University Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Liberal Studies
|
|
Return to: Academic Departments
Engineering and Technology A405
Phone: (323) 343-4100
Website: www.calstatela.edu/dept/libstudies/
https://www.calstatela.edu/dept/libstudies/womensstudies.php
Chair
Michael Willard
mwillar@calstatela.edu
323-343-4197
Director of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Alejandra Marchevsky
amarche@calstatela.edu
323-343-4100
Overview
Liberal Studies is an interdisciplinary program that offers students the opportunity to pursue a Bachelor of Arts degree grounded in the humanities and qualitative social sciences. The Liberal Studies major provides an appropriate foundation for professional training in education, librarianship, law, medicine, various fields of public service, and business and industry. In addition, with careful selection of electives, students may prepare for graduate study in such areas as education, American studies, communications, English, cultural studies, history, film and television studies, and the social sciences.
The Faculty
Liberal Studies Professors: Patrick B. Sharp, Victor Viesca, Michael Willard (Chair).
Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Professors: Dionne Espinoza, Alejandra Marchevsky (Director).
Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Associate Professor: Kimberly Robertson.
Liberal Studies Assistant Professor: Claudia Diera.
Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Assistant Professor: David B. Green.
I. Liberal Studies Overview
Liberal Studies is an interdisciplinary program that offers students the opportunity to pursue a Bachelor of Arts degree grounded in the humanities and qualitative social sciences. The Liberal Studies major provides an appropriate foundation for professional training in education, librarianship, law, medicine, various fields of public service, and business and industry. In addition, with careful selection of electives, students may prepare for graduate study in such areas as education, American studies, communications, English, cultural studies, history, film and television studies, and the social sciences.
II. Liberal Studies Mission statement
The mission of the Liberal Studies department is to provide students with a solid interdisciplinary education in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, and the Arts, preparing them to pursue post-graduate work and careers in education, government, law, business, the nonprofit sector, and several other fields. Through the Liberal Studies curriculum, the students will learn how disciplines work, how they resemble and differ from one another, and how they fit together into a bigger picture. The Liberal Studies faculty will train students to think critically about the ways in which meaning is generated and disseminated through various practices, beliefs, and institutions. The Liberal Studies faculty will expose students to diverse thinking and approaches, preparing them to become productive and empowered members of our globalized society, where knowledge is highly specialized, diverse, and interconnected. Our graduates will be prepared to traverse and integrate multiple fields, and think critically about the ethical and societal implications of how knowledge is produced, organized, and valued in our world.
III. Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Overview
Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (WGSS) engages students in the interdisciplinary study of gender and sexuality as interwoven with race, ethnicity, colonization, class, nation, and ability. Grounded in intersectional feminist and LGBTQ frameworks, WGSS introduces students to hidden histories, explores complex social structures, confronts injustice and oppression, and imagines more liberatory and just futures. Students can pursue a Bachelor of Arts degree, a Minor, or a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in WGSS. A Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies degree prepares students for graduate education and professional pathways in multiple fields, including public policy and politics, education, law, community organizing and the non-profit sector, social work, creative arts and entertainment, and human resources and business.
IV. Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Mission Statement
Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies provides students with a strong intersectional and interdisciplinary foundation to engage in research, creative and professional work, and public debates concerning women and LGBTQ people, especially in communities of color. Through the WGSS curriculum, students develop strong skills in verbal, written and visual communication, research, critical thinking, and working collaboratively. Students are trained as problem-solvers with a strong basis in concepts of research that seek to collaborate with marginalized communities to identify innovative solutions to pressing social justice issues that involve these communities. Students also learn about the role of the arts and humanities in fostering a diverse and humane society. These skills prepare students to advance to pursue post-graduate education and careers in a wide variety of fields, including the following: K-12 education and higher education; creative arts, including museums, media, and marketing; social services, including social work; community organizing and the non-profit sector; library and information sciences; and public policy and law, including legal services and advocacy.
ProgramsDegree - UndergraduateDegree - MinorCertificate - Post-BaccalaureateCoursesLiberal Studies (Undergraduate)Women’s Gender and Sexualities Studies (Undergraduate)- WGSS 1010 - Gender and Sexuality in College
- WGSS 2000 - Introduction to Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
- WGSS 2030 - Gender and Race in the Unites States
- WGSS 2200 - Chicanas & Latinas In US Contemporary US Society (also listed as CLS 2200)
- WGSS 2300 - Gender, Sexuality, and American Indian Communities
- WGSS 3000 - Theories in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
- WGSS 3050 - Black Feminism and Womanism (also listed as PAS 3050)
- WGSS 3100 - Critical Masculinities
- WGSS 3150 - Gender, Sexuality, and U. S. Law
- WGSS 3200 - Disability Studies (also listed as LBS 3200)
- WGSS 3400 - LGBT Political History in the US (also listed as HIST 3405)
- WGSS 3500 - Contemporary Feminist Movements
- WGSS 3650 - LGBTQ Cultural Production
- WGSS 3665 - Gender and Sexuality in Science Fiction (also listed as LBS 3665)
- WGSS 3715 - Rethinking the ‘Welfare Queen:’ Race, Gender, and Poverty in the US (also listed as PAS 3715)
- WGSS 3720 - Reproductive Justice
- WGSS 3860 - Gender in Science (also listed as LBS 3860)
- WGSS 4000 - Knowledge, Power, and Research Justice in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
- WGSS 4050 - Queer Theory
- WGSS 4100 - Chicana and Mexican Women Writers (also listed as ML 4100)
- WGSS 4130 - Issues in Feminist Philosophy (also listed as PHIL 4130)
- WGSS 4160 - Feminist Theories and Contemporary Society (also listed as SOC 4160)
- WGSS 4290 - Chicana Feminism: History, Theory, Praxis (also listed as CLS 4290)
- WGSS 4480 - Sexualities and Gender Diversity in Global Perspective (also listed as ANTH 4480)
- WGSS 4500 - Community Engagement and Internship in WGSS
- WGSS 4540 - Special Topics in Women’s Studies
- WGSS 4650 - Gender, Sexuality, and Transnational Migration (also listed as LAS 4650)
- WGSS 4710 - Global Feminisms
- WGSS 4722 - Women, Gender, and Sexuality in Asian American Communities (also listed as AAAS 4722)
- WGSS 4820 - Latin American Women’s Movements (also listed as LAS 4820)
- WGSS 4830 - Native Feminist Theories and Practices
- WGSS 4840 - Chicana/Latina Narratives and Community History
- WGSS 4860 - Gender-Based Violence from a Transnational Perspective (also listed as SOC 4860)
- WGSS 4990 - Undergraduate Directed Study
Women’s Gender and Sexualities Studies (Graduate)
All 4000-level courses may be applied toward master’s degree requirements, subject to limits established by the department and approval of the graduate adviser.
Return to: Academic Departments
|