2019-2020 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue 
    
    Apr 25, 2024  
2019-2020 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Classics/Classical Civilization

  
  • CL 214 - The Ancient Novel

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of the ancient novel in English translation, with particular emphasis on Apuleius and Petronius-master stylists and literary innovators who chronicled life in the Roman Empire at its most diverse, complex, and decadent. Same course as EN 214 .

    Prerequisite: EN 101 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 218 - The Golden Age of Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of selected works in translation by some of Rome's greatest writers, with special emphasis on Vergil, Ovid, and Livy. The course may be organized chronologically or thematically. Specific readings vary with the instructor. Same course as EN 218 .

    Prerequisite: EN 101 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 220 - The Ancient World: Special Topics

    (3.00 cr.)

    Topics in the study of the development of Western thought in the ancient world. Topics vary. May be repeated once for credit with different topic.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 224 - The Gospels and the Earliest Churches

    (3.00 cr.)

    Explores what we can discover about Jesus and the earliest Christian communities from the texts of the Gospels and other early Christian literature. Constantly examines how such knowledge is relevant to Christian life today. Same course as TH 224 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 225 - Biographical Tales of the Bible

    (3.00 cr.)

    Explores stories of various individuals from the Old and New Testaments (Abraham, Joseph, Moses, David, Ruth, Esther, Jesus, etc.); analyses structure, rhetorical features, and theological perspectives of the narratives; and inquires how the portrayal of these characters illuminate the shape of God's initiative in human history and the varieties of response. Same course as TH 225 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 226 - Women in the Christian Tradition

    (3.00 cr.)

    Examines the contribution of women to the Christian tradition, as well as questions addressed by their presence through the use of primary texts and monographs. Writings include Augustine's letters to women and such topics as the role of widows in the early church and medieval reformers and abbesses. The modern era includes women evangelicals, questions raised by some contemporary feminists, and women and religion in America. Same course as TH 211 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC/IG
  
  • CL 229 - Images of God in Scripture

    (3.00 cr.)

    Examines the various images/titles given to God in the Old and New Testaments from an historical theological perspective. Some images/titles discussed are God the Father, God the Mother, the Divine Warrior, the Good Shepherd, the Storm God, Christ the King, the Lamb of God, and God the Judge. Since our understanding of God is largely shaped by the image we have of Him, this course explores the influences these images/titles have had and continue to have on our approach to worship, on our concept of Church, and on our self understanding in relation to God. Same course as TH 229 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 241 - Survey of Art: Paleolithic to Gothic

    (3.00 cr.)

    A broad overview of art from the Paleolithic age to the Gothic era, focusing on Egyptian, Greek and Roman, early Christian and medieval art and architecture. Fulfills fine arts core requirement. Same course as AH 110 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CL 246 - Who is Jesus?

    (3.00 cr.)

    Explores the identity of Jesus Christ, as expressed in Scripture, the doctrine and tradition of the Church, as well as in art and literature. Emphasizes the historical context of Jesus' life, the variety of ways in which the significance of that life has been articulated over the centuries, and the ways in which one might discern faithful from unfaithful articulations. Same course as TH 246 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 250 - Clash of the Titans: Ancient versus Modern Worlds

    (3.00 cr.)

    The classical tradition and the modern perception of the ancients; exploration of the legacy of the Greeks and Romans in selected areas; discussion of the reception and interpretation of antiquity by the modern world. Topics include the myth and character of Odysseus, ancient and modern comedy, the Roman and American constitutions and politics, the ancient and modern Olympics, democracy and relativism, architecture, the ancient world in contemporary film, and concepts of justice.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 270 - Greece and Rome on Film

    (3.00 cr.)

    Sex, violence, insanity, and monsters are the main ingredients in Hollywood's recipe for movies about ancient Greece and Rome. By watching films like Gladiator, 300, Troy, Ben-Hur, and others, students discover the truth behind the extravagant images and see some very good (and very bad) films along the way.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IF
  
  • CL 291 - The Gladiator

    (3.00 cr.)

    A first-year Messina seminar that uses ancient and modern texts (e.g., The Colosseum, The Roman Games: A Sourcebook) and films (e.g., Gladiator, Spartacus, The Hunger Games) to illuminate the intersection of cruelty, ideology, and entertainment in the ancient arena.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 292 - Race, Conquest, and Identity in Ancient North Africa

    (3.00 cr.)

    A first-year Messina seminar that examines questions of race, imperialism, and cultural/ethnic identity in ancient North Africa, both before and after the Roman conquest. Students are exposed to global diversity and issues of justice, especially with reference to conquered populations, and to questions of assimilation and resistance.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 300 - Death of the Roman Republic

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of the final century of the Roman Republic when Rome suffered under the struggles for personal power of men like Sulla, Mark Antony, and Julius Caesar. Focuses on primary sources with a particular emphasis on the writings of Cicero who documented the final years of the Republic in public speeches as well as private, biting personal letters. Same course as HS 300 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 301 - The Church and the Roman Empire

    (3.00 cr.)

    A tiny, new religion and a vast, old empire collide. An examination of the early Church in the context of the Roman Empire. Topics include women in pagan and Christian societies; places and forms of worship; reasons for and pace of the Church's expansion; orthodoxy and heterodoxy in the early Church; myths concerning the persecutions; the Christians' debt to pagan ways of thinking and doing; the earliest Christian art; class and race as factors in the Christianization of the empire; the organization of the early Church; the Church's response to the sexual mores of its pagan neighbors; origins of the Christians' reputation for bizarre sexual promiscuity and human sacrifice; Constantine. Same course as HS 301 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC/II/IM
  
  • CL 302 - City of Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of the city of Rome, with particular emphasis on ancient Rome and its legacy for the city throughout history. Students examine the state of the city today and read texts describing its physical, architectural, artistic, and cultural evolution through time.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 303 - Ethics: Ancient, Modern, and Christian Approaches to Ethics

    (3.00 cr.)

    Studies the ways in which Christians of the first six centuries answered the question: How should one live? Pays particular attention to the themes which emerge in their answers to this question; e.g., the imitation of Christ, holiness, and the virtues. While some New Testament texts are included in the reading, the primary focus is on the writings of the Church Fathers. The last section of the course studies the writings of twentieth-century ethicists and some contemporary literature to see how these themes of holiness and virtue are developed in recent ethical reflection and discussion. Same course as TH 303 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 307 - Peace and War in Ancient Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    A survey of ideas about peace and war in the ancient city with visits to some of the most important archaeological sites in Rome.  Sites to visit include various monuments commemorating Roman military achievements, like the Column of Trajan, and the museums of Rome to see art that depicted virtuous captives and victorious soldiers, as well as dedications to abstractions like clemency, courage, and family devotion.  Students learn about Roman attitudes towards victory and  defeat.  The course includes in-person viewing and reading of primary sources. Same course as HS 307 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II/IPJ
  
  • CL 308 - Art of Ancient Greece

    (3.00 cr.)

    A survey of Greek art and architecture from the Bronze Age to the Hellenistic Era. Among the topics considered are Mycenaean tombs and palaces, the development of temple architecture, and the ways in which polytheistic religion shaped life in ancient Greece. Same course as AH 308 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 309 - Art of Ancient Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    A survey of Roman art and architecture from the emergence of the Etruscan Civilization to the fall of the empire. Topics include the forging of a new Roman culture from Italic and Greek origins, the invention of new construction techniques, and the appropriation of art for propagandistic purposes. Same course as AH 309 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 312 - History of Ancient Greece

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of Greece from the Bronze Age to Alexander the Great, with special attention to the development of the Greek polis or city-state and to the various constitutional, social, economic, and religious forms which this took. Same course as HS 312 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 313 - History of Christmas

    (3.00 cr.)

    Is Christmas the commemoration of Jesus' birth? Or is it a pagan winter festival hiding behind a thin but deceptive veil of Christian images and ideas? Students will discover that the holiday is both of these things and a good deal more to boot. Students examine the origins and many transformations of the holiday and how the holiday has both reflected and helped determine the course of history. Topics include the Christmas tree, gift giving, the suppression of Christmas, the Nativity accounts, pagan precedents and, of course, Santa. Same course as HS 313 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 314 - History of the Roman Empire

    (3.00 cr.)

    A survey of imperial history from the Principate of Augustus to the Reign of Constantine; focuses on the development of Roman culture as seen through the surviving ancient sources, including historians, inscriptions, monuments, and coins. Same course as HS 314 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II/IM
  
  • CL 320 - Hellenistic History

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of the Greek world from the death of Socrates (399 B.C.) to the Roman conquest (146 B.C.). Covers the fourth-century struggle for supremacy over Greece, Alexander the Great, the waning of the city-state and the growth of federal government and monarchy, and the nature of and reasons for the Roman conquest of Greece. Emphasizes the cultural, social, artistic, and intellectual developments of the period: the status of women, Hellenistic philosophy and technology, the class struggle, the evolution of Greek art and literature, athletics, private life, Greek religion, and ancient warfare. Same course as HS 320 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 322 - Gladiators and Roman Spectacles

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of ancient Rome's spectacles, including gladiatorial combat, chariot racing, animal fights and exhibitions, and mock battles. The course explores the intersection of power, violence, entertainment, class, and sex in Roman spectacles. Same course as HS 322 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 324 - Seminar: The Persecution of the Christians in the Roman World

    (3.00 cr.)

    An exploration of the causes, nature, and extent of early Christian persecutions until Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire in the fourth century. Topics include the Jewish-Greek- Roman environment of early Christianity; Rome's policies toward foreign cults; Christians' reputation for extreme promiscuity and cultic atrocities; comparison with competing cults; the danger of open profession of the new faith; and Christian acceptance of the ancient world. Given the muddled understanding of the early Christian persecutions, the course examines and dispels the myths and brings some order to the chaos. Written or electronic permission of the instructor. Same course as HS 475 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC/II/IM
  
  • CL 326 - The Golden Age of Athens

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of what has been called Athens' golden age focusing on the political and cultural factors which made the fifth century unique. Subjects include creation and workings of Athenian democracy, victories of the Persian wars, the Greek Enlightenment, Pericles' rule of the best citizen, demagoguery and empire, the Peloponnesian War, and the "end" of Athens symbolized by the execution of Socrates. Same course as HS 326 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 327 - Volcanoes, Fire, and Flood: Disasters of Ancient Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of ancient Rome's greatest disasters: the destruction of Pompeii, the Great Fire of Rome, floods, and plagues. Students investigate the causes of these events; the Romans' efforts to navigate and make sense of them; and the transformations they brought to the ancients' environment, behavior, and thought. Same course as HS 327 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: FO/IFS
  
  • CL 328 - Soldiers, Land, and Population Transferrals

    (3.00 cr.)

    Focuses on three topics regarding the Roman army: (a) the army as a social institution; (b) the problem of land ownership and distribution; and (c) the use of population transferrals as an instrument for social engineering. Students explore these topics in order to gain new insight into the accomplishments and failures of individuals as diverse as Pompeius Magnus, Augustus, and Theodosius I. Since history is never without relevance to the present, this seminar also provides students with new ideas and instruments for dealing with contemporary debates about such disputed issues as family farms and immigration. Same course as HS 328 .

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 329 - Women in Greece and Rome

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of the lives of and attitudes toward women in ancient Greece and Rome. Classic texts of ancient literature are read, masterpieces of art are viewed, and the sociology of ancient women is probed. Topics include the family; prostitution; women of the imperial family; Cleopatra; health, child bearing, and birth control; the source and psychology of Greek misogyny; jet-setters and women's liberation under the early Roman Empire; women and work; women in myth; women in early Christianity; the legacy of classical civilization for modern women. Same course as HS 329 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IG/II
  
  • CL 334 - Roman Private Life

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of family and social life in Ancient Rome which focuses on how environment and custom determine one another. Topics include women, crime, racism, pollution, class structure, private religion and magic, Christianity, blood sports, medicine, travel, theater, and death. Same course as HS 334 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 335 - An Introduction to the Theology of Saint Augustine

    (3.00 cr.)

    Studies the life and writings of the great fifth-century bishop and theologian, Augustine of Hippo. Topics include grace, free will, scripture, and the role of civil authority. Same course as TH 335 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC/IM
  
  • CL 337 - The Multicultural Roman Empire

    (3.00 cr.)

    In conquering and attempting to unify lands as diverse as Egypt, Iran, Britain, and Algeria, the Romans undertook one of the greatest social and political experiments in the history of the world. They assimilated some of the peoples they conquered, but the vanquished, in turn, assimilated their Roman conquerors-it is no accident that one third century emperor was named Philip the Arab. This course examines the strategies by which the Romans attempted to hold together their vast, multicultural empire, and the strategies by which many of their subjects preserved and even promulgated their cultures. Be prepared for clash and compromise, oppression and respect, culture and race, and, of course, some very astonishing customs. Same course as HS 337 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 339 - The Fall of Two Empires: Rome and Byzantium

    (3.00 cr.)

    The Roman and Byzantine Empires each lasted a thousand years, yet both fell. How? This course examines the reasons, internal and external, that brought an end to both empires; how they declined; and how they finally dissolved. It investigates how the political instability brought about by increasingly weak absolutist governments; the inabilities of their armies and navies to adapt to changes brought about by technological innovations and economic restraints; and the invasions of powerful outside cultural, religious, and military forces played roles in destroying two of the greatest States in history.

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 340 - Biblical Hebrew I

    (3.00 cr.)

    An enriched beginning course emphasizing grammar, syntax, and vocabulary. Intended for students with no previous knowledge of the language. Same course as TH 340 .

     

     

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 341 - Biblical Hebrew II

    (3.00 cr.)

    A continuation of CL 340 . Same course as TH 341 .

    Prerequisite: CL 340 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 342 - Biblical Hebrew III

    (3.00 cr.)

    A continuation of CL 341 . Same course as TH 342 .

    Prerequisite: CL 341  or TH 341 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 343 - Biblical Hebrew IV

    (3.00 cr.)

    A continuation of CL 342 . Same course as TH 343 .

    Prerequisite: CL 342  or TH 342 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 346 - Disputing the Bible

    (3.00 cr.)

    Examines a selection of arguments from the first through the twentieth centuries about how to interpret the Bible. Same course as TH 346 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 347 - Jesus and the Gospels

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students examine a variety of issues surrounding the portrayal of Jesus in the Gospels of the New Testament and in other early Christian writings. Same course as TH 347 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 350 - Introduction to European Culture

    (3.00 cr.)

    An introduction to the history, art, literature, and culture of Europe.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 355 - Saint Paul and His Writings

    (3.00 cr.)

    Explores the writings and theology of Paul the apostle. Topics include selected readings from Paul's writings, study of Paul's life and times, and an engagement with secondary literature. Same course as TH 355 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 356 - Genesis: Exploring the Bible's First Book

    (3.00 cr.)

    Genesis: the first and most famous book of the Bible, containing its earthiest and its most famous stories. Sex, sibling rivalry, love and heartbreak, folklore, and folk magic-it is all there, even Joseph and his "amazing technicolor dreamcoat." The course takes students through Genesis slowly and carefully, along with history's memorable interpretations. Same course as TH 356 .

    Prerequisite: TH 201 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IC
  
  • CL 358 - Ancient Philosophy

    (3.00 cr.)

    From the early inquiries of the Milesians to the elaborately structured reflections of Aristotle, the ancient Greek philosophers inaugurated questions about knowledge, virtue, being, and human nature that we continue to ask today. The course focuses on metaphysical, epistemological, and ethical topics in Thales, Pythagoras, Parmenides, Heraclitus, the Atomists, the Sophists, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Same course as PL 358 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 359 - The Presocratics

    (3.00 cr.)

    An investigation of the writings of the pre-Socratic philosophers, from Thales to the Sophists. The course looks at their work both in terms of its own intrinsic interest and its influence on later philosophers, chiefly Plato and Aristotle. Same course as PL 359 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 360 - Independent Study: Classical Civilization

    (3.00 cr.)

    An independent study in classical civilization. Topics vary. May be repeated once for credit with different topic.

    Prerequisite: One HS 100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 362 - Special Topics in Classics

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students focus on a specific author, genre, or topic in Classics. May be repeated twice for credit with a different topic.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 366 - Studies in Plato

    (3.00 cr.)

    An inquiry into the epistemological, moral, and metaphysical writings of Plato's middle and later periods, with special reference to the relation of anamnesis, participation and the theory of forms in the middle dialogues to koinonia and the theory of the greatest kinds in the later dialogues. Same course as PL 366 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 367 - Plato's Republic

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of the teachings contained in one of the most important of the Platonic dialogues. A close study of the dialogue and lectures treats the nature of justice, the quarrel between poetry and philosophy, relationship between philosophy and politics or theology, the character of the philosopher, the purposes of education, the doctrine of "ideas," and the naturality of political life. Same course as PL 367 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 368 - Introduction to Aristotle

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of Aristotle as a systematic thinker with an integrated view of the natural world, the goals of human life, and the formal properties of thought. Primary focus on selections from Aristotle's logical works and psychological treatises, together with his Physics, Metaphysics, Ethics, and Politics. Same course as PL 368 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 380 - Platonic Political Philosophy

    (3.00 cr.)

    Socrates and the founding of political philosophy; Thucydides and the crisis of the polis; the critique of Aristophanes; Plato's Apology, Crito, Gorgias, Republis, Theaetetus; subsequent contributions to the tradition by Cicero, Saint Augustine, Alfarabi, and Saint Thomas More; Plato's modern enemies: Machiavelli and Mill. Same course as PS 380 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 381 - Aristotelian Political Philosophy

    (3.00 cr.)

    An investigation of the founding of political science by Aristotle devoted to a reading of Nicomachean Ethics and Politics, as well as selections from Aristotle's scientific and logical treatises. Subsequent contributions to the tradition are also considered, including those of Marsilius of Padua and Saint Thomas Aquinas. Aristotle's modern enemies: Hobbes and Marx. Same course as PS 381 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 388 - Socratic Political Philosophy

    (3.00 cr.)

    Socrates, the first political philosopher, wrote nothing. His unique life and thought are known only through the writings of others-both friends and enemies. By reading works by Aristophanes, Plato, Xenophon, and Nietzsche, students seek to understand the Socratic way of life. The famous "Socratic turn" is examined-Socrates' move from natural philosophy toward political philosophy and the study of "the human things." Students also examine Socrates' quarrel with poets, the Sophists, and the political community itself. Was the Athenian democracy right to put Socrates to death? Finally, Socrates' relations with his friends and students are examined-how and what did he teach them. Same course as PS 388 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 405 - Aristotelian Ethics

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of the ethical writings of Aristotle, with an emphasis on the Nicomachean Ethics. It then explores contemporary Aristotelian ethics in its religious (Alasdair MacIntyre) and secular (Martha Nussbaum) variants. Same course as PL 405 .

    Prerequisite: PL 201  and one additional PL200-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 420 - Homer and History

    (3.00 cr.)

    Was there a Trojan War? What is the relation of Homer's epic Iliad to historical events of the Bronze Age Aegean? What was its impact on the Greek world of the Geometric era (the most likely period for the composition of the Homeric poems), a lively period of expansion, colonization, trade, and the rise of the nation-state of the polis. Investigates Homer's effect both on contemporary Greek national identity and later Greeks' understanding of and deliberate construction of their own past. Interdisciplinary approach combining literary texts, archaeology, and secondary historical analysis. Same course as HS 420 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course, one HS300-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

  
  • CL 421 - Caesar and Augustus

    (3.00 cr.)

    They transformed a great republic into a monarchy; killed (literally) millions of people; conquered a huge chunk of the Mediterranean World and Europe; carried out one of the greatest urban renewal projects in history; revived and transformed religion; revised the calendar; inspired Shakespeare, Shaw, and dozens of movies. And yet, the one wound up assassinated by his peers, and the other had so little control over his own family that he felt compelled to exile his jet-set daughter to the Roman equivalent of Siberia. Who were they? And how did the epochal events of their lifetime give birth to such genius monsters? Same course as HS 421 .

    Prerequisite: One HS100-level course.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Varies

    Interdisciplinary Studies: II
  
  • CL 450 - Senior Honors Thesis

    (3-6.00 cr.)

    An optional program available to select classics or classical civilization majors in their senior year. A directed, intensive study of an author, topic, or theme from classical literature, history, or art and archaeology culminating in a written thesis and oral defense. Students are expected to confront scholarship and to do research at an advanced level. Students using this course as a substitute for two advanced language courses are expected to produce a very involved, two-semester honors thesis. By invitation only. May be repeated once for credit.

    Prerequisite: Senior standing.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Varies
    Years Typically Offered: Varies


Communication

  
  • CM 201 - Media Writing

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn basic story writing skills that can be applied across communication fields, including journalism, digital media, public relations, and advertising. In this course, students explore what news is, how to interview effectively, and how to distinguish fact from opinion or fiction. Students learn how to tailor their messages in advertising campaigns, to social media platforms, and how to direct their messages to the media in press releases. Students are also introduced to some basic grammar rules in communication fields and explore some of the ethical issues facing news journalists, advertising executives, and public relations professionals today. Required for communication majors.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 202 - Digital Tools

    (3.00 cr.)

    Through a combination of lectures, on-site lab practices with applied projects, and online training resources, students gain working knowledge of fundamental digital media production skills required for advanced study in communication. Students learn the basic tenets of online applications, including: cloud storage and file management; print and web design; web content management; audio and video capture; editing and publishing. Required for communication majors.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 203 - Introduction to Communication

    (3.00 cr.)

    An introduction to the history, theory, practices, institutions, and impact of modern communications media in the United States, including audience experience of media, the media's impact on society, producing and consuming media, and media industries and careers. Includes readings in primary texts of the field. Required for all communication majors and minors.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 301 - News Reporting and Writing

    (3.00 cr.)

    A lab course devoted to learning the basics of news reporting and writing for print and online publication. The emphasis is on learning to report and to write the basic news story types that most entry-level journalists are expected to have mastered. Students learn the best practices associated with professional journalism, including objectivity, fairness, balance, and verification, as well as interviewing techniques and story research.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 302 - Free Speech, Free Expression

    (3.00 cr.)

    Through close examination of major U.S. Supreme Court decisions, students explore the contours of free speech and free expression in America. The relationship of free speech to democracy; the need for and possible restrictions on robust debate; and the First Amendment protections for commercial speech are discussed.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IU
  
  • CM 303 - Media Ethics

    (3.00 cr.)

    Features a comprehensive examination of the ethical issues and ideas informing today's communications media. Students examine real world, personal and workplace ethics, and case studies specific to advertising, public relations, journalism, and online and digital media. Does not fulfill the ethics core requirement.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Summer
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 305 - Media and the Political Process

    (3.00 cr.)

    An in-depth look at the relationship of all forms of media (including journalism, advertising, and public relations) to the political system in the United States. Readings drawn from both the scholarly and popular literature in the field.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IU
  
  • CM 306 - Popular Culture in America

    (3.00 cr.)

    An upper-level introduction to the issues surrounding popular culture and approaches to studying contemporary popular culture. Students explore the ways in which consumers experience the popular arts and entertainment and the significance of popular culture as both a reflection of, and an influence upon, American attitudes, beliefs, expectations, hopes, and concerns. The course is taught as a colloquium in which various topics are introduced by the instructor and explored in class discussion. Emphasis is placed on primary source artifacts of contemporary American popular arts and techniques for analyzing their social and cultural implications. Other dimensions such as historical and cross-cultural comparisons, discussion of the industries that develop and distribute commercial entertainment and information, and various critical and evaluative theories are included. The goal of the course is to refine the students' abilities to read, evaluate, and synthesize materials from popular culture into their own interdisciplinary analysis.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IU
  
  • CM 307 - Fundamentals of Advertising and Public Relations

    (3.00 cr.)

    Provides a foundation for advertising and public relations practice. Students learn how these fields are inter-related and make up critical elements of any effective communications strategy. Students  learn the basics of the strategic communication process, and become familiar with foundational research in persuasion and social influence. Additionally, students explore the ethical, regulatory, and social responsibility dimensions of these communication fields. In addition to serving as an introduction to the fields of advertising and public relations, students learn how these disciplines are ever-evolving to accommodate changing consumer interests and emerging media platforms. Required for communication majors specializing in advertising/public relations.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 308 - Multimedia Storytelling

    (3.00 cr.)

    A practical exploration of how multimedia stories are crafted and their audience effects in news, persuasion, and entertainment. Students produce their own media stories in a variety of formats and strategies, apply design and aesthetic principles, and consider their legal and ethical responsibilities as media storytellers. Required for communication majors specializing in journalism and digital media.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 310 - Public Speaking

    (3.00 cr.)

    Informed by classical rhetoric, students become skilled in the Jesuit tradition of eloquentia perfecta: clear thought delivered eloquently. Students research topics, write basic informative and persuasive speeches, practice speaking individually and in teams, and give and receive supportive critiques. This course helps students to build skills and confidence for oral presentations in other classes and the wider world.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 312 - Web I

    (3.00 cr.)

    Offers students the conceptual understandings—such as design principles, Web usability, and search engine optimization—associated with website design and development. Students also learn essential skills with applications such as HTML, CSS, Content Management systems and other related programs needed to build effective websites.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 314 - Communication Research

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn to analyze and understand the broad range of methods used to systematically evaluate communication processes in advertising, public relations, journalism, and popular culture. Students learn how to design and select methods to conduct in-depth studies in all forms of mass communication and to analyze and understand research data and results.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 316 - Travel Reporting

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students explore contemporary forms of travel reporting, developing their own travel stories as well as critiquing those of others. During the summer session only, with written or electronic permission of the instructor; domestic travel may be permitted based on proposal.

    Restrictions: Restricted to communication majors or minors studying abroad.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring/Summer
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 322 - Graphics I

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn basic concepts of file formats, bitmap picture editing, vector drawing, and page layout while developing skills in industry-standard computer graphics software tools. For visual journalists, designers, and media producers. Same course as SA 326 .

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 324 - Video I

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn digital moviemaking, camera handling, lighting, editing, motion tilting, basic animation, and studio techniques for broadcast television, DVD, Internet streaming, and podcasts.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IF
  
  • CM 330 - Stereotypes in U.S. Film and Television

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students use critical-cultural approaches to examine how narrative and documentary films, television shows, and music videos have constructed racial, gendered, and class images of U.S. society. They also examine how these images intersect, inform, and influence our perceptions, biases, and behaviors. Students view, discuss, write, and reflect on these issues as they consider appropriate responses to these social constructions, including ways in which the camera can be used to redefine social images and spaces to enhance respect for diversity.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 340 - Advanced Reporting

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students practice reporting and writing more complex story types and learn how to report on society's primary institutions and major social issues. Public affairs emphasis includes government, elections, budgets, criminal justice system, environment, labor and major issues facing urban and suburban communities.

    Prerequisite: CM 205 , CM 301 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 342 - Media, Culture, and Society

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students explore the impact of media on culture and social structure through the close examination of cultural products including books, television shows, music, and advertising. Using a wide range of theoretical constructions, students learn to analyze the social meanings of cultural objects.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Summer
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IU
  
  • CM 345 - Global Advertising

    (3.00 cr.)

    Focuses on global marketers, global media companies, and transnational advertising agencies that impact global culture. Students engage in critical study of the variety of distinctive cultural factors that impact global advertising regarding class, racial, and gender divisions within a country.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 346 - International Communication

    (3.00 cr.)

    Understanding the field of international communication is an important dimension of contemporary communication studies. This course presents a survey of topics pertaining to mass media's (including new and emerging media) political, economic, cultural, and social impacts. Students explore the field's history and provide a basis for understanding how it started, where it is headed, and what role the media play in modern global life in constituting our identities as audiences, citizens, consumers, and activists. The role of global news organizations and services is highlighted in journalism, advertising, and public relations within varying levels of democracy affecting citizens' access to information. The course takes a cultural approach to studying global media.

    Prerequisite: CM 226  or CM 227  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IL
  
  • CM 347 - The Documentary Tradition

    (3.00 cr.)

    A close study of the documentary tradition-including ethnography, propaganda, cinema verité, and postmodernism-that testifies to the tremendous vitality of the form, assesses its current state, and projects the future. Screenings celebrate human dignity and diversity in its many variations of race, gender, ethnicity, national origin, culture, religion, and sexual orientation. Students view, discuss, and write about majors works and apply insights to their own documentary projects.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

    Interdisciplinary Studies: IF
  
  • CM 349 - Book Arts and Artists' Books

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students are introduced to the materials, techniques, concepts, and equipment used in the craft of making traditional and nontraditional books. They learn folding, stitching, enclosing, and binding methods while creating three-dimensional works that literally or metaphorically reference the structure of books, address contemporary ideas about visual content, and exist as three-dimensional works of art. Same course as PT 353 /SA 353 .

    Prerequisite: SA 224  or written permission of the instructor.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 350 - Advertising Copy Writing

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students participate in a copywriting workshop aimed at providing practice in writing print advertisements (magazine, newspaper, billboards), radio and television commercials, storyboards, direct mail, and other types of material. Consideration given to how the copywriter interacts with the creative team and the development of a complete campaign.

    Prerequisite: CM 226  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 351 - Introduction to Radio and Digital Audio

    (3.00 cr.)

    An introduction to audio storytelling and techniques for sound production. The course explores creative exercises for students to become better communicators through the art of sound, with an emphasis on engaging an audience. Students participate in workshops to write and perform for the ear, craft conversations, and produce compelling stories for listeners.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 352 - Graphics II

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn the basics of publication design, layout, and production while using industry-standard computer software tools to create, choose, and manipulate formats, grids, layouts, logo/ nameplates, and typography. The overall goal is to relate effective design to clear and meaningful communication.

    Prerequisite: CM 322 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 353 - Video II

    (3.00 cr.)

    An advanced class that focuses on video story telling. Students develop their own movie concepts, write full scripts, recruit and rehearse actors, and shoot and edit the videos for public presentation.

    Prerequisite: CM 324 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 354 - Writing for Public Relations

    (3.00 cr.)

    An introduction to the wide range of communications materials developed by public relations professionals. Students learn how to write press releases, speeches, corporate background material, position papers, and internal publications such as newsletters.

    Prerequisite: CM 227  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 355 - Advertising Management

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students explore the challenges of account management, account planning, and media planning/buying-functions that are crucial in the advertising industry. The course focuses on developing advertising plans and budgets, conceiving media plans and advertising strategies, and executing media buys.

    Prerequisite: CM 226  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 356 - Case Studies in Public Relations

    (3.00 cr.)

    An in-depth approach to the practical aspects of public relations management. Using real-life examples from the corporate, government, education, and nonprofit sectors, students discover how and why public relations practitioners make decisions and apply their techniques. The psychological, ethical, and legal aspects of public relations communications are covered.

    Prerequisite: CM 227  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 357 - Seminar in Public Relations Specialties

    (3.00 cr.)

    In-depth investigation of several public relations (PR) specialties, depending on student interest. Possible topics include event planning, entertainment PR, sports PR, fund-raising, community relations, nonprofit PR, crisis communication, investor relations, and healthcare. Students are invited to explore their special interests in PR practice in accordance with class/professor guidelines.

    Prerequisite: CM 227  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 358 - Social Media in Advertising and Public Relations

    (3.00 cr.)

    A study of social media use (e.g., Facebook, Twitter) for advertising and public relations functions, including promotion of products and services, image formation and management, and community relations. Students learn industry "best practices" for utilizing social media-such as consumer tracking/measurement and search engine optimization (SEO)-and plan a social media campaign. Use of classroom technology is required.

    Prerequisite: CM 226  or CM 227 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 359 - Advertising Culture and Identity

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students examine the role of the audience's identity in the advertising process. Students learn about the potential for advertising messages to shape and reflect the identity of viewers; the role of viewer identity in determining advertising outcomes; and the effectiveness of how commercial messages are influenced by the personal and social identities of consumers.

    Prerequisite: CM 226  or CM 227  or CM 307 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 360 - Digital Mixed Media

    (3.00 cr.)

    A combination studio and digital photography course in which the computer is used as a tool and an integral part of the creative process, but work is achieved through mixed media studio methods. Two- and three-dimensional projects may include installation and/or virtual works that exist only on the Internet. Some prior computer experience is recommended. Same course as PT 360  and SA 360 .

    Prerequisite: SA 224  or written permission of the instructor.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 361 - Copy Editing

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students become familiar with the newspaper process: copy editing, specifying type, writing headlines, and proofreading. Students work with wire service copy and other raw copy, editing, rewriting, and copy fitting.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 362 - Arts and Entertainment Journalism

    (3.00 cr.)

    Analyzes media coverage of arts and culture—fashion, food, TV, film, music, and technology. Students learn skills to develop and craft specialized content—articles, blogs, and criticism—using multimedia elements across multiple platforms.

    Prerequisite: CM 301 ; CM 205  or CM 308 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 364 - Contemporary Digital Art

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students taking this course gain an understanding of contemporary artists focusing on new media, while developing their own digital art practice. Video, animation, sound, web-based artwork, 3-D, interactivity, and other media practices are addressed. Classes consist of research, discussion, studio projects, critiques, and written work. Same course as PT 364 /SA 364 .

    Prerequisite: CM 322  or SA 224  or written permission of the instructor.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 365 - Podcasting and Long-Form Digital Audio

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students learn the theories and techniques of creative audio storytelling to produce long-form features and podcasts. Skills in pitching stories, research, field recording, interviewing, scripting, multitrack production and editing are developed to professional standards within the context of contemporary radio broadcasting and digital media platforms.

    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 367 - Sports Writing

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students start with traditional game coverage and move toward more literary explorations of topics in sports. Students write news, features, opinion pieces, and essays. Readings range from journalistic examples to pieces and books by such authors as Norman Mailer, George Plimpton, George Will, and Roger Khan.

    Prerequisite: CM 205  or CM 308 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 368 - Entertainment, Media, and Politics

    (3.00 cr.)

    Today, entertainment media dominates our lives more than ever before. Content and platforms proliferate; people can listen to podcasts in the shower, watch YouTube clips while on the bus, and stream TV shows all night. This entertainment boom has occurred as democratic politics has become more fraught: U.S. electoral politics is dominated by partisan polarization and the rise of populist outsider candidates while Brexit is shaking the European Union. This course explores the relationship between these changes in entertainment media and democratic politics. How does the increasing proliferation of entertainment options and platforms shape political knowledge, civic engagement, and democratic citizenship? How is electoral politics affected by the rise of 'infotainment'? To what extent have television comedies and dramas shaped perceptions of crime and threat and helped drive changes in social attitudes about gender and sexuality? How accurate are fictional portrayals of politics on the big and small screen, and what do such portrayals teach the public about democracy? What does the future of entertainment and politics look like, and is it as dark as dystopian portrayals in pop culture might suggest? Same course as PS 368  

    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 370 - Public Art

    (3.00 cr.)

    An examination of the field of public art. Beginning with an investigation of the theoretical context of public art, students learn the controversial history of artworks and monuments in public spaces. Students also meet with community partners in the city of Baltimore and collaboratively determine the details of a public art project. Students then develop a series of drawings, models, digital mock-ups, and written proposals for a larger public art project. Accepted proposals are created and installed in the final phase of the class. Same course as SA 367 .

    Prerequisite: SA 224  or written permission of the instructor.
    Sessions Typically Offered: Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 371 - Web II

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students extend their knowledge of website design, publishing, aesthetics and concepts through community-focused projects.

    Prerequisite: CM 312 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall/Spring
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

  
  • CM 372 - Studio Television Production

    (3.00 cr.)

    Students crew live-to-tape studio productions for telecast and streaming on the campus television station. Leadership, teamwork, technological innovations, ethics, and social responsibility are explored.

    Prerequisite: CM 324 .
    Sessions Typically Offered: Fall
    Years Typically Offered: Annually

 

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 ... Forward 10 -> 18