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Course ID: | WMST 2010. 3 hours. | Course Title: | Introduction to Women's Studies | Course Description: | The study of women of diverse racial, ethnic, and class backgrounds. Topics include contemporary concerns within women's studies: labor markets, health, reproduction, socialization, language, media representations, law, and public policy. | Oasis Title: | Introduction Women's Studies | Duplicate Credit: | Not open to students with credit in WMST 2010H | Semester Course Offered: | Offered fall and spring semester every year. | Grading System: | A-F (Traditional) |
| Course Objectives: | Course Objectives:
1. To gain an appreciation for the basic issues within women's studies, and to
reflect critically on your own perspectives on these issues.
2. To develop an understanding of the history of women within the U.S. and how various
social issues have affected them due to the presence of sexism, racism, and class
issues.
3. To learn the facts about racial and sexual inequality in the United States and the
world, and to evaluate this information and draw conclusions from it.
4. To learn to communicate about politically charged issues with people of different
backgrounds in a respectful manner. | Topical Outline: | I. What is Women's Studies?
A. Introduction: Femininity/Feminism
B. Why Study "Women"?
C. Who Are We Studying: Are Women a Unified Social Category?
II. History of the Women's Movement
A. 19th Century Women's Movement: The Rhetoric of Reform
B. 20th Century Women's Movement: Questioning Patriarchy
C. 20th Century Women's Movement: Questioning Women's Unity
III. Notions of "Otherness"
A. Simone de Beauvior and Woman as "Other"
B. Gender and Race: Interlocking Systems
IV. Epistemology: Gender and the Construction of Knowledge
A. Is There a "Woman's Way of Knowing"?
B. Science and Technology
V. Gender Socialization
A. Gender as a Social Institution
B. Images of Women in Advertising
C. Gender and Genius in the Visual Arts
D. Language
E. Women and Psycho-Social Development
VI. Violence, Sexuality, and Reproduction
A. Violence Against Women
B. Lesbian Identity and Cultural Values
C. Reproductive Rights
VII. Family and Motherhood
A. Family Values: the Rise of the Nuclear Family
B. Working Mothers and Motherhood as Institution
C. Mother's Milk: Advice to Women on Breastfeeding
VIII. Women as Wage Earners
A. Women and Women's Economic Status
B. The Global Assambly Line
IX. Unaddressed Topics: Student Presentations
See syllabus at http://www.uga.edu/~wsp/syllabi/ws201s.html | |
Syllabus:
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