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  • 3.00 Credits

    This seminar course, required of all BFA majors in Graphic Design, introduces students to the concepts, methods and processes associated with professional design practice. Students will gain an understanding of the fundamentals of setting up a design business and contributing to a business' success as an employee. Students' presentation skills will be developed through writing and presenting proposals and the creation of a resume and online portfolio. Prerequisites: "C-" or better in DESGR 2300.
  • 3.00 Credits

    What is disability, and how did we come to know and feel what we think we know and feel about this realm of knowledge and lived experience? Cultural ideals of beauty, youth, fitness, strength, sex appeal, social skill, mental acuity, and 'health' all rely on norms of able-bodiedness, heterosexuality, and whiteness. We will thus approach disability not as fixed or singular category, but as a fluid, historically shifting, culturally-specific formation that intersects with race, class, gender, sexuality, size, and more. How do some bodies, minds, and psyches come to be seen as deviant and others as normal? What are the conditions and relationships of power that form the context for these processes? Which cultural institutions have historically disciplined disabled subjects? What legacies of resistance might we find in various forms of art and cultural production; in movements for social justice; and in feminist disability studies scholarship? Where can we look for models of kinship and community structures based on practices of interdependence rather than individual rights? We will approach these questions through a range of critical essays, novels, films, artwork, and community engagement.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Varied topics: See current course listing for offerings each semester.
  • 1.00 - 3.00 Credits

    Directed study arranged with individual instructors.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Varied topics: See current course listing for offerings each semester.
  • 1.00 - 6.00 Credits

    This course provides an integrative internship and/or experiential learning practicum for students to increase their understanding, application, and commitment to disability studies through internship activities.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Restricted to students in the Honors Program working on their Honors degree.
  • 3.00 Credits

    How do some bodies and minds come to be seen as deviant or and others as normal? What makes some subjects worthy of care and others disposable? How have the rubrics of 'health' and 'treatment' historically operated to discipline black and brown bodies? This course approaches narratives of race, disability, and illness through the frameworks of critical disability, critical ethnic, and feminist-of-color studies. It explores how illness, debility, and precarity are produced in and as racial violence. We will consider the categories of health and illness as historical products of medical knowledge and practices, studying the legacies of scientific racism, medical experimentation, and reproductive control. We will also examine contemporary iterations of environmental racism, tracing forms of structural inequality and violence that targets people of color'namely those who are poor and working class, queer and gender non-conforming, women, and (im)migrants. Finally, it asks what legacies of resistance we might find in various forms of art and cultural production, as well as in movements for racial, economic, and disability justice. We will approach these questions through a range of critical essays, novels, poetry, artwork, and community engagement.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Varied topics: See current course listing for offerings each semester.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course introduces students to, or expands their knowledge in, the field of Disability Studies, particularly examining the intersections amongst disability and gender, race/ethnicity, class, and sexuality. The course explores how bodyminds often considered 'bad' can also be understood as defiant, resistant to conventional understandings of 'normal' identity. We will examine how disabled people have been and continue to be marginalized, but we'll also explore how disability scholars, activists, and artists are remapping how we think about and experience gender, identity, and humanity.