THE CURRICULUM IN WOMEN'S STUDIES

  • at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
  • (Revised December 1993)

    This is a listing of courses offered in the Curriculum in Women's Studies. Cross-listed courses are listed in sequential order. Click here to see a listing of these courses grouped by the cross-listing department.

    CURRICULUM COURSE LISTING

    WMST 50

  • INTRODUCTION TO WOMEN'S STUDIES
  • Barbara Harris

    In interdisciplinary exploration of women and men in American society. Topics explored include: family and work; secuality and sexual identity; gender roles and images in language, literature, religion, art and science; and the impact of the contemporar y feminist movement. Course readings are drawn from the humanities and the social sciences.

    WMST 95

  • SPECIAL TOPICS IN WOMEN'S STUDIES
  • Staff

    Topics are announced in advance and reflect the interest of the particular instructor. Each course will concern itself with a study in depth of some problem or issue in Women's Studies.

    WMST 98A/WMST 98B

  • WOMEN'S STUDIES HONORS
  • Permission Required

    Introduction to research methods in women's studies leading to the completion of an Honors essay. (Fall, Spring)

    WMST 190

  • PRACTICUM IN WOMEN'S STUDIES
  • Negotiated

    Supervised internships designed to provide experience working in organizations concerned with women's issues. Prerequisite: WMST 50 or WMST 169. Written paper required. Either of these courses may be taken concurrently with WMST 190. 2-4 credit hours . Interested students should contact Denise Currin, Administrative Assistant, Women's Studies, 962-3908, prior to the beginning of the semester. Permission required.

    WMST 199

  • INDEPENDENT READING AND RESEARCH
  • Staff

    Intensive reading and research in a student's chosen area of interest under faculty supervision. Results in a written report. Open to Women's Studies majors and other qualified undergraduate and graduate students. Permission of the Director and faculty member required.

    CROSS-LISTED COURSES

    WMST 24/SOCI 24

  • SEX AND GENDER IN SOCIETY
  • Lawrence Rosenfeld
  • Richard Udry/Staff

    An examination of the social differentiation between men and women. Attention to the extent, causes and consequences of sexual inequality, and to changes in sex roles and their impact on interpersonal relations.

    WMST 42/CLAS 42

  • SEX AND GENDER IN ANTIQUITY
  • Cecil Wooten
  • Cynthia Dessen

    Exploration of gender constructs, what it meant to be a woman or a man in antiquity, as they are revealed in literary, historical and archaeological sources. Readings from Homer, Euripides, Plato, Ovid, Virgil, Juvenal, Petronius, and toher ancient autho rs.

    WMST 43/FREN 43

  • FRENCH WOMEN WRITERS
  • Staff

    Works by French women authors read in translation along with pertinent throretical texts. Course content will vary each semester, incorporating text from different periods and genres.

    WMST 44/GERM 44

  • WOMEN IN GERMAN CINEMA
  • Alice Kuzniar

    Introduction to feminist aesthetics and film by the examination of the representation of women in German cinema from Expressionism to the present; subtitled films. English is the language of instruction.

    WMST 46/PHIL 46

  • PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN FEMINISM
  • Staff

    Moral issues of equal rights and justice; sex role steeotypes; equal opportunity and reverse discrimination; abortion; philosophers' theories of feminism.

    WMST 56/SPCH 56

  • GENDER IN COMMUNICATION
  • Beverly Long

    Examines multiple relationships between communication and gender. Emphasize how communication creates gender and power roles and how communicative patterns reflect, sustain and alter social conceptions of gender.

    WMST 58/HIST 58

  • WOMEN IN EUROPE I
  • Judith Bennett/Barbara Harris

    Examines the images and realities of women's lives in pre-industrial Europe. Our focus will stretch from prehistoric societies up to the beginnings of industrialization inthe eighteenth century.

    WMST 59/HIST 59

  • WOMEN IN EUROPE II
  • Judith Bennett/Barbara Harris

    When he first factories opened in England int he late eighteenth centruy, they inqugurated a process of economic chnage that has radically transformed the human experience. In this class, we will study how these changes have affected the lives of europea n women.

    WMST 61/AFRI 61

  • AFRICAN WOMEN
  • Staff

    Introduction to recent literature, theoretcial questions and methodological issues concerning the study of women in Africa. Topics include women in traditional society, impact of colonial experience and modernization on African women.

    WMST 62/HIST 62

  • WOMEN IN AMERICAN HISTORY
  • Staff

    Using a variety of sources including monographs, diaries, autobiographies, fiction, and filem, we will explore the publica nd private lives of American women of different class, racial, ethnc, and religious backgrounds from the colonial period to the pres ent. Our goal is to understnad women's role in AMerican life and the ways they have shaped our society, cluture and politics.

    WMST 63/PHYE 63

  • WOMEN IN SPORT
  • Staff

    The changing level of women's involvement in sports and the socio-historical perceptions of this phenomenon, examines how women's participation in sports has been impacted by their racial, economic, and regional status.

    WMST 64/ART 64

  • WOMEN IN THE VISUAL ARTS I
  • Mary Sheriff

    This course will analyze the representation of women in Western Art, placing special emphasis on works made by women.

    WMST 65/AFAM 66

  • BLACK WOMEN IN AMERICA
  • Staff

    An examination of the individual and collective experiences of Black women in America from slavery to the present and the evolution of feminist consciousness.

    WMST 72/POLI 72

  • WOMEN AND POLITICS
  • Pamela Conover

    A comparison of men and women as political actors at the mass and elite levels in America. Topics include the "gender gap", the women's movement, abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment.

    WMST 80/HIST 80

  • WOMEN IN LATIN AMERICA
  • Sarah Chambers

    Women and gender in Latin American history; examines the experiences of women and gender relations in Latin American Societies from pre-Columbian times to the present.

    WMST 86/ENGL 86

  • AMERICAN WOMEN AUTHORS
  • Linda Wagner-Martin

    This course is a study of major American women authors from the seventeenth century into the twentieth century.

    WMST 87/ENGL 87

  • SOUTHERN WOMEN WRITERS
  • Staff

    Southern Women Writers examines thematic and stylistic aspects in the fiction, drama, and poetry of major authors, and explores recurrent motifs in works by lesser known writers, particularly those from North Carolina.

    WMST 9OB/ENGL 90B

  • FEMINIST THEORY AND LITERARY CRITICISM
  • Staff

    Examines the importance of feminist theory across the curriculum. Topics include language and linguistics; psychoanalysis; anthropology, and myth; women's labor, production, and reproduction; history, political science, and religious studies; and literat ure, predominantly French and English.

    WMST 91/ECON 91

  • WOMEN AND ECONOMICS
  • Rachel Willis

    An economic history of women, an economic analysis of women's time allocation patterns, and an application of economic techniques to contemporary policy issues.

    WMST 92/CMPL 92

  • WOMEN AND WORK
  • Lilian Furst

    Explores the possibilities, problems, and limitations of work for women during the Victorian period.

    WMST 94A/FREN 94A

  • COURTSHIP
  • Jane Burns

    Interdisciplinary study of western views concerning love between the sexes, focusing on courtly love in the Middle Ages and Romantic love in the Victorian era. Literary, historical and art historical materials.

    WMST 96/CMPL 96

  • MODERN WOMEN WRITERS
  • Diane Leonard

    An analysis of literary techniques in the works of such writers as Jane Austen, George Sand, George Elliot, Kate Chopin, Isak Dinesen, Colette, Virginia Woolf, Gertrude Stein, Anais Nin, Marguerite Duras and Nathalie Sarraute.

    WMST 101/LSRA 101

  • WOMEN, WORK AND LEISURE
  • M. Deborah Bialeschki

    Implications of the relationship between women and leisure from a lifestyle perspective. Analysis of the changing role of women and changing leisure concepts from a feminist perspective.

    WMST 103/MHCH 103

  • REPRODUCTIVE PHYSIOLOGY AND CONCEPTION CONTROL
  • Jaroslav Hulka

    The course describes the basic anatomy and physiology of the male and female reproductive organs and discusses methods of contraception to suppress normal fertility. The course also presents the subfertile or infertile causes and treatments. A major por tion of the course is in the discussion of pregnancy physiology and complications, including clinical management and newborn care, with a visit to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in North Carolina Memorial Hospital. The course is designed to make nonhea lth professionals as thoroughly familiar with the concepts and language of reproduction and its clinical concerns as physicians and nurses.

    WMST 115/JOMC 115

  • WOMEN AND MASS COMMUNICATION
  • A. Johnston/Jane Brown

    An examination of women as media producers, subjects, and audiences with a focus on current practices and possibilities for change.

    WMST 120/SPAN 120

  • WOMEN IN HISPANIC LITERATURE
  • Rosa Perelmuter

    A study of the inscription of femininity in texts by Spanish and Spanish American authors. Readings will be available in Spanish or in English translation. Lectures will be conducted in English.

    WMST 121/MUSC 121

  • WOMEN IN OPERA
  • Terry Rhodes

    An examination and exploration of women's changing roles, onstage and behind the scenes, in the 400-year history of opera; the influence of women on the course of opera.

    WMST 129/SOCI 129

  • RACE, CLASS AND GENDER
  • Sherryl Kleinman

    Conceptualizations of gender, race, and class and how, separately and in combination, they are interpreted by the wider society. Emphasis on how black and working class women make sense of their experiences at work and within the family.

    WMST 140/ANTH 140

  • GENDER AND CULTURE
  • Staff

    Cross-cultural perspectives on the social uses of gender distinctions. Focus on women's lives outside the U.S. and Europe. Comparison with students' social context.

    WMST 141/ANTH 141

  • GENDER, HEALTH AND ILLNESS
  • Staff

    Explores the social and cultural patterns and practices that differentially influence health and illness among women and men.

    WMST 142/PLAN 142

  • GENDER ISSUES IN PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Helzi Naponen

    This course examines gender differences in the economic development process in the Third World and explores methods of incorporating a gender analysis in the work of development planners and policy makers.

    WMST 145/RELI 145

  • THE FIGURE OF THE FATHER
  • Tomoko Masuzawa

    The relationship between the figure of the father and the authority of the law (religious, societal, or familia) studied through such writers as Flaubert, Kafka, and Freud.

    WMST 146/SPCH 146

  • PERFORMANCE OF WOMEN OF COLOR
  • Soyini Madison

    The course explores contemporary poetry, feminist discourse, and performance traditions by Latina, Native American and African American women. Study of culture and performance will culminate in the enactment of poetry.

    WMST 150/ENGL 50

  • GENDER AND LITERATURE
  • Staff

    This course will examine the ways women have portrayed their view of the south in fiction and drama. It will consider both the individual concerns of women artists and the cultural contexts which shape their art.

    WMST 151/ART 151

  • WOMEN IN THE VISUAL ARTS II
  • Mary Sheriff

    This course will focus on a limited number of topics related to the representation of women and/or the status of women as producers of art.

    WMST 160/HIST 160

  • WOMEN & RELIGION IN US HISTORY
  • Staff

    An interdisciplinary consideration of women's roles, behavior, and ideas in the religious life of Americans from 1636 to 1982.

    WMST 161/HBHE 160

  • WOMEN'S HEALTH & HEALTH EDUCATION
  • Jo Earp

    An overview of women's health emphasizing their specific interest as family and community members, as patients, and as health professionals. Implications for health education practice and research. Permission of instructor.

    WMST 164/POLI 164

  • FEMINISM AND POLITICAL THEORY
  • Stephen Leonard

    Explores continuities and discontinuities between feminist and "traditional" political theory, including conceptions of "woman", and how feminists have critically interpreted traditional ideas.

    WMST 168/HIST 168

  • WOMEN IN THE SOUTH
  • Jacquelyn Hall

    An exploration of the distinctive themes in southern women's lives, using the evidence of history and literature.

    WMST 169/HIST 169

  • WOMEN AND PUBLIC POLICY
  • Staff

    Explores the various areas and levels of women's involvement in the political process before and after suffrage.

    WMST 173/SPCH 173/HIST 173

  • ORAL HISTORY AND PERFORMANCE
  • Jacquelyn Hall/Della Pollock

    Permission of one of the instructors. Examines performance as means of interpreting and conveying oral history texts. Performance-centered approach to underscore gender distinctions in the telling and making of history; to enhance students' identificati on with narrators as historical agents; and to promote public presentation and discussion of historical research.

    WMST 176/NURS 176

  • WOMEN OVER 50
  • Eleanor Taggart

    The course will view the population group of women over 50 years of age from several perspectives--sociological, psychological, economic and political--looking at their numbers, their health and their roles in the family, work and community.

    WMST 178/RELI 178

  • GENDER IN THE HISTORY OF RELIGION
  • Joanne Waghorne

    Developments in the use of gender as a religious symbol and a religious structure from primal religion to the beginning of philosophical traditions in Asia, Africa and Europe.

    WMST 183/PSYC 183

  • CONTEMPORARY SEX ROLES
  • Staff

    Covers theories and research in the areas of constitutional and social learning influences on sex differences in such areas as intellectual accomplishment, achievement, dependency and aggression; sex differences in relation to behavior disorder.

    WMST 184/NURS 184

  • WOMEN, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
  • Margarete Sandelowski

    Permission of instructor. Examines women as creators and beneficiaries of science and technology. Considers women as scientists and inventors; gender bias in scientific theories; reproductive, household, child care technologies; feminist approaches to i nquiry.

    WMST 185/ENGL 185/FOLK 185

  • WOMEN IN FOLKLORE AND LITERATURE
  • Staff

    Explores images of women pictured in the folk imagination and traces those conceptions through created literature. Broadly based in folklore, literature, history and classics. Interdisciplinary approach reveals how writers are influenced by the folk cul tures that surround them.

    WMST 186/RUSS 186

  • RUSSIAN WOMEN'S LITERATURE
  • Staff

    A study of Russian women's writing after World War II. Includes both fictional and publicistic works analyzed in their socio-political context. An introduction to Russian women's studies.

    WMST 209/PHIL 209

  • FEMINIST THEORY
  • Staff

    Seminar in recent developments in feminist philosophy. Topics include feminist critiques of and constructive approaches toward ethics, epistemology, aesthetics, and philosophy of science.

    WMST 215/ANTH 215

  • FEMINISM AND SOCIETY
  • Staff

    Seminar in selected topics in feminist analysis of social life, with materials drawn from a global range of societies.

    WMST 220/HIST 220

  • EUROPEAN WOMEN'S HISTORY
  • Barbara Harris/Judith Bennett

    Readings in European women's history for graduate students.

    WMST 221/HIST 221

  • AMERICAN WOMEN'S HISTORY
  • Staff

    Reading in American women's history for graduate students.

    WMST 222/HIST 222

  • TOPICS IN WOMEN'S HISTORY
  • Staff

    Directed readings on selected topics in the history of women in Western Europe and the United States.

    WMST 223/HIST 223

  • MEDIEVAL WOMEN'S HISTORY
  • Judith Bennett

    This graduate-level reading course will cover selected topics in the history of European women, c. 500-1500. Topics will include: holy virginity and religious life; sexuality; work; courtly love; the different experiences of women of different social str ata (i.e., aristocratic vs. urban vs. peasant); and analysis of changes in women's status over time.

    WMST 225/FREN 225

  • FRENCH FEMINIST THEORY
  • Jane Burns

    This graduate-level course will provide a rigorous introduction to feminist literary theory, focusing on feminist writings from France and their sources in psychoanalysis and post-structuralism. Anglo-American counterparts and adaptations of French theor ists and the French tradition will also be treated.

    WMST 228/HIST 228

  • FEMINIST THEORY FOR HISTORIANS
  • Judith Bennett

    Readings in contemporary feminist theory, focused especially on theories that address the construction, writing and general practice of history.

    WMST 231/SOCI 231

  • SOCIOLOGY OF GENDER
  • Lawrence Rosenfeld
  • Richard Udry

    Reviews theory and research on variation in men's and women's gender roles, with emphasis on industrialized societies and women's roles.

    WMST 251/ART 251

  • GENDER AND VISUAL CULTURE
  • Mary Sheriff

    This course explores a range of feminist theory and investigates visual images (e.g., paintings, films, rock videos, advertisements) through issues of gender, race, class and sexual identity.

    WMST 253/ANTH 253

  • GENDER, SICKNESS AND SOCIETY
  • Kaja Finkler

    This seminar will deal in depth with the nature of gender cross culturally and the ways social comprehension of gender, gender status, and gender relationships impinge upon the differential experience of health and sickness in men and women from both a contemporary and historical perspective.

    WMST 265/EDSP 266

  • GENDER, RACE AND CLASS
  • Staff

    Insight and remedies on issues in education; curriculum, counseling and interaction patterns in the classroom; structures and leadership as well as fundamental assumptions can perpetuate racism, sexism and class divisions.

    WMST 266/POLI 266

  • FEMINIST POLITICS
  • Pam Conover/Stephen Leonard

    A survey of feminist approaches to politics and political inquiry.

    WMST 267/EDSP 267

  • FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF POWER AND ETHICS
  • Staff

    Feminist critiques of organizational and political power structures; readings and discussions leading to individual and group research projects.

    WMST 387/HIST 387

  • RESEARCH SEMINAR ON WOMEN'S HISTORY