Course Catalog - 2014-2015

     

HUMA 101 - ANCIENT GREECE TO MED ISLAM

Long Title: FROM ANCIENT GREECE TO MEDIEVAL ISLAM: INTRODUCTION TO WESTERN LITERATURE, HISTORY, AND PHILOSOPHY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of the foundational intellectual and artistic texts of the western tradition from Ancient Greece to Medieval Islam. Consideration of texts and images over time and in their historical development as we reflect on who we are and how we got here. Readings from Homer, Plato, the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, Thucydides, Vergil, Augustine, and the Qu'ran.
 

HUMA 102 - RENAISSANCE TO PRESENT

Long Title: FROM RENAISSANCE TO PRESENT: INTRODUCTION TO WESTERN LITERATURE, HISTORY, AND PHILOSOPHY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Study of the foundational intellectual and artistic texts of the Western tradition from the Renaissance to Einstein. Consideration of texts and images over time and in their historical development as we reflect on who are and how we got here. Readings from Machiavelli, Shakespeare, Kant, Flaubert, Nietzsche, Freud, Beauvoir, Einstein, Levi, Kuhn, Borges, and King, and images from such artists as Michelangelo, Goya, and Picasso.
 

HUMA 103 - LIBERTY&TERROR: FRENCH REVOLUT

Long Title: LIBERTY AND TERROR: THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The French Revolution toppled an ancient monarchy and sent shockwaves throughout the world. We will interpret the historical sources, contexts, and problems of this watershed moment and investigate the problems by political, philosophical, literary, and visual documents regarding the pre-revolutionary status quo, the transformation of political liberty into repressive terror, worldwide warfare, and ideological struggle. The course will focus on historical contexts such as the influence of the Enlightenment; the emergence of citizenship and human rights; the development of social spectacles and the public sphere; the Reign of Terror and the regression to Tyranny; emancipationist discourses (the abolition of slavery, colonial revolt, radical feminism); and the contradictory figure of Napoleon. We will consider, finally, how the Revolution has come to be viewed, both within France and without, considering its many aftershocks and reverberations up until the present day.
 

HUMA 104 - TRANSCULTURAL ENCOUNTERS

Long Title: TRANSCULTURAL ENCOUNTERS: FROM THE ANCIENT WORLD TO CONTEMPORARY GLOBALIZATION
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Explores interactions between cultures from early modern period to the present day through films, novels, memoirs and travelogues, bringing alive the experiences of historical and fictional figures, who, through colonialism, trade, war and conflict, travel, and migration, find themselves face to face with people who are not like them, and in particular, their responses to these new situations.
 

HUMA 107 - GREEK CIVILIZATION & LEGACY

Long Title: GREEK CIVILIZATION AND ITS LEGACY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: An examination of the literary, artistic, and intellectual achievements of classical Greek civilization from Homer through the golden age of classical Athens to the spread of Greek culture in the Hellenistic world. The influence of ancient Greece on Western culture will be a focus. Case studies in the later reception of classical Greek literature (e.g. tragedy), philosophy (e.g., Socrates), history (e.g., democracy), and art (e.g., Parthenon) will be examined. Cross-list: CLAS 107.
Course URL: http://classicallegacy.rice.edu
 

HUMA 108 - LATE MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE

Long Title: ART IN CONTEXT: LATE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE CULTURE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will be concerned with art, architecture, and history of the late middle-ages and Renaissance. We will employ historical texts, literature, and illustrations of works of art, showing how historical documents and sources can illuminate the culture context of art and architecture. Cross-list: HART 240, MDEM 108.
 

HUMA 111 - ROMAN CIVILIZATION &ITS LEGACY

Long Title: ROMAN CIVILIZTION AND ITS LEGACY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will investigate central aspects of Roman civilization: politics, religion, law, oratory, private life, public entertainment, literature, and visual art and architecture. Through case studies, we will also examine the place of ancient Rome in the western imagination, and the influence of ancient Rome on later politics, literature, and art. Cross-list: CLAS 108.
Course URL: http://classicallegacy.rice.edu/
 

HUMA 200 - INTRO TO MEDICAL HUMANITIES

Long Title: INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL HUMANITIES
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Poets, philosophers, artists, and theologians all seek to convey experiences of disease, affliction, and healing this course develops tools for understanding the limits and possibilities of their works, particularly in light of current scientific techniques designed to repair, sustain, and optimize the human body. Readings, films, and short essays. Cross-list: HEAL 200, HURC 200.
 

HUMA 201 - PUBLIC SPEAKING

Long Title: PUBLIC SPEAKING
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course is designed to give the student exposure to and experience using basic principles and skills of oral communication in the public context. Emphasis will be on the development of speech organization, support, and delivery. Informative and persuasive speeches will be practiced. An important outcome of the course is that the student better understand and appreciate the important role public speaking plays in modern society.
 

HUMA 202 - CULTURE ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT

Long Title: CULTURE, ENERGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT: AN INTRODUCTION TO ENERGY HUMANITIES
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Humanity faces extraordinary challenges in an era of climate change and energy transition. These challenges are not only technological but also questions of value, power, behavior, and understanding. This course draws upon new research across the arts, humanities and social sciences to help students better understand the cultural and social dimensions of our current patterns of energy use, their environmental impacts, and the possibility of new energy futures. Intended for both STEM majors and humanities and social science students. Cross-list: ENST 202.
 

HUMA 203 - CULTURES OF FUEL

Long Title: CULTURES OF FUEL
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1
Description: Can fuels (prior to their insertion in systems of energy) offer us hope in the face of climate change? This seminar, open to undergraduates and graduates from all disciplines, will consider fuels (real and imaginary; fossil-based and renewable) in literature, film, art and culture. Grades based on participation in discussions.
 

HUMA 210 - FORENSICS PRACTICUM

Long Title: FORENSICS PRACTICUM
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Internship/Practicum
Credit Hours: 1
Description: This course will focus on junior varsity intercollegiate speech and debate competition. Students will be required to prepare speeches and debate material for local, regional and possibly national competitions. Participation in intercollegiate competition is mandatory. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HUMA 212 - CAREER AND LIFE OPTIONS

Long Title: CAREER AND LIFE OPTIONS
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 1
Description: This class is intended for freshmen and sophomores who are exploring careers and academic majors (juniors and seniors are also welcome to enroll). In the class students will learn about career options that match their interests, personality, and values; become more familiar with the world of work and various career options; understand the connections between careers and major choice; learn about services that will enhance their marketability and academic experiences (internships, study abroad programs, scholarships/grants); and develop an action plan to reach their goals. This class is ideally suited for students who have no idea what they want to do after they graduate.
 

HUMA 214 - TOPICS IN HUM: LIT & OPERA

Long Title: TOPICS IN HUMANITIES: COMMON SOURCES: LITERATURE AND OPERA
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Concentrates on literary sources used for operatic adaptation, especially operas of the 20th century. Will compare operas with their original literary sources, discuss narrative divergences, use of music as dramatic coloring, and literary characteristics of libretti. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HUMA 270 - SEPHARDIC JEWS & DIASPORA

Long Title: THE SEPHARDIC (SPANISH) JEWS AND THEIR DIASPORA: A CONTRIBUTION TO HISPANIC CULTURE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Trilingual in English, Spanish, and Judeo-Spanish, the course explores the contribution of the Sephardic (Spanish) Jews to the Hispanic cultural heritage in Spain and in the Ottoman Empire. An interdisciplinary approach combines social history, literature and linguistics from Jewish and Spanish sources and critical perspectives. The course will be conducted in English, with an optional Spanish track.
 

HUMA 295 - CAREERS THRU INTERNSHIP

Long Title: EXPLORING CAREERS THROUGH AN INTERNSHIP
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1 TO 3
Description: Designed for currently enrolled undergraduate students from all areas of study to gain experience in a work place setting, earn course credit, and further develop professional skills. Students meet individually with a career counselor to process their experience and complete an action plan to market their qualifications to potential employers and graduate schools. Students arrange internship, receive approval from the course instructor, and may not receive financial compensation while enrolled in the course. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HUMA 300 - PJHC SERVICE REFLECTION

Long Title: PJHC SUMMER SERVICE INTERNSHIP REFLECTION
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 1
Description: Returning PJHC Summer Service Interns reflect on their experiences in an academic context, producing short digital stories. This course is required for all returning interns who received financial support from the Program in Poverty, Justice, and Human Capabilities for service learning and suggested for PJHC minors who completed other summer service internships. Offered in the first half of the full term in the Fall, weekly. Instructor permission required. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HUMA 301 - RHETORICAL CRITICISM

Long Title: RHETORICAL CRITICISM
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course emphasizes the study of historical and contemporary speech texts and other forms of public communication and surveys the major approaches in scholarly rhetorical criticism from ancient to contemporary times. The course will focus on learning and applying the methods to communication artifacts. Because rhetorical criticism is an interdisciplinary endeavor, the course will survey material from many fields. The goal of the course is to come away with basic knowledge of several approaches and detailed knowledge of at least one approach. A better understanding of the construction of public communication is an important outcome of the course.
 

HUMA 302 - RHETORICAL THEORY

Long Title: THEORIES OF RHETORICAL COMMUNICATION
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will survey major theorists of speech and public communication ranging from classical to contemporary thinkers. Emphasis will be on understanding speech and public communication from consumer and scholarly perspectives. Students are expected to read and discuss material with the goals of gaining basic understanding of major rhetorical theorists specifically engage a particular topic in rhetorical theory. Our central questions involve the nature of and relationship between speaker, text, and audience.
 

HUMA 303 - PERSUASION&POLITICAL RHETORIC

Long Title: PERSUASION AND POLITICAL RHETORIC
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will survey research and writing in the fields of persuasion and political communication. Of particular interest will be explanations of political communication based in rhetorical theory. Students will study historically important political speeches, debates, and advertisements. Emphasis will be on academic exploration of political rhetoric as human expression.
 

HUMA 305 - ADVANCED PUBLIC SPEAKING

Long Title: ADVANCED PUBLIC SPEAKING
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Designed for students with at least two prior years of instruction or public speaking experience. Will address the ancient origins of speech theory and will require students to apply contemporary speech theory in the presentation of four in-class speeches.
 

HUMA 306 - RHETORIC OF SCIENCE/TECHNOLOGY

Long Title: RHETORIC OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore the rhetoric of science and technology through examination of historically important speeches, campaigns, and other persuasive expression that has contributed to contemporary scientific and technological culture. Emphasis will be on the communication associated with scientific and technological culture rather than on the science or technology. The primary question for the course is, "How are science and technology expressed and persuasively promoted as human activities?
 

HUMA 308 - BUSINESS&PROFESSIONAL SPEAKING

Long Title: BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL SPEAKING
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Practical application of communication theory with emphasis on oral presentations, interviewing and small group dynamics. The course will consider many aspects of the business and professional sphere as they pertain to public speaking and public discourse. Through a series of four or more in-class speeches, in-class group exercises, outside speaker presentations, reading, and writing, the course will serve as basis of instruction to ready the student for the public or private sphere. Class will focus particularly on aspects of business and professional leadership communication, and business and office communications both written and oral, toward a greater mastery of authentic organizational, management, competitive, and community discourse.
 

HUMA 309 - ARGUMENTATION & DEBATE

Long Title: ARGUMENTATION AND DEBATE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Designed to help students develop communication, analysis, and research skills through the construction and presentation of arguments on questions of fact, value, and policy. Debate assignments will explore current issues. The course emphasizes argumentation exercises and in-class debates.
 

HUMA 310 - ADVANCED FORENSICS PRACTICUM

Long Title: ADVANCED FORENSICS PRACTICUM
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Internship/Practicum
Credit Hours: 1
Description: This course will focus on varsity intercollegiate speech and debate competition. Students will be required to prepare speeches and debate material for local, regional, and possibly national competitions. Participation in intercollegiate competition is mandatory. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HUMA 311 - RHETORIC OF LEADERSHIP

Long Title: THE RHETORIC OF LEADERSHIP
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will examine the relationship between leadership and communication within organizations. Explore leadership as a communication phenomenon. Emphasis will be on leadership as a set of relationships that manifest themselves in practices that arise from the implementation of theory. Historical and contemporary leadership and communication theory will be surveyed. An important outcome is an increased understanding of the relationship between communication and leadership. Cross-list: LEAD 320.
 

HUMA 312 - FOUNDATIONS OF LEADERSHIP

Long Title: HISTORICAL AND INTELLECTUAL FOUNDATIONS OF LEADERSHIP
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The focus of this course is to construct a historically informed philosophy of leadership that encompasses not just what leadership is but why it is valued, when it is legitimate, what its moral purpose is, and how it both shapes and reflects societal norms. Cross-list: LEAD 301.
 

HUMA 313 - THEORIES OF HUMAN COMM

Long Title: THEORIES OF HUMAN COMMUNICATION
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course offers an introduction to the study of human communication and surveys explanations of human communication from a variety of perspectives. Theories of interpersonal, intercultural, nonverbal and mass communication are explored.
 

HUMA 314 - COMMUNICATION/TECHNOLOGY/CHANG

Long Title: COMMUNICATION, TECHNOLOGY, AND CHANGE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: New communication technologies have profoundly altered daily life and challenge the definition of some of humanity's basic societal structures. This course explores interpretations of this transformation from many fields to better understand the change we are currently witnessing and to ask what the human experience is gaining and losing.
 

HUMA 315 - COMMUNICATION LAW

Long Title: COMMUNICATION LAW
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course will explore the historical development, contemporary state of and future direction of the relationship between law and communication. The central question is "What is the relation of the law to the human communication experience?"
 

HUMA 316 - RHETORIC OF POPULAR CULTURE

Long Title: RHETORIC OF POPULAR CULTURE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: What really persuades people? Many scholars consider popular culture to be the most influential persuasive force in the everyday lives of contemporary humans. Music, television, social media, film, fashion, books, and other elements of popular culture comprise a tremendous amount of the universe of meaning in which the modern human resides. This course will explore these phenomena by looking at current and historical popular cultural artifacts and trends and various ways of understanding them from a variety of fields. Students will pursue an original study of a specific artifact or trend.
 

HUMA 320 - SOCIAL STUDIES OF ENERGY

Long Title: FROM PHYSICS LABS TO OIL FUTURES: SOCIAL STUDIES OF ENERGY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: How did whale oil become replaced by fossil fuels? What were the turning points in implementing electricity networks within urban centers? What is the role of markets and industries when producing such new energy infrastructures? This interdisciplinary course will trace ideas of energy in anthropology, science and technology studies, literary studies and environmental history, and investigate how energy production and consumption affects social life.
 

HUMA 321 - EUROPEAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS

Long Title: EUROPEAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Filmmaking has celebrated its first hundred years. Women's contributions were significant and deserve to widen the film canon for all filmgoers. This course will concentrate on films by European women directors, taking into account aesthetic particularities, gender commitment, and post-feminist attempts. Importance will also be given to the contexts and conditions of women's film production. All films subtitled in English. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 321, HART 385, SWGS 358.
 

HUMA 322 - MARX, FREUD, EINSTEIN

Long Title: MARX, FREUD, EINSTEIN: FOREBEARERS OF MODERNITY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Like no others, these three thinkers of the 19th and 20th century have influenced the intellectual, historical, social, and cultural development not only of Germany, but of the entire world. The course examines the works of these authors in the context of their own time as well as their continued importance in the present. Works by Brecht, Christa Wolf, Schnitzler, Kafka will also be considered. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 322.
 

HUMA 324 - BERLIN-RESIDENCE,METRO,CAPITAL

Long Title: BERLIN, RESIDENCE, METROPOLIS, CAPITAL
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: The course offers an introduction to German history, politics, and culture as mirrored in the history of the old and new German capital. Berlin has always been a city of contradictions: from imperial glamour to proletarian slums, from the Roaring Twenties to Hitler's seizure of power. Emerging from the ruins of WWII Berlin became both the capital of Socialism and the display window of the Free World. After the fall of the wall, Berlin is still looking for its role in the center of a reshaped Europe. Readings and discussions encompass fine arts and literature from the 18th century to the present, including film. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 324.
 

HUMA 325 - MODERN GERMAN WRITERS: KAFKA

Long Title: MODERN GERMAN WRITERS: KAFKA
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Goethe's vision of "world-literature" came true in the twentieth century. German authors, among them Kafka, transcended the confines of national traditions and redefined the concepts of literature and authorship in view of a modern globally dispersed audience. Topics may vary. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 325. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HUMA 328 - GERMAN ADAPTATIONS: TEXT-FILM

Long Title: GERMAN ADAPTATIONS: TEXT TO FILM
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Prominent novels of the 20th century will be studied for their possibilities or impossibilities of rendition from print medium to cinematic medium. From the myriad of adaptations we will concentrate on Thomas Mann: Tod in Venedig; Franz Kafka: Das Schloss; Klaus Mann: Mehisto; Gunter Grass: Die Blechtrommel; H. Boll: Katharina Blum; Jurek Becker: Jacob der Lugner. All films are subtitled in English. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 328.
 

HUMA 329 - LIT OF HOLOCAUST & EXILE

Long Title: LITERATURE OF THE HOLOCAUST AND EXILE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Most of the authors from Germany and Austria, who were persecuted and fled into exile, used literature to search for meaning in life that apparently had been stripped of all meaning. Among these authors are the most distinguished writers of time, i.e. Th. and H. Mann, Brecht, Benjamin, Werfel, Doblin, J. Roth, S. Zweig, N. Sachs, Celan, Auslander. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 329.
 

HUMA 340 - WALTER BENJAMIN

Long Title: WALTER BENJAMIN: AESTHETICS, HISTORY AND POLITICS
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Benjamin has been celebrated as a revolutionary Marxist, a theologian of Jewish Messianism, and as an essayist and literary critic. The course offers an introduction to his writings by way of situating them in the historical background of the Weimar Republic and the crises of European society on the eve of WWII. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 340.
 

HUMA 344 - KOREAN LITERATURE AND CULTURE

Long Title: KOREAN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Exploration of selections from modern Korean literature and Korean films. Includes background survey of Korean history, philosophy, and religion. All texts and films in English translation. No previous knowledge of Korean language required. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: ASIA 344, KORE 344.
 

HUMA 368 - MONSTER

Long Title: CONCEIVING AND MISCONCEIVING THE MONSTROUS IN FICTION AND IN ART, IN MEDICINE AND IN BIOSCIENCE
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Credit Hours: 3
Description: However various the forms of life, we draw boundaries between the "normal," the "not normal," and the "monstrous." From the Biosciences to the Arts - from the cyclopean eye to Frankenstein - monsters illuminate (whether in fact or in fiction) who we are, how we perceive, and what we fear. Cross-list: BIOC 368.
 

HUMA 371 - POVERTY, JUSTICE, CAPABILITIES

Long Title: POVERTY, JUSTICE, AND HUMAN CAPABILITIES
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Seminar
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: This course provides an overview of the study of poverty, justice, and human capabilities. The course considers theory and economic policy oriented towards improving human well-being in the US, Asia, Africa, and other regions. Readings address not just material deprivations but also gender, racial and ethnic disparities, health status, education, human rights, and political freedoms. To be considered for the course, please email pjhc@rice.edu to complete a brief questionnaire. Preference is given to those that have declared the PJHC minor. Formerly HUMA/SOCI 280. Instructor Permission Required.Cross-list: SOCI 371. Mutually Exclusive: Cannot register for HUMA 371 if student has credit for HUMA 280/SOCI 280.
 

HUMA 372 - GERMAN FAIRY TALE: OLD & NEW

Long Title: THE GERMAN FAIRY TALE: OLD AND NEW
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Discussion of several prototypes from the fairy-tale collection of the Brothers Grimm and the subsequent development of the "literary" fairy tale from Goethe and the Romantics to the 20th century. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 326.
 

HUMA 373 - NEW GERM FILM: HITLER'S CINEMA

Long Title: NEW GERMAN FILM: HITLER'S CINEMATIC CHILDREN
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Distribution Group: Distribution Group I
Credit Hours: 3
Description: From the 1960 to 2000, Germany has developed a very distinct auteur cinema with independent filmmakers such as Fassbinder, Herzog, Wenders, Adlon, Trotta, Sander, Brueckner, Doerrie, Garnier, Tykwer, and others. The first 20 years of German film were oriented on coming to terms with the fascist past; the second 20 years focused on more contemporary issues. Film, critical reading and class discussion in English. All films are subtitled in English and will be assessed with podium technology. Taught in English. Cross-list: GERM 338, SWGS 361.
 

HUMA 421 - MEDICAL HUMANITIES RESEARCH I

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDIES IN MEDICAL HUMANITIES RESEARCH I
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Research
Credit Hours: 3
Description: Independent studies with a faculty member at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) centering on a medical humanities research topic. Students will spend up to 10 hours/week at BCM and will be required to submit a written report and/or an example of research products to supervisor and the Dean of Humanities. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.
 

HUMA 422 - MEDICAL HUMANITIES RESEARCH II

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDIES IN MEDICAL HUMANITIES RESEARCH II
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisite(s): HUMA 421
Description: Independent studies with a faculty member at Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) centering on a medical humanities research topic. Students will spend up to 10 hours/week at BCM and will be required to submit a written report and/or an example of research products to supervisor and the Dean of Humanities. Instructor Permission Required.
 

HUMA 498 - INDEPENDENT STUDY

Long Title: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Department: Humanities Division
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Independent Study
Credit Hours: 1 TO 3
Restrictions:
May not be enrolled in one of the following Level(s):
Graduate
Description: Independent Study. Instructor Permission Required. Repeatable for Credit.