Women's Studies
The Women’s Studies curriculum comprises courses in various disciplines and focuses on new scholarship on women, sex, and gender. Subjects include women’s history; feminist theory; the psychology and politics of sexuality; gender constructs in literature, visual arts, and popular culture; and the ways in which gender, race, class, and sexual identities intersect for both women and men. This curriculum is designed to help all students think critically and globally about sex-gender systems and to encourage women, in particular, to think in new ways about themselves and their work. Undergraduates may explore women’s studies in lectures, seminars, and conference courses. Advanced students may also apply for early admission to the College’s graduate program in Women’s History and, if admitted, may begin work toward the Master of Arts degree during their senior year. The MA program provides rigorous training in historical research and interpretation. It is designed for students pursuing careers in academe, advocacy, policymaking, and related fields.
Courses in other disciplines related to Women’s Studies
- Activists and Intellectuals: A Cultural and Political History of Women in the United States, 1775-1975
- First-Year Studies: Fops, Coquettes, and the Masquerade: Fashioning Gender and Courtship from Shakespeare to Austen
- Gloriana: Elizabeth I in Literature and the Arts
- Holding Up Half the Sky: Chinese Women in History
- Politics of Affect: Postcolonial and Feminist Literature and Film
- Reason and Revolution, Satire and the City: Literature and Social Change in the Age of Swift
- Revolutionary Women
- Virginia Woolf in the 20th Century
- Women/Gender, Race, Class and Sexuality in Film: History and Feminist Film Theory
- Writing Warrior (Wo)men: Mothering, Movements and Migration in Black Literature