University Writing Seminar
Last updated: August 24, 2023 at 9:41 AM
Objectives
The First Year Writing Program at Brandeis University is the foundation of the University Writing Program. The University Writing Seminar introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding.
The program offers a selection of topic-driven seminars that challenge students to formulate meaningful arguments, support them with observations and evidence, and convey them clearly and persuasively. In so doing, students will engage with writing as an integral part of academic and professional life, recognizing its value and utility as well as its capacity to foster an engaged citizenry through critical thinking and discussion. By instilling and strengthening flexible writing and research skills, the program invites students to participate in the intellectual discourses of the University. Each seminar addresses the distinct discursive requirements of various disciplines, including the sciences, social sciences and humanities. Students thus learn to write effectively and confidently in any field or profession.
Requirement Beginning Fall 2019
The requirement will be satisfied by completing one University Writing Seminar (UWS) in the student's first year, during which the student attends a Critical Conversation.
Requirement Prior to Fall 2019
First-year students entering in the fall of 2009 and thereafter must satisfactorily complete one UWS course.
Courses of Instruction
(1-99) Primarily for Undergraduate Students
COMP
1b
Composition
Prerequisite: Placement by the director of university writing. Successful completion of this course does NOT satisfy the first-year writing requirement. Enrollment open to native English speakers.
A course in the fundamentals of writing, required as a prerequisite to the first-year writing requirement for selected students identified by the director of university writing. Several sections will be offered in the fall semester.
Staff
CSEM
1a
Composition Seminar
Prerequisite: Placement by the director of university writing. Successful completion of this course does NOT satisfy the first-year writing requirement.
A course in the fundamentals of writing, required as a prerequisite to the first-year writing requirement for selected students identified by the director of university writing. Several sections will be offered in the fall semester.
Staff
UWS
2b
Darwinian Dating: The Evolution of Human Attraction
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Among animals, individuals choose mates based on biologically informative features such as long colorful tail feathers, large canines, or a red, swollen posterior. We typically assume that human attraction (and love) is much more nuanced and complex...but is it? Many features that humans find beautiful or attractive, such as small waists, curvy hips, and large eyes, can be tied to biological explanations. Even behavioral features, such as nurturing behaviors, may be attractive for adaptive reasons. In this course, we will explore and write about biological explanations for these and many other aspects of human attraction. Using an evolutionary perspective, we will examine global patterns of attraction and challenge stereotypes of beauty. Do nice guys really finish last? Do traditionally attractive features in western cultures'such as low body weight'actually provide an evolutionary benefit, or might some preferences be culturally derived? For the final essay, students will supplement library research with data collection to produce an interdisciplinary research paper. Usually offered every year.
Elissa Jacobs
UWS
4a
Medical Ethics
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The Hippocratic Oath is a guiding principle amongst doctors: 'First, do no harm.' But what if your patient is a potential mass murderer? Does the doctor's obligation lie first with the patient or with society at large? We will explore these questions and others across a variety of genres, including the acclaimed medical mystery television series House and other forms of social media such as Ted talks and Instagram posts. In addition, students will have the opportunity to research a case study on a topic of their choice ranging from designer babies to anti-vaxers. This course will foster the development of incisive analysis and sophisticated academic writing as well as an understanding of disciplinary differences through the exploration of bioethical dilemmas. Usually offered every year.
Lisa Rourke
UWS
5a
The Social Life of Sugar
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Sugar and sweeteners have played a large role in influencing human societies. From its earliest origins as an exotic substance to its commodification and democratization at the hands of capitalism, sugar has shaped empires, fueled systems of slavery, and revolutionized the human diet. Even today, this commodity continues to shape our cultures, our vocabularies, our diets, our health, and our environment in surprisingly pervasive ways. Why and how has this seemingly ordinary substance had such an impact upon our lives, and how can we constructively manage and responsibly enjoy it in the global future? In this course, we will examine its nature and the complex history of human interactions with this sweet commodity through film, including Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, poetry, novels, blogs, and art. We will also engage with current debates over how to manage its public health and environmental impacts and how to remedy the injustices that still accompany its production. Usually offered every year.
Robert B. Cochran
UWS
8b
The American Dream
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The 'American Dream' is a source of pride, controversy, and frustration. Many understand it as the pursuit of wealth, power, and social mobility. But when we apply this ideal to our contemporary society the American Dream becomes infinitely more complex. If the American Dream is about the 'pursuit of happiness' and we live in time of so much abundance, then why is there a seemingly equal amount of sadness, discontent, and rage? In this class we will explore the American Dream within the social, economic, and cultural context of capitalism. We will examine how this idea unfolds in film, such as the 2018 hit Sorry to Bother You and graphic novels. At the end of the day, what, if anything, does the American Dream promise for contemporary society?
Jared Berkowitz
UWS
13b
Business Ethics
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In 1978 childhood friends Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield founded Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream using socially responsible principles such as funding the Ben and Jerry's Foundation to pay for community-oriented projects. They prided themselves on their small company independence and touted their unique approach to melding business with social responsibility. Yet, in 2000 Ben and Jerry sold the company to the international food conglomerate Unilever. Many wondered: was this a sellout? This class on business ethics will explore different Harvard Business School cases studies such as this one using ethical lenses including Milton Friedman's 'Free Market' theory and Utilitarianism. In addition to analyzing case studies on topics such as the National Football League and concussions, we will examine the acclaimed film The Big Short to consider the boundaries of ethical behavior in the business world. This course will also foster the development of incisive analysis and sophisticated academic writing as a way to explore dilemmas relating to business ethics. Structured assignments, class discussions, peer group workshops, and conferences will direct us as we explore different writing tasks.
Lisa Rourke
UWS
16a
Sex and Advertising
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Sex Sells! It's the immortal truism of the advertising industry. But how does sex sell? For decades, advertisers have used hot bods and innuendo to suggest that power and pleasure can be bought. In the 1970s, the battle cry, 'You've come a long way, Baby!' pushed cigarettes as the hip accessories of feminism and the sexual revolution. Today, brands blend consumerism with gender activism, invite LGBTQ to the mainstream marketplace, and tempt millennials with new promises of sex and success. In this course, students find and write about advertising that delights, infuriates, and perplexes them. In the first essay, they dissect their choice of pornographic food commercials, Budweiser bromances, and Calvin Klein billboards that titillate consumers and reshape social constructs of masculinity and femininity. The research paper challenges students to locate and comprehend recent studies of sex and gender in advertising and apply them to a defined set of ads or a major campaign of their choice. Usually offered every year.
Doug Kirshen
UWS
17b
Bodies of Evidence: Forensic Science in Fact and Fiction
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Forensic science has helped to identify the dead, to solve crimes, and to bring culprits to justice. Forensic techniques, later discredited, have also led to false convictions: a man was found guilty of rape and spent decades in prison before DNA tests confirmed his innocence; a convicted arsonist was proven innocent but had been executed years earlier. This course invites students to explore the achievements and shortcomings of forensic science. We will investigate the work of forensic scientists, take a look at real-life cases to learn about the history and effectiveness of investigative techniques, and analyze how forensic science has been portrayed (and transformed) in popular television series such as CSI or Bones. Usually offered every year.
Katrin Fischer
UWS
20b
"Bad" English
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
A thick accent, bunch of grammar errors, jumble of different languages, and so on: it feels embarrassing to speak 'bad' English. We casually hear or say, 'you speak very good English!' Is it a compliment or insult? What do we assume as 'bad' and what counts as 'good'? In this seminar, we will look into how different forms of English are represented and consumed in literature, film, video, and visual art, starting with the film Lost in Translation. Students are welcomed to bring in and share their own experiences on issues including 'foreignness,' migration, language learning, and translation, to name but few. By focusing on how multiple Englishes meet and clash in fictional and real environments, we will try to rethink the hierarchies of language and culture. Our ultimate goal is to reflect on how this conversation could influence both our class environment and daily lives. Usually offered every year.
Amanda Presswood
UWS
33a
Dystopian Worlds
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This course introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The Matrix Resurrections. The Hunger Games. Blade Runner 2049. Ready Player One. Divergent. The Handmaid’s Tale. In recent years, dystopias have been a mainstay of popular books, movies, and TV. These depictions of brutal fictional worlds and the heroes who fight to change, escape, or just survive them have a lot to tell us about our own world. They explore issues of individual freedoms, reproductive justice, digital privacy, family power dynamics, capitalism, and nearly every other problem we face in our modern society. In this course, we will explore a variety of dystopian fiction on screen and in literature in order to understand how creators use dystopian allegories to teach us about ourselves. We will watch and discuss episodes of The Handmaid’s Tale together for our first paper, and then students will choose their own pieces of dystopian fiction to research and analyze for a larger final project. Usually offered every year.
Laura Heath-Stout
UWS
34a
Reading and Writing Boston
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
What is Boston? Boston is best known for baked beans, Fenway Park, The Boston Marathon, and over 50 colleges and universities that attract nearly 200,000 students in the Greater Metropolitan area. In the 1700's, Boston was called the 'Athens of America' because of its literate and engaged citizenry, wisdom, knowledge and education. Boston is a city of FIRSTS: the first public park, Boston Common, in 1634; the first public school, Boston Latin, in 1635; the first street-car subway system in the nation in 1897. In 2017, Boston ranked fifth in the world for innovations including cultural assets, education centers, transportation, and biking/walking accessibility. From the Esplanade on the Charles River, the Back Bay, Fens and Boston Common to the newer 15-acre Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, the beauty of Boston is unsurpassed. In this section of UWS, we will be using material on the City of Boston and its neighborhoods, with readings that focus on the historical, sociological, literary and contemporary beat of the city. The main goal for UWS is to further develop your academic research and writing skills , and this course will utilize the City of Boston as a textbook, enabling you to 'experience' Boston, close to where you have chosen to spend your college years. Usually offered every year.
Marsha Nourse
UWS
37a
The Biology of Morality
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Humans often consider themselves to be "the moral animal," distinguished from other animals by our complex and socially derived systems of morality, characterized by empathy and cooperation. However, when comparing humans with the rest of the animal world, are we really so different? In this course, we will examine through discussion and writing the degree to which human morality is grounded in our evolutionary past. We will explore the development of human morality during childhood and adulthood through the lens of evolution and will look at classic scientific tests of morality/ethics (e.g., the trolley problem). Additionally, we will engage with evidence for morality in non-human species and probe the degree to which our primate relatives engage in altruistic, empathetic, and moral behaviors. During the final paper, students will have the freedom to choose their own topic and to utilize interdisciplinary literature in their exploration of the nature and nurture of morality. Usually offered every year.
Elissa Jacobs
UWS
43a
Storytelling in Business
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Storytelling plays a crucial role in our lives. We draw on stories to make meaning of ourselves and others, to shed light on our experiences, and to express who we are or would like to be. The same holds true for businesses. Storytelling is not only a core competency of business leaders but an indispensable component of functional organizations. Successful companies take pride in compelling stories; troubled companies tend to lack institutional stories and a culture of storytelling. Capable business leaders are effective storytellers, and strategic storytelling has been a proven means of initiating change and of turning companies around. This course invites students to investigate the power of stories and storytelling in business contexts. By analyzing texts from various media, we will discuss questions such as: What characterizes effective stories? What is the importance of storytelling and story-making in companies? How can storytelling bring about organizational change? Which traits do storytellers and business leaders share? What is the connection between storytelling and leadership? Usually offered every year.
Katrin Fischer
UWS
43b
Animals in a Human World
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing, and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructor.
How do we define our relationship with animals: which we keep as livestock, which we keep as pets, and which we keep in zoos? Human-animal interactions have developed over hundreds of thousands of years; in that time, animals have had a significant impact on human behavior and on the development of human societies. In this class, we will explore the deep history of the relationship between humans and animals. We will consider how different cultures and subsistence strategies cultivate different interspecies dynamics, and particularly how domestication changes the way we perceive animals and their place in the world. To explore these questions, we will use multiple lines of evidence, including ethnographic data, material culture, and scientific analyses of faunal remains. Students will have the opportunity to research and write about the relationship between humans and animals in a wide variety of ancient and modern cultures. Usually offered every year.
Catherine Scott
UWS
48a
Love: Where, When, How, Who?
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing, and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructor.
What is love? How does society encourage or discourage it? Who gets to fall in love and why? For many years, the study of love seemed to belong to poets, painters, singers, and playwrights. Scholars in different fields like history and anthropology avoided studying love, claiming that it was too special, too personal, maybe too sacred to be a topic of reflection and analysis. Yet love is all around us. What does it mean and do? This course explores films, case studies, and more to explore how love conforms to and challenges the prevailing social order and becomes a force for change or continuity. We will analyze readings about how people living in Africa, the USA, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East have described and experienced love as a vital emotion within or despite the expectations they face. Students will research a love-related issue of their choice and may choose from texts including written narratives, ethnographies, legal studies, films, works of art, novels, and other mediums. Usually offered every year.
Martha Lagace
UWS
50a
Neurodiversity and Culture
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing, and revising'working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
John Nash was a brilliant mathematician at Princeton who won the 1994 Nobel Prize in Economics for his work in game theory even as he struggled with schizophrenia. How did academic culture influence Nash's personal and professional life, and, more broadly, what role does culture play in neurodiversity? How does social media, such as Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok influence perceptions of neurodiversity? In this course we will explore the way neurodiversity plays a role in culture beginning with an analysis of the film A Beautiful Mind, based on Nash's life. Students will then choose their own research topic and text on neurodiversity, ranging from films such as Prozac Nation and Silver Linings Playbook to television series, such as Homeland and The Good Doctor. This course will help prepare students for academic research and writing, introducing them to peer reviewed research, academic databases, and the fundamentals of disciplinary conventions. Usually offered every year.
Matthew Burkett
UWS
50b
Public Health: Writing with Data
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Over the past year, particularly with the COVID-19 pandemic, we've seen an increasing reliance on public health data to inform public policies, monitor progress, and guide individuals' health decisions. Public health data has been spun into narratives about right versus wrong, infographics that motivate action, and graphs that illustrate trends, among others. Since we've been inundated with quantitative data, you likely know what it's like to experience data as an audience member, however in this course, you'll become the composer with data at your communicative disposal. This course will encourage you to think about questions like: What is public health data? How is data generated and collected? How is public health data used or misused in academic, professional, and societal contexts? How do writers frame data to achieve certain ends? How does data visualization relate to communication? We will explore these questions across a variety of texts including CDC and NIH publications, TedTalks, and academic articles. After analyzing public health data use in different genres, you'll then embark on your own quantitative reasoning journey by crafting a research essay that incorporates public health data and strategic data visualization. Usually offered every year.
Allison Gianotti
UWS
51a
Professional Writing in the Sciences
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
According to Charles Darwin, 'A naturalist's life would be a happy one if [they] had only to observe and never to write.' Unfortunately (or fortunately!), much of a naturalist's practice involves writing. In fact, the same holds true for those in other scientific fields'scientists must not only do science, but they, too, must write science. But what exactly are professional scientists writing? What motivates their composing and to whom do they write? What rhetorical choices do scientists make when communicating complex information? In this course, we'll examine the discursive and generic requirements scientists face when composing in different contexts for different audiences. By considering a number of professional scientific genres'including research articles, grant applications, poster presentations, and public talks'we will explore questions of accessibility, writerly agency, persuasion, and objectivity. You'll even have the opportunity to interview faculty members in the disciplines to learn about the writing tasks you might encounter as a working professional in your field. By the end of this course, you'll have a more sophisticated understanding of professional writing in the sciences, and as such, you'll be asked to produce two distinct genres of writing that take up the same research topic, albeit for different audiences and different communicative purposes. Usually offered every year.
Allison Gianotti
UWS
52a
Playing Fair: Gender, Race, and Sports in America
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Whether you're an athlete or fan, you have likely noticed that issues of race and gender have become increasingly central to conversations in collegiate and professional sports. These issues have raised important questions: To what extent do sports create a 'level playing field' for women, transgender athletes and Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC)? How do intersections of social class, mental health, and physical ability impact the discourse about race and gender in sports? In this class, we will investigate the history of racist and sexist policies and practices in amateur and professional sports as well as developments that place sports on the cutting edge of gender and racial equality in society at large. Case studies will include the raised fist salute by Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, the passage of Title IX, current debates about financial compensation for elite NCAA athletes, and Colin Kaepernick's kneeling for the national anthem in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. Usually offered every year.
Deborah Feingold
UWS
52b
Environmental Justice
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing, and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
This section of UWS focuses on 'Environmental Justice,' which encompasses the equal access of all people, regardless of race, ethnic origin, or socio-economic status, to the benefits of nature as well as the equitable distribution of environmental harms. It gives visibility and voice to those who have been historically marginalized and suffered the most from environmental hazards and the effects of climate change: communities of color, indigenous peoples, and the poor. The course invites students to examine power inequities, historical contexts, and scientific concepts to understand the causes and effects of environmental injustices and environmental racism. It also invites students to explore stories of resilience and hope by researching, learning, and writing about inspirational individuals, groups, and movements who have taken action for a more just and equitable future. Usually offered every year.
Katrin Fischer
UWS
53b
Mythology of the American West
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing, and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Davy Crockett, Daniel Boone, the gold rush, and Conestoga Wagons. When we think of the American West, we might envision images of cowboys and Indians, of danger and folk heroes. But these images mask a darker side of struggles and colonization; some even argue that Westward expansion in the 19th Century lay the roots for American expansionist policies in the Cold War era and beyond. This course will interrogate these seemingly conflicting narratives. We will first watch the classic John Ford western film, Stagecoach, in which the mysterious cowboy/outlaw character, Ringo Kid, helps to protect a group of innocent pioneer townsfolk on a dangerous stagecoach trip across the American Southwest. For the research essay, students select a topic and text of their choice, ranging from the film Pocahantas, to a painting by Georgia O'Keefe, to a classic novel by John Steinbeck, in order to explore the idealization of the American West and the lingering effects of that idealization today. Usually offered every year.
Eric Hollander
UWS
54b
Thinking About Borders Through Data
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
As Eavan Boland's poem 'That the Science of Cartography is Limited' might remind us, maps are limited renderings of the places we encounter: not only because they are representations of these places rather than the places themselves, but because we make decisions about the features or data we encode in them and the borders we draw. Given how core the language of territory and borders is to how we understand what we know'What 'field,' for example, are you thinking of majoring in?'this course will consider borders metaphorically as well as literally. In both of these contexts, what does it mean to be a citizen, or a migrant, or a tourist? What are the documents that confer or communicate these identities? We will read from fiction, watch movies, and listen to podcasts to think critically about the boundaries that separate physical spaces, as well as those that separate conceptual spaces like fields of knowledge and genres. Further, we will think through the decisions that we make as writers when wandering through these spaces, while representing the identities we and others claim in them. Specifically, we will focus on what documents and data can and can't capture, as well as how they can, at different times, reinforce or break down the boundaries we draw. Usually offered every year.
Gregory Palermo
UWS
55a
Making Decisions with Algorithms
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Should an algorithm be used to grade your paper, based on what other papers look like? How about to determine what videos you see on YouTube or TikTok, based on what it thinks you like? Or what about to decide how long you are incarcerated, based on your risk of future crime? In this course, we will read popular and journalistic texts to learn about algorithms and how they can carry the politics of their designers and propagate bias. Discussing issues like digital redlining, recidivism assessment, and facial recognition, we will consider the extent to which the digital technologies that shape our daily experiences when sorting through information can potentially cause harm. Moreover, we will consider our role in resisting the categories chosen for us when sorting through the content we engage, in spaces ranging from social media to grocery stores ' thinking, perhaps, about the times we are asked to be algorithmic ourselves as readers and writers. How might we still make space there for what we want to say. Usually offered every year.
Gregory Palermo
UWS
55b
Homelessness and the Self-Perpetuating Cycle of Shame
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Why has the number of people experiencing homelessness in Massachusetts more than doubled since 1990? This course will investigate the changing face of homelessness over the past fifty years and question why the 'hidden homeless,' many of whom are couch-surfing college-age kids, constitute the fastest growing and least recognized segment of this population. Through literature, film and essays, this course will examine the shame that so often contributes to homelessness and discuss what it will take to shift this self-perpetuating cycle. Weekly reading responses, lively debate and your own mock profile of a person experiencing homelessness will help us address our individual and collective response to this national crisis. Guest speakers from area shelters will contribute to the discussion, and you will be prompted to dive deep into your own relation to homelessness through short essay assignments. Usually offered every year.
Julie Batten
UWS
56b
Tracking the Digital Self
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Streaming service algorithms, smart home devices, predictive text, even sleep-tracking apps. These are just a few examples of technologies that shape our daily experiences. We use apps to order food, track our bodies, and even find love. We have robots that clean our floors as well as robots that surveil our streets. This seminar asks students to explore, through writing and research, some tricky questions about the technologies we come into contact with: how they shape our identities and track our bodies or how corporate powers exploit our data and influence our behavior. As a class, we will explore technology debates and representations of technology in cultural texts (stories, films, ads, news coverage etc.). For the final research papers, students will be expected to develop a research topic on a technology of their choosing. Usually offered every year.
Paige Marie Eggebrecht
UWS
57b
Racial Difference and the Senses
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
How is a person’s race determined? Is it how they look, sound, or feel? Is it their biological or cultural filiation? While some may be tempted to say that race is merely a function of skin tone, it has historically been theorized as something much more complicated. Indeed, since 1896, when Plessy v. Ferguson established the “one-drop rule” as the law of the land in the United States, race has largely been understood to exceed the bounds of the visual, to be made up of something more than just the color of one’s skin. This “something more” will be the central focus of this course. Reading a wide range of creative, cultural-critical, historical, and scientific texts that grapple with the issue of racialized perception, we will spend the semester exploring how all five senses—not just sight—work to construct and deconstruct categories of racial difference. Usually offered every year.
Patrick Kindig
UWS
58a
The Age of Distraction
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In 1941, poet T.S. Eliot lamented that the world had grown “distracted from distraction by distraction.” Living as we do in the era of Twitter and TikTok, we would be hard-pressed to disagree with him. But what exactly do we mean when we call something a distraction? How do distractions force us to attend to them, and why do we see this as a problem? In this course, we will explore how and why we draw the line between distraction and so-called “normal” or “healthy” attention. Borrowing analytical tools from the fields of medicine, psychology, philosophy, and cultural history and theory, we will examine both historical distractions (such as theater and film) and more contemporary ones (such as social media). We will also investigate the role played by distraction in such psychiatric disorders as ADHD and internet addiction. In analyzing these phenomena, we will develop a more nuanced understanding of how attention and distraction shape our experience of the world. Usually offered every year.
UWS
58b
Nature and the Human Experience
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Whether camping in the White Mountains, walking through an urban park, or biking down a busy metropolitan road, humans interact every day with the natural world. This course explores the history of that relationship through various perspectives, geographies, terrains, and political traditions developing a conceptual understanding of our evolving relationship to the earth we inhabit. We will look at technology, agriculture, urban planning, forestry, and social movements as lenses through which to interpret that relationship. To do this, the course uses sources from history, film, literature, and political science to paint a broad picture of how humans have experienced the natural world and made sense of and/or resisted that experience. More importantly, students will come away from the class able to apply a critical and historically informed opinion of mainstream conceptions of the environment and our role within it. Usually offered every year.
Alexander Herbert
UWS
59b
Museums and Cultural Heritage
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Cultural heritage—which includes a diversity of tangible (e.g., artifacts, monuments, buildings) and intangible (e.g., language, folklore, traditions) elements of culture—is a vital part of how we understand ourselves and the world. Here in Boston, we have a particularly close relationship with the cultural heritage of the founding of the United States; a stroll along the Freedom Trail will lead one past historically “sacred” sites such as the Old North Church and Bunker Hill, as well as to sites reminiscent of daily life such as the Boston Common and the Paul Revere House. However, communities in the United States and around the world often have a fraught relationship with cultural heritage because of the ways that it has been shaped by legacies of colonialism and oppression. These complexities are evident in longstanding debates around the repatriation of objects—such as the Elgin Marbles from Greece or the Benin Bronzes from what is now Nigeria—and in recent protests advocating for the removal of Confederate monuments. In this course, we will examine some of the conversations surrounding tangible cultural heritage. Who has the “right” to own objects? Who controls what stories are told about cultural heritage? And how do those stories shape our understanding of our place in the world? Usually offered every year.
Catherine Scott
UWS
60a
Body Obsession and Representations of Bodies in the Media
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Examines ways that media constructs and reconstructs the “ideal” body and the ways in which that ideal continues to be reconfigured. From the supermodels of the 1990s to Kim Kardashian, it is clear that society is obsessed with how bodies, especially female bodies, are represented in the media. But what is the role of social media when it comes to representations of the body? Does it allow for a greater representation of body types or is it reproducing the idealized body portrayed by mainstream media? This course explores how media constructs, shapes, and reinforces the culture of the ideal body. We will also explore the stereotypes and ideologies regarding gender, race, and class embedded in body image. The course will introduce critical approaches and theoretical foundations used to examine the representations and impacts of body images. Areas of the study may include, but not limited to, television, movies, social media, magazines, and video games. Usually offered every year.
Amanda Presswood
UWS
61a
Time Travel
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Time travel is a motif that appears regularly in the genres of science-fiction and fantasy—from recent popular television series like Doctor Who and Loki, to classic novels like H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine and Diana Gabaldon’s fantasy-romance series Outlander. But is time travel only the stuff of fiction, or could it be a real possibility? How do we understand time, and do we have the capacity to manipulate it? In this course, we will explore how time is conceived in different cultures and academic disciplines in an attempt to get a fuller picture of what time actually is and how it affects us. Using strategies from the fields of physics, sociology, philosophy, and psychology, we will analyze the scientific and ethical questions raised by cultural depictions of time travel. Through this analysis, we will develop a deeper understanding of how time affects our own lives, and how we might be able to affect it. Usually offered every year.
Rachel Dale
UWS
61b
Anime and Cultural Identity
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In recent years, anime has become a global phenomenon enjoyed by millions of people, racking up a diverse group of fans. Yet, in many ways, anime is still very much rooted in its Japanese cultural origins. So, what does it mean for anime to be simultaneously Japanese and global? This course will examine this question from various angles, using the films of Studio Ghibli as well as some popular television shows. Together, we will explore how anime creators use their unique cultural perspective to create universal messages about issues such as the environment, coming of age, and cultural belonging. At the same time, we will see how these creators’ limited perspective can lead to problems such as cultural appropriation and issues surrounding racial and gender representation. Through this, students will learn to think more critically about the media they encounter and gain a new way to experience anime. Usually offered every year.
Shirah Malka Cohen
UWS
62a
Video Gameplay, Players, and Styles
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Video games afford opportunities to immerse ourselves in virtual worlds in an interactive and engaging manner. The creativity and imagination behind game design necessitate the interaction of a wide range of skills: coding, graphic design, storytelling, musical composition, and sound design. How is it that we can spend hours picking up virtual weeds in Animal Crossing, be fearful of turtle shells in Mario Kart, or experience immense satisfaction when leveling up our Pokemon or beating a boss in Dark Souls? This course addresses these questions by tracing the development of video games from the early pixelated heroes of Mario and Pac-Man to online spaces that involve the global participation of millions of people, such as League of Legends and Call of Duty. Students are required to think critically about the virtual worlds they inhabit and consider how video games implement play, immersion, and engagement and how their unique function as an interactive medium has evolved throughout the latter half of the 20th century to the present day. The interdisciplinary nature of game studies allows students to think and write critically on an array of topics concerning narrative, immersion, gender, music, technology, and game design. Usually offered every year.
James Hazelwood-Dale
UWS
63b
Going Viral
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
When something goes viral, it spreads. The pandemic has triggered a medical awareness of social distancing and community spread, but it has also instigated mob mentality and rampant misinformation through technological sharing. How do these concepts of contagion function? How do they impact individuals and communities, making connections while also causing marginalization? Can they be controlled? We will investigate how ideas and disease are spread, their short-term and long-term consequences, and the measures taken in response. Course readings and media will encourage students to think critically about human behavior that creates and destroys viral community. Students will analyze and research cultural and historical examples from zombies, to Twitter, to witch trials through the interdisciplinary lens of epidemiology, sociology, and psychology. By applying rhetorical analysis to instances of uncontrollable forms of communication, students will learn and reflect on their own strategies of academic communication. Usually offered every year.
Laura Kremmel
UWS
64a
Culture and Illness
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The Joker, Hannibal Lecter, and Norman Bates are all villains defined by their mental illnesses: they’re weird, dangerous, even evil. Similarly, we draw on narrative tropes to understand real and fictional characters with physical illness. For example, depictions of cancer patients in popular culture often use metaphors of the battlefield to declare them victorious or defeated. Experiences of physical and mental illness—including related embodiments of confusion, pain, and grief—are notoriously difficult to articulate. Without feeling illness ourselves, we are left to representations like the ones above to provide insight into these conditions. How do those representations influence our behavior towards those who are ill? How do they inform understandings of our own health and sociopolitical, bioethical, or criminological programs? To address these questions, we will analyze representations of illness in a variety of genres, which may include film, ads, comics, and online media. This course will help students build skills in research, analysis, and rhetorical awareness of the many disciplines that representations of illness impact. Usually offered every year.
Laura Kremmel
UWS
64b
The Resistance Mix-Tape: Music and Social Justice
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Considers music as a radical political tool for social justice. Guided by different genres of music and different social justice issues, we will listen to politically resonant songs in order to explore how music not only actively participates in and shapes our culture, but also offers modes of resistance to regimes of power. From the pro-labor and anti-war politics of folk music, the anti-establishment and anti-normative bents of punk, and the racial and social justice orientations of hip-hop, students will examine how music fights power, encourages activism, and effects social change. This course is designed in such a way that students may participate fully regardless of the level of their prior musical knowledge or experience. All of the music we will be examining involves texts that are linguistic, sonic, and occasionally, in the case of music videos, visual. Our study of these musical texts will be enhanced through various critical and theoretical approaches to the intersections of race, gender, and class. For final research papers, students will be encouraged to develop a research topic about music and social justice issues that are meaningful to them. Usually offered every year.
Ethan King
UWS
65a
Everyday Apocalypse, or Living Through the Long Emergency
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Our contemporary moment has been marked by various catastrophes and crises: the pandemic, the climate emergency, the refugee crisis, widening economic disparities, rising nationalist extremism, and racial inequalities and police violence. These crises have combined to create a present moment of profound uncertainty and growing unrest, and daily life has become undergirded by a rising tide of anxiety. Using contemporary events and recent cultural texts as sites of inquiry about the global tumult of our present, students will consider how the convergence of the everyday and the catastrophic frame our “new normal,” as well as how distinctions between normalcy and emergency are connected to media narratives, corporate agendas, and political rhetoric and policy. Altogether, the course invites students to examine our experience of the contemporary world from multiple lenses and encourages students to research, learn, write about, and potentially reimagine the social, economic, and environmental challenges of our time. Usually offered every year.
Ethan King
UWS
65b
Coming to America
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Filmmakers have long celebrated the successes—and warned of the harrowing dangers—of coming to America as an immigrant. We pride ourselves as a nation of immigrants, yet newcomers pay dearly to get here, only to find that they are not very welcome when they arrive. What do these strangers from strange lands contribute to our national identity, and what must they sacrifice to fit into the American scene? Filmmakers use immigrant stories to show us our country through their eyes, and what we see is not always pretty. Ideals of justice and fair play are compromised, and progress always comes at a price. Through such films as An American Tail (1986), the story of naïve mice (representing European Jews) who imagine that in America there are no cats, The Godfather II (1974), and El Norte (1983), we will consider the myths and realities of America as a land of opportunity shaped by the hardships and determination of immigrants. Usually offered every year.
Doug Kirshen
UWS
66a
Travel and Self-Discovery
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The ocean, the open road, and the automobile all entice us to travel. From Thelma and Louise, a female buddy road crime film, to acclaimed food critic Anthony Bourdain, who samples foods from across the globe, travel has long worked in popular culture to offer the tantalizing possibilities of reinvention, of getting lost, of escape into the new. However, travel is more than just a romantic fantasy about self-transformation. In fact, British travel essayist Pico Iyer argues that our travel experiences are always structured by our preconceptions about ourselves and the world; for Iyer, we can never completely escape from ourselves. Building on the ideas of Iyer and others, we will investigate what we do when we travel and the motivations that drive the urge to explore. How does travel relate to identity, gender, and self-discovery? In this course, we will probe this question and others by watching films and reading texts from a variety of genres and disciplines, examining the desires, pressures, and delusions that propel us to hit the open road or take flight. Building on ideas from the course, students will be encouraged to write papers that engage with issues related to travel and self-exploration that they find compelling. Usually offered every year.
Collin Cook
UWS
66b
Sports, Money, and Power
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Despite being united by the common desire to win, few relationships in popular culture are as fraught as the relationship between athletes and the various organizational structures—teams, leagues, coaches, agents—of sports. Indeed, given the amount of money at stake, the sports industry’s many competing interests make it a productive case study for thinking about this ever-shifting balance of power. Beginning with the film Jerry Maguire, this course will track these ongoing power negotiations by looking at a variety of relationships within sports, attempting to understand how different actors—athletes, coaches, owners—try to win, maintain dominance, and get paid. How do organizations respond, for example, when individual players like Tom Brady and Aaron Rogers upset the traditional hierarchies that govern teams? Are some coaching styles—such as those of Steve Kerr or Phil Jackson—better suited than others to balancing the competing personalities and interests of professional sports? To further engage with the topics we discuss, students will be encouraged to write papers that grapple with sports-related questions and issues of power dynamics that are of interest to them. Usually offered every year.
Collin Cook
UWS
67a
Diversity and Justice on Campus
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Many news stories about college campuses emphasize social diversity and identity politics, from free speech debates to sexual violence to student worker unionization to affirmative action. Writers have discussed these issues in editorials, manifestos, fiction, memoirs, and academic research studies. We will examine several of these depictions in order to understand how many forms of diversity, inclusion, and oppression play out in the space of the college campus. We will begin by watching and studying the film Dear White People, then will examine how college is portrayed in a variety of genres of writing, and then students will choose a particular issue to research. Usually offered every year.
Laura Heath-Stout
UWS
67b
Music, Protests, and Social Change of the Sixties
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The Times They Are A-Changin…When Bob Dylan wrote this song in the early 1960s, it was the time of political and military upheaval in America. Dylan was trying to rally people to come together to bring about needed change in our society: culturally, socially, and politically. The decade marked revolutionary ideas and turmoil, and the most prevalent included individual freedoms, Civil Rights, Women’s Liberation, the Viet Nam controversy, Woodstock, Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), Gay Liberation, and more. Students played a major role in bringing about change as campus protests occurred across America. To explore their role, we will start by examining primary sources and personal narratives between 1960 and 1974 from the extensive archive at Brandeis. Through a series of writing assignments, this UWS will provide students an opportunity to examine the Sixties phenomena, first through the lens of music, then through a comparative analysis of controversies, and finally through research into movements that accomplished social change. Usually offered every year.
Marsha Nourse
UWS
68a
Mindfulness in a Noisy World
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
We’re constantly bombarded with messages about the importance of mindfulness: If we would just pay attention, meditate, live in the moment, focus on breathing, or do yoga, then surely our lives would improve. But with so much noise around us, practicing mindfulness can be challenging. As the great composer John Cage observed, “Wherever we are, what we hear is mostly noise.” How can we turn noise to our advantage so that it enhances rather than disrupts mindfulness? To begin exploring answers to this question, we will first listen to the album Five Songs About Power Lines by the band "World Without Parking Lots" and then examine strategies for listening to help us navigate our noisy world. Usually offered every year.
Eric Hollander
UWS
69a
Hip-Hop as Social Commentary
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Examines hip-hop as a form of social commentary, focusing on how hip-hop artists use their music to address social, political, and cultural issues. Through readings, discussions, and listening exercises, we will explore how hip-hop artists have commented on topics such as racism, police brutality, poverty, and other social issues. Students will be encouraged to engage in critical thinking and discussion about the social issues addressed in hip-hop music, and to analyze how these messages are conveyed through the music. By the end of the course, students will have an understanding of how hip-hop can be used as a form of social commentary, and will have developed the skills necessary to analyze any genre of text that addresses social issues. Usually offered every year.
Joshua Lederman
UWS
69b
The Ethics of True Crime
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In recent news, Adnan Syed – the lead figure in the seminal true crime podcast Serial – was released from prison after twenty-three years. Syed had been sentenced to life in prison for the murder of his girlfriend, Hay Min Lee, but the podcast shed enough doubt on the conviction that a court eventually overturned it, leading to Syed’s release. At the same time, many have noted that the emergence of true crime podcasts and docuseries has its roots in the exploitation of people’s misery for the entertainment of the masses (and the financial benefit of the media outlets). In this course, we will examine the ethics of this genre. We will read texts in ethical philosophy (authors like Kant, James, and Mill), as well as arguments about true crime series themselves. In the end, we will have examined some of our own beliefs about right and wrong, and will have conducted a critical investigation into the culture that surrounds us. Usually offered every year.
Joshua Lederman
UWS
70a
Beautiful People: Myths, Models, Makeovers
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Rigorous controlled experiments have now confirmed what has always intuitively seemed true: being beautiful has its advantages. But how do we define, identify, and recognize beauty? Why do we seek it out; why must we strive so hard to achieve it? And why does it often have such an ugly underbelly? This course will examine culturally and historically contingent ways of defining beauty, analyzing how constructs of racialized, classed, and gendered attributes at different historical moments factor into what counts as beautiful, fashionable, or desirable. We also will parse the values and ideals promoted by our own moment through a wide variety of selections from recent pop-culture and mass-media campaigns: music videos, such as Beyonce’s “Pretty Hurts,” reality TV clips, such as America’s Next Top Model, Instagram trends including #iweigh and #freethepuff, and advertisements for cosmetics and clothing, such as Aerie’s “real” campaign and Sephora’s “We Belong to Something Beautiful.” Nonfiction articles, book chapters, and documentary clips on the globalized beauty industry (cosmetics, plastic surgery) will offer critical and theoretical lenses to consider where and how beauty works. Usually offered every year.
Sophia Richardson
UWS
70b
Clones and Copies in Art, Literature, and Science
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In the battle between the original and the clone, who wins? If they are identical, does it matter? In this course we will examine what it means to make a copy or a clone, and what it might mean to be a copy or clone. We will analyze how different technologies of reproduction – mirrors, lenses, the printing press, cameras, computers, bodies – both motivate and alter the impulse to copy. As we analyze a wide array of media including literature, film, painting, photography, dance, and music, we will investigate how form shapes – and is shaped by – the anxieties and opportunities afforded by replication. What makes a good copy? Why is the relationship between original and copy so contested? How do cloning and copying – whether historical or present day – force us to rethink the boundary between life and art, to renegotiate our ideas of what it means to be a human, a self, a unique individual? Texts may include clips from films such as The Matrix and television series such as Black Mirror as well as recent articles on innovations in artificial intelligence and bio-technology. Usually offered every year.
Sophia Richardson
UWS
71a
Like, but Not Like: The Uncanny Futures of Robots, Cyborgs, and Androids
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Examines the robots, cyborgs, and androids that proliferate in fiction, culture, and daily life: from Arnold’s T-800 to our friendly campus delivery bots. The creation of artificial intelligence, labor, and life requires us to investigate our political and cultural beliefs about individual autonomy, property, and civil rights. Using theoretical constructs around labor, the Uncanny, and Otherness, in this class, students will write about the cultural representations of robotic life in film as well as have the opportunity to examine the creation, implementation, and impacts of robots in the world around us. Usually offered every year.
Paige Eggebrecht
UWS
71b
Zombies and Society: Reading and Writing the Undead
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
The zombie genre is a staple of horror. But in the same way that most art is a reflection of society, authors, filmmakers, and creators have used the zombie hoard to interrogate important issues in society. Max Brook’s World War Z is really a critique of the failures of global disaster preparedness. George Romero’s Dawn of the Dead has been broadly interpreted as a meditation on consumer culture. Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend asks the question "what does it mean to be human?” The un-dead are a blank canvas, ready to become what we believe them to be. In this way, they are an effective vehicle for cultural commentary. This class will use novels, comics, film, and television to investigate the zombie genre as a form of social critique. Topics will include immigration and migration, disaster preparedness, sickness and death, the essence of humanity, mourning and loss, and climate change. This class will also draw on scholarly literature in history, English, medicine, sociology, and anthropology. Usually offered every year.
Sara Beth Gable
UWS
72a
Autobiographical Comics
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Autobiography is an extremely popular genre among comics artists. Masterpieces like Art Spiegelman’s Maus, Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis, and Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home are now common inclusions in high school and college curricula. These works share an uncanny ability to take difficult subjects — e.g., warfare, violence, and family trauma — and portray them in a human dimension that is accessible to readers of all ages and backgrounds. Other texts in the genre depict lighter subject matter, but these also claim to represent the past through images drawn much later in time than the episodes that they depict actually occurred. What is it about comics as a medium that draws artists to reflect on their personal experiences and enchants readers to engage? What should we make of the connection between lived reality and its portrayal in comics? Are comics more or less “real” than other media like text, photography, film, and paint?
In this course, we will pair autobiographical comics with theory from various disciplines: art and visual representation, history and narrativization, and psychology and memory studies. Students will be encouraged to write papers that investigate the relationship between comics, the self, and the notion of truth. Usually offered every year.
Rafael Abrahams
UWS
72b
Driving Change: Student-Led Social Movements
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In January of 1969, Black students and other students of color at Brandeis led an 11-day sit-in at Ford Hall, an administrative building, and issued a list of ten demands that promoted racial justice. Brandeis students aren’t unique: Students and young adults play a critical role in nearly every social movement. For generations, youth across the world have used innovative tactics to protest inequality, racism, violence, and human rights violations. Is the rest of the world listening? How do these movements form and how are they portrayed in media and pop culture? Why do they succeed or fail?
This course utilizes documentaries, archives, pop culture, and scholarly histories to explore the tactics of student and youth-led groups through the intersecting lenses of race, gender identity, citizenship, and sexuality. Throughout the semester, students will reflect on these activists’ impact on social justice movements around the world as well as how authorities and media view their tactics. During the final paper, students will have the freedom to choose their own topic and to utilize interdisciplinary literature in their exploration of how youth activism shape our understanding of how to fight for change. Usually offered every year.
Anja Parish
UWS
73a
From Leptons to Neurons: The Science of Free Will
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
In The Matrix, Neo believes he is the author of his own life. But is he really? As it turns out, intelligent machines have enslaved the minds of humans, and Neo is merely a cog in their grand scheme to access solar energy. While this film may seem far-fetched, philosophers have debated whether or not we truly have free will for millennia. At stake is our understanding of ourselves, our place in the world, and how we ought to judge the behavior of others. While the free will question is far from settled, the tools of science may be able to get us closer to an answer. From the fundamental structure of the universe to how our brains operate, science can help determine what kind of control is possible and how we actually make decisions. This course will examine the implications of theories and experiments in physics, psychology, and neuroscience for the free will debate. Course material may include readings from philosophy, science, and literature, as well as popular films like The Matrix and Minority Report. Usually offered every year.
Matthew Paskell
UWS
73b
The Ethics of Technology
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Introduces students to the power of writing as a means of communication and a process of thinking and understanding. As students complete a series of writing assignments, they will engage in a process of reading, drafting, reviewing and revising, working in peer groups and individually with their instructors.
Chat GPT has generated much anxiety in professional and academic arenas. Will AI eliminate jobs or become smart enough to manipulate humans? Films such as Her prey on these fears when the film’s protagonist falls in love with and takes advice from his AI assistant, Samantha. Looking beyond AI, the use of technology raises a host of other questions. For example, should social media companies restrict speech on their platforms? Do interactions in video games have different social rules than real life? These questions each come with their own distinct considerations but are united by a common theme—life in the digital age and the related ethical implications. Determining our moral obligations when using or developing technology has important consequences, ranging from our interpersonal relationships to the very fate of humanity. This course will examine ethical issues arising from various kinds of technological advancement, present and future. Course material may include readings from philosophy, science, and literature, as well as popular films like Ex Machina, Transcendence, and Her. Usually offered every year.
Matthew Paskell