Honors%20Program%20Course%20Descriptions%20WEB

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Honors Program Course Descriptions FYS1101*79: The Politics of Food Recent debates surrounding obesity in the United States have focused on eating healthy, public health concerns, and personal responsibility. Absent from this discussion are the political issues surrounding food production, consumption, and health. Eating a healthy diet is truly a social justice issue. This course will explore the social, cultural, and political concerns of food production and consumption in the United States, and its extension to Canada to the North and Latin America to the South. We will adopt an interdisciplinary approach to the topic by assessing immigration, trade policy, the agricultural business community, labor and poverty issues, public health concerns, and governmental initiatives to promote a healthy America. In addition to a comprehensive paper, the course will involve an experiential education component that will take us out of the classroom and into the community to explore how all the aspects of food policy affects people’s everyday lives. Fall semester. 4 credits

HONOR2201 Affective Reading: Sympathy and the Institution of the English Novel (AI-L) This course provides students with an interdisciplinary analysis of one of the most recognizable literary genres in the world. Tracing the developments of different philosophical approaches to sympathy in the 18th century, this course will consider how novels respond to the emotional needs of their readers by presenting the possibilities and limitations of human interaction. Emerging at a time when the slave trade provided the basis of the English economy, these theories and the novels that embody their significance struggle to represent the irony of what it means to be human. Readings will include, but are not limited to, selections from Thomas Hobbes’ Leviathan, David Hume’s A Treatise of Human Nature, Oliver Goldsmith’s The Vicar of Wakefield, Jane Austen’s Persuasion, and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Spring semester. 4 credits

HONOR2202 Reading Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Approach (AI-L) This course uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore “Shakespeare” as a powerful cultural force through which ideas about history, the literary canon, the theater, art, politics, religion, gender, sexuality, class, and society itself are produced. We focus on two plays written at the turn of the 17th century, Twelfth Night and Hamlet. In addition to doing in-depth readings of the plays in their historical contexts, we study film adaptations (Almereyda’s Hamlet, Fickman’s She’s the Man, and Pool’s Lost and Delirious), famous readings of the plays (Freud, Coleridge, and T.S. Eliot), and significant theoretical approaches (feminist, psychoanalytic, new historicist, queer theory). Spring semester. 4 credits

HONOR2401 Social Justice and Catholic Social Teaching (SA) In this course, students will examine issues of social justice through the lens of Catholic Social Teaching and community service. The course covers social issues concerning the global south as well as the global north. It explores over 100 years of Catholic Social Teaching, using papal encyclicals and pastoral letters primarily from the U.S. Catholic Conference of Bishops as well as the Conferences of African and Latin American Catholic Bishops. Students will analyze these documents and provide critiques of the teachings. With the help of a service-learning component, the course allows students to obtain in-depth knowledge about and apply the mission of national and international Catholic social justice organizations. The preparations of the service-learning component of the course will begin during the January intersession. Students who take this course cannot also take SOC2131 or THRS2130. Spring semester. 4 credits


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