Jun 16, 2024  
2017-2018 Scripps Catalog 
    
2017-2018 Scripps Catalog THIS IS AN ARCHIVED CATALOG. LINKS MAY NO LONGER BE ACTIVE AND CONTENT MAY BE OUT OF DATE!

Courses


Descriptions are provided for courses offered at Scripps College and offered as part of joint or cooperative programs in which Scripps participates. For those courses that may appear under more than one discipline or department, the full course description appears under the discipline or department sponsoring the course and cross-reference is made under the associated discipline or department. Numbers followed by, for example, “AA,” “AF,” or “CH,” indicate courses sponsored by The Claremont Colleges as part of joint programs, i.e., Asian American Studies, Africana Studies, and Chicana/o-Latina/o Studies.

Please refer to the Schedule of Courses on the Scripps Portal published each semester by the Office of the Registrar for up-to-date information on course offerings.

All courses are 1.0 credit unless otherwise stated.

 

History

  
  • HIST 197G JT - Rethinking Radicalism: Progress and Its Critics


    What else might radicalism mean? How and why did democrats abandon populism to the political right? Through these questions, we will consider whether or not there are inherent limits to much of contemporary progressive thought and action. Special attention will be given to the political and historical foundations of radical populism on the left and to the anti-progressive tradition of democracy. The diverse set of readings includes labor leaders, agrarian farmers, artists, religious figures, and civil rights organizers, as well as some major political thinkers.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HIST 199 SC - Independent Study in History: Reading and Research


    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Humanities

The Humanities Institute was founded in 1986 to promote interdisciplinary research and public discussion of important issues in culture and society. Each semester the Institute sponsors a series of events on a significant theme in the humanities. The programs of the Institute include conferences, lectures, readings, exhibitions, and film series and bring to Scripps College scholars, scientists, and artists who are of special interest to the community. Students can apply to participate in the work of the Institute. Fellows, who are appointed for one term, take a research seminar (Humanities 195J) in addition to attending all the events of the Institute and creating a final project.

  
  • HUM 195J SC - Fellowship in the Humanities Institute


    Fellows in the Scripps College Humanities Institute will work closely with the director on an experiential project related to the theme of the Institute in a given semester. The half-credit Fellowship in the Humanities Institute does not satisfy any general education requirement, but may be used once toward requirements of a major with approval of the faculty adviser in the major. Registration requires application. For information on applying, see www.scrippscollege.edu/campus/humanities-institute/indes.php. May apply to repeat once for credit.

    For Spring 2018: The Humanities Institute Fellows seminar will cover the historical contextualization of migration and immigration that expands from the local to the global, building on our focus on LA and the USA to include other parts of the world; recent migration issues in the late 20th century and early 21st century worldwide (warfare, religious persecution, exploitable immigrant labor, etc.); and relevant topics raised by prejudicial immigration policies not only in the USA but also in Europe and Asia (including the politics and practices of exclusive nationalisms). This course will give HI Fellows opportunities to learn from and interact with people who are making a difference. The Fellowship in the Humanities Institute does not satisfy any general education requirement, but may be used once toward requirements of a major with approval of the faculty adviser in the major.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Each semester


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Humanities Major: Culture

  
  • HMSC 123 SC - Introduction to the Philosophy and History of Culture


    This course will focus on some of the major work in post-Enlightenment (19th and 20th centuries) thinking about culture: Kant’s Third Critique, Schiller’s Aesthetic Education, Arnold’s Culture and Anarchy. As well, it will examine later works on the historical development of the relationship between culture and society paying attention to the ways in which culture has shaped the social categories and experience of class, race, nation, and gender.This course is cross listed as HIST 123  SC.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 130 SC - Schools of Cultural Criticism: Culture and Critique


    This team-taught course will examine the categories by which philosophers, social scientists, historians, and literary critics have understood culture. Topics may include historicism (the role of history in defining individual experience), the development of mass culture and new media, and post-colonialism. May be completed twice for credit with different topics. This course is cross listed as HIST 130  SC.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 133 SC - Freud/Derrida


    This course will examine key concepts common to Freudian psychoanalysis and Derridean deconstruction: repression and meaning, the limit of knowledge, and sexual difference and the self. A consideration of the significance of Freud’s work beyond the theme of sexuality will be pursued through an engagement with the critical insights of Derrida, so as to think differently about intellectual influence, the filiation of disciplines, and the aims/possibilities of knowledge.

    Offered: Every other year


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 134 SC - Foundations in Postcolonial Theory


    This course provides an in-depth survey of key foundational texts in postcolonial theory. Students will learn the main tenets of theoretical paradigms advanced by postcolonial theorists and attain proficiency with the terminology of the field (ex. hegemony, subalternity, orientalism, hybridity, contamination, conviviality, etc.) emerging across geographies and disciplines from the 1950s to the present. The course will problematize the relationship of postcolonial theory as a field to discourses in feminist theory, globalization and transnationalism and application of the theories to real-world situations.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 136 SC - Cultural Critique and Capitalism


    This course explores historical and contemporary efforts to analyze and understand the relationship between “culture” and “capitalism.” We will focus on the emergence of the concept of culture and the critical discourses surrounding it from the rise of industrial capitalism to contemporary crises in capital.

     


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 138 SC - Genet


    Among an impressive group of post-World War II European writers, Jean Genet stands out as perhaps the most versatile.  He was, at once, novelist, playwright, philosopher, filmmaker, memoirist, and polemicist. Is this the reason why Genet’s works, though lauded by both Sartre and Derrida, today occupy a “minor” position in both the academy and the literate world beyond? Through a close reading of some of his most important texts, this course will consider how Genet deployed and confronted sexuality, family, morality, and nation as interrelated aspects of the operations of inclusion/exclusion so central to modern Western societies. This course is designed for mature audiences.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every other year


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 148 SC - The Poetry and Science of Sleep


    This course looks at ways scientists, social scientists, and artists approach sleep, and at ways sleep is positioned in various cultures and societies. It draws on multiple perspectives: neuroscience, psychology, sociology, anthropology, history, immunology, psychoneuroimmunology, endocrinology. Instructor permission required.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 167 SC - Metropolis: Imagining the City


    Whether pictured as labyrinth, stage set, utopian pleasure-dome or gigantic living room, the urban landscape has played a crucial role in the attempt of 20th-century writers and artists to come to terms with modernity. The course will move from the squares of 19th-century Berlin, the grid of Manhattan, to the malls and theme parks of Los Angeles, using fiction (Poe, Kafka, Wm. Gibson), film (Lang, Wenders, R. Scott), essays (Eco, Didion), and urban theory (Sennett, Choay) to investigate how changes in the perception of the city reflect the ways modernity sees itself. Cross listed as GRMT 167  SC. This course is taught in English.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 185 SC - Humanities Major Junior Seminar


    Provides intensive instruction to majors in the study of culture, using both theoretical and archival materials in the investigation of a specific assigned topic. Students will develop skills in critical thinking and in archival and bibliographical research. In the second half of the semester, they will apply these skills by choosing and researching their own topic in the area of culture.

    Prerequisite(s): Two of the following: HMSC 123 , HMSC 130 , an introductory course related to discipline. Permission of instructor required.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 190 SC - Senior Seminar


    The course will consider issues in the field of Interdisciplinary Studies in Culture as they are presented in classic and contemporary scholarship in the humanities and the interpretative social sciences. The aim will be to prepare students to write the thesis in the Humanities major.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 191 SC - Senior Thesis


    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • HMSC 199 SC - Independent Study in the Humanities major


    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Interdisciplinary Studies

  
  • ID 020 PO - Science and Religion: Friends, Enemies, or Strangers?


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ID 099 SC - Mellon Mays Undergraduate Seminar


    This course is an academic research and leadership seminar for Mellon Mays undergraduate Fellows. It will prepare students for graduate school.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Each semester


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ID 191D SC - Senior Thesis for Dual Majors


    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ID 191S SC - Senior Thesis for Self-Designed Majors


    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ID 199 SC - Independent Study


    This course number may be used to enroll a student approved to complete an independent study of an interdisciplinary nature that does not fit into one of the established majors or programs and is overseen by two or more faculty from different academic departments. Offered only when approved by petition.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



International and Intercultural Studies

  
  • IIS 050 PZ - Power and Social Change


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 075 PZ - Introduction to Postcolonial Studies


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 080 PZ - Introduction to Critical Theory


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 113 PZ - Science, Politics, and Alternative Medicine


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 128 PZ - The War on Terror


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 146 PZ - International Relations of the Middle East


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 167 PZ - Theory and Practice of Resistance to Monoculture


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • IIS 168 PZ - Culture and Power


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Italian

  
  • ITAL 001 SC - Introductory Italian


    Instruction in Italian grammar supplemented by extensive readings and conversations concerning Italian life and culture. Emphasis on mastery of oral communication as well as use of the written language. Offered annually. Note: This course may not be counted in the major.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 002 SC - Continued Introductory Italian


    Review of grammar, syntax, and vocabulary as covered in the preceding course. Continuation of grammar study, with presentation of more complex grammar structures. Continuation of emphasis on oral communication. Note: This course may not be counted in the major. Offered annually.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 001  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 033 SC - Intermediate Italian


    Review of first year grammar, conversation, composition, and readings based on literary sources. Concentration on syntax, style, and idiomatic phrases. Note: This course may not be counted in the major. Offered annually.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 002  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 044 SC - Advanced Italian: Readings in Literature and Civilization


    Literary analysis and cultural perspectives, based on short stories, excerpts from longer works, and films. Offered annually.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 033  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 120 JT - Italian Cities


    This course will provide an interdisciplinary approach to the development of cities and urban spaces in Italy from the Middle Ages through the Twentieth Century. How have urban structures and social group identities changed from early city-states to modern metropolis with sprawling urbanization? What are the “narratives” produced around the city? Italian cities will be studied under the rubrics art history, architecture, literature and film. Taught in English.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 121 SC - Readings in Italian Medieval and Renaissance Literature


    The course will focus on some of the major works of Italian medieval and Renaissance literature, and on the ways they present a lens through which to understand this fertile era of pre-modernity. To be included are excerpts from Dante’s Divine Comedy, Boccaccio’s Decameron, Petrarch’s lyric sonnets and the tradition they generated, and Ariosto’s epic fantasy, The Orlando Furioso. Taught in English.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 123 SC - Renaissance Italian Literature


    Selections from the writings of Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio, Machiavelli, and Ariosto. Analysis of these works as milestones in the evolution of Renaissance literature. Emphasis will be placed on the stylistic and intellectual contributions of these authors. The course is also designed to make the student aware of the interrelationships between literature and other aspects of life in Renaissance Italy, such as politics, religion, social trends, and culture in a general sense.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 132 SC - Modern Italian Literature


    Literary perspectives of 20th-century Italy with a particular focus on World War II and its aftermath. Authors to be read include Elio Vittorini, Cesare Pavese, Italo Calvino, Natalia Ginzburg, Primo Levi, Carlo Levi, Ignazio Silone, Eugenio Montale, Giuseppe Ungaretti, and Umberto Saba.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 133 SC - Contemporary Italian Literature


    In this course we will explore recent trends in Italian literature. Authors vary, but may include: Erri de Luca, Carmine Abate, Alessandro Baricco, Andrea de Carlo, Dacia Maraini, Wu Ming, Giancarlo De Cataldo. Repeatable three times for credit with different authors.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 134 SC - Twentieth-Century Italian Women’s Literature


    Works by some of the most well known authors of the 20th century. What do these authors have to say about issues of social justice, and especially gender? How were these works received by various audiences? Who decides what books qualify as “great art,” and how? Authors to be read include: Sibilla Aleramo, Grazia Deledda, Natalia Ginzburg, Elsa Morante, and Dacia Maraini.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 135 SC - The Legacy of the Past: Appreciating History in Contemporary Italian Fiction


    A current trend in Italian literature is the memoir or the family saga. In this course, students will read contemporary novels in which narrators recall their own past and revisit their parents’ and ancestors’ experiences. They will not only have the opportunity to learn about Italian history, but because the texts convey a contemporary point of view, they will also explore the past in ways that have been revised and re-appraised. The authors to be read include: Abate, De Carlo, Ginzburg, Loy, Maraini, and Tabucchi.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 136 SC - Italians as Guests and Hosts: Intercultural Encounters in Current Italian Fiction


    This course examines the phenomenon of exchange between Italians and other cultures. Through their readings, students will gain an understanding of the experiences of Italian immigrants, who undergo the process of establishing themselves on foreign soil, as well as those of immigrants from abroad, who seek opportunities as “new Italians.” The course will take into account the changes in attitudes experienced by these guests as well as by their hosts. Authors to be read include: Erri de Luca, Laura Pariani, Carmine Abate, and Pap Khouma.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 137 SC - Italy as a Murder Mystery


    In this course, we will explore in detail all the characteristics of the “giallo” genre and subgenres related to it (such as horror stories and legal narratives), its widespread reception and its inherent multiple textuality, which includes novels, film and comic books. Such texts will open the way to the cultural analysis of the representation of real “gialli”, or violent episodes in Italian history that have been on the spotlight for different reasons and in different ways of investigation and have contributed to the formation of Italian modernity.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 140 SC - History of Italian Cinema


    This course will explore the history and criticism of Italian cinema from its origin to the 21st century through the showing of a number of iconic films and the criticism surrounding them. It will also help student better understand contemporary Italian history through film. Taught in Italian.

    Offered: Every other year


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  •  Course Syllabus

    ITAL 142 SC - Italian Literature and Cinema


    Decameron di Boccaccio: Tradizioni, Traduzioni e Tradimenti
    This course offers an introduction to Boccaccio’s Decameron through a close reading of Boccaccio’s collection of one hundred tales, an investigation of the literary traditions (tradizioni) that converge in the most important prose work of the Italian Middle Ages, and its cinematic “translations” (traduzioni/tradimenti). During the semester, we will read all the novellas that have been adapted for the screen by Pier Paolo Pasolini (Decameron, 1971), and the Taviani brothers (Magnifico Boccaccio, 2015), re-valuing Boccaccio’s work and identifying the challenges that such a classical Italian work presents to Italian filmmakers in their attempts to transcribe it into an audiovisual spectacle.

    Syllabus  

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL044 SC  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 146 SC - Losers in Italian Literature


    This course scrutinizes and reconsiders the concept of losing and its implications by analyzing fictional characters from the Italian short story tradition (from its origins to the twentieth century) who have been addressed as “perdenti, reietti, inetti vinti, sconfitti, and falliti” but who, in the end, have made history in literature by showing how getting lost, losing, and being defeated should carry no shame because, as Umberto Eco claimed, “losers are much more interesting than winners, since they invite the readers to find the reasons for their failure.” Course taught in Italian.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL044 SC  
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 197 SC - Special Topics in Italian


    Specific course information available in pre-registration materials.

    Prerequisite(s): ITAL 044  or equivalent.
    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 197A SC - The Writer as Fable-Maker: The Works of Italo Calvino


    The course will examine Calvino’s literary career, a narrative trajectory which reflects, through his fanciful lens, key literary, cultural, historical, and social aspects of twentieth-century Italy. Taught in English.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • ITAL 199 SC - Independent Study in Italian Literature: Reading and Research


    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Japanese

  
  • JAPN 001A PO - Elementary Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 001B PO - Elementary Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 011 PO - Conversation: Contemporary Japanese Language and Culture


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 012A PO - Japanese Kanji Class


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 012B PO - Japanese Kanji Class


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 013 PO - Advanced Conversation


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 051A PO - Intermediate Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 051B PO - Intermediate Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 111A PO - Advanced Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 111B PO - Advanced Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 124 PO - Readings in Current Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 125 PO - Readings in Modern Japanese Literature


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 131 PO - Introduction to Classical Japanese


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 192A PO - Senior Project


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 192B PO - Senior Project


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JAPN 199 PO - Reading and Research


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Annually


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Japanese Literature and Culture in English Translation

  
  • JPNT 170 PO - Pre-Modern Japanese Literature in English Translation


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JPNT 174 PO - Modern Japanese Literature in English: Literary Reconfigurations of Japanese Identity, 1868 to Present


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Alternate years


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JPNT 176 PO - Time and Space in Modern Japanese Literature


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JPNT 177 PO - Japanese and Japanese American Women Writers


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JPNT 178 PO - Japanese and Japanese American Autobiography


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  • JPNT 179 PO - Graphically Speaking: Japanese Manga and Its Buds


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Korean

  
  
  • KORE 002 CM - Continuing Introductory Korean


    See the Claremont McKenna College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  
  
  • KORE 100 CM - Readings in Korean Literature and Culture


    See the Claremont McKenna College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  

Korean Literature and Culture in English Translation

  
  • KRNT 130 CM - Korean Cinema and Culture


    See the Claremont McKenna College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Alternate years


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Latin American Studies

  
  • LAST 191 SC - Senior Thesis in Latin American and Caribbean Studies


    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Linguistics

  
  • LING 110 PZ - Language and Gender


    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Linguistics and Cognitive Science

LGSC courses are offered through the Linguistics and Cognitive Science Department at Pomona College

  
  • LGCS 010 PO - Introduction to Linguistics


    See the Pomona College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.



Literature

  
  
  
  
  
  
  • LIT 103 HM - Third Cinema


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  • LIT 145 HM - Third World Women Writers


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


  
  
  • LIT 155 HM - Post-Apartheid Narratives


    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.

    Course Credit: 1.0


    Please refer to the course schedule on the Scripps Portal for current course offerings and details.


 

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