Religion.
Courses in other disciplines related to International Studies
- African American Literature Survey (1789-2011)
- Ancient Israelite Epic
- Machines: A Critique of New Media
- Arts of the African Continent
- Arts of the Americas: The Continents Before Columbus and Cortés
- Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity
- Bitter Victories, Sweet Defeats
- Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context
- Chinese Philosophy: Tao, Mind, and Human Nature
- Cinema and Society in the Middle East and North Africa
- Collective Violence and Post-Conflict Reconciliation
- Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature
- Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance
- Democracy and Diversity
- Empire to Nation
- Experiment and Scandal: The 18th-Century British Novel
- Field Methods in the Study of Language and Culture
- First-Year Studies: Cultures and Arts of India
- First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance
- First-Year Studies: Political Economics of the Environment
- First-Year Studies: The American Polity
- First-Year Studies: Utopia
- Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development
- France and Germany in the 20th Century
- From Republicanism to Authoritarianism: Re-Viewing the Spanish Civil War
- Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa
- Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America
- Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food
- Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back
- Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back
- Images of India: Text/Photo/Film
- Imagining War
- Imperial Russia: Power and Society
- Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development
- Introduction to Economic Theory & Policy
- Islam and the Muslim World
- Jewish Life in Eastern Europe
- Jewish Mysticism From Antiquity to the Present
- Language, Culture, and Performance
- Language and Race: Constructing the Self and Imagining the Other in the United States and Beyond
- Leisure and Danger
- Literature in Translation: “Because We Know That Language Exists”: Roland Barthes and French Literature and Theory (1945-2011)
- Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction
- Looking at Leadership and Decision Making in the Political World
- Making History of Non-Western Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas
- Money and Financial Crises: Theory, History, and Policy
- Muslim Literature, Film, and Art
- Performing Culture
- Political Language and Performance
- Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History
- Questions of the Commons: Interrogating Property
- Rainbow Nation: Growing Up South African in the Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Eras
- Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa
- Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America
- Sickness and Health in Africa
- Smith, Marx, and Keynes
- Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012)
- Studying Men and Masculinities
- Sustainable Development
- The Anthropology of Life Itself
- The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America
- The Cold War In History and Film
- The Legitimacy of Modernity? Basic Texts in Social Theory
- The Political Economy of Global and Local Inequality: The Welfare State, Developmental State, and Poverty
- Travel and Tourism: Economies of Pleasure, Profit, and Power
- “Untied” Kingdom: British Literature Since 1945
- Writing India: Transnational Narratives

