Minor in Global Studies
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Program Overview
Degree:
Minor in Global Studies
Application:
$0 application fee. No essays/exams.
Demonstrate cultural and global awareness and learn to become a responsible citizen in a diverse society by earning a Minor in Global Studies. Coursework includes Global Communications, Film in a Global Context, Gender and Global Society, Ecological Revolutions, The Global Economy, and more.
Course Details
Requirements for the Minor
6 Courses
Choose any six of the following:
Film in a Global Context
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 240
Examines how international cinema represents various aspects of societies and cultures outside the U.S. Representative films of Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America, Australia and Oceania, and Canada may be studied.
Global Environmental History
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 240; HIS 233; HIS 234
Examines the relationships between humans and the natural environment from prehistoric times to the present. Investigates conceptions of nature and the use of resources in various societies, the consequences of different forms of social and economic organization on the environment, and the impact of technological change on the world’s ecology.
The Global Economy
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 240
Examines changes associated with globalization since World War II, including changes in technology, urbanization, finance, markets, lending, the internationalization of production, the organization of work, and power relations among nations and world cultures. Investigates both theories of and popular responses to the new global economy.
Culture of Global Capitalism
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102
Places contemporary cultural, economic and technological issues in a global and historical perspective. Examines the ways that capitalism, culture, and technology have interacted over the past 500 years to shape the places, peoples and societies that have come into existence in the modern world.
Contemporary World Literature
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 240 and LIT 100
Study of contemporary literary works from diverse cultures outside the Anglo-American literary tradition.
World Music
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102
An exploration of musical traditions and techniques in a variety of cultures, including Japan, India, Native America, South America, and Africa. Broadens students’ cultural understanding of music.
World Religions
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102
Major world religions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, are surveyed in their historical, literary, and historical contexts. The sociology of religion is extensively addressed, and parallels in myths, rituals, conversion, and rites of passage are compared. Recent and contemporary religious trends are also addressed.
International Relations
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102
A survey of the nature of the international system and the theoretical framework used by political scientists to examine it; in particular, this course focuses on the decision-making process within the international arena. International negotiation and decision-making are utilized.
Geography
4.5 Quarter Units
Examination of relationships between geographical features of the earth and human societies. Includes the study of map construction, mapping tools, geographical data, and the influence of geomorphological features on the development and spatial distribution of political systems, languages, and religions.
Social Movements
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102
Introduction to social movements and collective action, covering several theoretical perspectives on how to understand and analyze social movements in recent global history, from their origins to their demise; a global survey of the processes of social and political awareness, mobilization, and development of such movements.
Gender in World History
4.5 Quarter Units
Prerequisite: ENG 102; HIS 234
Traces the ways masculinity and femininity have changed over time in various contexts around the world from 1492 to 1968. Explores the many ways people have constructed these two genders, infusing them with characteristics and values. Also investigates the ways gender becomes a discourse used in defining power relationships. This course demonstrates how gender can be a useful category for analysis when querying historical phenomena, including: empire building; revolutions, anti-colonial uprisings, and labor movements; the major utopian ideas of the 20th century; and post-war political and social realignments.
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