Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Course | Title | Instructor | Lecture | Discussion |
---|---|---|---|---|
HUM 260-0-20 | Waterlogs: Global Cinema of the Aquatic | Kylie Walters | MW 10:00 - 11:50 am | |
HUM 260-0-20 Waterlogs: Global Cinema of the AquaticCo-listed with RTVF 298-0-20 This course dives into the vast world of water in film. Drawing on readings across cultural theory and the environmental humanities, we'll examine the ways visual media of oceans, lakes, and rivers narrate histories of technology, industry, nature, and social difference. Course topics include Jacques Cousteau’s deep-sea filmmaking, cinematic narratives of dams and hydropower, and the representation of fictional underwater creatures, both fearsome and friendly. We’ll ask: How does water relate to theories of cinematic landscape? How has water inspired new forms of vision? What different purposes can these aquatic films serve in our era of ecological concern? Students will engage with a range of narrative, documentary, and experimental films to develop a broad understanding of water’s history as a vital resource, a geography of exploration and exploitation, and a source of aesthetic pleasure and symbolic meaning. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 260-0-20 | The Matter and Metaphor of Energy | Govind Ponnuchamy | MW 2:00 - 3:20 pm | |
HUM 260-0-20 The Matter and Metaphor of EnergyCo-listed with ENGLISH 200-0-20 What are the politics of driving a car? What social choices do we make when we charge our phones? Are there philosophical and historical undertones to productivity vlogs on youtube? Even as these day-to-day acts of consumption might seem unrelated to each other, they are all connected by one critical concept: Energy. This course explores the social, political, and literary valences of energy to unearth the term’s numerous and vastly divergent meanings. Over the quarter, we’ll read texts ranging from Victorian novels to present day science fiction, tracking different understandings of energy that blur the line between scientific and imaginative ways of thinking. In our class discussions we’ll enquire how literary authors use energy as a metaphor to name a variety of social dynamics like race, gender, class, empire, nature, and god. Reading literary texts alongside a social history of science, we’ll use short writing tasks and class presentations to ask: how does the science of energy make its way through literature into our imaginations about the world? We will spend time with literary artefacts and study them with the premise that energy is both a force materially vital to life on earth and a vast imaginative resource for the worlds and societies we seek to build. Through a grading contract that rewards your labor and treats your energies as inherently valuable, we will focus on writing process, time management, and improvement over the course of the quarter. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 260-0-24 | Speculative Fictions of Race and Empire | Mariana Gutierrez-Loew | TTh 3:30 - 4:50 pm | |
HUM 260-0-24 Speculative Fictions of Race and EmpireCo-listed with ENGLISH 215-0-2 TV shows like Andor, Game of Thrones, and The Last of Us have sought to portray great empires: the Galactic Empire, The Seven Kingdoms, and FEDRA. All-powerful, authoritarian kingdoms and state and/or corporate powers abound in the many genres of speculative fiction—from sci-fi to fantasy, from dystopian to horror. But how do they relate to our contemporary moment and history? This class examines how empires are conceived and constructed and what roles race and gender play in their creation. Linking the history of U.S. empire building across the hemisphere with contemporary popular media and the works of Latinx and Indigenous authors and filmmakers, we’ll ask: how are empires built? What purposes do they serve? How do they construct (and deconstruct) the meanings of race and gender? And finally, how does speculative fiction envision alternative futures? Texts and media may include selections from Helena María Viramontes’ The Moths, Vanessa Angélica Villareal’s Magical/ Realism, Cherie Dimaline’s The Marrow Thieves, Andor, Game of Thrones, and The Last of Us. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-4-22 | Race and the American Midwest | Doug Kiel | TTh 3:30 - 4:50 pm | |
HUM 370-4-22 Race and the American MidwestCo-listed with HISTORY 393-0-22 This seminar explores the role of race and Indigeneity in histories of the American Midwest. Despite popular narratives of the Midwest as purely a heartland of white homogeneity and normativity, racialized communities of color have long shaped politics, culture, and society in the region. This course emphasizes the fluid nature of ideas about race, and their interplay with the construction of place in a settler colonial society. The course materials cover a wide range of topics that are crucial for understanding both Midwestern and U.S. history writ large. From the multi-ethnic world of the fur trade, to contemporary housing inequalities, this course highlights the making of a U.S. region, and confronts mythologies of the Midwest in the American imagination. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-21 | Queer Cinema | Lakshmi Padmanabhan | Th 10:00 -11:50 am, screening + 12:00 - 1:20 pm, discussion - 4:50 pm | |
HUM 370-6-21 Queer CinemaFulfills FD-LA / Distro 6, Literature and Arts How does cinema allow us to theorize queer forms of belonging? What constitutes queer aesthetics today? What are the political possibilities for reimagining the boundaries of queerness in the present? And what are the ongoing tensions and fault lines around identity and desire that remain unaddressed through queer theory's political interventions? These are some of the questions we will grapple with in this course. Screenings will include early gay and lesbian cinema, and “queer” film avant la lettre, the New Queer Cinema movement in the United States and Europe, as well as contemporary queer and trans film and video from around the world. We will pay particular attention to the aesthetic strategies of independent filmmakers and video artists, drawing out the connections between experimental aesthetic forms and politically engaged critique. Each week, we will develop a shared language of film analysis to address the intersections of race, class, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality through close readings of the visual texts. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-23 | Your Faves are Problematic(?): Racial and Gender Imbrication in Contemporary Pop Media | Mustafa Siddiqui | TTh 9:30 -10:50 am | |
HUM 370-6-23 Your Faves are Problematic(?): Racial and Gender Imbrication in Contemporary Pop MediaCo-listed with BLK_ST 380-0-23 How does pop music illuminate the structural violences of race, gender, and sexuality that we navigate on a daily basis? In mining the “problematic” in pop culture, as well as the resistive work of marginalized artists, this course will explore the lyrical, sonic, and visual worldmaking enacted by contemporary pop musicians in order to make sense of the myriad roles that pop culture and media play in the production, reproduction, and maintenance of power and social operations. Students can expect to engage the work of artists such as Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Frank Ocean, SZA, and Charli XCX (amongst others) alongside texts from a diverse range of fields including Black studies, performance studies, and gender and sexuality studies. Evaluation methods include discussion posts, a short written midterm assignment, and a final creative playlisting project. | ||||
Bio coming soon | ||||
HUM 370-6-25 | The Crime Centered Documentary | Marcela Fuentes | W 2:00 - 5:00 pm | |
HUM 370-6-25 The Crime Centered DocumentaryFulfills FD-LA / Distro 6, Literature and Arts In this course, we will view non-fiction and hybrid films that revolve around crime, criminal justice, and criminal court cases. Our emphasis will be on cases that are either mired in controversy or emblematic of wider social concerns. Readings will augment viewings as we weigh legal, philosophical, or scientific perspectives: What is accurately depicted? What is omitted? What is misrepresented? Concurrently, we will investigate the films aesthetically: How is the film structured and why? What choices are being made by the filmmaker regarding camera, sound, and editing, and how do these choices affect viewers? Throughout the course, we will consider the ethics of depicting real people and traumatic events. We will also look at specific films in regard to their legal or societal impact. Assignments will include a series of short response papers and a substantial final project, which can take the form of either (up to the student) a ten to twelve-page paper or a six to twelve-minute film/podcast/media project. Projects should center upon a legal topic. Ideas include, but are not limited to, a paper that compares two films depicting the same criminal case or a polished/edited film interview with an individual connected to a crime or involved with the legal system (a defendant, a lawyer, a judge, a policeperson, etc.). Additional topics could center around mitigation films, viral crime videos, local courts, legal advocacy centers, or hybrid crime films. | ||||
Bio coming soon |