Professor
Griffin's Classes
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Women's Studies 102: Women in Contemporary
Society
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GE credit: An introduction
to some of the basic questions raised by the contemporary feminist movement
relating to the social, political and economic status of women. Required
for Majors.
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Women's Studies 300: Principles of Feminism
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An introduction to principles of feminist
history, thought, theory, methodology, and current issues that emphasizes
but is not limited to the United States. Prerequisites: ENGL 100
and upper division status or by consent of instructor. Required for
Majors, and students who take W/ST 415 Feminist Theory.
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Women's Studies 307: Women and
the Economy: Money, Sex and Power
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HD credit: This course is an interdisciplinary
examination of assumptions about the economic roles of women; analysis
of the sexual division of labor, domestic work, and its ideology; women
as wage workers; women and development; U.S. women and the economy.
Special focus will be on the origin, migration, settlement, and economic
patterns of, problems facing, and attitudes about women from major ethnic
and racial groups in the United States. Major disciplines are
sociology and history.
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Women's Studies 392: Feminist
Pedagogy
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This class provides training and experience
in peer facilitation of small group discussion, teaching assistance and
other assignments directed by a supervising faculty member, supplemented
by seminar, reading, and journal writing. May be repeated for a maximum
of 6 units. Prerequisites: Permission of instructor.
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Women's Studies 410: Women, Religion
& Spirituality
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This newly revamped course is a cross-cultural
exploration of women's experience of and response to religious systems.
We will look at a rich body of material, including sacred texts, creations
myths, oral traditions, historical, anthropological and sociological studies,
and feminist theological reflections in a variety of religions. The
course focuses in particular in three areas: the religious construction
of women, women's religious experience, and feminist transformations of
religious traditions.
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Women's Studies 424: Women and
Environmental Justice (was Ecofeminism)
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Soon to be Global Credit. This
newly designed course will examine the ways in which women and nature have
been linked and treated, the relationship between patterns of consumption
and environmental damage, and current ecoactivism by women around the world.
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Women's Studies 425: Women and
Power
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This class offers an examination of
the ways power has been defined, obtained, shaped and maintained, and the
effect this has historically had on women. It applies theory to contemporary
issues affecting women and explores strategies for empowerment. There is
a class action project.
last
updated: August 22, 1999, by Professor Wendy Griffin