Jun 21, 2024  
2020-2021 Scripps Catalog 
    
2020-2021 Scripps Catalog THIS IS AN ARCHIVED CATALOG. LINKS MAY NO LONGER BE ACTIVE AND CONTENT MAY BE OUT OF DATE!

Course Descriptions


Course descriptions are provided for course offerings at Scripps College and courses available 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 Chicanx Latinx Studies.

Please refer to the Schedule of Courses on the Scripps Portal published each semester by the Registrar’s Office for real-time information on course offerings.

All courses are 1.0 credit unless otherwise stated.

 

Chicanx Latinx Transnational Studies

  
  • CHLT 154 CH - Latinas in the Garment Industry


    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.


  
  • CHLT 157 CH - Latina Activists Work & Protest


    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.


  
  • CHLT 160 CH - Queering (Im)Migration: LGBTI & Gender Nonconforming Migration from Central America


    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.


  
  • CHLT 166 CH - Chicana Feminist Epistemologies


    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.



Chinese

  
  • CHIN 001A PO - Elementary Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 001B PO - Elementary Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 002 PO - Elementary Chinese for Bilinguals


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 011 PO - Conversation: Contemporary Chinese 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.


  
  • CHIN 013 PO - Chinese Conversation, Advanced


    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.


  
  • CHIN 051A PO - Intermediate Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 051B PO - Intermediate Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 051H PO - Intermediate Chinese for Bilinguals


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 111A PO - Advanced Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 111B PO - Advanced Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 125 PO - Modern Chinese Literature


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 127 PO - Advanced Readings in Modern Chinese Literature and Culture


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 131 PO - Introduction to Classical Chinese


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 192A PO - Senior Project


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CHIN 192B PO - Senior Project


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

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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



Chinese Literature in English Translation

  
  • CHNT 164 PO - Poetry and Poetics


    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.


  
  • CHNT 166 PO - Chinese Fiction, Old and New


    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.


  
  • CHNT 167 PO - Urban Imaginations: The City in Chinese Literature and Film


    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.


  
  • CHNT 168 PO - Gender and Sexuality in Modern Chinese 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.



Classics

  
  • CLAS 001 PO - Greek and Roman Classics


    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.


  
  • CLAS 010 SC - Epic Heroes and Form in Popular Culture


    Starting with cinematic superheroes (e.g., Black Panther, Superman) and stretching back to Homer’s Achilles and the Sumerian Gilgamesh, traditional epic heroism has been an important site for education, the sublime, and entertainment. Yet anti-epic and anti-heroes often critique the values woven into traditional epic form. This course surveys the role of epic heroes/heroines across ancient, medieval, and modern times in order to better understand the changing conceptions of heroes: what kinds of knowledge do epic heroes produce and how does this knowledge relate to our lives? Along with screening films, we read epic poems (e.g., Near Eastern, Greek, Roman, English, German), novels, and critical theory.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every two years


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


  
  • CLAS 012 SC - Greek Tragedy/Modern World


    We explore the strange world of Greek tragedy through a reading of selected plays (e.g., Sophocles, Euripides) and modern adaptations (plays and films). Why have these ancient plays been so influential? Students also learn about Dionysiac rituals, performance styles, theater archaeology, and reception theory. No prior knowledge necessary. Students will also have the opportunity to act out/direct/assist with scenes from ancient/modern plays. 

    This course satisfies either the Fine Arts or Letters general education requirement but not both.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CLAS 014 SC - Ancient Comedy


    A survey of Greek and Roman comedy, this course explores the origins, architecture, staging techniques, and rituals of the ancient theatre in terms of its changing social, political, and historical contexts. Special attention is paid to the function(s) of comedy and the role(s) of humor in the ancient world.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 018 SC - The Ancient Novel and Romance


    The dominant modern literary genre, the novel, finds its origins in ancient popular romances of wanderings and happy endings. Students will read the novels and romances of Longus, Heliodorus, Chariton, Lucian, Apuleius, and others, with attention to historical context, the nature of the genre, readership, and narratology. Special emphasis will be placed on the origins and nature of the novel, with a look at Homer’s Odyssey and Euripides’ romances as well as theorists including Bakhtin.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 019 SC - Classical Myth in Film: Hollywood and Avant-garde Cinema


    From Cleopatra’s beguiling charms and Medea’s torrid love affair with Jason to Homer’s wily Odysseus and Oedipus’ complex, ancient culture still provides material for conceptualizing modern political, racial, social, and sexual issues as imagined in modern Hollywood films and European cinema. This course explores the relationship between modernity and antiquity through a study of cinematic adaptations of mythical narratives; central to these discussions are the relationship between aesthetics and politics and the shifting role of culture from common ground to culture industry and beyond. In addition to screening films, students will also read plays, poetry, historical narratives, film criticism, and works of critical theory.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every two years


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


  
  • CLAS 020 PZ - Fantastic Archaeology: Modern Myths, Pseudo-Science, and the Study of the Past


    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.


  
  • CLAS 022 PO - Epic: Gods and Heroes


    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.


  
  • CLAS 113 SC - History of Sexuality: The Classical World


    The ancient Greeks and Romans categorized sexuality differently from modern Westerners. This course focuses on same-sex love, an area of maximal difference. Using ancient evidence—from literature, history, and art—as well as modern theories, we will study the history of sexuality in the Classical cultures.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 114 SC - Female and Male in Ancient Greece


    Using evidence from literature, oratory, law, medical writings, and the visual arts, this course will explore the legal and social position of women in ancient Greece; male attitudes toward women and the idea of the Female; sexuality; and the contrast between the myths of powerful women and the apparent reality.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 121 JT - Classical Mythology


    This class surveys some of the prominent myths of the ancient Greek and Roman world, with attention to material culture, literary interpretation, theory of myth and modern reception. How did Greeks and Romans live among their myths? The class is usually taught jointly by a literary Classicist and an archaeologist.  Readings include selections from Hesiod, Homer, the dramatists, Ovid and Apuleius.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 125 PZ - Ancient Spectacle


    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.


  
  • CLAS 130 SC - Roman Decadence


    From the Augustan Age onward, the Roman World was sharply divided between a self-created image of order, stability, and propriety, based on Rome’s visible political and military achievements, and its increasing involvement with exotic, private, and unconscious forces of disruption and decay. This course will examine closely those so-called “enemies of Roman order”: religious cults, superstition, personal corruption and excess, popular violence, the Roman obsession with death, the radical decline from Classical models of life and art. Authors read include Ovid, Lucan, Seneca, Petronius, Tacitus, Juvenal, Apuleius.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 145 SC - Ancient Political Thought


    Students study the historical and theoretical construction of communities in antiquity (with particular attention to Greece) and its reception in critical theory. Topics include citizenship, class struggle, different political regimes, and the relationship between culture and the state.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 150 SC - Special Topics in Ancient Studies


    A research seminar that focuses on specific historical periods, societies, problems, or themes. Repeatable for credit with different topics.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CLAS 161 PZ - Greek Art and Archaeology


    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.


  
  • CLAS 162 PZ - Roman Art and Archaeology


    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.


  
  • CLAS 164 PZ - Pompeii and the Cities of Vesuvius


    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.


  
  • CLAS 190 SC - Senior Seminar in Ancient Studies/Classics


    This course consists of an intensive study of selected topics within the larger field of Ancient Studies leading to significant independent research. Required of majors in the senior year.

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every fall


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


  
  • CLAS 191 SC - Senior Thesis


    Students will work closely and on an individual basis with their faculty advisers to identify an area of interest, become familiar with basic bibliography and research tools, and define a topic to investigate. Students will submit the results of this research in writing and make an oral presentation to the Ancient Studies/Classics Department. Restricted to seniors majoring in classics.

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CLAS 199 SC - Independent Study in Classics: Reading and Research


    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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



Cognitive Science

  
  • COGS 123 PZ - Minds and Machines


    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.


  
  • MATH 010Z PZ - History of Algorithms


    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.



Computer Science

  
  • CSCI 005 HM - Introduction to Computer Science


    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.


  
  • CSCI 051 CM - Introduction to Computer Science


    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.


  
  • CSCI 052 PO - Fundamentals of Computer Science


    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.



Core Courses

  
  • CORE 001 SC - Histories of the Present: Truth


    The search for truth is often taken to be one of the goals of academic inquiry, as well as a touchstone for making political and social decisions. Yet despite it being something many of us seek, we do not all agree on what is true. This course examines some methods that are seen as offering access to universal truth, while also proposing additional ways of knowing that challenge such claims. Who decides what is true and false? What do we do when dominant powers insist on a version of truth that we do not believe? Is there such a thing as truth, and, if not, what does it mean for something to be a lie? In addressing these questions, we consider how institutions, socially constructed categories such as race and gender, and other cultural frameworks influence ways of evaluating truth.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Becoming Someone Else in American Culture


    American literary and cultural history is full of discarded selves. In a culture that celebrates both self-creation and especially, self re-creation, what happens to those selves we leave behind? Are they ever jettisoned fully? Do they conflict with our new selves? Ranging from the Colonial period through the 21st century, the course will take up a variety of acts of self-fashioning, self-transformation, and self-forgetting in order to explore questions of personal, racial, gender, and national identity. We will examine how writers, artists, and musicians explore the fluidity of these categories, as well as the social consequences that attend transgressing them.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Constructions of (Dis)Ability


    This course focuses on the ways our society is structured around particular norms for “ability” and on the different kinds of violence done to those who do not fit these norms. After discussing how “normal” and “abnormal” bodies have been defined and categorized throughout modern history in literature and science, we examine the current implications of those definitions and categories. We will discuss contemporary debates about the incorporation of non-normative bodies and behaviors into social spaces and consider whether we must modify our bodies or the institutional and social spaces that they inhabit.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Convergence: Women, Work and Alternative Media


    This course will look at two ideas of convergence (technological and social); two kinds of independents in the media (quasiindustry and community-based models); and a variety of sources that cover women and labor issues in and through alternative media. Additionally, the course addresses the increasing recognition of immigrant issues as women’s issues.

     

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Death


    What is death? Why do we care about it? Is death bad? Why do we mourn the dead? What ought to be done with the dead? Has death changed? Can one be dead? The definition of death is not obvious and its criterion has changed over time (soul departure, cessation of breath, cessation of heartbeat, cessation of brain waves, etc.) for a variety of complex reasons (including religious, scientific, practical, political). Drawing upon philosophical, historical, psychological, religious, and pop culture perspectives, we will investigate death.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Discord and Dialog


    People often disagree with each other on matters of great importance, including ethical, scientific, religious, political, and aesthetic issues. This discord, and the dialog or dispute that derives from it, is a fact of our social predicament. This course investigates the nature and significance of such disagreements and dialogs by examining their structure, content, and presuppositions. We will also consider the question of what value disagreement has for society and the history of some of these disagreements.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Display, Desire and Domination


    Using texts from the fields of political science, philosophy, international relations, and history, Justice in Theory and Practice examines the way that thinkers from a variety of disciplines have explored justice in theory and in practice. By investigating ways that philosophers have theorized about justice and scholars of politics and history have applied ideas about justice empirically, this course would fit the theme of truth by looking at how notions of justice differ by time period and area of application, including in war crimes, terrorism, human rights, and truth commissions. 

    Note: If you took FREN116 SC, you cannot earn credit for this Core 2 section.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Gender, Science and Knowledge


    This course examines how cultural values have historically shaped and continue to shape scientific inquiry, practice, and knowledge production, focusing specifically on gender. We will consider questions such as: What constitutes scientific knowledge, and how is that related to who gets to be a scientist? What barriers have women faced in entering the scientific community? What might feminist science look like, and what does it mean to be a feminist scientist? How might science education be changed to be more inclusive? To address these topics, we will read critical analyses of science, perspectives of working scientists, and proposals for change.

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Hunger


    Using hunger as its central metaphor, this course explores the construction of a modern self (physical, psychological, and social) through the perception or experience of lack. Readings from philosophy, literature, politics, and sociology will guide our inquiry into discourses of sexual desire, global food policy, famine in the Global South, eating disorders, capitalism, politics, and creative expression. In all cases, our approach will be intersectional, and will consider how gender, race, class, and sexual identity affect how hunger is embodied and interpreted.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Incentives Matter: The Economics of Gender and Choice


    This course will explore how gender construction and perceptions about gender have evolved over time and how current perceptions affect the choices that individuals, institutions, and governments make. We explore the very ideas of choice, gender roles, the relationship between social and biological functions, and the notion of equity that economic participation may promise. These are issues we will examine as we look at how economic opportunities for women are linked to issues of race and class and how education plays a key role in changing the economic calculus of women’s lives.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Interdisciplinary Core 2


    Core II continues—with sharper focus and through an array of course offerings—the interdisciplinary investigations begun in Core I. That is, we develop our examination of the ways in which our contemporary self-understandings (political, moral, economic, aesthetic, etc.) emerge from and express commitments and categories that are often regarded as given—so “natural” and “obvious” as to prevent us from thinking clearly about their complexities and ambiguities. Core II courses are taught by a faculty member with interdisciplinary research interests and may be team-taught by faculty whose complementary research interests make for fresh interdisciplinary dialogue. Consult the Scripps Portal for CORE II offerings for the current semester. Core II descriptions available Interdisciplinary Core Program .

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Justice in Theory and Practice


    Using texts from the fields of political science, philosophy, international relations, and history, Justice in Theory and Practice examines the way that thinkers from a variety of disciplines have explored justice in theory and in practice. By investigating ways that philosophers have theorized about justice and scholars of politics and history have applied ideas about justice empirically, this course would fit the theme of truth by looking at how notions of justice differ by time period and area of application, including in war crimes, terrorism, human rights, and truth commissions.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Making Sense of Power


    This course explores how relationships of power and inequality often are described and experienced as rational, reasonable, and therefore appropriate. Drawing from texts in politics, economics, philosophy, and law, the course examines how social institutions literally make “sense” out of power.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Marginalized Communities


    This course explores definitions of marginalization, mechanisms of marginalization, and experiences of marginalized communities in the United States, with specific attention paid to racial minority groups, women and children, immigrants, the LGBT community, and the poor. What hurdles exist for these communities as they attempt to navigate social, political and economic processes in the US? How have/do federal, state and local policies or proposed policies hurt or bolster these communities? We will mainly rely on readings from history, economics, politics, sociology, and psychology.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Me and the Boys Come Back from Area 51


    Using texts from the fields of media studies, philosophy, English, Post-Colonial Theory, Psychology and Post-Structuralism, Me and the Boys Comes Back From Area 51 explores the way the way that memes and other digital media have changed our notions of truth, perhaps forever. In examining ways that we receive information, and how we are constructed by our interface with the digital, this course would fit the theme of truth by looking at how facts in our time, and truth itself, are now considered suspect.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 002 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, to the grid of Manhattan, to the malls and subdivisions of Los Angeles. Using fiction, film and urban history, we investigate how changes in the perception of the city reflect the ways modernity sees itself.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Misrepresentation of Women in Society and Science


    This course examines representations of women constructed from seemingly scientific evidence.  We will examine the way in which social and natural science studies from the 1800s to the present construct ideas of gender, female fragility and feminine normalcy, thus contributing to the objectification and devaluing of women.  We will critique the misuse of these studies and describe how such misuse contributes to harmful stereotypes that linger today.  Finally, we will examine how the idea of scientific “truth” shifts when those seeking the truth are women.

     

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Nerds and Geeks


    The words “geek” and “nerd” are used to describe individuals with a range of behaviors from the socially awkward to the intellectually focused. In this course, we will examine how, in our high-tech age, these terms have crossed over from a subculture to pop culture. We will explore the rise and fall of historical intellectual periods as they relate to the present day emphasis on STEM and the concurrent anti-science movements. We will also discuss misogynist versus feminist trends, and transnational influences (e.g. Japan, Korea, Germany, Hungary). Students in the class will play a part in the direction and design of a class final project.

     

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Old New Media


    Beginning with photography in the early nineteenth century and attending primarily to telegraphy, telephony, radio, television, and video, this seminar explores the history of the fascination, fear, and peculiar associations that have accompanied new technological developments. Do telephones provide direct lines to the next world? Are radio waves signals from Martians? Do new technologies help us communicate better with (and, consequently, understand) ourselves? This course uses fiction, nonfiction, film, and paranormal engagements to explore historical efforts in Europe and the United States to come to terms with new technologies and the kinds of communication they appear to provide.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Poetry of the Revolution: The Manifesto


    As consumers of the artifacts of modern culture – paintings, architecture, movies, literature – we tend to be unaware that most artistic and political movements originated in one very specific idea. Embodying the quintessentially modern claim to nothing less than the capacity to change the world, the manifesto has captured the urgency of this idea for almost 200 years now. Beginning with the modern era’s archetypical manifesteers, Marx and Engels, this class explores proclamations by African-American abolitionists, Italian Futurists, and Riot Grrrl punkrockers. We will discuss declarations by women’s suffrage activists, Bauhaus architects, French filmmakers, and many other manifestos.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every two years


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Riotous Americans: Los Angeles and the Poetics of Unrest


    This course focuses on three Los Angeles riots (“Zoot Suit,” Watts, Rodney King) with an eye towards understanding them as complex and multilayered “histories of the present.” By focusing on “riots,” we will explore how our built environments continue to produce and reproduce differential structures of class, race, gender, and citizenship.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Shakespeare Then and Now


    We will study Shakespeare’s plays by pushing against the common wisdom that they are inaccessible and obsolete. We will read closely to add historical perspective to themes introduced in Core, and imagine how his dramas might come to life in our time. We will consider how these old plays script ideas and questions that we live with today, such as Twelfth Night’s festive yet skeptical presentation of gender and love, Henry V’s exploration of the strange and bloody pull of nationalism, Othello’s treatment of race relations and rhetorical power, Macbeth’s raw account of political terror and psychological trauma, and Lear’s astonishing, anguished vision of relentless cruelty, abjection, and suffering. (The exact reading list will vary each year.) Secondary readings will be drawn from literary criticism, history, psychology, and philosophy.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every spring


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Subversive Selves


    This course focuses on the dynamic exchange between self and community, private and public, via an interdisciplinary approach to a variety of media, including photography, poetry, novels, films, memoir, fashion, and music. The syllabus will feature materials created by, for, or about women - and mostly by women of color from North America and Africa. Students will query the historical and cultural processes that make a seemingly neutral undertaking of “finding yourself,” “expressing yourself,” or “being yourself” especially fraught for these artists and writers, and the communities to which they belong.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every other year


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Terms of Modernity


    This course examines the concepts that structure the possibilities of our (contemporary) world, especially how we “experience” it and attempt to transform it through social and political action. The course will focus most explicitly on the fundamental concept of the “individual” and the characteristics most commonly associated with it: understanding, freedom, equality, family, justice, rights, secularism, to name a few. Too often, we take these concepts and characteristics as givens, and reduce their imperfect realization to the relations and machinations of the material world. In doing so, have we not bought into a false binary between principle and context that has precluded us from understanding these concepts as constituent elements of political power and social organization, and thus from fully appreciating what their potential might be?

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Aesthetics of Justice: Race, Space, Architecture and Music


    As a follow-up to the question posed by Core 1, “What is a community?” this course examines the aesthetics of justice as practiced in contemporary urban communities. The Aesthetics of Justice: Race, Space, Architecture and Music challenges students to engage in discussions and debates regarding social justice and racialized practices of urban environmental design, urban street art (such as graffiti), and urban music (such as rap and hiphop) as responses to the challenges of living in contemporary urban communities. The intention is to critique the current educational model of art and music history that has been appropriated from the ecole des beaux arts. This course will address the topic of race and architecture beyond applies foci by referring to some of the philosophical insights of Foucault, Adorno, and Locke.

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every two years


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Art of Medicine, Medicine in the Arts: the body in Italian Literature


    This course examines the relationship between Italian literature and the history of medicine, specifically anatomy and physiopathology. Medieval treatises on physiology, da Vinci’s contributions to the study of anatomy, and scientific developments between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries had an enormous impact on Italian writers, as evidenced in works by Cavalcanti, Boccaccio, Marino, Verga, Tarchetti, and Berto. Throughout this course, we will analyze how various literary works represent and interpret the human body, illness, disease, and death, and situate the texts in their social, historical, and political contexts. All materials for the course will be in English.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Arts and Literature of Zen Buddhism


    From Beat poets to Bart Simpson, Zen Buddhism has been influential in contemporary cultures worldwide, although few “Zen-inspired” American authors or artists have studied the history of Zen or examined how the ideas and practices of Zen have been represented in the visual arts, performing arts, or literatures of East Asia. This course will survey the arts and literatures of Zen as they developed over the last 1500 years, with particular attention to Chan in China and Zen in Japan. By considering the historical development of Zen, recent American versions can be more fully evaluated and understood. Students will read and interpret texts (in translation) by Chan and Zen masters, examine paintings and calligraphy done by Chan and Zen monks, and experience architecture and gardens through field trips to a local Buddhist temple and the Huntington Botanic Gardens.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Construction of Kinship


    Using texts from the fields of poetry, fiction, Marxism, psychoanalysis, post-colonial theory and post-structuralism, this course explores the ways that family and other social bonds that most of us take for granted are shaped by hegemonic forces. Texts include Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, “Mama’s Baby, Papa’s Maybe” by Hortense Spillers, The Sympathizer, a recent Pulitzer Prize winner by Viet Thanh Nguyen, Dawn, a science fiction novel by Octavia Butler, Look, a book of poems by Iranian-American poet Solmaz Sharif, and excerpts from Franz Fanon’s Black Skin White Mask.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every two years


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Language of Music


    This course questions our tendency to consider music and literature as distinct art forms by exploring how they have historically been intertwined. We will read drama and fiction that includes musical performances alongside poems titled as “songs,” asking how references to music within literary texts influence our understanding of these works. In studying texts that have migrated from the page to the stage and screen, we will analyze the transformative effects of musical setting and adaptation. We will consider music as a tool of social formation, commentary, and protest, while also thinking critically about our own linguistic habits in talking about literature and music.

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - The Question of the Animal, Ancient and Contemporary


    This course examines human interaction with non-human animals, focusing on two periods, mostly in the West: the ancient and the contemporary. Topics include: the conceptualizing of boundaries between human and animal in philosophy, literature, science, and religion, the “animal-industrial complex” and its environmental impact, animal rights, and the creative imagining of animal minds.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Urban Nights: Gender, Work, and Experiences


    We explore how our experiences of nighttime have been shaped through the rise of modern cities and expand our understanding of gender, sexuality, and modernity introduced in Core I by articulating these concepts with discussions about the division of labor, global outsourcing, urban crowd, and sustainability. By looking at various nighttime landscapes such as gentrification and urban planning in New York, call center labors in Mumbai, and take-back-the-night campaigns in London, we will come to understand how our ideas and experiences of urban nights are deeply associated with the culturally constructed divisions between men/women, public/private, and productive/non-productive.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Where We Live & What We Live For


    In this course, students will encounter various ways of thinking about place: how and why cities form and decline, why people in some places have higher material standards of living than others, who has access to what places, and how the places we live affect our world view. As communication and transportation technologies advance, and our economic and social interactions become increasingly digital, does place become irrelevant? Or does it matter more than ever?

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: One-time offering in SP2020


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


  
  • CORE 002 SC - Why Punish?


    Given the fact that, in 2018, nearly seven million Americans were subject to some form of “correctional supervision,” and over two million Americans were incarcerated, we might think that there must be very compelling answers to the question that serves as this course’s title; and while most of us will agree that particular impositions of punishment are unjust, few of us are likely to dispute the justification of the institution of legal punishment, per se. We aim during the semester to investigate the telling and disorientating relationship between various theories of legal punishment and the realities of legal punishment. We begin with an investigation of a number of influential justifications of punishment and then turn to various accounts and analyses of the shape legal punishment takes in contemporary America. Coursework includes attending writing workshops at the local women’s prison on several Tuesday evenings. Students must be available on Tuesdays, 4:30-8:30 p.m.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - “America” in recent music & literature


    This section of Core 3 will examine the construction of “American” identities through selected music, film, poetry, and novels of the 20th and 21st centuries. We will question what America do these artist and writers envision? What America do they fear? How do different American identities coexist? Building on the concepts studied through the semester, students will complete a final paper or project exploring an “American” identity or the intersection of identities.

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Animal Rights and Speciesism


    Through weekly lectures, discussions, visual presentations, movies, and culinary arts, this course examines the present day treatment of animals. We will develop an understanding of speciesism by looking at how humans treat, use, consume and exploit animals; and explore the contested issue of animal welfare vs. rights. The course employs philosophical, economic, sociological and scientific perspectives to analyze industrial practices and their impacts on global economics and planetary health. By surveying ideas and practices from antiquity to the present, we will analyze how moral attitudes have shifted through time and helped to create today’s animal rights movement.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Antiracist and Transnational Feminist Coalitions


    This course will introduce the visionary work of diverse U.S., indigenous, transnational women and trans-people of colors who work with coalitional practices of community building.  Antiracist, multiracial, and transnational feminist perspectives will be underscored. Focusing on notions of bridges, border crossings, and solidarity, we will explore such questions as: What does it mean to build trust and solidarity across seemingly insurmountable fault lines of difference and power? How do our positions of privilege and marginalization inform such attempts to build community?

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Art, Ecology, and Fieldwork


    This studio based course will explore methodologies used by artists and scientists who conduct place-based field work. Throughout the course, students will develop a critical framework, exploring and critiquing the relationship between visual art, technology and the natural sciences. An emphasis will be placed on the use of conventional and unconventional methodologies in the arts and humanities to collect, analyze and interpret data, objects, natural phenomena and sensorial experiences in the field. Through research and studio practice, students will generate interdisciplinary artworks that engage with contemporary conversations in the environmental humanities.


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Bad Writing


    This course asks students to think critically about the notion of “bad writing.” We will discuss what writers, critics, and teachers have stood to gain by labeling certain styles or writers as “bad” and why some authors have welcomed, even courted, the label. We will look in depth at how different categories of bad writing – including bad language, taboo-breaking, and bad-faith portrayals of race and history – have inflected popular and academic conversations about Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and other novels. And we will research what is at stake in how definitions of “bad writing” continue to change in the present day.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Between the Image and the Word


    The relation between writing, painting, photography, cinema, comics, and electronic media might at first be viewed as a familiar combination of visual and verbal art as an interplay of affinities. However, it also generates numerous theoretical speculations with far-reaching implications for the conceptualization of art, literature and electronic media and its relation to the histories of the present. The potentially frictional relations between the visual image and the written text are especially pertinent for a discussion of the cultural productions in Europe and the Americas during the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The course will also examine the critique that new forms of media generate particularly when it comes to the growing popularity of the image.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every other year


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Bodies in Motion: Representation and Simulation


    This course departs from Aristotle’s dictum that, “to be ignorant of motion is to be ignorant of nature.” Through readings, screenings, and museum visits, we will explore how the movement of human and non-human bodies has been understood historically, and experiment with contemporary methods of representing, simulating, and capturing bodies in motion used in the arts, sciences, and humanities. Turning to sport and dance, we will ask: what are the aesthetics, politics, and economies of motion and its apparent opposites: stillness, rest, sleep? In our ever more carefully tracked world, what does motion mean and how is it made meaningful?

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Building Los Angeles


    A lot of what we think we know about our (Western) world is derived from Hollywood’s seemingly infinite reservoir of iconic imagery. This especially applies to the one empirical topography most closely associated with the studio system - the city of Los Angeles. We will examine LA’s fictional as well as its actual cityscape; we will explore its streets, neighborhoods, architecture, and its long history of aggressive real-estate boosterism and displacement. Special attention will be given to how Los Angeles has been - and still is - mythologized and even altered by Hollywood’s fictionalities. This class includes at least one field trip.

     

     

     

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Capitalism/Anti-Capitalism


    Capitalism is the air we breathe. It can thus be easy not to evaluate critically the role of capital and class relations in daily life. Topics include the origins of capitalism. Marxist critiques, neoliberalism, the transformation of values and practices by the free market, the relationship between capitalism and culture, and possibilities for change (primarily in the context of the US and Europe). Students will have the opportunity to work with campus groups and community organizations.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Occasionally


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Caribbean Women’s Literature


    This course examines Caribbean women’s literature from the Anglophone, Francophone and Spanish Caribbean. Our purpose will be to explore the historical and contemporary contexts that have produced innovative texts by women writers of the Caribbean who seek not only to record their cultural existence but also to challenge both the stereotypes and limitations placed upon them from within and without the Caribbean. We will consider the effects of enslavement, imperialism/colonialism, and neo-colonialism in addition to issues of multiple oppression such as race, color, class, gender, sexuality, and exile, upon the literary production of contemporary writers.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year-3 years


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Challenges from the global south - “America”


    This class addresses challenges from the global south in the western hemisphere. It is organized around questions raised by struggles for freedom in locations ranging from Haiti to Chile. Each week we will focus on a discrete problem in a discrete geographic location. Most of these struggles draw on ancient Indigenous or African conceptions. They challenge contemporary corporate projects and elite conceptions. Our texts include films (subtitled in English), print media, essays, and oral histories. In order to explore issues of perspective, writers form the regions we are studying will be favored.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Collective Songwriting: Theory and Knowledge Production


    This course will engage in the study and embodied practice of the collective songwriting method. In this course collective creative expression through song becomes the vehicle by which we will engage in discussions about greater social issues pertaining to gender, race, class, sexuality and nationhood. We consider the historical, political, and economic significance that song has played in social movements through African-American, Chicanx-Latinx, Native American, Asian American and poor Anglo communities in the 20th and 21st centuries, and how song has played a vital role in their collective and individual struggle for self determination and social justice in the history of this country.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Creating and Recreating Genji


    Written in the 11th century by Lady Murasaki Shikibu as a fictional account of Japanese court life, The Tale of Genji has influenced Japanese literature and the visual and performing arts for over a 1000 years. This course will examine the original text and then explore various new versions, focusing on how the text has been recreated by later generations, through Buddhist interpretations in 14th century noh plays, working class satires in 17th century short stories, political parodies in 19th century prints, imperialist propaganda in the early 20th century and social commentary in late 20th century movies, anime and manga.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Creating Archives: Archives, Disciplinary Knowledge, and Research


    We will examine the long history of the “archive,” including classical libraries, monastic collections, wonder-cabinets, modern archives, and new digital archives. We will explore the ways in which collection practices shape and are shaped by disciplinary practice. Archives from a range of different disciplines will be considered, including biological and mathematical sciences, corporate and national archives, literary archives and libraries, and perhaps even the long geological archive of the earth. Readings will help us theorize and problematize the concept of “archive” as a transparent, natural, and neutral space. Students will develop their own “small-archive” based on their research interests.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Democracy in Theory and Practice


    Democracy In Theory and Practice will interrogate the ideals of democratic theory in light of what actually ends up happening in campaigns, elections, and government policy. The class will confront students with key critiques of democracy to help them understand the current American political scene from the vantage point of competing (and often conflicting) “histories of the present”-including forms of political activism that reject electoral politics or which go beyond the two major American political parties. The class will also provide students with the chance to dialogue in class with local politicians and require that each student to do substantial volunteer work on a local political campaign of their choice.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Dream Factories: cinema in theory and in practice


    This course will expose the students to the basic tools of critical film analysis, and to different styles of filmmaking in the world. Examples will come from Hollywood, Bollywood, Chinese, European, Iranian and African cinema. The course will also explore the idea of film industry and its implications on labor and the use of technology. Finally, the course will include the shooting and editing of a short film as a group project.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every three years


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Education and Inequality


    Education was once regarded as the great equalizer, providing students from a variety of backgrounds with the opportunity to better themselves and achieve a higher degree of success than their parents.  These beliefs are increasingly challenged by the data, as children’s academic success increasingly appears to track their parents’ social status. We will consider this conundrum closely, asking what reforms might make it possible for education to live up to its unfulfilled potential. Our focus will be on the U.S. experience since the mid-20th century, but we will frame this examination both comparatively and historically.

    Course Credit: 1.0


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


  
  • CORE 003 SC - Embodying Illness


    How do our bodies feel, act, and respond when we are ill? This seminar considers how the body is not just a biological entity, but one also profoundly shaped by social and historical circumstance. We trace how the embodiment of illness connects to cultural norms, practices, and understandings of the self. Importantly, we consider the body as existing within relations of power, including forms of surveillance and normative framings of the able body. The course ultimately challenges us to rethink divisions between “the body” and “society” by exploring how illness experiences are embedded in cultural and political processes.

    Course Credit: 1.0
    Offered: Every year


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


 

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