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Academic Year 2004/2005
Sophomore Seminar Gender and History
WMST 269 FA
This sophomore seminar is designed to introduce students to the use of gender as a category for historical analysis. The course highlights research skills, critical thinking, and debate about the nature and connections
among gender and history. It provides a thematic overview of current research topics in the study of women, men, gender, and sexuality, as well as new methods and approaches to conventional topics of interest to
historians:
power, agency, experience, social movements, events, and ideas. Students learn how to write histories that focus on women's experiences and acquire tools for analyzing the ways in which politics construct gender and
gender
constructs politics. They also develop critical thinking about the assumptions, practices, and rhetoric of the discipline of history, discovering how the writing of history is not simply a record of changes in the social
organization of gender but also, a participant in the production of knowledge and perceptions of sexual difference. Throughout the course, attention will be paid to the intersection of gender with other primary modes of
power: race, class, sexuality, nationalism, and ethnicity. The course is especially appropriate for prospective history and women's studies majors.
MAJOR READINGS
Joan Scott, GENDER AND THE POLITICS OF HISTORY
Ruiz and DuBois, UNEQUAL SISTERS: A MULTICULTURAL READER IN U.S. WOMEN'S HISTORY
Kim Townsend, MANHOOD AT HARVARD: WILLIAM JAMES AND OTHERS
Judith Walkowitz, CITY
OF DREADFUL NIGHT: NARRATIVES OF
SEXUAL DANGER IN LATE-VICTORIAN LONDON
George Chauncey, GAY NEW YORK: GENDER, URBAN CULTURE, AND THE MAKING OF THE GAY MALE WORLD
Judith Leavitt, TYPHOID MARY
Nell Painter, SOJOURNER TRUTH: A LIFE, A
SYMBOL
Gerda Lerner, THE CREATION OF FEMINI
ST CONSCIOUSNESS FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO 1870
Hine, King, and Reed, eds. "We Specialize in the Wholly Impossible": A READER IN BLACK WOMEN'S HISTORY
Ann-Lou Shapiro, ed. FEMINISTS REVISION HISTORY
Francesca
Bray, TECHNOLOGY AND GENDER: FABRICS O
F POWER IN LATE IMPERIAL CHINA
EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
A midterm, a final, and short papers.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS
This course is a gateway to the WMST major.
COURSE FORMAT:
Lecture/Discussion
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Level:
UGRD
Credit:
1
Gen Ed Area Dept:
SBS HIST
Grading Mode:
Graded
Prerequisites:
NONE
SECTION 01
- Instructor(s): Tucker,Jennifer
- Times: ..T.... 07:00PM-09:50PM; Location: 287 HIGH;
- Reserved Seats: (Total Limit: 15)
- SR. major: 0 Jr. major: 0
- SR. non-major: 0 Jr. non-major: 0 SO: 15 FR: 0
Special Attributes:
- Curricular Renewal: Reading Non-Verbal Texts, Writing
Links to Web Resources For This Course.
Last Updated on MAR-21-2005
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Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459