Major Requirements in Communications
Deciding on a Major
The first course that you will take in your major is COM 107: Communications and Society. It is required in ALL Newhouse majors. The course will introduce you to the many areas of communications and get you thinking about what major you want. There are career discussions which are part of the course where you will have the opportunity to hear and talk with communications professionals from a variety of fields. In addition, in your first year, you’ll also complete COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling, a three-credit course in which you’ll have the opportunity to experiment with different types of stories: stories that persuade, stories that document, and stories that entertain. These courses are designed to help you become familiar with the various fields within public communications. Also in the first year, all Newhouse majors complete a required one-credit grammar class, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications. Writing skills are important in Newhouse majors, and strong grammatical skills will help you communicate clearly.
You can also learn more about Newhouse majors and communications in general by talking to your faculty adviser and your peer adviser, by attending lectures given by visiting professionals and by attending programs sponsored by the Newhouse Career Development Center and student organizations. You should consider participating in at least one of the many fine campus media groups—WAER, WJPZ, Citrus TV, The Daily Orange, Equal Time, The Student Voice, and other student publications. You should also consider joining one of the many active student chapters of professional communications organizations in Newhouse including Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Women in Communications (WICI), the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, (NAHJ), and other such organizations.
View a list of organizations>>
YOU MUST DECLARE YOUR MAJOR BY THE END OF YOUR SOPHOMORE YEAR.
That is a University rule. Because of New York State law, students who do not declare their major on time will lose their TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) aid. In addition, juniors will not be able to register without declaring a major. (A junior is defined as a student who has completed 54 credit hours.) There are many rules pertaining to New York State financial aid and federal financial aid. For more information, consult the Financial Aid Office or visit the Financial Aid Office website.
Accreditation Requirements
The Newhouse School is accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. We subscribe to our accrediting agency’s philosophy that students studying communications need to be broadly educated. Therefore, following these guidelines, we limit the number of communications credits which a singly enrolled Newhouse student can can count toward your degree to 38 credits of the 122 required credits. (Sixty-five of the degree credits must be in courses taught by the College of Arts and Sciences.)
As a dually enrolled student, you are already required to take more than 122 credits. If you take more Newhouse credits than is required in your major, you will be increasing the number of credits you will need to graduate since you cannot subtract from the required 65 credits in Arts and Sciences, nor your IS major.
If, for example, you are enrolled in a 38-credit Newhouse major, you will need 146 credits to graduate. If you choose to take two additional Newhouse courses for a total of 44 Newhouse credits, then you must graduate with 152 credits, since only 38 Newhouse credits may be part of the credits needed for your degree.
If you are concerned about planning your courses so that you graduate on time, an adviser in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office may help. You will receive a “Degree Check” before your senior year. At that time, you and your adviser will review your remaining requirements so that you know exactly what you need to take in order to graduate. We encourage you to ask questions of your faculty adviser or the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office at any time if you are uncertain about your requirements.
Declaring a Newhouse Major
There are eight major undergraduate programs of study in Newhouse:
- Advertising
- Broadcast and Digital Journalism
- Graphic Design
- Magazine
- Newspaper and Online Journalism
- Photography
- Public Relations
- Television, Radio and Film
The Photography major has a choice of two different sequences: Illustration Photography OR Photojournalism.
You can find the most up-to-date requirements for each Newhouse major in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3). There is a handout, which you may pick up in that Office, for each major that interests you. You can also find the requirements for each major, as well as course descriptions and prerequisites, in the School of Public Communications section of the Syracuse University Undergraduate Course Catalog, 2014-2015.
You can declare or change your major at any time, as long as you are in good academic standing. The process is simple. You must fill out a MAJOR PLAN OF STUDY FORM in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. At that time, a copy of the current requirements for the major you choose will be placed in your file, and those are the requirements you will be expected to follow in completing your degree.
You may notice that a major is already appearing on your MySlice student record. If you indicated a preference for a major on your Admission application, that information became part of your SU student record. If you wish to change your major, you may do so through the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. If you are happy with your major, you need do nothing to retain it except if you are planning to major in Graphic Design or Photography.
To declare a major in GRAPHIC DESIGN or PHOTOGRAPHY, you must pass a portfolio review. Students may submit their portfolios to the Multimedia, Photography and Design Department after completing one course: GRA 217 (for students interested in majoring in Graphic Design) or PHO 301 (for students interested in majoring in Photography). You can obtain more information about this process from the Department chair, Professor Bruce Strong. His office is 318 Newhouse 3. In order to declare a major in Graphic Design or Photography, you must obtain Professor Strong’s signature on your Major Plan of Study Form and return the form to the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3) for processing.
Please be aware that if your major appears as PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS, you are an undeclared major. (If you are uncertain of your status, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can help.) While undeclared majors have access to 100- and 200-level courses in Newhouse, access to upper division courses is frequently restricted by major. So if your major is undeclared or incorrect, you will have difficulty as a junior or senior registering for the Newhouse classes you need.
As noted previously, all Newhouse major programs have at least three courses in common: COM 107: Communications and Society, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications, and COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling. All Newhouse majors—both singly and dually enrolled—are also required to complete a Diversity requirement and a Global Experience requirement.
The Diversity requirement and the Global Experience requirement are explained on the following pages.
Deciding on a Major
The first course that you will take in your major is COM 107: Communications and Society. It is required in ALL Newhouse majors. The course will introduce you to the many areas of communications and get you thinking about what major you want. There are career discussions which are part of the course where you will have the opportunity to hear and talk with communications professionals from a variety of fields. In addition, in your first year, you’ll also complete COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling, a three-credit course in which you’ll have the opportunity to experiment with different types of stories: stories that persuade, stories that document, and stories that entertain. These courses are designed to help you become familiar with the various fields within public communications. Also in the first year, all Newhouse majors complete a required one-credit grammar class, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications. Writing skills are important in Newhouse majors, and strong grammatical skills will help you communicate clearly.
You can also learn more about Newhouse majors and communications in general by talking to your faculty adviser and your peer adviser, by attending lectures given by visiting professionals and by attending programs sponsored by the Newhouse Career Development Center and student organizations. You should consider participating in at least one of the many fine campus media groups—WAER, WJPZ, Citrus TV, The Daily Orange, Equal Time, The Student Voice, and other student publications. You should also consider joining one of the many active student chapters of professional communications organizations in Newhouse including Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Women in Communications (WICI), the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, (NAHJ), and other such organizations.
View a list of organizations>>
YOU MUST DECLARE YOUR MAJOR BY THE END OF YOUR SOPHOMORE YEAR.
That is a University rule. Because of New York State law, students who do not declare their major on time will lose their TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) aid. In addition, juniors will not be able to register without declaring a major. (A junior is defined as a student who has completed 54 credit hours.) There are many rules pertaining to New York State financial aid and federal financial aid. For more information, consult the Financial Aid Office or visit the Financial Aid Office website.
Accreditation Requirements
The Newhouse School is accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. We subscribe to our accrediting agency’s philosophy that students studying communications need to be broadly educated. Therefore, following these guidelines, we limit the number of communications credits which a singly enrolled Newhouse student can can count toward your degree to 38 credits of the 122 required credits. (Sixty-five of the degree credits must be in courses taught by the College of Arts and Sciences.)
As a dually enrolled student, you are already required to take more than 122 credits. If you take more Newhouse credits than is required in your major, you will be increasing the number of credits you will need to graduate since you cannot subtract from the required 65 credits in Arts and Sciences, nor your IS major.
If, for example, you are enrolled in a 38-credit Newhouse major, you will need 146 credits to graduate. If you choose to take two additional Newhouse courses for a total of 44 Newhouse credits, then you must graduate with 152 credits, since only 38 Newhouse credits may be part of the credits needed for your degree.
If you are concerned about planning your courses so that you graduate on time, an adviser in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office may help. You will receive a “Degree Check” before your senior year. At that time, you and your adviser will review your remaining requirements so that you know exactly what you need to take in order to graduate. We encourage you to ask questions of your faculty adviser or the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office at any time if you are uncertain about your requirements.
Declaring a Newhouse Major
There are eight major undergraduate programs of study in Newhouse:
- Advertising
- Broadcast and Digital Journalism
- Graphic Design
- Magazine
- Newspaper and Online Journalism
- Photography
- Public Relations
- Television, Radio and Film
The Photography major has a choice of two different sequences: Illustration Photography OR Photojournalism.
You can find the most up-to-date requirements for each Newhouse major in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3). There is a handout, which you may pick up in that Office, for each major that interests you. You can also find the requirements for each major, as well as course descriptions and prerequisites, in the School of Public Communications section of the Syracuse University Undergraduate Course Catalog, 2015-2016.
You can declare or change your major at any time, as long as you are in good academic standing. The process is simple. You must fill out a MAJOR PLAN OF STUDY FORM in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. At that time, a copy of the current requirements for the major you choose will be placed in your file, and those are the requirements you will be expected to follow in completing your degree.
You may notice that a major is already appearing on your MySlice student record. If you indicated a preference for a major on your Admission application, that information became part of your SU student record. If you wish to change your major, you may do so through the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. If you are happy with your major, you need do nothing to retain it. Generally, you will be following the requirements of the year you entered the University as a matriculated student.
Please be aware that if your major appears as PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS, you are an undeclared major. (If you are uncertain of your status, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can help.) While undeclared majors have access to 100- and 200-level courses in Newhouse, access to upper division courses is frequently restricted by major. So if your major is undeclared or incorrect, you will have difficulty as a junior or senior registering for the Newhouse classes you need.
As noted previously, all Newhouse major programs have at least three courses in common: COM 107: Communications and Society, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications, and COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling. All Newhouse majors—both singly and dually enrolled—are also required to complete a Diversity requirement and a Global Experience requirement.
The Diversity requirement and the Global Experience requirement are explained on the following pages.
Deciding on a Major
The first course that you will take in your major is COM 107: Communications and Society. It is required in ALL Newhouse majors. The course will introduce you to the many areas of communications and get you thinking about what major you want. There are career discussions which are part of the course where you will have the opportunity to hear and talk with communications professionals from a variety of fields. In addition, in your first year, you’ll also complete COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling, a three-credit course in which you’ll have the opportunity to experiment with different types of stories: stories that persuade, stories that document, and stories that entertain. These courses are designed to help you become familiar with the various fields within public communications. Also in the first year, all Newhouse majors complete a required one-credit grammar class, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications. Writing skills are important in Newhouse majors, and strong grammatical skills will help you communicate clearly.
You can also learn more about Newhouse majors and communications in general by talking to your faculty adviser and your peer adviser, by attending lectures given by visiting professionals and by attending programs sponsored by the Newhouse Career Development Center and student organizations. You should consider participating in at least one of the many fine campus media groups—WAER, WJPZ, Citrus TV, TNH advertising agency, The Daily Orange, Equal Time, The Student Voice, and other student publications. You should also consider joining one of the many active student chapters of professional communications organizations in Newhouse including Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Women in Communications (WICI), the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, (NAHJ), and other such organizations.
View a list of organizations>>
YOU MUST DECLARE YOUR MAJOR BY THE END OF YOUR SOPHOMORE YEAR.
That is a University rule. Because of New York State law, students who do not declare their major on time will lose their TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) aid. In addition, juniors will not be able to register without declaring a major. (A junior is defined as a student who has completed 54 credit hours.) There are many rules pertaining to New York State financial aid and federal financial aid. For more information, consult the Financial Aid Office or visit the Financial Aid Office website.
Accreditation Requirements
The Newhouse School is accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. We subscribe to our accrediting agency’s philosophy that students studying communications need to be broadly educated. Therefore, following these guidelines, we limit the number of communications credits which a singly enrolled Newhouse student can can count toward your degree to 38 credits of the 122 required credits. (Sixty-five of the degree credits must be in courses taught by the College of Arts and Sciences.)
As a dually enrolled student, you are already required to take more than 122 credits. If you take more Newhouse credits than is required in your major, you will be increasing the number of credits you will need to graduate since you cannot subtract from the required 65 credits in Arts and Sciences, nor your IS major.
If, for example, you are enrolled in a 38-credit Newhouse major, you will need 146 credits to graduate. If you choose to take two additional Newhouse courses for a total of 44 Newhouse credits, then you must graduate with 152 credits, since only 38 Newhouse credits may be part of the credits needed for your degree.
If you are concerned about planning your courses so that you graduate on time, an adviser in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office may help. You will receive a “Degree Check” before your senior year. At that time, you and your adviser will review your remaining requirements so that you know exactly what you need to take in order to graduate. We encourage you to ask questions of your faculty adviser or the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office at any time if you are uncertain about your requirements.
Declaring a Newhouse Major
There are eight major undergraduate programs of study in Newhouse:
- Advertising
- Broadcast and Digital Journalism
- Graphic Design
- Magazine
- Newspaper and Online Journalism
- Photography
- Public Relations
- Television, Radio and Film
The Photography major has a choice of two different sequences: Illustration Photography OR Photojournalism.
You can find the most up-to-date requirements for each Newhouse major in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3). There is a handout, which you may pick up in that Office, for each major that interests you. You can also find the requirements for each major, as well as course descriptions and prerequisites, in the School of Public Communications section of the Syracuse University Undergraduate Course Catalog, 2016-2017.
You can declare or change your major at any time, as long as you are in good academic standing. The process is simple. You must fill out a MAJOR PLAN OF STUDY FORM in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. At that time, a copy of the current requirements for the major you choose will be placed in your file, and those are the requirements you will be expected to follow in completing your degree.
You may notice that a major is already appearing on your MySlice student record. If you indicated a preference for a major on your Admission application, that information became part of your SU student record. If you wish to change your major, you may do so through the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. If you are happy with your major, you need do nothing to retain it. Generally, you will be following the requirements of the year you entered the University as a matriculated student.
Please be aware that if your major appears as PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS, you are an undeclared major. (If you are uncertain of your status, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can help.) While undeclared majors have access to 100- and 200-level courses in Newhouse, access to upper division courses is frequently restricted by major. So if your major is undeclared or incorrect, you will have difficulty as a junior or senior registering for the Newhouse classes you need.
As noted previously, all Newhouse major programs have at least three courses in common: COM 107: Communications and Society, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications, and COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling. All Newhouse majors—both singly and dually enrolled—are also required to complete a Diversity requirement and a Global Experience requirement.
The Diversity requirement and the Global Experience requirement are explained on the following pages.
Deciding on a Major
The first course that you will take in your major is COM 107: Communications and Society. It is required in ALL Newhouse majors. The course will introduce you to the many areas of communications and get you thinking about what major you want. There are career discussions which are part of the course where you will have the opportunity to hear and talk with communications professionals from a variety of fields. In addition, in your first year, you’ll also complete COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling, a three-credit course in which you’ll have the opportunity to experiment with different types of stories: stories that persuade, stories that document, and stories that entertain. These courses are designed to help you become familiar with the various fields within public communications. Also in the first year, all Newhouse majors complete a required one-credit grammar class, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications. Writing skills are important in Newhouse majors, and strong grammatical skills will help you communicate clearly.
You can also learn more about Newhouse majors and communications in general by talking to your faculty adviser and your peer adviser, by attending lectures given by visiting professionals and by attending programs sponsored by the Newhouse Career Development Center and student organizations. You should consider participating in at least one of the many fine campus media groups—WAER, WJPZ, Citrus TV, TNH advertising agency, The Daily Orange, Equal Time, The Student Voice, and other student publications. You should also consider joining one of the many active student chapters of professional communications organizations in Newhouse including Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Women in Communications (WICI), the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, (NAHJ), and other such organizations.
View a list of organizations>>
YOU MUST DECLARE YOUR MAJOR BY THE END OF YOUR SOPHOMORE YEAR.
That is a University rule. Because of New York State law, students who do not declare their major on time will lose their TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) aid. In addition, juniors will not be able to register without declaring a major. (A junior is defined as a student who has completed 60 credit hours.) There are many rules pertaining to New York State financial aid and federal financial aid. For more information, consult the Financial Aid Office or visit the Financial Aid Office website.
Accreditation Requirements
The Newhouse School is accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. We subscribe to our accrediting agency’s philosophy that students studying communications need to be broadly educated. Therefore, following these guidelines, we limit the number of communications credits which a singly enrolled Newhouse student can can count toward your degree to 38 credits of the 122 required credits. (Sixty-five of the degree credits must be in courses taught by the College of Arts and Sciences.)
As a dually enrolled student, you are already required to take more than 122 credits. If you take more Newhouse credits than is required in your major, you will be increasing the number of credits you will need to graduate since you cannot subtract from the required 65 credits in Arts and Sciences, nor your IS major.
If, for example, you are enrolled in a 38-credit Newhouse major, you will need 146 credits to graduate. If you choose to take two additional Newhouse courses for a total of 44 Newhouse credits, then you must graduate with 152 credits, since only 38 Newhouse credits may be part of the credits needed for your degree.
If you are concerned about planning your courses so that you graduate on time, an adviser in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office may help. You will be asked to review your DEGREE AUDIT with your adviser before your senior year. At that time, you and your adviser will review your remaining requirements so that you know exactly what you need to take in order to graduate. We encourage you to ask questions of your faculty adviser or the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office at any time if you wish to discuss your requirements and plans.
Declaring a Newhouse Major
There are eight major undergraduate programs of study in Newhouse:
- Advertising
- Broadcast and Digital Journalism
- Graphic Design
- Magazine
- Newspaper and Online Journalism
- Photography
- Public Relations
- Television, Radio and Film
The Photography major has a choice of two different sequences: Illustration Photography OR Photojournalism.
You can find the most up-to-date requirements for each Newhouse major in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3). There is a handout, which you may pick up in that Office, for each major that interests you. You can also find the requirements for each major, as well as course descriptions and prerequisites, in the School of Public Communications section of the Syracuse University Undergraduate Course Catalog, 2017-2018.
You can declare or change your major at any time, as long as you are in good academic standing. The process is simple. You must fill out a MAJOR PLAN OF STUDY FORM in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. At that time, a copy of the current requirements for the major you choose will be placed in your file and recorded in your online record, and those are the requirements you will be expected to follow in completing your degree.
You may notice that a major is already appearing on your MySlice student record. If you indicated a preference for a major on your Admission application, that information became part of your SU student record. If you wish to change your major, you may do so through the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. If you are happy with your major, you need do nothing to retain it. Generally, you will be following the requirements of the year you entered the University as a matriculated student.
Please be aware that if your major appears as PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS, you are an undeclared major. (If you are uncertain of your status, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can help.) While undeclared majors have access to 100- and 200-level courses in Newhouse, access to upper division courses is frequently restricted by major. So if your major is undeclared or incorrect, you will have difficulty as a junior or senior registering for the Newhouse classes you need.
As noted previously, all Newhouse major programs have at least three courses in common: COM 107: Communications and Society, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications, and COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling. All Newhouse majors—both singly and dually enrolled—are also required to complete a Diversity requirement and a Global Experience requirement.
The Diversity requirement and the Global Experience requirement are explained on the following pages.
Deciding on a Major
The first course that you will take in your major is COM 107: Communications and Society. It is required in ALL Newhouse majors. The course will introduce you to the many areas of communications and get you thinking about what major you want. There are career discussions which are part of the course where you will have the opportunity to hear and talk with communications professionals from a variety of fields. In addition, in your first year, you’ll also complete COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling, a three-credit course in which you’ll have the opportunity to experiment with different types of stories: stories that persuade, stories that document, and stories that entertain. These courses are designed to help you become familiar with the various fields within public communications. Also in the first year, all Newhouse majors complete a required one-credit grammar class, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications. Writing skills are important in Newhouse majors, and strong grammatical skills will help you communicate clearly.
You can also learn more about Newhouse majors and communications in general by talking to your faculty adviser and your peer adviser, by attending lectures given by visiting professionals and by attending programs sponsored by the Newhouse Career Development Center and student organizations. You should consider participating in at least one of the many fine campus media groups—WAER, WJPZ, Citrus TV, TNH advertising agency, The Daily Orange, Equal Time, The Student Voice, and other student publications. You should also consider joining one of the many active student chapters of professional communications organizations in Newhouse including Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), Women in Communications (WICI), the National Association of Hispanic Journalists, (NAHJ), and other such organizations.
View a list of organizations>>
YOU MUST DECLARE YOUR MAJOR BY THE END OF YOUR SOPHOMORE YEAR.
That is a University rule. Because of New York State law, students who do not declare their major on time will lose their TAP (Tuition Assistance Program) aid. In addition, juniors will not be able to register without declaring a major. (A junior is defined as a student who has completed 60 credit hours.) There are many rules pertaining to New York State financial aid and federal financial aid. For more information, consult the Financial Aid Office or visit the Financial Aid Office website.
Accreditation Requirements
The Newhouse School is accredited by the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications. We subscribe to our accrediting agency’s philosophy that students studying communications need to be broadly educated. Therefore, following these guidelines, we limit the number of communications credits which a singly enrolled Newhouse student can can count toward your degree to 38 credits of the 122 required credits. (Sixty-five of the degree credits must be in courses taught by the College of Arts and Sciences.)
As a dually enrolled student, you are already required to take more than 122 credits. If you take more Newhouse credits than is required in your major, you will be increasing the number of credits you will need to graduate since you cannot subtract from the required 65 credits in Arts and Sciences, nor your iSchool major.
If, for example, you are enrolled in a 38-credit Newhouse major, you will need 146 credits to graduate. If you choose to take two additional Newhouse courses for a total of 44 Newhouse credits, then you must graduate with 152 credits, since only 38 Newhouse credits may be part of the credits needed for your degree.
If you are concerned about planning your courses so that you graduate on time, an adviser in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office may help. You will be asked to review your DEGREE AUDIT with your adviser before your senior year. At that time, you and your adviser will review your remaining requirements so that you know exactly what you need to take in order to graduate. We encourage you to ask questions of your faculty adviser or the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office at any time if you wish to discuss your requirements and plans.
Declaring a Newhouse Major
There are eight major undergraduate programs of study in Newhouse:
- Advertising
- Broadcast and Digital Journalism
- Graphic Design
- Magazine
- Newspaper and Online Journalism
- Photography
- Public Relations
- Television, Radio and Film
The Photography major has a choice of two different sequences: Illustration Photography OR Photojournalism.
You can find the most up-to-date requirements for each Newhouse major in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office (316 Newhouse 3). There is a handout, which you may pick up in that Office, for each major that interests you. You can also find the requirements for each major, as well as course descriptions and prerequisites, in the School of Public Communications section of the Syracuse University Undergraduate Course Catalog, 2018-2019.
You can declare or change your major at any time, as long as you are in good academic standing. The process is simple. You must fill out a MAJOR PLAN OF STUDY FORM in the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. At that time, a copy of the current requirements for the major you choose will be placed in your file and recorded in your online record, and those are the requirements you will be expected to follow in completing your degree.
You may notice that a major is already appearing on your MySlice student record. If you indicated a preference for a major on your Admission application, that information became part of your SU student record. If you wish to change your major, you may do so through the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office. If you are happy with your major, you need do nothing to retain it. Generally, you will be following the requirements of the year you entered the University as a matriculated student.
Please be aware that if your major appears as PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS, you are an undeclared major. (If you are uncertain of your status, the Newhouse Undergraduate Advising and Records Office can help.) While undeclared majors have access to 100- and 200-level courses in Newhouse, access to upper division courses is frequently restricted by major. So if your major is undeclared or incorrect, you will have difficulty as a junior or senior registering for the Newhouse classes you need.
As noted previously, all Newhouse major programs have at least three courses in common: COM 107: Communications and Society, COM 101: Practical Grammar for Public Communications, and COM 117: Multimedia Storytelling. All Newhouse majors—both singly and dually enrolled—are also required to complete a Diversity requirement and a Global Experience requirement.
The Diversity requirement and the Global Experience requirement are explained on the following pages.
Diversity Requirement
As part of its educational mission, the Newhouse School encourages students to value, embrace and support diversity in society and the media. While diversity is considered in many courses in your major, one course, in particular, will be devoted to the topic of diversity. In addition, we hope that you will also take courses outside your major that will help you develop an understanding and appreciation of diversity.
Students may fulfill the Newhouse Diversity Requirement by choosing ONE of the following:
• COM 344: Diversity and Media Issues (1 Newhouse credit) and one three-credit, upper-division Arts and Sciences course from the following list (upper-division is defined as 300-level or above). Students may take these two courses in the same semester or different semesters.
• COM 346: Race, Gender, and the Media (3 Newhouse credits).
• COM 348: Beauty and Diversity in the Fashion Media (3 Newhouse credits)
African American Studies
AAS 302 Contemporary African American Theater
AAS 303/WGS 303 Black Women Writers
AAS/PSC 306 African American Politics
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS/HST 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
AAS/HST 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
AAS/REL 345 African American Religious History
AAS/SOC 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
AAS 361/HOA 386 Art of the Black World
AAS 367 Protestant Movements & African American Artists: 19th & 20th Centuries
AAS/HST 402 Slavery and Abolition
AAS 408 Masters of American Black Music
AAS 409 History of Jazz, 1940 to Present
AAS/SOC 410 Seminar on Social Change
AAS/SOC 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
AAS/SOC 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
AAS/SOC/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
AAS 433 Harlem Renaissance: Literature and Ideology
AAS/HST 434/ANT494 Underground Railroad
AAS 465 The Image of Blacks in Art and Film
AAS 501 African American Sociological Practice: 1900-45
AAS 503 Black Paris: Studies in Literature, Culture and Intellectual Life
AAS/HST 510 Studies in African American History
AAS/WGS 512 African American Women’s History
AAS/WGS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
AAS 540 Seminar: African American Studies
Anthropology
ANT/NAT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
ANT/NAT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
ANT/NAT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
ANT/NAT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
ANT/NAT 461 Museums and Native Americans
ANT/LIN/WGS 472 Language, Culture and Society
ANT 494/AAS/HST 434 Underground Railroad
ANT/LIN/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 303 Communication in the Classroom
CSD 436 Cultural and Linguistic Issues in Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 477 Speech-Language Pathology in School Settings (Prerequisite: CSD 451)
Economics
ECN/WGS 325 Economics and Gender (Prerequisite: ECN 203)
ECN/WGS 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination (Prerequisite: ECN 203)
English and Textual Studies
ETS 355 The Politics of the English Language
ETS/WGS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
ETS 450 Topics in Reading Race and Ethnicity
ETS 460 Topics in Reading Class and Economic Materiality
Geography
GEO 311 The New North Americas
GEO 440 Race and Space
GEO/WGS 576 Gender, Place, and Space
History
HST 330 The Iroquois
HST/AAS 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
HST/AAS 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
HST 340/WGS 342 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
HST/WGS 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
HST 387/REL/WGS 341 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
HST/QSX/WGS 389 LGBT History
HST/WGS 396 Women and the American Frontier
HST/AAS 402 Slavery and Abolition
HST/AAS 434/ANT 494 Underground Railroad
HST/AAS 510 Studies in African American History
History of Art
HOA 386/AAS 361 Art of the Black World
HOA 387/NAT 346 Native North American Art
HOA 440/WGS 449 Women in Art
History of Music
HOM 372 Music in Multicultural America
HOM/WGS 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
HOM/WGS 494 Music and Gender
Latin American Studies
LAS/SPA 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Linguistics
LIN/ANT/WGS 472 Language, Culture, and Society
LIN/ANT/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Native American Studies
NAT/ANT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
NAT 346/HOA 387 Native North American Art
NAT/REL 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
NAT/REL 348 Religion and American Consumerism
NAT/SOC 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
NAT/SOC 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
NAT/ANT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
NAT/ANT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
NAT/ANT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
NAT/ANT 461 Museums and Native Americans
Philosophy
PHI 411 Philosophies of Race and Identity
PHI/WGS 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
Political Science
PSC/AAS 306 African American Politics
PSC/WGS 319 Gender and Politics
PSC 328/WGS 318 American Social Movements
PSC/QSX 384 Sexuality and the Law
PSC 386/SOC/WGS 354 Gender, Militarism, and War
Psychology
PSY/WGS 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
PSY 379 The Social Psychology of Stigma (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209 and PSY 274)
PSY 475 Social Influences on Human Sexual Behavior (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
Queer Sexuality
QSX/PSC 384 Sexuality and the Law
QSX/HST/WGS 389 LGBT History
QSX/WGS 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
QSX/WGS 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
QSX/SOC/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Religion
REL/WGS 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
REL/AAS 345 African American Religious History
REL/NAT 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
REL/NAT 348 Religion and American Consumerism
Sociology
SOC/WGS 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 343 The Deviance Process
SOC/AAS 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
SOC/WGS 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
SOC/WGS 364 Aging and Society
SOC 377 Class, Status, and Power
SOC/AAS 410 Seminar on Social Change
SOC/AAS 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
SOC/AAS 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
SOC/DSP 424 Representations of Ability & Disability
SOC/WGS 425 Feminist Organizations
SOC/AAS/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
SOC/DSP/WGS 432 Gender and Disability
SOC/WGS 433 Race, Class, and Gender
SOC/WGS 435 Sexual Politics
SOC/DSP 438 Disability and Popular Culture
SOC/DSP 440 Sociology of Disability
SOC/NAT 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
SOC/NAT 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
SOC 448 The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination
SOC/QSX/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
SOC/ANT/LIN 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Spanish
SPA/LAS 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Women’s and Gender Studies
WGS 301 Feminist Theory
WGS/AAS 303 Black Women Writers
WGS/SOC 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS 318/PSC 328 American Social Movements
WGS/PSC 319 Gender and Politics
WGS/ECN 325 Economics and Gender
WGS/SWK 328 Human Diversity in Social Contexts
WGS/PSY 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health
WGS/REL 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
WGS 342/HST 340 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
WGS/HST 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
WGS/SOC 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
WGS/ECN 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination
WGS/ETS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
WGS/SOC 364 Aging and Society
WGS 365 Negotiating Difference: Coming of Age Narratives
WGS/HST/QSX 389 LGBT History
WGS 395 Gender and Popular Culture
WGS/HST 396 Women and the American Frontier
WGS/CRS 414 Communication & Gender
WGS/SOC 425 Feminist Organizations
WGS/AAS/SOC 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
WGS/DSP/SOC 432 Gender and Disability
WGS/SOC 433 Race, Class and Gender
WGS/SOC 435 Sexual Politics
WGS/QSX 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
WGS/PHI 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
WGS/CFE 444 Schooling & Diversity
WGS/QSX 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
WGS 449/HOA 440 Women in Art
WGS/QSX/SOC 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
WGS/ANT/LIN 472 Language, Culture, and Society
WGS/HOM 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
WGS/HOM 494 Music and Gender
WGS/AAS 512 African American Women’s History
WGS/AAS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
WGS/GEO 576 Gender, Place, and Space
Writing
WRT 423 African American Rhetoric (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
WRT 424 Studies in Writing, Rhetoric, Identity (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
*Notes
Students may receive credit for either ECN/WGS 258 Poverty and Discrimination in America OR ECN/WGS 358 Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination, but not both courses.
As part of its educational mission, the Newhouse School encourages students to value, embrace and support diversity in society and the media. While diversity is considered in many courses in your major, one course, in particular, will be devoted to the topic of diversity. In addition, we hope that you will also take courses outside your major that will help you develop an understanding and appreciation of diversity.
Students may fulfill the Newhouse Diversity Requirement by choosing ONE of the following:
• COM 344: Diversity and Media Issues (1 Newhouse credit) and one three-credit, upper-division Arts and Sciences course from the following list (upper-division is defined as 300-level or above). Students may take these two courses in the same semester or different semesters.
• COM 346: Race, Gender, and the Media (3 Newhouse credits).
• COM 348: Beauty and Diversity in the Fashion Media (3 Newhouse credits)
African American Studies
AAS 302 Contemporary African American Theater
AAS 303/WGS 303 Black Women Writers
AAS/PSC 306 African American Politics
AAS/HST 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
AAS/HST 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
AAS/REL 345 African American Religious History
AAS/SOC 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
AAS 361/HOA 386 Art of the Black World
AAS 367 Protestant Movements & African American Artists: 19th & 20th Centuries
AAS/HST 402 Slavery and Abolition
AAS 408 Masters of American Black Music
AAS 409 History of Jazz, 1940 to Present
AAS/SOC 410 Seminar on Social Change
AAS/SOC 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
AAS/SOC 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
AAS/SOC/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
AAS 433 Harlem Renaissance: Literature and Ideology
AAS/HST 434/ANT494 Underground Railroad
AAS 465 The Image of Blacks in Art and Film
AAS 501 African American Sociological Practice: 1900-45
AAS 503 Black Paris: Studies in Literature, Culture and Intellectual Life
AAS/HST 510 Studies in African American History
AAS/WGS 512 African American Women’s History
AAS/WGS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
AAS 540 Seminar: African American Studies
Anthropology
ANT/NAT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
ANT/NAT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
ANT/NAT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
ANT/NAT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
ANT/NAT 461 Museums and Native Americans
ANT/LIN/WGS 472 Language, Culture and Society
ANT 494/AAS/HST 434 Underground Railroad
ANT/LIN/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 303 Communication in the Classroom
CSD 477 Speech-Language Pathology in School Settings (Prerequisite: CSD 451)
Economics
ECN/WGS 325 Economics and Gender (Prerequisite: ECN 203)
ECN/WGS 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination (Prerequisite: ECN 203)
English and Textual Studies
ETS 355 The Politics of the English Language
ETS/WGS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
ETS 450 Topics in Reading Race and Ethnicity
ETS 460 Topics in Reading Class and Economic Materiality
Geography
GEO 311 The New North Americas
GEO 440 Race and Space
GEO/WGS 576 Gender, Place, and Space
History
HST 330 The Iroquois
HST/AAS 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
HST/AAS 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
HST 340/WGS 342 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
HST/WGS 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
HST 387/REL/WGS 341 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
HST/QSX/WGS 389 LGBT History
HST/WGS 396 Women and the American Frontier
HST/AAS 402 Slavery and Abolition
HST/AAS 434/ANT 494 Underground Railroad
HST/AAS 510 Studies in African American History
History of Art
HOA 386/AAS 361 Art of the Black World
HOA 387/NAT 346 Native North American Art
HOA 440/WGS 449 Women in Art (Prerequisite: HOA 105 or 106 or WGS 101)
History of Music
HOM 372 Music in Multicultural America
HOM/WGS 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
HOM/WGS 494 Music and Gender
Latin American Studies
LAS/SPA 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Linguistics
LIN/ANT/WGS 472 Language, Culture, and Society
LIN/ANT/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Native American Studies
NAT/ANT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
NAT 346/HOA 387 Native North American Art
NAT/REL 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
NAT/REL 348 Religion and American Consumerism
NAT/SOC 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
NAT/SOC 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
NAT/ANT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
NAT/ANT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
NAT/ANT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
NAT/ANT 461 Museums and Native Americans
Philosophy
PHI 411 Philosophies of Race and Identity
PHI/WGS 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
Political Science
PSC/AAS 306 African American Politics
PSC/WGS 319 Gender and Politics
PSC 328/WGS 318 American Social Movements
PSC/QSX 384 Sexuality and the Law
PSC 386/SOC/WGS 354 Gender, Militarism, and War
Psychology
PSY/WGS 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
PSY 379 The Social Psychology of Stigma (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209 and PSY 274)
PSY 475 Social Influences on Human Sexual Behavior (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
Queer Sexuality
QSX/PSC 384 Sexuality and the Law
QSX/HST/WGS 389 LGBT History
QSX/WGS 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
QSX/WGS 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
QSX/SOC/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Religion
REL/WGS 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
REL/AAS 345 African American Religious History
REL/NAT 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
REL/NAT 348 Religion and American Consumerism
Sociology
SOC/WGS 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOC 343 The Deviance Process
SOC/AAS 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
SOC/WGS 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
SOC/WGS 364 Aging and Society
SOC 377 Class, Status, and Power
SOC/AAS 410 Seminar on Social Change
SOC/AAS 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
SOC/AAS 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
SOC/DSP 424 Representations of Ability & Disability
SOC/WGS 425 Feminist Organizations
SOC/AAS/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
SOC/DSP/WGS 432 Gender and Disability
SOC/WGS 433 Race, Class, and Gender
SOC/WGS 435 Sexual Politics
SOC/DSP 438 Disability and Popular Culture
SOC/DSP 440 Sociology of Disability
SOC/NAT 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
SOC/NAT 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
SOC 448 The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination
SOC/QSX/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
SOC/ANT/LIN 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Spanish
SPA/LAS 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Women’s and Gender Studies
WGS 301 Feminist Theory
WGS/AAS 303 Black Women Writers
WGS/SOC 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
WGS 318/PSC 328 American Social Movements
WGS/PSC 319 Gender and Politics
WGS/ECN 325 Economics and Gender
WGS/SWK 328 Human Diversity in Social Contexts
WGS/PSY 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health
WGS/REL 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
WGS 342/HST 340 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
WGS/HST 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
WGS/SOC 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
WGS/ECN 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination
WGS/ETS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
WGS/SOC 364 Aging and Society
WGS 365 Negotiating Difference: Coming of Age Narratives
WGS/HST/QSX 389 LGBT History
WGS 395 Gender and Popular Culture
WGS/HST 396 Women and the American Frontier
WGS/CRS 414 Communication & Gender
WGS/SOC 425 Feminist Organizations
WGS/AAS/SOC 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
WGS/DSP/SOC 432 Gender and Disability
WGS/SOC 433 Race, Class and Gender
WGS/SOC 435 Sexual Politics
WGS/QSX 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
WGS/PHI 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
WGS/CFE 444 Schooling & Diversity
WGS/QSX 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
WGS 449/HOA 440 Women in Art
WGS/QSX/SOC 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
WGS/ANT/LIN 472 Language, Culture, and Society
WGS/HOM 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
WGS/HOM 494 Music and Gender
WGS/AAS 512 African American Women’s History
WGS/AAS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
WGS/GEO 576 Gender, Place, and Space
Writing
WRT 423 African American Rhetoric (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
WRT 424 Studies in Writing, Rhetoric, Identity (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
*Notes
Students may receive credit for either ECN/WGS 258 Poverty and Discrimination in America OR ECN/WGS 358 Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination, but not both courses.
As part of its educational mission, the Newhouse School encourages students to value, embrace and support diversity in society and the media. While diversity is considered in many courses in your major, one course, in particular, will be devoted to the topic of diversity. In addition, we hope that you will also take courses outside your major that will help you develop an understanding and appreciation of diversity.
Students may fulfill the Newhouse Diversity Requirement by choosing ONE of the following:
• COM 344: Diversity and Media Issues (1 Newhouse credit) and one three-credit, upper-division Arts and Sciences course from the following list (upper-division is defined as 300-level or above). Students may take these two courses in the same semester or different semesters.
• COM 346: Race, Gender, and the Media (3 Newhouse credits).
• COM 348: Beauty and Diversity in the Fashion Media (3 Newhouse credits)
African American Studies
AAS 302 Contemporary African American Theater
AAS 303/WGS 303 Black Women Writers
AAS/PSC 306 African American Politics
AAS/HST 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
AAS/HST 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
AAS/REL 345 African American Religious History
AAS/SOC 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
AAS 361/HOA 386 Art of the Black World
AAS 367 Protestant Movements & African American Art and Literature
AAS/HST 402 Slavery and Abolition
AAS 408 Masters of American Black Music
AAS 409 History of Jazz, 1940 to Present
AAS/SOC 410 Seminar on Social Change
AAS/SOC 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
AAS/SOC 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
AAS/SOC/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
AAS 433 Harlem Renaissance: Literature and Ideology
AAS/HST 434/ANT494 Underground Railroad
AAS 465 The Image of Blacks in Art and Film
AAS 501 African American Sociological Practice: 1900-45
AAS 503 Black Paris: Studies in Literature, Culture and Intellectual Life
AAS/HST 510 Studies in African American History
AAS/WGS 512 African American Women’s History
AAS/WGS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
AAS 540 Seminar: African American Studies
Anthropology
ANT/NAT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
ANT/NAT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
ANT/NAT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
ANT/NAT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
ANT/NAT 461 Museums and Native Americans
ANT/LIN/WGS 472 Language, Culture and Society
ANT 494/AAS/HST 434 Underground Railroad
ANT/LIN/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 303 Communication in the Classroom
CSD 477 Speech-Language Pathology in School Settings (Prerequisite: CSD 451)
Economics
ECN/WGS 325 Economics and Gender (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
ECN/WGS 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
English and Textual Studies
ETS 355 The Politics of the English Language
ETS/WGS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
ETS 450 Topics in Reading Race and Ethnicity
ETS 460 Topics in Reading Class and Economic Materiality
Geography
GEO 311 The New North Americas
GEO 440 Race and Space
GEO/WGS 576 Gender, Place, and Space
History
HST 330 The Iroquois
HST/AAS 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
HST/AAS 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
HST 340/WGS 342 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
HST/WGS 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
HST 387/REL/WGS 341 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
HST/QSX/WGS 389 LGBT History
HST/WGS 396 Women and the American Frontier
HST/AAS 402 Slavery and Abolition
HST/AAS 434/ANT 494 Underground Railroad
HST/AAS 510 Studies in African American History
History of Art
HOA 386/AAS 361 Art of the Black World
HOA 387/NAT 346 Native North American Art
HOA 440/WGS 449 Women in Art (Prerequisite: HOA 105 or 106 or WGS 101)
History of Music
HOM 372 Music in Multicultural America
HOM/WGS 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
HOM/WGS 494 Music and Gender
Latin American Studies
LAS/SPA 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Linguistics
LIN/ANT/WGS 472 Language, Culture, and Society
LIN/ANT/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Native American Studies
NAT/ANT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
NAT 346/HOA 387 Native North American Art
NAT/REL 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
NAT/REL 348 Religion and American Consumerism
NAT/SOC 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
NAT/SOC 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
NAT/ANT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
NAT/ANT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
NAT/ANT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
NAT/ANT 461 Museums and Native Americans
Philosophy
PHI 411 Philosophies of Race and Identity
PHI/WGS 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
Political Science
PSC/AAS 306 African American Politics
PSC/WGS 319 Gender and Politics
PSC 328/WGS 318 American Social Movements
PSC/QSX 384 Sexuality and the Law
PSC 386/SOC/WGS 354 Gender, Militarism, and War
Psychology
PSY/WGS 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
PSY 379 The Social Psychology of Stigma (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209 and PSY 274)
PSY 475 Social Influences on Human Sexual Behavior (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
Queer Sexuality
QSX/PSC 384 Sexuality and the Law
QSX/HST/WGS 389 LGBT History
QSX/WGS 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
QSX/WGS 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
QSX/SOC/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Religion
REL/WGS 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
REL/AAS 345 African American Religious History
REL/NAT 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
REL/NAT 348 Religion and American Consumerism
Sociology
SOC/WGS 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOC 343 The Deviance Process
SOC/AAS 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
SOC/WGS 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
SOC/WGS 364 Aging and Society
SOC 377 Class, Status, and Power
SOC/AAS 410 Seminar on Social Change
SOC/AAS 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
SOC/AAS 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
SOC/DSP 424 Representations of Ability & Disability
SOC/WGS 425 Feminist Organizations
SOC/AAS/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
SOC/DSP/WGS 432 Gender and Disability
SOC/WGS 433 Race, Class, and Gender
SOC/WGS 435 Sexual Politics
SOC/DSP 438 Disability and Popular Culture
SOC/DSP 440 Sociology of Disability
SOC/NAT 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
SOC/NAT 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
SOC 448 The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination
SOC/QSX/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
SOC/ANT/LIN 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Spanish
SPA/LAS 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Women’s and Gender Studies
WGS 301 Feminist Theory
WGS/AAS 303 Black Women Writers
WGS/SOC 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
WGS 318/PSC 328 American Social Movements
WGS/PSC 319 Gender and Politics
WGS/ECN 325 Economics and Gender
WGS/SWK 328 Human Diversity in Social Contexts
WGS/PSY 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health
WGS/REL 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
WGS 342/HST 340 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
WGS/HST 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
WGS/SOC 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
WGS/ECN 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination
WGS/ETS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
WGS/SOC 364 Aging and Society
WGS 365 Negotiating Difference: Coming of Age Narratives
WGS/HST/QSX 389 LGBT History
WGS 395 Gender and Popular Culture
WGS/HST 396 Women and the American Frontier
WGS/CRS 414 Communication & Gender
WGS/SOC 425 Feminist Organizations
WGS/AAS/SOC 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
WGS/DSP/SOC 432 Gender and Disability
WGS/SOC 433 Race, Class and Gender
WGS/SOC 435 Sexual Politics
WGS/QSX 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
WGS/PHI 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
WGS/CFE 444 Schooling & Diversity
WGS/QSX 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
WGS 449/HOA 440 Women in Art
WGS/QSX/SOC 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
WGS/ANT/LIN 472 Language, Culture, and Society
WGS/HOM 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
WGS/HOM 494 Music and Gender
WGS/AAS 512 African American Women’s History
WGS/AAS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
WGS/GEO 576 Gender, Place, and Space
Writing
WRT 423 African American Rhetoric (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
WRT 424 Studies in Writing, Rhetoric, Identity (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
*Notes
Students may receive credit for either ECN/WGS 258 Poverty and Discrimination in America OR ECN/WGS 358 Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination, but not both courses.
As part of its educational mission, the Newhouse School encourages students to value, embrace and support diversity in society and the media. While diversity is considered in many courses in your major, one course, in particular, will be devoted to the topic of diversity. In addition, we hope that you will also take courses outside your major that will help you develop an understanding and appreciation of diversity.
Students may fulfill the Newhouse Diversity Requirement by choosing ONE of the following:
• COM 344: Diversity and Media Issues (1 Newhouse credit) and one three-credit, upper-division Arts and Sciences course from the following list (upper-division is defined as 300-level or above). Students may take these two courses in the same semester or different semesters.
• COM 346: Race, Gender, and the Media (3 Newhouse credits).
• COM 348: Beauty and Diversity in the Fashion Media (3 Newhouse credits)
African American Studies
AAS 302 Contemporary African American Theater
AAS 303/WGS 303 Black Women Writers
AAS/PSC 306 African American Politics
AAS/HST 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
AAS/HST 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
AAS/REL 345 African American Religious History
AAS/SOC 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
AAS 361/HOA 386 Art of the Black World
AAS 367 Protestant Movements & African American Art and Literature
AAS/HST 402 Slavery and Abolition
AAS 408 Masters of American Black Music
AAS 409 History of Jazz, 1940 to Present
AAS/SOC 410 Seminar on Social Change
AAS/SOC 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
AAS/SOC 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
AAS/SOC/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
AAS 433 Harlem Renaissance: Literature and Ideology
AAS/HST 434/ANT494 Underground Railroad
AAS 465 The Image of Blacks in Art and Film
AAS 501 African American Sociological Practice: 1900-45
AAS 503 Black Paris: Studies in Literature, Culture and Intellectual Life
AAS/HST 510 Studies in African American History
AAS/WGS 512 African American Women’s History
AAS/WGS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
AAS 540 Seminar: African American Studies
Anthropology
ANT/NAT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
ANT/NAT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
ANT/NAT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
ANT/NAT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
ANT/NAT 461 Museums and Native Americans
ANT/LIN/WGS 472 Language, Culture and Society
ANT 494/AAS/HST 434 Underground Railroad
ANT/LIN/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 303 Communication in the Classroom
CSD 477 Speech-Language Pathology in School Settings (Prerequisite: CSD 451)
Economics
ECN/WGS 325 Economics and Gender (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
ECN/WGS 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
English and Textual Studies
ETS 355 The Politics of the English Language
ETS/WGS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
ETS 450 Topics in Reading Race and Ethnicity
ETS 460 Topics in Reading Class and Economic Materiality
Geography
GEO 311 The New North Americas
GEO 440 Race and Space
GEO/WGS 576 Gender, Place, and Space
History
HST 330 The Iroquois
HST/AAS 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
HST/AAS 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
HST 340/WGS 342 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
HST/WGS 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
HST 387/REL/WGS 341 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
HST/QSX/WGS 389 LGBT History
HST/WGS 396 Women and the American Frontier
HST/AAS 402 Slavery and Abolition
HST/AAS 434/ANT 494 Underground Railroad
HST/AAS 510 Studies in African American History
History of Art
HOA 386/AAS 361 Art of the Black World
HOA 387/NAT 346 Native North American Art
HOA 440/WGS 449 Women in Art (Prerequisite: HOA 105 or 106 or WGS 101)
History of Music
HOM 372 Music in Multicultural America
HOM/WGS 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
HOM/WGS 494 Music and Gender
Latin American Studies
LAS/SPA 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Linguistics
LIN/ANT/WGS 472 Language, Culture, and Society
LIN/ANT/SOC 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Native American Studies
NAT/ANT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
NAT 346/HOA 387 Native North American Art
NAT/REL 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
NAT/REL 348 Religion and American Consumerism
NAT/SOC 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
NAT/SOC 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
NAT/ANT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
NAT/ANT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
NAT/ANT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
NAT/ANT 461 Museums and Native Americans
Philosophy
PHI 411 Philosophies of Race and Identity
PHI/WGS 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
Political Science
PSC/AAS 306 African American Politics
PSC/WGS 319 Gender and Politics
PSC 328/WGS 318 American Social Movements
PSC/QSX 384 Sexuality and the Law
PSC 386/SOC/WGS 354 Gender, Militarism, and War
Psychology
PSY/WGS 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
PSY 379 The Social Psychology of Stigma (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209 and PSY 274)
PSY 475 Social Influences on Human Sexual Behavior (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
Queer Sexuality
QSX/PSC 384 Sexuality and the Law
QSX/HST/WGS 389 LGBT History
QSX/WGS 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
QSX/WGS 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
QSX/SOC/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Religion
REL/WGS 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
REL/AAS 345 African American Religious History
REL/NAT 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
REL/NAT 348 Religion and American Consumerism
Sociology
SOC/WGS 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOC 343 The Deviance Process
SOC/AAS 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
SOC/WGS 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
SOC/WGS 364 Aging and Society
SOC 377 Class, Status, and Power
SOC/AAS 410 Seminar on Social Change
SOC/AAS 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
SOC/AAS 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
SOC/DSP 424 Representations of Ability & Disability
SOC/WGS 425 Feminist Organizations
SOC/AAS/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
SOC/DSP/WGS 432 Gender and Disability
SOC/WGS 433 Race, Class, and Gender
SOC/WGS 435 Sexual Politics
SOC/DSP 438 Disability and Popular Culture
SOC/DSP 440 Sociology of Disability
SOC/NAT 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
SOC/NAT 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
SOC 448 The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination
SOC/QSX/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
SOC/ANT/LIN 571 Topics in Sociolinguistics
Spanish
SPA/LAS 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Women’s and Gender Studies
WGS 301 Feminist Theory
WGS/AAS 303 Black Women Writers
WGS/SOC 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
WGS 318/PSC 328 American Social Movements
WGS/PSC 319 Gender and Politics
WGS/ECN 325 Economics and Gender
WGS/SWK 328 Human Diversity in Social Contexts
WGS/PSY 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health
WGS/REL 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
WGS 342/HST 340 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
WGS/HST 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
WGS/SOC 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
WGS/ECN 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination
WGS/ETS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
WGS/SOC 364 Aging and Society
WGS 365 Negotiating Difference: Coming of Age Narratives
WGS/HST/QSX 389 LGBT History
WGS 395 Gender and Popular Culture
WGS/HST 396 Women and the American Frontier
WGS 414 Communication & Gender
WGS/SOC 425 Feminist Organizations
WGS/AAS/SOC 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
WGS/DSP/SOC 432 Gender and Disability
WGS/SOC 433 Race, Class and Gender
WGS/SOC 435 Sexual Politics
WGS/QSX 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
WGS/PHI 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
WGS/CFE 444 Schooling & Diversity
WGS/QSX 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
WGS 449/HOA 440 Women in Art
WGS/QSX/SOC 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
WGS/ANT/LIN 472 Language, Culture, and Society
WGS/HOM 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
WGS/HOM 494 Music and Gender
WGS/AAS 512 African American Women’s History
WGS/AAS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
WGS/GEO 576 Gender, Place, and Space
Writing
WRT 423 African American Rhetoric (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
WRT 424 Studies in Writing, Rhetoric, Identity (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
*Notes
Students may receive credit for either ECN/WGS 258 Poverty and Discrimination in America OR ECN/WGS 358 Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination, but not both courses.
As part of its educational mission, the Newhouse School encourages students to value, embrace and support diversity in society and the media. While diversity is considered in many courses in your major, one course, in particular, will be devoted to the topic of diversity. In addition, we hope that you will also take courses outside your major that will help you develop an understanding and appreciation of diversity.
Students may fulfill the Newhouse Diversity Requirement by choosing ONE of the following:
• COM 344: Diversity and Media Issues (1 Newhouse credit) and one three-credit, upper-division Arts and Sciences course from the following list (upper-division is defined as 300-level or above). Students may take these two courses in the same semester or different semesters.
• COM 346: Race, Gender, and the Media (3 Newhouse credits).
• COM 348: Beauty and Diversity in the Fashion Media (3 Newhouse credits)
African American Studies
AAS 302 Contemporary African American Theater
AAS /WGS 303 Black Women Writers
AAS/PSC 306 African American Politics
AAS/HST 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
AAS/HST 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
AAS/REL 345 African American Religious History
AAS/SOC 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
AAS 361/HOA 386 Art of the Black World
AAS 367 Protestant Movements & African American Art and Literature
AAS/HST 402 Slavery and Abolition
AAS 408 Masters of American Black Music
AAS 409 History of Jazz, 1940 to Present
AAS/SOC 410 Seminar on Social Change
AAS/SOC 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
AAS/SOC 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
AAS/SOC/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
AAS 433 Harlem Renaissance: Literature and Ideology
AAS/HST 434/ANT494 Underground Railroad
AAS 465 The Image of Blacks in Art and Film
AAS 501 African American Sociological Practice: 1900-45
AAS 503 Black Paris: Studies in Literature, Culture and Intellectual Life
AAS/HST 510 Studies in African American History
AAS/WGS 512 African American Women’s History
AAS/WGS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
AAS 540 Seminar: African American Studies
Anthropology
ANT/NAT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
ANT/NAT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
ANT/NAT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
ANT/NAT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
ANT/NAT 461 Museums and Native Americans
ANT 494/AAS/HST 434 Underground Railroad
Communication Sciences and Disorders
CSD 303 Communication in the Classroom
CSD 477 Speech-Language Pathology in School Settings (Prerequisite: CSD 451)
Economics
ECN/WGS 325 Economics and Gender (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
ECN/WGS 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination (Prerequisite: ECN 203 or ECN 101/102)
English and Textual Studies
ETS 355 The Politics of the English Language
ETS/WGS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
ETS 450 Reading Ethnicity
ETS 460 Topics in Reading Class and Economic Materiality
Geography
GEO 311 The New North Americas
GEO 440 Race and Space
GEO/WGS 576 Gender, Place, and Space
History
HST 330 The Iroquois
HST/AAS 332 African American History: Through the 19th Century
HST/AAS 333 African American History: After the 19th Century
HST 340/WGS 342 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
HST/WGS 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
HST 387/REL/WGS 341 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
HST/QSX/WGS 389 LGBT History
HST/WGS 396 Women and the American Frontier
HST/AAS 402 Slavery and Abolition
HST/AAS 434/ANT 494 Underground Railroad
HST/AAS 510 Studies in African American History
History of Art
HOA 386/AAS 361 Art of the Black World
HOA 387/NAT 346 Native North American Art
HOA 440/WGS 449 Women in Art (Prerequisite: HOA 105 or 106 or WGS 101)
History of Music
HOM 372 Music in Multicultural America
HOM/WGS 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
HOM/WGS 494 Music and Gender
Latin American Studies
LAS/SPA 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies
QSX/PSC 384 Sexuality and the Law
QSX/HST/WGS 389 LGBT History
QSX/WGS 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
QSX/WGS 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
QSX/SOC/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Native American Studies
NAT/ANT 323 Peoples and Cultures of North America
NAT 346/HOA 387 Native North American Art
NAT/REL 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
NAT/REL 348 Religion and American Consumerism
NAT/SOC 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
NAT/SOC 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
NAT/ANT 445 Public Policy and Archaeology
NAT/ANT 456 Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Popular Culture
NAT/ANT 459 Contemporary Native North American Issues
NAT/ANT 461 Museums and Native Americans
Philosophy
PHI 411 Philosophies of Race and Identity
PHI/WGS 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
Political Science
PSC/AAS 306 African American Politics
PSC/WGS 319 Gender and Politics
PSC 328/WGS 318 American Social Movements
PSC/QSX 384 Sexuality and the Law
PSC 386/SOC/WGS 354 Gender, Militarism, and War
Psychology
PSY/WGS 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
PSY 379 The Social Psychology of Stigma (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209 and PSY 274)
PSY 475 Social Influences on Human Sexual Behavior (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
Religion
REL/WGS 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
REL/AAS 345 African American Religious History
REL/NAT 347 Religion and the Conquest of America
REL/NAT 348 Religion and American Consumerism
Sociology
SOC/WGS 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
SOC 343 The Deviance Process
SOC/AAS 353 Sociology of the African American Experience
SOC/WGS 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
SOC/WGS 364 Aging and Society
SOC 377 Class, Status, and Power
SOC/AAS 410 Seminar on Social Change
SOC/AAS 413 There Goes the Neighborhood: US Residential Segregation
SOC/AAS 416 Race, Crime and Punishment
SOC/DSP 424 Representations of Ability & Disability
SOC/WGS 425 Feminist Organizations
SOC/AAS/WGS 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
SOC/DSP/WGS 432 Gender and Disability
SOC/WGS 433 Race, Class, and Gender
SOC/WGS 435 Sexual Politics
SOC/DSP 438 Disability and Popular Culture
SOC/DSP 440 Sociology of Disability
SOC/NAT 441 Federal Indian Policy and Native American Identity
SOC/NAT 444 Contemporary Native American Movements
SOC 448 The Dynamics of Prejudice and Discrimination
SOC/QSX/WGS 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
Spanish
SPA/LAS 481 The Literature of Latinos in the United States
Women’s and Gender Studies
WGS 301 Feminist Theory
WGS/AAS 303 Black Women Writers
WGS/SOC 305 Sociology of Sex and Gender
WGS 318/PSC 328 American Social Movements
WGS/PSC 319 Gender and Politics
WGS/ECN 325 Economics and Gender
WGS/SWK 328 Human Diversity in Social Contexts
WGS/PSY 329 Biopsychological Perspectives on Women’s Health
WGS/REL 341/HST 387 Women, Abolition, and Religion in 19th Century America
WGS 342/HST 340 Women in America: 17th Century to the Civil War
WGS/HST 349 Women in America: Civil War to Present
WGS/SOC 354/PSC 386 Gender, Militarism, and War
WGS/ECN 358* Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination
WGS/ETS 360 Topics in Reading Gender and Sexualities
WGS/SOC 364 Aging and Society
WGS 365 Negotiating Difference: Coming of Age Narratives
WGS/HST/QSX 389 LGBT History
WGS 395 Gender and Popular Culture
WGS/HST 396 Women and the American Frontier
WGS 414 Communication & Gender
WGS/SOC 425 Feminist Organizations
WGS/AAS/SOC 427 New York City: Black Women Domestic Workers
WGS/DSP/SOC 432 Gender and Disability
WGS/SOC 433 Race, Class and Gender
WGS/SOC 435 Sexual Politics
WGS/QSX 438 Trans Genders and Sexualities
WGS/PHI 441 Topics in Feminist Philosophy
WGS/CFE 444 Schooling & Diversity
WGS/QSX 447 Sexualities and Genders in World Teen Culture
WGS 449/HOA 440 Women in Art
WGS/QSX/SOC 456 LGBT Studies in Sociology
WGS/HOM 473 Women, Rap and Hip-Hop Feminism
WGS/HOM 494 Music and Gender
WGS/AAS 512 African American Women’s History
WGS/AAS 513 Toni Morrison: Black Book Seminar
WGS/GEO 576 Gender, Place, and Space
Writing
WRT 423 African American Rhetoric (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
WRT 424 Studies in Writing, Rhetoric, Identity (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
*Notes
Students may receive credit for either ECN/WGS 258 Poverty and Discrimination in America OR ECN/WGS 358 Economics of US Poverty and Discrimination, but not both courses.
Global Experience Requirement
Mass communications is a global endeavor. To become effective communicators, Newhouse students are encouraged to develop an appreciation of different cultures around the world. One of the best ways to gain a global perspective is to study abroad. SU Abroad offers programs that last a week, a summer session, or a whole semester. Students are encouraged to satisfy the Global Experience requirement by studying through SU Abroad. Students who are unable to study abroad may fulfill this requirement by taking at least one course from the following list.
Courses that are on this list and that are also on the Divisional Requirement lists may fulfill both the Global requirement and the Divisional requirement. However, the Diversity requirement and the Global requirement may not be fulfilled with the same course, and both must be taken for a letter grade, not pass/fail, since they are requirements.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAS 202 Caribbean Society since Independence
AAS 207 A Survey of African Music
AAS 233 The Caribbean Novel
AAS 234 African Fiction
AAS 241/REL 281 African Religions: An Introduction
AAS 305 African Orature
AAS/WGS 307 African Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender, and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS 312 Pan Africanism
AAS/HST 325 Africa to 1800
AAS/HST 326 Africa Since 1800
AAS 327 History of Southern Africa
AAS/PSC 341 Politics of Africa
AAS/PSC 346 Comparative Third World Politics
AAS/PSC 364 African International Relations
AAS/PSC 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
AAS/WGS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
ANTHROPOLOGY
ANT 121 Peoples and Cultures of the World
ANT/HST 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
ANT 185 Global Encounters: Comparing World Views & Values Cross-Culturally
ANT 273/NAT/REL 244 Indigenous Religions
ANT 318 African Cultures
ANT 322/LAS 318 South American Cultures
ANT/SAS/WGS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
ANT 326/WGS 327 Africa through the Novel
ANT 327 Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean
ANT 357 Health, Healing, and Culture
ANT/GEO/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
ANT 372 Issues in Intercultural Conflict and Communications
ANT/HTW/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
ANT 427 Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives
ANT 428 Transformation of Eastern Europe
ANT 446 Caribbean Archaeology
ANT/WGS 455 Culture and AIDS
ANT/HTW/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
ANT/HTW 463 Global Health
ANT/IRP/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ANT/REL 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
ANT 479 Anthropology of Global Transformations
ANT/LAS 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
ANT/WGS 553 Women and Social Change
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
CAS 311 Living in a Global Environment
ECONOMICS
ECN 365 The World Economy (Prerequisite: ECN 101 and 102, or ECN 203)
ECN 465 International Trade Theory and Policy (Prerequisite: ECN 301 or 311)
ENGLISH AND TEXTUAL STUDIES
ETS 113 Survey of British Literature, Beginnings to 1789
ETS 114 Survey of British Literature, 1789 to Present
ETS 115 Topics in British Literary History
ETS 121 Introduction to Shakespeare
ETS 235 Classics of World Literature I
ETS 236 Classics of World Literature II
FRENCH
FRE 305 Evolution and Revolution through the Centuries
FRE 306 From Romanticism to Postmodernism
FRE 315 French Civilization
FRE 316 Contemporary French Culture
FRE 403 Eighteenth-Century French Literature and Film Adaptation
FRE 405 French Culture in Age of Louis XIV
FRE 407 French Libertine Fictions
FRE 409 French Culture and Revolution
FRE 411 Moliere
FRE/WGS 412 French Women Writers
FRE 417 “Impressions d’Afrique”: Caribbean Gazes
FRE 419 Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema
FRE 421 Francophone African Criticism
GEOGRAPHY
GEO 272 World Cultures
GEO 273 World Political Economy
GEO/LAS 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
GEO 325 Colonialism in Latin America
GEO 361 Global Economic Geography
GEO 362 The European City
GEO/ANT/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
GEO 561 Global Economic Geography
GERMAN
GER 357 Contemporary German Culture and Civilization (Prerequisite: GER 202 and 306)
GER 365 Nineteenth-Century Prose
GER 366 Nineteenth-Century Drama
GER 367 German Lyrics and Ballads
GER 376 Classicism and Romanticism (Prerequisite: GER 202)
GER 377 Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II
GER 378 German Literature Since World War II
GER 379 German and Austrian Cinema
GREEK
GRE 310 Greek Prose Authors (Prerequisite: GRE 102)
GRE 320 Readings from Greek Poets
HISTORY
HST 111 Early Modern Europe, 1350-1815
HST 112 Modern Europe: Napoleon to the Present
HST/ANT 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
HST 210 The Ancient World HST 211 Medieval and Renaissance Europe
HST 231 English History
HST 232 English History
HST 310 The Early Middle Ages
HST 311 Medieval Civilization
HST 312 Reformation of the 16th Century
HST 313 French Revolution: Sun King to Guillotine
HST 314 Europe from Bismarck to the First World War
HST 315 Europe in the Age of Hitler and Stalin
HST 316 Europe Since 1945
HST/MES 318 The Middle East to 1900
HST/MES 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
HST 320 Traditional China
HST 321 Modern China
HST/LAS 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
HST 323/LAS 313 Modern Latin America
HST/LAS 324 Recent Latin American History
HST/AAS 325 Africa to 1800
HST/AAS 326 Africa Since 1800
HST 327 A History of Southern Africa
HST/SAS 328 Ancient and Medieval India
HST/SAS 329 Making of Modern India
HST 352 History of Ancient Greece
HST 353 History of Ancient Rome
HST 354 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
HST 355 The Italian Renaissance
HST 356 Italy Since 1600
HST 357 Culture and Politics in Early Modern England: From Henry VIII to Charles I
HST 358 Revolution and Civil War in 17th-Century England
HST 359 Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
HST 360 Modern France from Napoleon
HST 361 Germany to World War I, 1770-1918
HST/JSP/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
HST 364 The Origins of Modern Russia
HST 365 Russia in the Twentieth Century
HST 367 Plague to AIDS
HST/LAS/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
HST/LAS/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
HST/SAS 375 British Empire
HST 376 Renaissance London (Honors)
HST 377 History of Venice
HST 378 Early Modern Mediterranean
HST/WGS 379 Gender, Race and Colonialism
HST/JSP 392 History of the Holocaust
HST 393 East Asia and the Socialist Experience
HST 395 Modern Japan
HST 397 Modern Korea
HISTORY OF ART
HOA 105 Arts and Ideas I
HOA 106 Arts and Ideas II
HOA 301 Origins of Western Art
HOA 322/ARC 335 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 323/ARC 332 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 324/ARC 336 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 389/ARC 435 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 391 Survey of Asian Art
HOA 439/ARC 433 French Architecture, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA/HOM 560 Arts and Ideas in the Nineteenth Century
HISTORY OF MUSIC
HOM 165 Understanding Music I
HOM 166 Understanding Music II
HOM 266/MHL 168 History of European Music before 1750
HOM 285 /MHL 185 Introduction to World Music
HOM 361 Topics in European Music
HOM 384/SAS 385 Music and Dance of India
HOM 482 The Roots of Global Pop (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 512 World Music and Film (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 560 Arts and Ideas in the Nineteenth Century
HOM/DRA 561 Music and Shakespeare
HOM 562 Bach and Handel (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 563 The Operas of Wagner (Prerequisite: HOM 165 or 166 or 266 or HOM/MHL 267 or MHL 168)
HUMANITIES
HUM 420 Studies in Renaissance Cultural History
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IRP/ANT/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ITALIAN
ITA 376 Contemporary Italian Literature
ITA 432 Verga, Verismo, Southern Novel
ITA 442 Italian Novel under Fascism
ITA 445 Class, Ideology and the Novel After 1968
JEWISH STUDIES
JSP/REL 114* The Bible
JSP/REL 135 Judaism
JSP/REL 215* The Hebrew Bible
JSP/LIT/REL 231 Judaic Literature
JSP/REL 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
JSP/REL 311 The Bible as Literature
JSP/LIT/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
JSP/LIT/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
JSP/REL 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
JSP/MES/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
JSP/HST/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
JSP/HST 392 History of the Holocaust
LATIN
LAT 310 Latin Prose Authors
LAT 320 Latin Poets
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
LAS 302/SPA 322 Introduction to Latin American Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS 313/HST 323 Modern Latin America
LAS 318/ANT 322 South American Cultures
LAS/GEO 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
LAS/HST 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS/HST 324 Recent Latin American History
LAS 325 Colonialism in Latin America
LAS/SPA 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
LAS/PSC 333 Politics of Latin America
LAS/HST/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
LAS/HST/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
LAS/SPA 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
LAS/SPA 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
LAS/SPA 465 Literature and Popular Culture
LAS/SPA 467 Film and Literature
LAS/SPA 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
LAS/SPA 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
LAS/SPA 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
LAS/ANT 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
LIT 101 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 102 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 203 Greek and Roman Epic in English Translation
LIT 211 Greek and Roman Drama in English Translation
LIT 226 Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
LIT 227 Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn
LIT/JSP/REL 231 Judaic Literature
LIT 241 Dante and the Medieval World
LIT 242 Petrarch and the Renaissance World
LIT 245 Florence and Renaissance Civilization
LIT 255 Cervantes in English
LIT 257 Italian Cinema and Culture Since World War II
LIT/RUS 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film
LIT/RUS 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore
LIT/JSP/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
LIT/JSP/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
LIT/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
LIT/RUS 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations
LIT 510 Studies in Greek and Roman Literature in Translation
LIT 521 Mythology
MAXWELL SCHOOL
MAX 132 Global Community
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
MES/REL/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
MES/HST 318 The Middle East to 1900
MES/HST 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
MES/LIT 336 Arabic Cultures
MES/JSP/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
MES/PSC 344 Politics of the Middle East
MES/PSC 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
MES/PSC 349 Politics of Iran
MES/REL/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
MES 365/REL/SAS 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Arts
MES/PSC 366 Representations of the Middle East
MES/ANT/HTW 382 Health in the Middle East
MES/REL/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
MES/ANT/IRP 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
NAT/REL 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
NAT/HST/LAS 372 Race in Latin America
PHILOSOPHY
PHI 111 Plato’s Republic
PHI 307 Ancient Philosophy
PHI 308 Classical Islamic Philosophy
PHI 313 British Philosophy
PHI 418 Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche
PHI 422 Twentieth Century French and German Philosophy
PHI 510 Topics in Ancient Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSC 123 Comparative Government and Politics
PSC 124 International Relations
PSC 139 International Relations (Honors)
PSC 331 Canadian Politics
PSC/LAS 333 Politics of Latin America
PSC/AAS 341 Politics of Africa
PSC/JSP/MES/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
PSC/MES 344 Politics of the Middle East
PSC/MES 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
PSC/AAS 346 Comparative Third World Politics
PSC 347 Politics of Russia
PSC 348 Politics and the Military
PSC/MES 349 Politics of Iran
PSC 354 Human Rights and Global Affairs
PSC 355 International Political Economy
PSC 358 Latin-American Relations
PSC 359 Foreign Policymaking
PSC/AAS 364 African International Relations
PSC/AAS 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
PSC/MES 366 Representations of the Middle East
PSC 369 Global Migration
PSC 372 Marxist Theory
PSYCHOLOGY
PSY 375 Cross-Cultural Psychology (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
QUEER SEXUALITY
QSX/HST/JSP 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
RELIGION
REL 101 Religions of the World
REL 102 Religion Today in a Globalizing World
REL/JSP 114* The Bible
REL 121 Pilgrimage
REL/JSP 135 Judaism
REL 156 Christianity
REL/MES/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
REL/SAS 185 Hinduism
REL/SAS 186 Buddhism
REL 205 Ancient Greek Religion
REL 206 Greco-Roman Religion
REL/JSP 215* The Hebrew Bible
REL 217 * The New Testament
REL 227 Gods: A Cross-Cultural Gallery
REL/JSP/LIT 231 Judaic Literature
REL/NAT 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
REL 281/AAS 241 African Religions: An Introduction
REL/SAS 283 India’s Religious Worlds
REL 294 Mythologies
REL 301 Ancient Near Eastern Religions and Cultures
REL/JSP 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
REL 309 Early Christianities
REL/JSP 311 The Bible as Literature
REL/JSP/LIT 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
REL/JSP/LIT 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
REL/JSP 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
REL/JSP/MES/PSC 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
REL/MES/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
REL/SAS 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
REL/SAS/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
REL 385 Religion in Chinese Society
REL/MES/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
REL/ANT 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
REL 487 Global Hinduism
RUSSIAN
RUS 320 Contemporary Russian Media (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore (Prerequisite: RUS 201)
RUS 351 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS 352 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS/LIT 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
SOCIOLOGY
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 415 Global Cities
SOC 434 Globalization and Social Change
SOC/AAS/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
SOC 447 Social Change and Conflict in Modern China
SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
SAS/MES/REL 165 Discovering Islam
SAS/REL 185 Hinduism
SAS/REL 186 Buddhism
SAS/REL 283 India’s Religious Worlds
SAS/WGS/ANT 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
SAS/HST 328 Ancient and Medieval India
SAS/HST 329 Making of Modern India
SAS/MES/REL 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
SAS/REL 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
SAS/HST 375 British Empire
SAS/REL/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
SAS 385 /HOM 384 Music and Dance of India
SAS/MES/REL/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
SPANISH
SPA 321 Introduction to Spanish Literature
SPA 322/LAS 302 Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPA 325/LAS/HST 322 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201)
SPA/LAS 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
SPA 441 Medieval and Golden Age Literature
SPA 443 Cervantes
SPA 451 Identities and Cultures of Spain
SPA 453 Spanish Literature (20th Century)
SPA 455 Romantics and Realists: Gender Politics in Spanish Literature and Film
SPA 457 Civil War to Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
SPA 458 20th Century Spanish Theater
SPA/LAS 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
SPA/LAS 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
SPA/LAS 465 Literature and Popular Culture
SPA/LAS 467 Film and Literature
SPA/LAS 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
SPA/LAS 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
SPA/LAS 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
SPA/LAS 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
SPA/LAS 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES
WGS/AAS 307 African Women Writers
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS/ANT/SAS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
WGS 327/ANT 326 Africa through the Novel
WGS/ANT/GEO 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
WGS/HST/LAS 371 Gender in Latin American History
WGS/HST 379 Gender, Race, and Colonialism
WGS/REL/SAS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
WGS/AAS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
WGS/FRE 412 French Women Writers
WGS/CRS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
WGS 439 Women, Gender and Violence in a Transnational Context
WGS/AAS/SOC 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
WGS 452 Feminism and Postcolonial Studies (Prerequisites: WGS 101 or 201 or 301 or 310 or 410)
WGS/ANT 455 Culture and Aids
WGS/ANT/HTW 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
WGS/MES/REL/SAS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
WGS/LAS/SPA 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
WGS/ANT 553 Women and Social Change
WRITING
WRT/CRS/WGS 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s) (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Architecture
ARC 332/HOA 323 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 335/HOA 322 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 336/HOA 324 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 433/HOA 439 French Architecture, 16th and 17th Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 435/HOA 389 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Law and Public Policy
LPP/SCM 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
School of Management
SOM 354 Managing in a Global Setting
Strategy and Human Resources
SHR 448 Management in a Cross-cultural Environment (Prerequisite: SOM 354)
Supply Chain Management
SCM/LPP 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
DAVID B. FALK COLLEGE OF SPORT AND HUMAN DYNAMICS
Food Studies
FST 217 World Cuisines
Health and Wellness
HTW/ANT/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
HTW/ANT/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
HTW/ANT 463 Global Health
Sport Management
SPM 381 International Sports Relations (Prerequisite: SPM 205)
S.I. NEWHOUSE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Advertising
ADV 345 Economics, Persuasion, and the Global Marketplace
Television, Radio and Film
TRF 560 Topics in International Perspectives
COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Communications and Rhetorical Studies
CRS 430 Intercultural Communication
CRS/WGS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
CRS 551 History of British Public Address
Drama
DRA 352 Survey of Theatre History (Prerequisite: DRA 115)
DRA/HOM 561 Music and Shakespeare
Fashion Design
FAS 335 History of Fashion Design I: Origins and Revivals
FAS 336 History of Fashion Design II: Contemporary Trends
FAS 526 Cultural Aspects of Clothing
Music History and Literature
MHL 168/HOM 266 History of European Music before 1750
MHL 185/HOM 285 Introduction to World Music
Recording and Allied Entertainment
RAE 411 Global Commerce and Law for the Music Entertainment Industry
*Notes:
Students may receive credit for one of the courses in the following pairs:
JSP/REL 114: The Bible or JSP/REL 215: The Hebrew Bible
JSP/REL 114: The Bible or REL 217: The New Testament
Global Experience courses which are not listed under Arts and Sciences or crosslisted with Arts and Sciences may not count toward the 65-credit Arts and Sciences requirement.
Mass communications is a global endeavor. To become effective communicators, Newhouse students are encouraged to develop an appreciation of different cultures around the world. One of the best ways to gain a global perspective is to study abroad. SU Abroad offers programs that last a week, a summer session, or a whole semester. Students are encouraged to satisfy the Global Experience requirement by studying through SU Abroad. Students who are unable to study abroad may fulfill this requirement by taking at least one course from the following list.
Courses that are on this list and that are also on the Divisional Requirement lists may fulfill both the Global requirement and the Divisional requirement. However, the Diversity requirement and the Global requirement may not be fulfilled with the same course, and both must be taken for a letter grade, not pass/fail, since they are requirements.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAS 202 Caribbean Society since Independence
AAS 207 A Survey of African Music
AAS 233 The Caribbean Novel
AAS 234 African Fiction
AAS 241/REL 281 African Religions: An Introduction
AAS 305 African Orature
AAS/WGS 307 African Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender, and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS 312 Pan Africanism
AAS/HST 325 Africa to 1800
AAS/HST 326 Africa Since 1800
AAS 327 History of Southern Africa
AAS/PSC 341 Politics of Africa
AAS/PSC 346 Comparative Third World Politics
AAS/PSC 364 African International Relations
AAS/PSC 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
AAS/WGS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
ANTHROPOLOGY
ANT 121 Peoples and Cultures of the World
ANT/HST 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
ANT 185 Global Encounters: Comparing World Views & Values Cross-Culturally
ANT 273/NAT/REL 244 Indigenous Religions
ANT 318 African Cultures
ANT 322/LAS 318 South American Cultures
ANT/SAS/WGS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
ANT 326/WGS 327 Africa through the Novel
ANT 327 Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean
ANT 357 Health, Healing, and Culture
ANT/GEO/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
ANT/HTW/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
ANT 427 Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives
ANT 428 Transformation of Eastern Europe
ANT 446 Caribbean Archaeology
ANT/WGS 455 Culture and AIDS
ANT/HTW/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
ANT/HTW 463 Global Health
ANT/IRP/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ANT/REL 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
ANT 479 Anthropology of Global Transformations
ANT/LAS 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
ANT/WGS 553 Women and Social Change
ARABIC
ARB/LIT/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
CAS 311 Living in a Global Environment
ECONOMICS
ECN 365 The World Economy (Prerequisite: ECN 101 and 102, or ECN 203)
ECN 465 International Trade Theory and Policy (Prerequisite: ECN 301 or 311)
ENGLISH AND TEXTUAL STUDIES
ETS 113 Survey of British Literature, Beginnings to 1789
ETS 114 Survey of British Literature, 1789 to Present
ETS 115 Topics in British Literary History
ETS 121 Introduction to Shakespeare
ETS 235 Classics of World Literature I
ETS 236 Classics of World Literature II
FRENCH
FRE 305 Evolution and Revolution through the Centuries
FRE 306 From Romanticism to Postmodernism
FRE 315 French Civilization
FRE 316 Contemporary French Culture
FRE 403 Eighteenth-Century French Literature and Film Adaptation
FRE 405 French Culture in Age of Louis XIV
FRE 407 French Libertine Fictions
FRE 409 French Culture and Revolution
FRE 411 Moliere
FRE/WGS 412 French Women Writers
FRE 417 “Impressions d’Afrique”: Caribbean Gazes
FRE 419 Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema
FRE 421 Francophone African Criticism
GEOGRAPHY
GEO 272 World Cultures
GEO 273 World Political Economy
GEO/LAS 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
GEO 325 Colonialism in Latin America
GEO 361 Global Economic Geography
GEO 362 The European City
GEO/ANT/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
GEO 561 Global Economic Geography
GERMAN
GER 357 Contemporary German Culture and Civilization
GER 365 Nineteenth-Century Prose
GER 366 Nineteenth-Century Drama
GER 367 German Lyrics and Ballads
GER 376 Classicism and Romanticism
GER 377 Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II
GER 378 German Literature since World War II
GER 379 German and Austrian Cinema
GREEK
GRE 310 Greek Prose Authors (Prerequisite: GRE 102)
GRE 320 Readings from Greek Poets
HISTORY
HST 111 Early Modern Europe, 1350-1815
HST 112 Modern Europe: Napoleon to the Present
HST/ANT 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
HST 210 The Ancient World HST 211 Medieval and Renaissance Europe
HST 231 English History
HST 232 English History
HST 310 The Early Middle Ages
HST 311 Medieval Civilization
HST 312 Reformation of the 16th Century
HST 313 French Revolution: Sun King to Guillotine
HST 314 Europe from Bismarck to the First World War
HST 315 Europe in the Age of Hitler and Stalin
HST 316 Europe Since 1945
HST/MES 318 The Middle East to 1900
HST/MES 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
HST 320 Traditional China
HST 321 Modern China
HST/LAS 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
HST 323/LAS 313 Modern Latin America
HST/LAS 324 Recent Latin American History
HST/AAS 325 Africa to 1800
HST/AAS 326 Africa Since 1800
HST 327 A History of Southern Africa
HST/SAS 328 Ancient and Medieval India
HST/SAS 329 Making of Modern India
HST 352 History of Ancient Greece
HST 353 History of Ancient Rome
HST 354 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
HST 355 The Italian Renaissance
HST 356 Italy Since 1600
HST 357 Culture and Politics in Early Modern England: From Henry VIII to Charles I
HST 358 Revolution and Civil War in 17th-Century England
HST 359 Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
HST 360 Modern France from Napoleon
HST 361 Germany to World War I, 1770-1918
HST/JSP/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
HST 364 The Origins of Modern Russia
HST 365 Russia in the Twentieth Century
HST 367 Plague to AIDS
HST/LAS/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
HST/LAS/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
HST/SAS 375 British Empire
HST 376 Renaissance London (Honors)
HST 377 History of Venice
HST 378 Early Modern Mediterranean
HST/WGS 379 Gender, Race and Colonialism
HST/JSP 392 History of the Holocaust
HST 393 East Asia and the Socialist Experience
HST 395 Modern Japan
HST 397 Modern Korea
HISTORY OF ART
HOA 105 Arts and Ideas I
HOA 106 Arts and Ideas II
HOA 301 Origins of Western Art
HOA 322/ARC 335 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 323/ARC 332 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 324/ARC 336 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 389/ARC 435 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 391 Survey of Asian Art
HOA 439/ARC 433 French Architecture, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HISTORY OF MUSIC
HOM 165 Understanding Music I
HOM 166 Understanding Music II
HOM 285 /MHL 185 Introduction to World Music
HOM 361 Topics in European Music
HOM 384/SAS 385 Music and Dance of India
HOM 482 The Roots of Global Pop (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 512 World Music and Film (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM/DRA 561 Music and Shakespeare
HOM 562 Bach and Handel (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HUMANITIES
HUM 420 Studies in Renaissance Cultural History
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IRP/ANT/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ITALIAN
ITA 376 Contemporary Italian Literature
ITA 432 Verga, Verismo, Southern Novel
ITA 442 Italian Novel under Fascism
ITA 445 Class, Ideology and the Novel After 1968
JEWISH STUDIES
JSP/REL 114* The Bible
JSP/REL 135 Judaism
JSP/REL 215* The Hebrew Bible
JSP/LIT/REL 231 Jewish Literature
JSP/REL 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
JSP/REL 311 The Bible as Literature
JSP/LIT/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
JSP/LIT/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
JSP/REL 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
JSP/MES/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
JSP/HST/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
JSP/HST 392 History of the Holocaust
LATIN
LAT 310 Latin Prose Authors
LAT 320 Latin Poets
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
LAS 302/SPA 322 Introduction to Latin American Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS 313/HST 323 Modern Latin America
LAS 318/ANT 322 South American Cultures
LAS/GEO 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
LAS/HST 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201 or higher level SPA course)
LAS/HST 324 Recent Latin American History
LAS 325 Colonialism in Latin America
LAS/SPA 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
LAS/PSC 333 Politics of Latin America
LAS/PSC 358 Latin-American International Politics
LAS/HST/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
LAS/HST/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
LAS/SPA 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
LAS/SPA 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
LAS/SPA 465 Literature and Popular Culture
LAS/SPA 467 Film and Literature
LAS/SPA 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
LAS/SPA 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
LAS/SPA 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
LAS/ANT 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
LIT 101 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 102 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 203 Greek and Roman Epic in English Translation
LIT 211 Greek and Roman Drama in English Translation
LIT 226 Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
LIT 227 Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn
LIT/JSP/REL 231 Jewish Literature
LIT 241 Dante and the Medieval World
LIT 242 Petrarch and the Renaissance World
LIT 245 Florence and Renaissance Civilization
LIT 255 Cervantes in English
LIT 257 Italian Cinema and Culture Since World War II
LIT/RUS 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film
LIT/RUS 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore
LIT/JSP/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
LIT/JSP/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
LIT/ARB/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
LIT/RUS 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations
LIT 510 Studies in Greek and Roman Literature in Translation
LIT 521 Mythology
MAXWELL SCHOOL
MAX 132 Global Community
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
MES/REL/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
MES/HST 318 The Middle East to 1900
MES/HST 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
MES/LIT 336 Arabic Cultures
MES/JSP/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
MES/PSC 344 Politics of the Middle East
MES/PSC 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
MES/PSC 349 Politics of Iran
MES/REL/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
MES 365/REL/SAS 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Arts
MES/PSC 366 Representations of the Middle East
MES/ANT/HTW 382 Health in the Middle East
MES/REL/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
MES/ANT/IRP 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
NAT/REL 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
NAT/HST/LAS 372 Race in Latin America
PHILOSOPHY
PHI 111 Plato’s Republic
PHI 307 Ancient Philosophy
PHI 308 Classical Islamic Philosophy
PHI 313 British Philosophy
PHI 418 Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche
PHI 422 Twentieth Century French and German Philosophy
PHI 510 Topics in Ancient Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSC 123 Comparative Government and Politics
PSC 124 International Relations
PSC 139 International Relations (Honors)
PSC 331 Canadian Politics
PSC/LAS 333 Politics of Latin America
PSC/AAS 341 Politics of Africa
PSC/JSP/MES/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
PSC/MES 344 Politics of the Middle East
PSC/MES 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
PSC/AAS 346 Comparative Third World Politics
PSC 347 Politics of Russia
PSC 348 Politics and the Military
PSC/MES 349 Politics of Iran
PSC 354 Human Rights and Global Affairs
PSC 355 International Political Economy
PSC/LAS 358 Latin-American International Relations
PSC 359 Foreign Policymaking
PSC/AAS 364 African International Relations
PSC/AAS 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
PSC/MES 366 Representations of the Middle East
PSC 369 Global Migration
PSC 372 Marxist Theory
PSYCHOLOGY
PSY 375 Cross-Cultural Psychology (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
QUEER SEXUALITY
QSX/HST/JSP 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
RELIGION
REL 101 Religions of the World
REL 102 Religion Today in a Globalizing World
REL/JSP 114* The Bible
REL 121 Pilgrimage
REL/JSP 135 Judaism
REL 156 Christianity
REL/MES/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
REL/SAS 185 Hinduism
REL/SAS 186 Buddhism
REL 205 Ancient Greek Religion
REL 206 Greco-Roman Religion
REL/JSP 215* The Hebrew Bible
REL 217 * The New Testament
REL 227 Gods: A Cross-Cultural Gallery
REL/JSP/LIT 231 Jewish Literature
REL/NAT 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
REL 281/AAS 241 African Religions: An Introduction
REL/SAS 283 India’s Religious Worlds
REL 294 Mythologies
REL 301 Ancient Near Eastern Religions and Cultures
REL/JSP 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
REL 309 Early Christianities
REL/JSP 311 The Bible as Literature
REL/JSP/LIT/MES 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
REL/JSP/LIT 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
REL/JSP 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
REL/JSP/MES/PSC 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
REL/MES/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
REL/SAS 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
REL/SAS/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
REL 385 Religion in Chinese Society
REL/MES/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
REL/ANT 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
REL 487 Global Hinduism
RUSSIAN
RUS 320 Contemporary Russian Media (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore (Prerequisite: RUS 201)
RUS 351 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS 352 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS/LIT 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
SOCIOLOGY
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 415 Global Cities
SOC 434 Globalization and Social Change
SOC/AAS/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
SOC 447 Social Change and Conflict in Modern China
SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
SAS/MES/REL 165 Discovering Islam
SAS/REL 185 Hinduism
SAS/REL 186 Buddhism
SAS/REL 283 India’s Religious Worlds
SAS/WGS/ANT 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
SAS/HST 328 Ancient and Medieval India
SAS/HST 329 Making of Modern India
SAS/MES/REL 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
SAS/REL 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
SAS/HST 375 British Empire
SAS/REL/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
SAS 385 /HOM 384 Music and Dance of India
SAS/MES/REL/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
SPANISH
SPA 321 Introduction to Spanish Literature
SPA 322/LAS 302 Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPA 325/LAS/HST 322 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201)
SPA/LAS 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
SPA 441 Medieval and Golden Age Literature
SPA 443 Cervantes
SPA 451 Identities and Cultures of Spain
SPA 453 Spanish Literature (20th Century)
SPA 455 Romantics and Realists: Gender Politics in Spanish Literature and Film
SPA 457 Civil War to Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
SPA 458 20th Century Spanish Theater
SPA/LAS 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
SPA/LAS 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
SPA/LAS 465 Literature and Popular Culture
SPA/LAS 467 Film and Literature
SPA/LAS 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
SPA/LAS 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
SPA/LAS 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
SPA/LAS 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
SPA/LAS 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES
WGS/AAS 307 African Women Writers
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS/ANT/SAS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
WGS 327/ANT 326 Africa through the Novel
WGS/ANT/GEO 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
WGS/HST/LAS 371 Gender in Latin American History
WGS/HST 379 Gender, Race, and Colonialism
WGS/REL/SAS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
WGS/AAS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
WGS/FRE 412 French Women Writers
WGS/CRS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
WGS 439 Women, Gender and Violence in a Transnational Context
WGS/AAS/SOC 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
WGS 452 Feminism and Postcolonial Studies (Prerequisites: WGS 101 or 201 or 301 or 310 or 410)
WGS/ANT 455 Culture and Aids
WGS/ANT/HTW 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
WGS/MES/REL/SAS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
WGS/LAS/SPA 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
WGS/ANT 553 Women and Social Change
WRITING
WRT/CRS/WGS 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s) (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Architecture
ARC 332/HOA 323 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 335/HOA 322 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 336/HOA 324 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 433/HOA 439 French Architecture, 16th and 17th Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 435/HOA 389 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Law and Public Policy
LPP/SCM 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
Management
MGT 448 Management in a Cross-cultural Environment (Prerequisite: SOM 354)
School of Management
SOM 354 Managing in a Global Setting
Supply Chain Management
SCM/LPP 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
DAVID B. FALK COLLEGE OF SPORT AND HUMAN DYNAMICS
Food Studies
FST 217 World Cuisines
Health and Wellness
HTW/ANT/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
HTW/ANT/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
HTW/ANT 463 Global Health
Sport Management
SPM 381 International Sports Relations (Prerequisite: SPM 205)
S.I. NEWHOUSE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Advertising
ADV 345 The Power and Peril of Global Persuasion (Prerequisite: COM 107)
Television, Radio and Film
TRF 560 Topics in International Perspectives
COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Communications and Rhetorical Studies
CRS 430 Intercultural Communication
CRS/WGS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
CRS 551 History of British Public Address
Drama
DRA 352 Survey of Theatre History (Prerequisite: DRA 115)
DRA/HOM 561 Music and Shakespeare
Fashion Design
FAS 335 History of Fashion Design I: Origins and Revivals
FAS 336 History of Fashion Design II: Contemporary Trends
FAS 526 Cultural Aspects of Clothing
Music History and Literature
MHL 168 History of European Music before 1750
MHL 185/HOM 285 Introduction to World Music
Recording and Allied Entertainment
RAE 411 Global Commerce and Law for the Music Entertainment Industry
*Notes:
Students may receive credit for one of the courses in the following pairs:
JSP/REL 114: The Bible or JSP/REL 215: The Hebrew Bible
JSP/REL 114: The Bible or REL 217: The New Testament
Global Experience courses which are not listed under Arts and Sciences or crosslisted with Arts and Sciences may not count toward the 65-credit Arts and Sciences requirement.
Mass communications is a global endeavor. To become effective communicators, Newhouse students are encouraged to develop an appreciation of different cultures around the world. One of the best ways to gain a global perspective is to study abroad. SU Abroad offers programs that last a week, a summer session, or a whole semester. Students are encouraged to satisfy the Global Experience requirement by studying through SU Abroad. Students who are unable to study abroad may fulfill this requirement by taking at least one course from the following list.
Courses that are on this list and that are also on the Divisional Requirement lists may fulfill both the Global requirement and the Divisional requirement. However, the Diversity requirement and the Global requirement may not be fulfilled with the same course, and both must be taken for a letter grade, not pass/fail, since they are requirements.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAS 202 Caribbean Society since Independence
AAS 207 A Survey of African Music
AAS 233 The Caribbean Novel
AAS 234 African Fiction
AAS 241/REL 281 African Religions: An Introduction
AAS 305 African Orature
AAS/WGS 307 African Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender, and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS 312 Pan Africanism
AAS/HST 325 Africa to 1800
AAS/HST 326 Africa Since 1800
AAS 327 History of Southern Africa
AAS/PSC 341 Politics of Africa
AAS/PSC 346 Comparative Third World Politics
AAS/PSC 364 African International Relations
AAS/PSC 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
AAS/WGS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
ANTHROPOLOGY
ANT 121 Peoples and Cultures of the World
ANT/HST 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
ANT 185 Global Encounters: Comparing World Views & Values Cross-Culturally
ANT 273/NAT/REL 244 Indigenous Religions
ANT 318 African Cultures
ANT 322/LAS 318 South American Cultures
ANT/SAS/WGS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
ANT 326/WGS 327 Africa through the Novel
ANT 327 Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean
ANT 357 Health, Healing, and Culture
ANT/GEO/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
ANT/HTW/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
ANT 427 Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives
ANT 428 Transformation of Eastern Europe
ANT 446 Caribbean Archaeology
ANT/WGS 455 Culture and AIDS
ANT/HTW/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
ANT/HTW 463 Global Health
ANT/IRP/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ANT/REL 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
ANT 479 Anthropology of Global Transformations
ANT/LAS 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
ANT/WGS 553 Women and Social Change
ARABIC
ARB/LIT/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
CAS 311 Living in a Global Environment
ECONOMICS
ECN 365 The World Economy (Prerequisite: ECN 101 and 102, or ECN 203)
ECN 465 International Trade Theory and Policy (Prerequisite: ECN 301 or 311)
ENGLISH AND TEXTUAL STUDIES
ETS 113 Survey of British Literature, Beginnings to 1789
ETS 114 Survey of British Literature, 1789 to Present
ETS 115 Topics in British Literary History
ETS 121 Introduction to Shakespeare
ETS 235 Classics of World Literature I
ETS 236 Classics of World Literature II
FRENCH
FRE 305 Evolution and Revolution through the Centuries
FRE 306 From Romanticism to Postmodernism
FRE 315 French Civilization
FRE 316 Contemporary French Culture
FRE 403 Topics in French and Francophone Literature and Film
FRE 405 French Culture in Age of Louis XIV
FRE 407 French Libertine Fictions
FRE 409 French Culture and Revolution
FRE 411 Moliere
FRE/WGS 412 French Women Writers
FRE 417 “Impressions d’Afrique”: Caribbean Gazes
FRE 419 Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema
FRE 421 Francophone African Criticism
GEOGRAPHY
GEO 272 World Cultures
GEO 273 World Political Economy
GEO/LAS 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
GEO 325 Colonialism in Latin America
GEO 361 Global Economic Geography
GEO 362 The European City
GEO/ANT/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
GEO 561 Global Economic Geography
GERMAN
GER 357 Contemporary German Culture and Civilization
GER 365 Nineteenth-Century Prose
GER 366 Nineteenth-Century Drama
GER 367 German Lyrics and Ballads
GER 376 Classicism and Romanticism
GER 377 Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II
GER 378 German Literature since World War II
GER 379 German and Austrian Cinema
GREEK
GRE 310 Greek Prose Authors (Prerequisite: GRE 102)
GRE 320 Readings from Greek Poets
HISTORY
HST 111 Early Modern Europe, 1350-1815
HST 112 Modern Europe: Napoleon to the Present
HST/ANT 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
HST 210 The Ancient World HST 211 Medieval and Renaissance Europe
HST 231 English History
HST 232 English History
HST 310 The Early Middle Ages
HST 311 Medieval Civilization
HST 312 Reformation of the 16th Century
HST 313 French Revolution: Sun King to Guillotine
HST 314 Europe from Bismarck to the First World War
HST 315 Europe in the Age of Hitler and Stalin
HST 316 Europe Since 1945
HST/MES 318 The Middle East to 1900
HST/MES 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
HST 320 Traditional China
HST 321 Modern China
HST/LAS 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
HST 323/LAS 313 Modern Latin America
HST/LAS 324 Recent Latin American History
HST/AAS 325 Africa to 1800
HST/AAS 326 Africa Since 1800
HST 327 A History of Southern Africa
HST/SAS 328 Ancient and Medieval India
HST/SAS 329 Making of Modern India
HST 352 History of Ancient Greece
HST 353 History of Ancient Rome
HST 354 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
HST 355 The Italian Renaissance
HST 356 Modern Italy
HST 357 Culture and Politics in Early Modern England: From Henry VIII to Charles I
HST 358 Revolution and Civil War in 17th-Century England
HST 359 Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
HST 360 Modern France from Napoleon
HST 361 Germany to World War I, 1770-1918
HST/JSP/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
HST 364 The Origins of Modern Russia
HST 365 Russia in the Twentieth Century
HST 367 Plague to AIDS
HST/LAS/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
HST/LAS/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
HST/SAS 375 British Empire
HST 376 Renaissance London (Honors)
HST 377 History of Venice
HST 378 Early Modern Mediterranean
HST/WGS 379 Gender, Race and Colonialism
HST/JSP 392 History of the Holocaust
HST 393 East Asia and the Socialist Experience
HST 395 Modern Japan
HST 397 Modern Korea
HISTORY OF ART
HOA 105 Arts and Ideas I
HOA 106 Arts and Ideas II
HOA 301 Origins of Western Art
HOA 322/ARC 335 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 323/ARC 332 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 324/ARC 336 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 389/ARC 435 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 391 Survey of Asian Art
HOA 439/ARC 433 French Architecture, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HISTORY OF MUSIC
HOM 165 Understanding Music I
HOM 166 Understanding Music II
HOM 285 /MHL 185 Introduction to World Music
HOM 361 Topics in European Music
HOM 384/SAS 385 Music and Dance of India
HOM 482 The Roots of Global Pop (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 512 World Music and Film (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM/DRA 561 Music and Shakespeare
HOM 562 Bach and Handel (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HUMANITIES
HUM 420 Studies in Renaissance Cultural History
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IRP/ANT/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ITALIAN
ITA 376 Contemporary Italian Literature
ITA 432 Verga, Verismo, Southern Novel
ITA 442 Italian Novel under Fascism
ITA 445 Class, Ideology and the Novel After 1968
JEWISH STUDIES
JSP/REL 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
JSP/REL 135 Judaism
JSP/REL 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/LIT/REL 231 Jewish Literature
JSP/REL 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
JSP/REL 311 The Bible as Literature
JSP/LIT/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
JSP/LIT/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
JSP/REL 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
JSP/MES/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
JSP/HST/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
JSP/HST 392 History of the Holocaust
LATIN
LAT 310 Latin Prose Authors
LAT 320 Latin Poets
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
LAS 302/SPA 322 Introduction to Latin American Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS 313/HST 323 Modern Latin America
LAS 318/ANT 322 South American Cultures
LAS/GEO 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
LAS/HST 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
LAS/HST 324 Recent Latin American History
LAS 325 Colonialism in Latin America
LAS/SPA 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
LAS/PSC 333 Politics of Latin America
LAS/PSC 358 Latin-American International Politics
LAS/HST/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
LAS/HST/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
LAS/SPA 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
LAS/SPA 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
LAS/SPA 465 Literature and Popular Culture
LAS/SPA 467 Film and Literature
LAS/SPA 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
LAS/SPA 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
LAS/SPA 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
LAS/ANT 523 Globalization and Its Discontents in Latin America
LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
LIT 101 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 102 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 203 Greek and Roman Epic in English Translation
LIT 211 Greek and Roman Drama in English Translation
LIT 226 Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
LIT 227 Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn
LIT/JSP/REL 231 Jewish Literature
LIT 241 Dante and the Medieval World
LIT 242 Petrarch and the Renaissance World
LIT 245 Florence and Renaissance Civilization
LIT 255 Cervantes in English
LIT 257 Italian Cinema and Culture Since World War II
LIT/RUS 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film
LIT/RUS 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore
LIT/JSP/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
LIT/JSP/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
LIT/ARB/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
LIT/RUS 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations
LIT 510 Studies in Greek and Roman Literature in Translation
LIT 521 Mythology
MAXWELL SCHOOL
MAX 132 Global Community
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
MES/REL/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
MES/HST 318 The Middle East to 1900
MES/HST 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
MES/LIT 336 Arabic Cultures
MES/JSP/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
MES/PSC 344 Politics of the Middle East
MES/PSC 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
MES/PSC 349 Politics of Iran
MES/REL/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
MES 365/REL/SAS 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Arts
MES/PSC 366 Representations of the Middle East
MES/ANT/HTW 382 Health in the Middle East
MES/REL/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
MES/ANT/IRP 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
NAT/REL 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
NAT/HST/LAS 372 Race in Latin America
PHILOSOPHY
PHI 111 Plato’s Republic
PHI 307 Ancient Philosophy
PHI 308 Classical Islamic Philosophy
PHI 313 British Philosophy
PHI 418 Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche
PHI 422 Twentieth Century French and German Philosophy
PHI 510 Topics in Ancient Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSC 123 Comparative Government and Politics
PSC 124* International Relations
PSC 139* International Relations (Honors)
PSC 331 Canadian Politics
PSC/LAS 333 Politics of Latin America
PSC/AAS 341 Politics of Africa
PSC/JSP/MES/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
PSC/MES 344 Politics of the Middle East
PSC/MES 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
PSC/AAS 346 Comparative Third World Politics
PSC 347 Politics of Russia
PSC 348 Politics and the Military
PSC/MES 349 Politics of Iran
PSC 354 Human Rights and Global Affairs
PSC 355 International Political Economy
PSC/LAS 358 Latin-American International Relations
PSC 359 Foreign Policymaking
PSC/AAS 364 African International Relations
PSC/AAS 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
PSC/MES 366 Representations of the Middle East
PSC 372 Marxist Theory
PSYCHOLOGY
PSY 375 Cross-Cultural Psychology (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
QUEER SEXUALITY
QSX/HST/JSP 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
RELIGION
REL 101 Religions of the World
REL 102 Religion Today in a Globalizing World
REL/JSP 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
REL 121 Pilgrimage
REL/JSP 135 Judaism
REL 156 Christianity
REL/MES/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
REL/SAS 185 Hinduism
REL/SAS 186 Buddhism
REL 205 Ancient Greek Religion
REL 206 Greco-Roman Religion
REL/JSP 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
REL 217 * The New Testament
REL 227 Gods: A Cross-Cultural Gallery
REL/JSP/LIT 231 Jewish Literature
REL/NAT 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
REL 281/AAS 241 African Religions: An Introduction
REL/SAS 283 India’s Religious Worlds
REL 294 Mythologies
REL 301 Ancient Near Eastern Religions and Cultures
REL/JSP 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
REL 309 Early Christianities
REL/JSP 311 The Bible as Literature
REL/JSP/LIT/MES 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
REL/JSP/LIT 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
REL/JSP 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
REL/JSP/MES/PSC 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
REL/MES/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
REL/SAS 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
REL/SAS/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
REL 385 Religion in Chinese Society
REL/MES/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
REL/ANT 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
REL 487 Global Hinduism
RUSSIAN
RUS 320 Contemporary Russian Media (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore (Prerequisite: RUS 201)
RUS 351 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS 352 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS/LIT 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
SOCIOLOGY
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 415 Global Cities
SOC 434 Globalization and Social Change
SOC/AAS/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
SOC 447 Social Change and Conflict in Modern China
SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
SAS/MES/REL 165 Discovering Islam
SAS/REL 185 Hinduism
SAS/REL 186 Buddhism
SAS/REL 283 India’s Religious Worlds
SAS/WGS/ANT 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
SAS/HST 328 Ancient and Medieval India
SAS/HST 329 Making of Modern India
SAS/MES/REL 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
SAS/REL 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
SAS/HST 375 British Empire
SAS/REL/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
SAS 385 /HOM 384 Music and Dance of India
SAS/MES/REL/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
SPANISH
SPA 321 Introduction to Spanish Literature
SPA 322/LAS 302 Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPA 325/LAS/HST 322 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201)
SPA/LAS 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
SPA 441 Medieval and Golden Age Literature
SPA 443 Cervantes
SPA 451 Identities and Cultures of Spain
SPA 453 Spanish Literature (20th Century)
SPA 455 Romantics and Realists: Gender Politics in Spanish Literature and Film
SPA 457 Civil War to Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
SPA 458 20th Century Spanish Theater
SPA/LAS 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
SPA/LAS 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
SPA/LAS 465 Literature and Popular Culture
SPA/LAS 467 Film and Literature
SPA/LAS 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
SPA/LAS 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
SPA/LAS 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
SPA/LAS 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
SPA/LAS 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES
WGS/AAS 307 African Women Writers
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS/ANT/SAS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
WGS 327/ANT 326 Africa through the Novel
WGS/ANT/GEO 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
WGS/HST/LAS 371 Gender in Latin American History
WGS/HST 379 Gender, Race, and Colonialism
WGS/REL/SAS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
WGS/AAS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
WGS/FRE 412 French Women Writers
WGS/CRS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
WGS 439 Women, Gender and Violence in a Transnational Context
WGS/AAS/SOC 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
WGS 452 Feminism and Postcolonial Studies (Prerequisites: WGS 101 or 201 or 301 or 310 or 410)
WGS/ANT 455 Culture and Aids
WGS/ANT/HTW 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
WGS/MES/REL/SAS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
WGS/LAS/SPA 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
WGS/ANT 553 Women and Social Change
WRITING
WRT/CRS/WGS 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s) (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Architecture
ARC 332/HOA 323 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 335/HOA 322 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 336/HOA 324 Italian Seventeenth Century Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 433/HOA 439 French Architecture, 16th and 17th Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 435/HOA 389 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Law and Public Policy
LPP/SCM 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
SOM 354 Managing in a Global Setting
Supply Chain Management
SCM/LPP 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
DAVID B. FALK COLLEGE OF SPORT AND HUMAN DYNAMICS
Food Studies
FST 217 World Cuisines
Health and Wellness
HTW/ANT/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
HTW/ANT/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
HTW/ANT 463 Global Health
Sport Management
SPM 381 International Sports Relations (Prerequisite: SPM 205)
S.I. NEWHOUSE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Advertising
ADV 345 The Power and Peril of Global Persuasion (Prerequisite: COM 107)
Television, Radio and Film
TRF 560 Topics in International Perspectives
COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Communications and Rhetorical Studies
CRS 430 Intercultural Communication
CRS/WGS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
CRS 551 History of British Public Address
Drama
DRA 352 Survey of Theatre History (Prerequisite: DRA 115)
DRA/HOM 561 Music and Shakespeare
Fashion Design
FAS 335 History of Fashion Design I: Origins and Revivals
FAS 336 History of Fashion Design II: Contemporary Trends
FAS 526 Cultural Aspects of Clothing
Music History and Literature
MHL 168 History of European Music before 1750
MHL 185/HOM 285 Introduction to World Music
Recording and Allied Entertainment
RAE 411 Global Commerce and Law for the Music Entertainment Industry
*Notes:
Students may receive credit for one of the courses in the following pairs:
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or JSP/REL 215: The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or REL 217: The New Testament
PSC 124: International Relations or PSC 139: International Relations (Honors)
Global Experience courses which are not listed under Arts and Sciences or crosslisted with Arts and Sciences may not count toward the 65-credit Arts and Sciences requirement.
Mass communications is a global endeavor. To become effective communicators, Newhouse students are encouraged to develop an appreciation of different cultures around the world. One of the best ways to gain a global perspective is to study abroad. SU Abroad offers programs that last a week, a summer session, or a whole semester. Students are encouraged to satisfy the Global Experience requirement by studying through SU Abroad. Students who are unable to study abroad may fulfill this requirement by taking at least one course from the following list.
Courses that are on this list and that are also on the Divisional Requirement lists may fulfill both the Global requirement and the Divisional requirement. However, the Diversity requirement and the Global requirement may not be fulfilled with the same course, and both must be taken for a letter grade, not pass/fail, since they are requirements.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAS 202 Caribbean Society since Independence
AAS 207 A Survey of African Music
AAS 233 The Caribbean Novel
AAS 234 African Fiction
AAS 241/REL 281 African Religions: An Introduction
AAS 305 African Orature
AAS/WGS 307 African Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender, and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS 312 Pan Africanism
AAS/HST 325 Africa to 1800
AAS/HST 326 Africa Since 1800
AAS 327 History of Southern Africa
AAS/PSC 341 Politics of Africa
AAS/PSC 346 Comparative Third World Politics
AAS/PSC 364 African International Relations
AAS/PSC 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
AAS/WGS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
ANTHROPOLOGY
ANT 121 Peoples and Cultures of the World
ANT/HST 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
ANT 185 Global Encounters: Comparing World Views & Values Cross-Culturally
ANT 273/NAT/REL 244 Indigenous Religions
ANT 318 African Cultures
ANT 322/LAS 318 South American Cultures
ANT/SAS/WGS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
ANT 326/WGS 327 Africa through the Novel
ANT 327 Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean
ANT 357 Health, Healing, and Culture
ANT/GEO/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
ANT/HTW/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
ANT/LAS 423 Effects of Globalization in Latin America
ANT 427 Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives
ANT 428 Transformation of Eastern Europe
ANT 446 Caribbean Archaeology
ANT/WGS 455 Culture and AIDS
ANT/HTW/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
ANT/HTW 463 Global Health
ANT/IRP/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ANT/REL 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
ANT 479 Anthropology of Global Transformations
ANT/WGS 553 Women and Social Change
ARABIC
ARB/LIT/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
CAS 311 Living in a Global Environment
ECONOMICS
ECN 365 The World Economy (Prerequisite: ECN 101 and 102, or ECN 203)
ECN 465 International Trade Theory and Policy (Prerequisite: ECN 301 or 311)
ENGLISH AND TEXTUAL STUDIES
ETS 113 Survey of British Literature, Beginnings to 1789
ETS 114 Survey of British Literature, 1789 to Present
ETS 115 Topics in British Literary History
ETS 121 Introduction to Shakespeare
ETS 174 World Literature, Beginnings to 1000
ETS 175 World Literature, 1000 to present
FRENCH
FRE 305 Evolution and Revolution through the Centuries
FRE 306 From Romanticism to Postmodernism
FRE 315 French Civilization
FRE 316 Contemporary French Culture
FRE 403 Topics in French and Francophone Literature and Film
FRE 405 French Culture in Age of Louis XIV
FRE 407 French Libertine Fictions
FRE 409 French Culture and Revolution
FRE 411 Moliere
FRE/WGS 412 French Women Writers
FRE 417 “Impressions d’Afrique”: Caribbean Gazes
FRE 419 Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema
FRE 421 Francophone African Criticism
GEOGRAPHY
GEO 272 World Cultures
GEO 273 World Political Economy
GEO/LAS 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
GEO 325 Colonialism in Latin America
GEO 361 Global Economic Geography
GEO 362 The European City
GEO/ANT/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
GEO 561 Global Economic Geography
GERMAN
GER 357 Contemporary German Culture and Civilization
GER 365 Nineteenth-Century Prose
GER 366 Nineteenth-Century Drama
GER 367 German Lyrics and Ballads
GER 376 Classicism and Romanticism
GER 377 Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II
GER 378 German Literature since World War II
GER 379 German and Austrian Cinema
GREEK
GRE 310 Greek Prose Authors (Prerequisite: GRE 102)
GRE 320 Readings from Greek Poets
HISTORY
HST 111 Early Modern Europe, 1350-1815
HST 112 Modern Europe: Napoleon to the Present
HST/ANT 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
HST 210 The Ancient World HST 211 Medieval and Renaissance Europe
HST 231 English History
HST 232 English History
HST 310 The Early Middle Ages
HST 311 Medieval Civilization
HST 312 Reformation of the 16th Century
HST 313 French Revolution: Sun King to Guillotine
HST 314 Europe from Bismarck to the First World War
HST 315 Europe in the Age of Hitler and Stalin
HST 316 Europe Since 1945
HST/MES 318 The Middle East to 1900
HST/MES 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
HST 320 Traditional China
HST 321 Modern China
HST/LAS 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
HST 323/LAS 313 Modern Latin America
HST/LAS 324 Recent Latin American History
HST/AAS 325 Africa to 1800
HST/AAS 326 Africa Since 1800
HST 327 A History of Southern Africa
HST/SAS 328 Ancient and Medieval India
HST/SAS 329 Making of Modern India
HST 352 History of Ancient Greece
HST 353 History of Ancient Rome
HST 354 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
HST 355 The Italian Renaissance
HST 356 Modern Italy
HST 357 Culture and Politics in Early Modern England: From Henry VIII to Charles I
HST 358 Revolution and Civil War in 17th-Century England
HST 359 Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
HST 360 Modern France from Napoleon
HST 361 Germany to World War I, 1770-1918
HST/JSP/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
HST 364 The Origins of Modern Russia
HST 365 Russia in the Twentieth Century
HST 367 Plague to AIDS
HST/LAS/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
HST/LAS/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
HST/SAS 375 British Empire
HST 376 Renaissance London (Honors)
HST 377 History of Venice
HST 378 Early Modern Mediterranean
HST/WGS 379 Gender, Race and Colonialism
HST/JSP 392 History of the Holocaust
HST 393 East Asia and the Socialist Experience
HST 395 Modern Japan
HST 397 Modern Korea
HISTORY OF ART
HOA 105 Arts and Ideas I
HOA 106 Arts and Ideas II
HOA 301 Origins of Western Art
HOA 322/ARC 335 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 323/ARC 332 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 389/ARC 435 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 391 Survey of Asian Art
HOA 439/ARC 433 French Architecture, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HISTORY OF MUSIC
HOM 165 Understanding Music I
HOM 166 Understanding Music II
HOM 285 /MHL 185 Introduction to World Music
HOM 361 Topics in European Music
HOM 384/SAS 385 Music and Dance of India
HOM 482 The Roots of Global Pop (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 512 World Music and Film (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM/DRA 561 Music and Shakespeare
HOM 562 Bach and Handel (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HUMANITIES
HUM 420 Studies in Renaissance Cultural History
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IRP/ANT/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ITALIAN
ITA 376 Contemporary Italian Literature
ITA 432 Verga, Verismo, Southern Novel
ITA 442 Italian Novel under Fascism
ITA 445 Class, Ideology and the Novel After 1968
JEWISH STUDIES
JSP/REL 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
JSP/REL 135 Judaism
JSP/REL 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/LIT/REL 231 Jewish Literature
JSP/REL 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
JSP/REL 311 The Bible as Literature
JSP/LIT/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
JSP/LIT/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
JSP/REL 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
JSP/MES/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
JSP/HST/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
JSP/HST 392 History of the Holocaust
LATIN
LAT 310 Latin Prose Authors
LAT 320 Latin Poets
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
LAS 302/SPA 322 Introduction to Latin American Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS 313/HST 323 Modern Latin America
LAS 318/ANT 322 South American Cultures
LAS/GEO 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
LAS/HST 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
LAS/HST 324 Recent Latin American History
LAS 325 Colonialism in Latin America
LAS/SPA 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
LAS/PSC 333 Politics of Latin America
LAS/PSC 358 Latin-American International Politics
LAS/HST/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
LAS/HST/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
LAS/ANT 423 Effects of Globalization in Latin America
LAS/SPA 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
LAS/SPA 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
LAS/SPA 465 Literature and Popular Culture
LAS/SPA 467 Film and Literature
LAS/SPA 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
LAS/SPA 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
LAS/SPA 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
LAS/SPA 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
LIT 101 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 102 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 203 Greek and Roman Epic in English Translation
LIT 211 Greek and Roman Drama in English Translation
LIT 226 Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
LIT 227 Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn
LIT/JSP/REL 231 Jewish Literature
LIT 241 Dante and the Medieval World
LIT 242 Petrarch and the Renaissance World
LIT 245 Florence and Renaissance Civilization
LIT 255 Cervantes in English
LIT 257 Italian Cinema and Culture Since World War II
LIT/RUS 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film
LIT/RUS 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore
LIT/JSP/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
LIT/JSP/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
LIT/ARB/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
LIT/RUS 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations
LIT 510 Studies in Greek and Roman Literature in Translation
LIT 521 Mythology
MAXWELL SCHOOL
MAX 132 Global Community
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
MES/REL/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
MES/HST 318 The Middle East to 1900
MES/HST 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
MES/LIT 336 Arabic Cultures
MES/JSP/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
MES/PSC 344 Politics of the Middle East
MES/PSC 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
MES/PSC 349 Politics of Iran
MES/REL/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
MES 365/REL/SAS 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Arts
MES/PSC 366 Representations of the Middle East
MES/ANT/HTW 382 Health in the Middle East
MES/REL/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
MES/ANT/IRP 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
NAT/REL 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
NAT/HST/LAS 372 Race in Latin America
PHILOSOPHY
PHI 111 Plato’s Republic
PHI 307 Ancient Philosophy
PHI 308 Classical Islamic Philosophy
PHI 313 British Philosophy (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 418 Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 422 Twentieth Century French and German Philosophy (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 510 Topics in Ancient Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSC 123 Comparative Government and Politics
PSC 124* International Relations
PSC 139* International Relations (Honors)
PSC 231 Canadian Politics
PSC/LAS 333 Politics of Latin America
PSC/AAS 341 Politics of Africa
PSC/JSP/MES/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
PSC/MES 344 Politics of the Middle East
PSC/MES 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
PSC/AAS 346 Comparative Third World Politics
PSC 347 Politics of Russia
PSC 348 Politics and the Military
PSC/MES 349 Politics of Iran
PSC 354 Human Rights and Global Affairs
PSC 355 International Political Economy
PSC/LAS 358 Latin-American International Relations
PSC 359 Foreign Policymaking
PSC/AAS 364 African International Relations
PSC/AAS 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
PSC/MES 366 Representations of the Middle East
PSC 372 Marxist Theory
PSYCHOLOGY
PSY 375 Cross-Cultural Psychology (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
QUEER SEXUALITY
QSX/HST/JSP 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
RELIGION
REL 101 Religions of the World
REL 102 Religion Today in a Globalizing World
REL/JSP 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
REL 121 Pilgrimage
REL/JSP 135 Judaism
REL 156 Christianity
REL/MES/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
REL/SAS 185 Hinduism
REL/SAS 186 Buddhism
REL 205 Ancient Greek Religion
REL 206 Greco-Roman Religion
REL/JSP 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
REL 217 * The New Testament
REL 227 Gods: A Cross-Cultural Gallery
REL/JSP/LIT 231 Jewish Literature
REL/NAT 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
REL 281/AAS 241 African Religions: An Introduction
REL/SAS 283 India’s Religious Worlds
REL 294 Mythologies
REL 301 Ancient Near Eastern Religions and Cultures
REL/JSP 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
REL 309 Early Christianities
REL/JSP 311 The Bible as Literature
REL/JSP/LIT/MES 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
REL/JSP/LIT 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
REL/JSP 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
REL/JSP/MES/PSC 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
REL/MES/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
REL/SAS 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
REL/SAS/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
REL 385 Religion in Chinese Society
REL/MES/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
REL/ANT 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
REL 487 Global Hinduism
RUSSIAN
RUS 320 Contemporary Russian Media (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore (Prerequisite: RUS 201)
RUS 351 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS 352 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS/LIT 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
SOCIOLOGY
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 415 Global Cities
SOC 434 Globalization and Social Change
SOC/AAS/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
SOC 447 Social Change and Conflict in Modern China
SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
SAS/MES/REL 165 Discovering Islam
SAS/REL 185 Hinduism
SAS/REL 186 Buddhism
SAS/REL 283 India’s Religious Worlds
SAS/WGS/ANT 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
SAS/HST 328 Ancient and Medieval India
SAS/HST 329 Making of Modern India
SAS/MES/REL 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
SAS/REL/MES 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
SAS/HST 375 British Empire
SAS/REL/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
SAS 385 /HOM 384 Music and Dance of India
SAS/MES/REL/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
SPANISH
SPA 321 Introduction to Spanish Literature
SPA 322/LAS 302 Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPA 325/LAS/HST 322 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201)
SPA/LAS 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
SPA 441 Medieval and Golden Age Literature
SPA 443 Cervantes
SPA 451 Identities and Cultures of Spain
SPA 453 Spanish Literature (20th Century)
SPA 455 Romantics and Realists: Gender Politics in Spanish Literature and Film
SPA 457 Civil War to Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
SPA 458 20th Century Spanish Theater
SPA/LAS 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
SPA/LAS 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
SPA/LAS 465 Literature and Popular Culture
SPA/LAS 467 Film and Literature
SPA/LAS 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
SPA/LAS 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
SPA/LAS 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
SPA/LAS 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
SPA/LAS 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES
WGS/AAS 307 African Women Writers
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS/ANT/SAS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
WGS 327/ANT 326 Africa through the Novel
WGS/ANT/GEO 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
WGS/HST/LAS 371 Gender in Latin American History
WGS/HST 379 Gender, Race, and Colonialism
WGS/REL/SAS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
WGS/AAS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
WGS/FRE 412 French Women Writers
WGS/CRS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
WGS 439 Women, Gender and Violence in a Transnational Context
WGS/AAS/SOC 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
WGS 452 Feminism and Postcolonial Studies (Prerequisites: WGS 101 or 201 or 301 or 310 or 410)
WGS/ANT 455 Culture and Aids
WGS/ANT/HTW 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
WGS/MES/REL/SAS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
WGS/LAS/SPA 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
WGS/ANT 553 Women and Social Change
WRITING
WRT/CRS/WGS 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s) (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Architecture
ARC 332/HOA 323 Sixteenth Century Italian Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 335/HOA 322 Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 1400-1529 (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 433/HOA 439 French Architecture, 16th and 17th Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 435/HOA 389 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Law and Public Policy
LPP/SCM 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
School of Management
SOM 354 Managing in a Global Setting
Supply Chain Management
SCM/LPP 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
DAVID B. FALK COLLEGE OF SPORT AND HUMAN DYNAMICS
Food Studies
FST 217 World Cuisines
Health and Wellness
HTW/ANT/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
HTW/ANT/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
HTW/ANT 463 Global Health
SPORT MANAGEMENT
SPM 381 International Sports Relations (Prerequisite: SPM 205)
S.I. NEWHOUSE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Advertising
ADV 345 The Power and Peril of Global Persuasion (Prerequisite: COM 107)
Recording and Allied Entertainment
RAE 411 Global Commerce and Law for the Music Entertainment Industry
Television, Radio and Film
TRF 560 Topics in International Perspectives
COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Communications and Rhetorical Studies
CRS 430 Intercultural Communication
CRS/WGS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
CRS 551 History of British Public Address
Drama
DRA 352 Survey of Theatre History (Prerequisite: DRA 115)
DRA/HOM 561 Music and Shakespeare
Fashion Design
FAS 335 History of Fashion Design I: Origins and Revivals
FAS 336 History of Fashion Design II: Contemporary Trends
FAS 526 Cultural Aspects of Clothing
Music History and Literature
MHL 168 History of European Music before 1750
MHL 185/HOM 285 Introduction to World Music
*Notes:
Students may receive credit for one of the courses in the following pairs:
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or JSP/REL 215: The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or REL 217: The New Testament
PSC 124: International Relations or PSC 139: International Relations
Global Experience courses which are not listed under Arts and Sciences or crosslisted with Arts and Sciences may not count toward the 65-credit Arts and Sciences requirement.
Newhouse courses on the Global Experience list will be counted as Newhouse credits. They may be used to fulfill the Global Experience requirement list and, if appropriate, a Newhouse major requirement.
Mass communications is a global endeavor. To become effective communicators, Newhouse students are encouraged to develop an appreciation of different cultures around the world. One of the best ways to gain a global perspective is to study abroad. SU Abroad offers programs that last a week, a summer session, or a whole semester. Students are encouraged to satisfy the Global Experience requirement by studying through SU Abroad. Students who are unable to study abroad may fulfill this requirement by taking at least one course from the following list.
Courses that are on this list and that are also on the Divisional Requirement lists may fulfill both the Global requirement and the Divisional requirement. However, the Diversity requirement and the Global requirement may not be fulfilled with the same course, and both must be taken for a letter grade, not pass/fail, since they are requirements.
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
AAS 202 Caribbean Society since Independence
AAS 207 A Survey of African Music
AAS 233 The Caribbean Novel
AAS 234 African Fiction
AAS 241/REL 281 African Religions: An Introduction
AAS 305 African Orature
AAS/WGS 307 African Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 309 Race, Gender, and Sexuality in African Diaspora
AAS 312 Pan Africanism
AAS 327 History of Southern Africa
AAS/PSC 341 Politics of Africa
AAS/PSC 346 Comparative Third World Politics
AAS/PSC 364 African International Relations
AAS/PSC 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
AAS/WGS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
AAS/SOC/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
ANTHROPOLOGY
ANT 121 Peoples and Cultures of the World
ANT/HST 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
ANT 185 Global Encounters: Comparing World Views & Values Cross-Culturally
ANT 273/NAT/REL 244 Indigenous Religions
ANT 318 African Cultures
ANT 322/LAS 318 South American Cultures
ANT/SAS/WGS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
ANT 326/WGS 327 Africa through the Novel
ANT 327 Anthropology of Race in Latin America and the Caribbean
ANT 357 Health, Healing, and Culture
ANT/GEO/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
ANT/HTW/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
ANT/LAS 423 Effects of Globalization in Latin America
ANT 427 Brazil: Anthropological Perspectives
ANT 428 Transformation of Eastern Europe
ANT 446 Caribbean Archaeology
ANT/WGS 455 Culture and AIDS
ANT/HTW/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
ANT/HTW 463 Global Health
ANT/IRP/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ANT/REL 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
ANT 479 Anthropology of Global Transformations
ANT/WGS 553 Women and Social Change
ARABIC
ARB/LIT/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
CAS 311 Living in a Global Environment
ECONOMICS
ECN 365 The World Economy (Prerequisite: ECN 101 and 102, or ECN 203)
ECN 465 International Trade Theory and Policy (Prerequisite: ECN 301 or 311)
ENGLISH AND TEXTUAL STUDIES
ETS 113 Survey of British Literature, Beginnings to 1789
ETS 114 Survey of British Literature, 1789 to Present
ETS 115 Topics in British Literary History
ETS 121 Introduction to Shakespeare
ETS 174 World Literature, Beginnings to 1000
ETS 175 World Literature, 1000 to present
FRENCH
FRE 305 Evolution and Revolution through the Centuries
FRE 306 From Romanticism to Postmodernism
FRE 315 French Civilization
FRE 316 Contemporary French Culture
FRE 403 Topics in French and Francophone Literature and Film
FRE 405 French Culture in Age of Louis XIV
FRE 407 French Libertine Fictions
FRE 409 French Culture and Revolution
FRE 411 Moliere
FRE/WGS 412 French Women Writers
FRE 417 “Impressions d’Afrique”: Caribbean Gazes
FRE 419 Sembene Ousmane and the African Cinema
FRE 421 Francophone African Criticism
GEOGRAPHY
GEO 272 World Cultures
GEO 273 World Political Economy
GEO/LAS 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
GEO 325 Colonialism in Latin America
GEO 361 Global Economic Geography
GEO 362 The European City
GEO/ANT/WGS 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
GEO 561 Global Economic Geography
GERMAN
GER 357 Contemporary German Culture and Civilization
GER 365 Nineteenth-Century Prose
GER 366 Nineteenth-Century Drama
GER 367 German Lyrics and Ballads
GER 376 Classicism and Romanticism
GER 377 Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II
GER 378 German Literature since World War II
GER 379 German and Austrian Cinema
GREEK
GRE 310 Greek Prose Authors (Prerequisite: GRE 102)
GRE 320 Readings from Greek Poets
HISTORY
HST 111 Early Modern Europe, 1350-1815
HST 112 Modern Europe: Napoleon to the Present
HST/ANT 145 Introduction to Historical Archaeology
HST 210 The Ancient World HST 211 Medieval and Renaissance Europe
HST 231 English History
HST 232 English History
HST 310 The Early Middle Ages
HST 311 Medieval Civilization
HST 312 Reformation of the 16th Century
HST 313 French Revolution: Sun King to Guillotine
HST 314 Europe from Bismarck to the First World War
HST 315 Europe in the Age of Hitler and Stalin
HST 316 Europe Since 1945
HST/MES 208/MES 318 Middle East since the Rise of Islam
HST/MES 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
HST 320 Traditional China
HST 321 Modern China
HST/LAS 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
HST 323/LAS 313 Modern Latin America
HST/LAS 324 Recent Latin American History
HST 327 A History of Southern Africa
HST/SAS 328 Ancient and Medieval India
HST/SAS 329 Making of Modern India
HST 352 History of Ancient Greece
HST 353 History of Ancient Rome
HST 354 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
HST 355 The Italian Renaissance
HST 356 Modern Italy
HST 357 Culture and Politics in Early Modern England: From Henry VIII to Charles I
HST 358 Revolution and Civil War in 17th-Century England
HST 359 Modern Britain 1850 to the Present
HST 360 Modern France from Napoleon
HST 361 Germany to World War I, 1770-1918
HST/JSP/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
HST 364 The Origins of Modern Russia
HST 365 Russia in the Twentieth Century
HST 367 Plague to AIDS
HST/LAS/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
HST/LAS/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
HST/SAS 375 British Empire
HST 376 Renaissance London (Honors)
HST 377 History of Venice
HST 378 Early Modern Mediterranean
HST/WGS 379 Gender, Race and Colonialism
HST/JSP 392 History of the Holocaust
HST 393 East Asia and the Socialist Experience
HST 395 Modern Japan
HST 397 Modern Korea
HISTORY OF ART
HOA 105 Arts and Ideas I
HOA 106 Arts and Ideas II
HOA 301 Origins of Western Art
HOA 389/ARC 435 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HOA 391 Survey of Asian Art
HOA 439/ARC 433 French Architecture, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
HISTORY OF MUSIC
HOM 165 Understanding Music I
HOM 166 Understanding Music II
HOM 285 /MHL 185 Introduction to World Music
HOM 361 Topics in European Music
HOM 384/SAS 385 Music and Dance of India
HOM 482 The Roots of Global Pop (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM 512 World Music and Film (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HOM/DRA 561 Music and Shakespeare
HOM 562 Bach and Handel (Prerequisite: Any HOM or MHL course)
HUMANITIES
HUM 420 Studies in Renaissance Cultural History
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IRP/ANT/MES 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
ITALIAN
ITA 376 Contemporary Italian Literature
ITA 432 Verga, Verismo, Southern Novel
ITA 442 Italian Novel under Fascism
ITA 445 Class, Ideology and the Novel After 1968
JEWISH STUDIES
JSP/REL 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
JSP/REL 135 Judaism
JSP/REL 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/LIT/REL 231 Jewish Literature
JSP/REL 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
JSP/REL 311 The Bible as Literature
JSP/LIT/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
JSP/LIT/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
JSP/REL 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
JSP/MES/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
JSP/HST/QSX 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
JSP/HST 392 History of the Holocaust
LATIN
LAT 310 Latin Prose Authors
LAT 320 Latin Poets
LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
LAS 302/SPA 322 Introduction to Latin American Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 202)
LAS 313/HST 323 Modern Latin America
LAS 318/ANT 322 South American Cultures
LAS/GEO 321 Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects
LAS/HST 322/SPA 325 Colonial Latin America
LAS/HST 324 Recent Latin American History
LAS 325 Colonialism in Latin America
LAS/SPA 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
LAS/PSC 333 Politics of Latin America
LAS/PSC 358 Latin-American International Politics
LAS/HST/WGS 371 Gender in Latin American History
LAS/HST/NAT 372 Race in Latin America
LAS/ANT 423 Effects of Globalization in Latin America
LAS/SPA 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
LAS/SPA 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
LAS/SPA 465 Literature and Popular Culture
LAS/SPA 467 Film and Literature
LAS/SPA 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
LAS/SPA 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
LAS/SPA 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
LAS/SPA 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
LAS/SPA 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
LAS/SPA 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDER STUDIES
QSX/HST/JSP 362 Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
LITERATURE IN TRANSLATION
LIT 101 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 102 Introduction to Classical Literature
LIT 203 Greek and Roman Epic in English Translation
LIT 211 Greek and Roman Drama in English Translation
LIT 226 Dostoevsky and Tolstoy
LIT 227 Pasternak and Solzhenitsyn
LIT/JSP/REL 231 Jewish Literature
LIT 241 Dante and the Medieval World
LIT 242 Petrarch and the Renaissance World
LIT 245 Florence and Renaissance Civilization
LIT 255 Cervantes in English
LIT 257 Italian Cinema and Culture Since World War II
LIT/RUS 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film
LIT/RUS 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore
LIT/JSP/REL 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
LIT/JSP/MES/REL 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
LIT/ARB/MES 336 Arabic Cultures
LIT/RUS 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations
LIT 510 Studies in Greek and Roman Literature in Translation
LIT 521 Mythology
MAXWELL SCHOOL
MAX 132 Global Community
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
MES/REL/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
MES/HST 208/MES 318 Middle East since the Rise of Islam
MES/HST 319 The Middle East in the 20th Century
MES/LIT 336 Arabic Cultures
MES/JSP/PSC/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
MES/PSC 344 Politics of the Middle East
MES/PSC 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
MES/PSC 349 Politics of Iran
MES/REL/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
MES 365/REL/SAS 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Arts
MES/PSC 366 Representations of the Middle East
MES/ANT/HTW 382 Health in the Middle East
MES/REL/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
MES/ANT/IRP 468 Middle East in Anthropological Perspective
NATIVE AMERICAN STUDIES
NAT/REL 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
NAT/HST/LAS 372 Race in Latin America
PHILOSOPHY
PHI 111 Plato’s Republic
PHI 307 Ancient Philosophy
PHI 308 Classical Islamic Philosophy
PHI 313 British Philosophy (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 418 Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 422 Twentieth Century French and German Philosophy (Prerequisite: Any PHI course or junior/senior standing)
PHI 510 Topics in Ancient Philosophy
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PSC 123 Comparative Government and Politics
PSC 124* International Relations
PSC 139* International Relations (Honors)
PSC 231 Canadian Politics
PSC/LAS 333 Politics of Latin America
PSC/AAS 341 Politics of Africa
PSC/JSP/MES/REL 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
PSC/MES 344 Politics of the Middle East
PSC/MES 345 Islam and Politics in Asia
PSC/AAS 346 Comparative Third World Politics
PSC 347 Politics of Russia
PSC 348 Politics and the Military
PSC/MES 349 Politics of Iran
PSC 354 Human Rights and Global Affairs
PSC 355 International Political Economy
PSC/LAS 358 Latin-American International Relations
PSC 359 Foreign Policymaking
PSC/AAS 364 African International Relations
PSC/AAS 365 International Political Economy of the Third World
PSC/MES 366 Representations of the Middle East
PSC 372 Marxist Theory
PSYCHOLOGY
PSY 375 Cross-Cultural Psychology (Prerequisite: PSY 205 or 209)
RELIGION
REL 101 Religions of the World
REL 102 Religion Today in a Globalizing World
REL/JSP 114* The Bible in History, Culture and Religion
REL 121 Pilgrimage
REL/JSP 135 Judaism
REL 156 Christianity
REL/MES/SAS 165 Discovering Islam
REL/SAS 185 Hinduism
REL/SAS 186 Buddhism
REL 205 Ancient Greek Religion
REL 206 Greco-Roman Religion
REL/JSP 215* The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
REL 217 * The New Testament
REL 227 Gods: A Cross-Cultural Gallery
REL/JSP/LIT 231 Jewish Literature
REL/NAT 244/ANT 273 Indigenous Religions
REL 281/AAS 241 African Religions: An Introduction
REL/SAS 283 India’s Religious Worlds
REL 294 Mythologies
REL 301 Ancient Near Eastern Religions and Cultures
REL/JSP 307 The Temple and the Dead Sea Scrolls
REL 309 Early Christianities
REL/JSP 311 The Bible as Literature
REL/JSP/LIT/MES 333 Yiddish Literature in Translation
REL/JSP/LIT 335 Israeli Literature and Culture
REL/JSP 337 Shoah: Responding to the Holocaust
REL/JSP/MES/PSC 342 Religion and Politics in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
REL/MES/SAS 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
REL/SAS 367/MES 365 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
REL/SAS/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
REL 385 Religion in Chinese Society
REL/MES/SAS/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
REL/ANT 471 Religion and Society in Brazil
REL 487 Global Hinduism
RUSSIAN
RUS 320 Contemporary Russian Media (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 331 Russian Culture through Fiction and Film (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
RUS/LIT 332 Russian Fairy Tales and Folklore (Prerequisite: RUS 201)
RUS 351 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS 352 Introduction to Russian Literature
RUS/LIT 361 Russian Literary Film Adaptations (Prerequisite: RUS 202)
SOCIOLOGY
SOC/AAS/WGS 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
SOC 415 Global Cities
SOC 434 Globalization and Social Change
SOC/AAS/WGS 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
SOC 447 Social Change and Conflict in Modern China
SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES
SAS/MES/REL 165 Discovering Islam
SAS/REL 185 Hinduism
SAS/REL 186 Buddhism
SAS/REL 283 India’s Religious Worlds
SAS/WGS/ANT 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
SAS/HST 328 Ancient and Medieval India
SAS/HST 329 Making of Modern India
SAS/MES/REL 364 Enchanting Words: Muslim Poets, Singers and Storytellers
SAS/REL/MES 367 God and Beauty in Islamic Art
SAS/HST 375 British Empire
SAS/REL/WGS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
SAS 385 /HOM 384 Music and Dance of India
SAS/MES/REL/WGS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
SPANISH
SPA 321 Introduction to Spanish Literature
SPA 322/LAS 302 Introduction to Latin American Literature
SPA 325/LAS/HST 322 Colonial Latin America (Prerequisite: SPA 201)
SPA/LAS 326 Beyond the Screen: Latin American and Spanish Film
SPA 441 Medieval and Golden Age Literature
SPA 443 Cervantes
SPA 451 Identities and Cultures of Spain
SPA 453 Spanish Literature (20th Century)
SPA 455 Romantics and Realists: Gender Politics in Spanish Literature and Film
SPA 457 Civil War to Contemporary Spanish Literature and Culture
SPA 458 20th Century Spanish Theater
SPA/LAS 461 Nobel Prize Writers of the Spanish-Speaking World
SPA/LAS 463 Contemporary Latin American Theater
SPA/LAS 465 Literature and Popular Culture
SPA/LAS 467 Film and Literature
SPA/LAS 471 Contemporary Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS/WGS 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
SPA/LAS 479 Perspectives on Mexico and Central America: Literature, Art, Film
SPA/LAS 489 Hispanic Caribbean Narrative and Film
SPA/LAS 493 Afro-Hispanic Topics in Caribbean Literature (Prerequisite: SPA 301)
SPA/LAS 495 Marginal Cultures in Hispanic Caribbean Literature
SPA/LAS 497 Text and Context in Cuban Revolutionary Literature
WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES
WGS/AAS 307 African Women Writers
WGS/AAS/SOC 309 Race, Gender and Sexuality in African Diaspora
WGS/ANT/SAS 324 Modern South Asian Cultures
WGS 327/ANT 326 Africa through the Novel
WGS/ANT/GEO 367 Gender in a Globalizing World
WGS/HST/LAS 371 Gender in Latin American History
WGS/HST 379 Gender, Race, and Colonialism
WGS/REL/SAS 384 Goddesses, Women and Power in Hinduism
WGS/AAS 403 African and Caribbean Women Writers
WGS/FRE 412 French Women Writers
WGS/CRS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
WGS 439 Women, Gender and Violence in a Transnational Context
WGS/AAS/SOC 445 The Caribbean: Sex Workers, Transnational Capital, and Tourism
WGS 452 Feminism and Postcolonial Studies (Prerequisites: WGS 101 or 201 or 301 or 310 or 410)
WGS/ANT 455 Culture and Aids
WGS/ANT/HTW 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
WGS/MES/REL/SAS 465 Beyond the Veil: Gender Politics in Islam
WGS/LAS/SPA 475 Women, Myth and Nation in Latin American Literature
WGS/ANT 553 Women and Social Change
WRITING
WRT/CRS/WGS 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s) (Prerequisite: WRT 205 or WRT 209 or ENL 213)
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
Architecture
ARC 433/HOA 439 French Architecture, 16th and 17th Centuries (Prereq: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
ARC 435/HOA 389 Islamic Architecture (Prerequisite: CAS/ARC 134 or HOA 105)
THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Law and Public Policy
LPP/SCM 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
School of Management
SOM 354 Managing in a Global Setting
Supply Chain Management
SCM/LPP 459 The Law of Global Business (Prerequisites: LPP 255 and SCM 265)
DAVID B. FALK COLLEGE OF SPORT AND HUMAN DYNAMICS
Food Studies
FST 217 World Cuisines
Health and Wellness
HTW/ANT/MES 382 Health in the Middle East
HTW/ANT/WGS 462 Culture and Reproductive Health and Medicine
HTW/ANT 463 Global Health
Sport Management
SPM 381 International Sports Relations (Prerequisite: SPM 205)
S.I. NEWHOUSE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Advertising
ADV 345 The Power and Peril of Global Persuasion (Prerequisite: COM 107)
Television, Radio and Film
TRF 560 Topics in International Perspectives
COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS
Communications and Rhetorical Studies
CRS 430 Intercultural Communication
CRS/WGS/WRT 436 Feminist Rhetoric(s)
CRS 551 History of British Public Address
Drama
DRA 352 Survey of Theatre History (Prerequisite: DRA 115)
DRA/HOM 561 Music and Shakespeare
Fashion Design
FAS 335 History of Fashion Design I: Origins and Revivals
FAS 336 History of Fashion Design II: Contemporary Trends
FAS 526 Cultural Aspects of Clothing
Recording and Allied Entertainment
RAE 411 Global Commerce and Law for the Music Entertainment Industry
Music History and Literature
MHL 168 History of European Music before 1750
MHL 185/HOM 285 Introduction to World Music
*Notes:
Students may receive credit for one of the courses in the following pairs:
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or JSP/REL 215: The Jewish Bible/Christian Old Testament
JSP/REL 114: The Bible in History, Culture and Religion or REL 217: The New Testament
PSC 124: International Relations or PSC 139: International Relations
Global Experience courses which are not listed under Arts and Sciences or crosslisted with Arts and Sciences may not count toward the 65-credit Arts and Sciences requirement.
Newhouse courses on the Global Experience list will be counted as Newhouse credits. They may be used to fulfill the Global Experience requirement list and, if appropriate, a Newhouse major requirement.