Proof for the 2012-2013 Duke University Bulletin of Undergraduate Instruction, p
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Proof for the 2012-2013 Duke University Bulletin of Undergraduate Instruction, p.
RETURN PROOF BY MARCH 6, 2012 TO INGEBORG WALTHER: waltheri@duke.edu
________________________________________________________________________________
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International Comparative Studies (ICS)
Associate Professor Hasso, Director; Lecturer Kirk, Director of Undergraduate Studies; Senior Lecturing Fellow Ross, Associate Director of Undergraduate Studies. Affiliated Faculty: Professors Baker (cultural anthropology, sociology, and African and African-American studies), Ramaswamy (history), and Wiegman (literature and women’s studies); Associate Professor Ching (Asian and Middle East studies); Associate Professor of the Practice Broverman (biology); Assistant Professor Göknar (Turkish studies).
A major, but not a minor, is available in this program.
The International Comparative Studies Program offers a Bachelor of Arts degree to students interested in an interdisciplinary individualized major focused on critical transnational studies. The ICS Program mission is to prepare lifelong learners who can live, work, and thoughtfully engage with people and problems in a complex, diverse, and interconnected world. ICS majors gain knowledge in the culture(s), history, politics, and language of one geographic region of the world through Region and Foreign Language coursework. This knowledge based on the multidimensional study of a particular part of the world is complemented by an examination of transnational dynamics through Core and Comparative coursework. Well over 75 percent of ICS majors complete some of their coursework in study abroad programs. Core courses, individualized advising, and research mentoring encourage ICS students to formulate and address questions through a variety of disciplinary approaches.
The courses listed on the following pages include only ICS Core and Comparative courses. The most up-to-date listings of approved Comparative and Region courses are available on the ICS website, organized and archived by semester and year.
Introductory Courses: 90A, 90B
Comparative/Global Issues Courses: 101A, 101B, 101C, 101E, 101F, 101G, 101H, 102A, 102C, 102HD, 103B, 103C, 103E, 103FS, 103G, 103GS, 201AS, 201BS, 201CS, 202A
Area Courses—Africa: 110A, 110CS, 103FS
Area Courses—East Asia: 120A, 120B, 120C, 120G, 120H, 121C, 121E, 121G, 221AS, 221BS
Area Courses—Latin America: 130A, 130B, 130C, 130ES, 130F, 130G, 131CD, 132BS, 132S, 230AS
Area Courses—Middle East: 141A, 141B, 141C, 141E
Area Courses—North America: 98, 151A, 151ES
Area Courses—Russia and Eastern Europe: 160A, 161A
Area Courses—South Asia: 141A, 170B, 170C, 170E, 170F, 170G, 170H
Area Courses—Western Europe: 180A, 180BD, 180C, 180E, 180F, 180G, 180H, 181C, 181E, 181H, 182CS, 182ES, 183A, 183B, 183C, 183E, 230AS, 280B, 280CS, 280ES
89S. First Year Seminar. Topics vary each semester offered. Instructor: Staff. One course.
101. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology. CCI, CZ, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 101
102. Introduction to Dance. ALP, CCI One course. C-L: see Dance 101
104. Anthropology and Film. SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 130; also C-L: Visual and Media Studies 243, Documentary Studies, Arts of the Moving Image
105. Fantasy, Mass Media, and Popular Culture. CCI, R, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 150; also C-L: Visual and Media Studies 244, Documentary Studies, Policy Journalism and Media Studies, Study of Sexualities
107. Old Worlds/New Histories, 500-1500 CE. CCI, CZ, SS One course. C-L: see History 105; also C-L: African and African American Studies 134
108. Religions of Asia. CCI, CZ, EI One course. C-L: see Religion 175
170. Muslim World: Transformations and Continuities. CCI, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 250; also C-L: Religion 380, Women's Studies
190A. Duke-Administered Study Abroad: Special Topics in Comparative Area Studies. CCI Topics differ by section. Instructor: Staff. One course.
195. Comparative Approaches to Global Issues. CCI, CZ, SS Introduction to critical transnational studies through several disciplinary approaches. Examines capitalism and neo-liberal globalization and their relationships to culture, politics, economics, and other social forms and outcomes; considers transnationalism "from below"; addresses linear and Western-centric thinking about progress and modernity; focuses a historical lens on political discourses, institutions, and projects to understand them contextually; demonstrates how cultures and identities are dynamically constituted in interaction with historical, material, political, and situational factors; considers how different inequalities and contestations inflect most social formations. Instructor: Hasso or Need. One course. C-L: Cultural Anthropology 195, History 103, Political Science 178, Religion 195, Sociology 195
201S. Doing Good: Anthropological Perspectives on Development. CCI, EI, R, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 428S; also C-L: Public Policy Studies 210S
203. Gender and Culture. CCI, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 271; also C-L: Women's Studies 217, Study of Sexualities, Women's Studies
204. Globalization and Anti-Globalization. CCI, CZ, SS One course. C-L: see Cultural Anthropology 425
205. World Military History. CZ, STS One course. C-L: see History 384
206. Pigging Out: The Cultural Politics of Food. CCI, EI, SS One course. C-L: see African and African American Studies 352; also C-L: Sociology 374
207. Gender and Language (DS4). CCI, R, SS One course. C-L: see Russian 364; also C-L: Cultural Anthropology 232, Women's Studies 232, Linguistics 364
208S. Transnational Feminism. CCI, EI, R, SS One course. C-L: see Women's Studies 369S
209S. The Atlantic Slave Trade. CCI, CZ, R One course. C-L: see History 316S; also C-L: African and African American Studies 217S, Latin American Studies
210. Languages of the World. CCI, SS One course. C-L: see Linguistics 202; also C-L: Cultural Anthropology 202, Russian 362
212. Representing Slavery. ALP, CCI, EI, SS One course. C-L: see African and African American Studies 314; also C-L: Cultural Anthropology 314, Visual and Media Studies 326
213. Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Human Development: A View From Modern Day Japan and Asia (C,D). CCI, SS One course. C-L: see Psychology 241; also C-L: Cultural Anthropology 249
214. Dance and Religion in Asia and Africa. ALP, CCI, CZ One course. C-L: see Dance 367; also C-L: Religion 244, African and African American Studies 222
215. Gender in Dance and Theatre. ALP, CCI, CZ One course. C-L: see Dance 368; also C-L: Women's Studies 212, Theater Studies 236
218. Postcolonial Novel. ALP, CCI One course. C-L: see English 358