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
- Anthropology and Photography
- Based on a True Story? Latin American History Through Film
- Democratization and Inequality
- First-Year Studies: Africa in the International System
- First-Year Studies: Health, Illness, and Medicine in a Multicultural Context: A Service Learning Course
- First-Year Studies: Introduction to International Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development
- First-Year Studies: Place, Landscape, and Identity in the Middle East
- Gender, Education and Opportunity in Africa
- Global Adoptions: An Anthropology of Kinship
- Global Africa: Theories and Cultures of Diaspora
- Global Child Development
- Global Flows and Frictions in Southeast Asia and Beyond
- Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back
- Images of India: Text/Photo/Film
- Industrial Competition, Labor Relations, and National Systems of Innovation
- Islam in Europe and the United States
- Migration and Experience
- “New” World Literatures: Fictions of the Yard
- New World Studies: Maroons, Rebels, and Pirates of the Caribbean
- Personal Narratives: Identity and History in Modern China
- Popular Culture in the Modern Middle East
- Religion, Ethics, and Conflict
- Sickness and Health in Africa
- The Cuban Revolution(s) from 1898 to Today
- The Geography of Contemporary China: A Political Ecology of Reform, Global Integration, and Rise to Superpower
- The Political Economy of Pakistan
- Women and Gender in the Middle East
- Workshop in Photoethnographies
- Writing India: Transnational Narratives