Graduate Course Descriptions

The following directory lists the graduate courses which the University expects to offer, although the University in no way guarantees that all such courses will be offered in any given academic year, and reserves the right to alter the list if conditions warrant. Click on the links below for a list of courses in that subject area. You may then click “View Classes” to see scheduled classes for individual courses.

5333. Topics in the History of American Women

Also offered as: HIST 5555

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 9 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

View Classes »

5364. Professional Development and Praxis Seminar

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Professional orientation in the field of WGSS and potential future workplaces. Topics include starting an MA project, advice on mentoring and networking, preparing for the job market, and confronting institutional barriers to diversity, inclusion, and social justice.

View Classes »

5365. Feminist Epistemologies and Methodologies

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Theoretical underpinnings of diverse feminist methodologies and interdisciplinary scholarship. Contemporary debates in the field and ethical dilemmas faced by researchers using feminist, interdisciplinary and intersectional epistemologies. Relationship to critical race, indigenous, and queer methodologies. Guided experience in designing and producing feminist scholarship.

View Classes »

5366. Feminist Pedagogy

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Overview of feminist and critical epistemologies and pedagogical tools for use in interdisciplinary classrooms in varied academic contexts.

View Classes »

5367. MA Capstone

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: Instructor consent. Recommended preparation: WGSS 5365.

Grading Basis: Graded

A collaborative seminar focused on supporting students in completing their MA project. Opportunity to reflect on the WGSS knowledge and skills learned and future goals.

View Classes »

5390. Independent Study for Graduate Students

1.00 - 6.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 24 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

View Classes »

5395. Special Topics Seminar in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 9 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Topics of current interest from a feminist perspective.

View Classes »

5398. Variable Topics in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies

3.00 credits | May be repeated for a total of 9 credits.

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

With a change in topics, may be repeated for credit.

View Classes »

5410. Black Feminist Theory and Politics

Also offered as: POLS 5410

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Major debates at the core of black feminist theory, emphasizing the ways in which interlocking systems of oppression uphold and sustain each other in contemporary U.S. politics.

View Classes »

5613. Theories of Intersectionality

Also offered as: SOCI 5613

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Analyses of theories that simultaneously take into account dynamics of race, class, gender, sexuality, nation, ability, and other dimensions of social inequality and difference. How scholars research intersectionality, the limits and possibilities of different approaches, and the types of methodologies that are most effective for intersectional analysis.

View Classes »

5614. Sexual Citizenship

Also offered as: SOCI 5614

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

Sexuality as an axis of citizenship in diverse national and international contexts. Analysis of access to citizenship, relationship recognition, marriage rights, heteronormativity and compulsory heterosexuality, trans citizenship claims, immigration, asylum, sex work, reproductive rights, sex education, racism and racialization, colonialism, and social justice.

View Classes »

5661. Feminist Approaches to Disability, Illness, and Care

3.00 credits

Prerequisites: None.

Grading Basis: Graded

An examination of care and caregiving across different threads of feminist scholarship in sociology, science and technology studies (STS), and disability studies. Key topics include how care is raced and gendered, disability as an axis of inequality, and how approaches to care have evolved, particularly in feminist disability studies/disability justice.

View Classes »