2013-14 Pomona College Catalog 
    
    May 17, 2024  
2013-14 Pomona College Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG] Use the dropdown above to select the current 2023-24 catalog.

Courses


Check major and minor requirement sections in the Departments, Programs and Areas of Study section to determine if specific courses will satisfy requirements. Inclusion on this list does not imply that the course will necessarily satisfy a requirement.

Click here  to view a Key to Course Listings and Discipline codes.

 

Studio Art

  
  • ART 131 PO - Sculptural Function and Conceptual Design


    CrsNo ART 131 PO

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2012.

    Instructor(s): M. O’Malley

    An upper division course that investigates sculptural practice as it re-imagines the pragmatic, functional objects of the built environment while concurrently looking to design with its increased emphasis on communicating ideas and making representations. Students will be expected to learn wood and metal fabrication as well as the CNC Router and its attendant software. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: ART 025 PO  or ART 126A PO . Letter grade only.

  
  • ART 134 SC - Between Analog+Digital Printmaking


    CrsNo ART 134 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 141 SC - Introduction to Digital Imaging


    CrsNo ART 141 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 142 SC - Intermediate/Advanced Digital Imaging


    CrsNo ART 142 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 143 SC - Digital Color Photography


    CrsNo ART 143 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 144 SC - Advanced Web Projects


    CrsNo ART 144 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 148 SC - Introduction to Video


    CrsNo ART 148 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 149 SC - Intermediate and Advanced Video


    CrsNo ART 149 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 150 SC - Advanced Video


    CrsNo ART 150 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 181G SC - From Beauty to the Abject


    CrsNo ART 181G SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 183 SC - Feminist Concepts and Strategies


    CrsNo ART 183 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ART 189C PO - Sculptural Function Conceptual Design II


    CrsNo ART 189C PO

    When Offered: One-time only; spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): M.O’Malley

    This is an extension of the Art 131 Sculptural Function Conceptual Design with the goal of designing and building furniture for the new arts building. The class will work with artists and the architects designing the building WHY to articulate the design. Prerequisites: ART 027 PO . Letter grade only.

  
  • ART 190 PO - Junior/Senior Art Major Seminar


    CrsNo ART 190 PO

    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    For Pomona studio art majors, to be taken in the fall of the junior and senior years. A more in-depth examination of the theories and issues relevant to contemporary art practice. Exploration takes the form of art production and its critique and response papers to visiting artists, readings and field trips. Letter grade only.

  
  • ART 192 PO - Advanced Projects in Studio Art


    CrsNo ART 192 PO

    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Seminar meets twice weekly during the spring semester for critique and discussion of advanced student work in studio art. Include visiting speakers, readings, and intensive work on independent studio art projects. This class is mandatory for senior art majors in preparation for their senior exhibit. Letter grade only. May be repeated for credit.

  
  • ART 199DRPO - Art: Directed Readings


    CrsNo ART 199DRPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Directed Readings. Syllabus reflects workload of a standard course in the department or program. Examinations or papers equivalent to a standard course. Regular interaction with the faculty supervisor. Weekly meetings are the norm. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • ART 199IRPO - Art: Independent Research


    CrsNo ART 199IRPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Independent Research or Creative Project. A substantial and significant piece of original research or creative product produced. Pre-requisite course work required. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • ART 199RAPO - Art: Research Assistantship


    CrsNo ART 199RAPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Lab notebook, research summary or other product appropriate to the discipline is required. Half-course credit only.


Art History

  
  • ARHI 047 PO - Museum Collecting


    CrsNo ARHI047 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): K. Howe

    This course is an introduction to, and practical exercise in, the decision process guiding museums when they acquire art works. Students will learn about the Pomona College Museum’s mission, standard curatorial practice, and the ethics and best practices in making art purchases. Working in teams and under the guidance of the museum director and professional staff, they will review the work of several contemporary artists and select an artist on whom to focus. Through research, studio and gallery visits, and an evaluative process considering both curatorial and curricular criteria, each student team will propose an art work for purchase. Teams will present their recommendation in a public forum. The class, with advice of museum staff, will award one proposal with purchase for the Pomona College Museum’s permanent collection. The permanent collection record will carry the names of all members of the class. P/NC grading only. May be repeated twice for credit.

  
  • ARHI 051A PO - Introduction to the History of Art: Prehistory Through Ancient Times in Europe, the Mediterranean and the Fertile Crescent


    CrsNo ARHI051A PO

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2012.

    Instructor(s): J. Emerick

    Asks how the visual cultures of past times relate to those of the present. Critically examines the modern notion of “art.” Proceeds chronologically and globally with examples from Europe, Africa, the Americas and Asia. Courses may be taken in any order. ARHI 51A: Prehistory through ancient times in Europe, the Mediterranean and the Fertile Crescent. ARHI 051B PO: European Middle Ages. ARHI 051C PO: Renaissance to Modern

  
  • ARHI 051B PO - Introduction to the History of Art: The European Middle Ages


    CrsNo ARHI051B PO

    When Offered: Fall 2013.

    Instructor(s): J. Emerick

    Asks how the visual cultures of past times relate to those of the present. Critically examines the modern notion of “art.” Proceeds chronologically and globally with examples from Europe, Africa, the Americas and Asia. Courses may be taken in any order. ARHI 051A PO: Prehistory through ancient times in Europe, the Mediterranean and the Fertile Crescent. ARHI 51B: European Middle Ages. ARHI 051C PO: Renaissance to Modern

  
  • ARHI 051C PO - Introduction to the History of Art: Renaissance to Modern


    CrsNo ARHI051C PO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes; G. Gorse; F. Pohl

    Asks how the visual cultures of past times relate to those of the present. Critically examines the modern notion of “art.” Proceeds chronologically and globally with examples from Europe, Africa, the Americas and Asia. Courses may be taken in any order. ARHI 051A PO: Prehistory through ancient times in Europe, the Mediterranean and the Fertile Crescent. ARHI 051B PO: European Middle Ages. ARHI 51C: Renaissance to Modern

  
  • ARHI 133 PO - Art, Conquest and Colonization


    CrsNo ARHI133 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): F. Pohl

    Examines how images were enlisted in and helped shape the systematic exploration, conquest and colonization of North America (Canada, the U.S. and Mexico) by Europeans from ca. 1500 to 1800. Considers how images were used by indigenous populations to resist attempts to erase their cultures and to control the manner in which they assimilated into European settler cultures.

  
  • ARHI 135 PO - Picturing a Nation: Art and Nationalism in 19th-Century North America


    CrsNo ARHI135 PO

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2015.

    Instructor(s): F. Pohl

    Examines how 19th-century North American artists and art institutions were involved in shaping the “imagined communities” that constituted the nations of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. Includes works in a variety of media—paintings, sculpture, prints, architecture—and museums, art markets and mass media. Letter grade only.

  
  • ARHI 137 PZ - Tradition and Transformation in Native North American Art


    CrsNo ARHI137 PZ

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 139 PZ - Seminar Topics: Native American Art History


    CrsNo ARHI139 PZ

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 140 PO - The Arts of Africa


    CrsNo ARHI140 PO

    When Offered: Spring 2015.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    Survey of African art and architecture exploring ethnic and cultural diversity. Emphasis on the social, political and religious dynamics that foster art production at specific historic moments in West, Central and North Africa. Critical study of Western art historical approaches and methods used to study African arts.

  
  • ARHI 141A PO - (Re)presenting Africa: Art, History and Film


    CrsNo ARHI141A PO

    When Offered: Fall 2013.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    The seminar centers on post-colonial African films to examine (re)presentations of the people, arts, cultures and socio-political histories of Africa and its Diaspora. Course critically examines the cinematic themes, aesthetics, styles and schools of African and African Diasporic filmmakers. Recommended: one prior art history or Black studies or media studies course. Letter grade only.

  
  • ARHI 141B PO - Africana Cinema: Through the Documentary Lens


    CrsNo ARHI141B PO

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    This course examines documentary films and videos created by filmmakers from Africa and the African Diaspora (United States, Britain and Caribbean). Topics include: history and aesthetics of documentary filmmaking, documentary as art, the narrative documentary, docu-drama, cinema vérité, biography, autobiography and historical documentary.

  
  • ARHI 141M PO - Representing Blackness: Music and Masculinities from Class to A$$


    CrsNo ARHI141M PO

    When Offered: Offered alternate years: next offered fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    Examines constructions of Blackness and notions Black masculinity through study of documentary films and related visual arts representing key musical innovators of the African diaspora. Explores the aesthetic influence of musical genres (e.g., spirituals, ragtime, blues, jazz, folk, gospel, rock and roll, soul, funk, reggae, Afrobeat, mbalax, disco, opera, hip hop, rap and neo-soul) on the interdependent visual vocabularies of arts movements, values of political movements, and representational codes of popular commodity culture from 1900 to present. Letter grade only.

  
  • ARHI 144B PO - Daughters of Africa: Art, Cinema, Theory, Love


    CrsNo ARHI144B PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    Examines visual arts and cultural criticism produced by women from Africa and the African Diaspora (North America, Caribbean and Europe). Students analyze aesthetic values, key representational themes, visual conventions, symbolic codes and stylistic approaches created from feminism’s spirited love of Blackness, African-ness and justice. Complement to AFRI 144A AF, Black Women Feminism(s) and Social Change. Suggested: previous course in either African or Chicano/a or gender and women’s studies.

  
  • ARHI 150 SC - The Arts of China


    CrsNo ARHI150 SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 151 SC - The Arts of Japan


    CrsNo ARHI151 SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 152 SC - Arts of Late Imperial China


    CrsNo ARHI152 SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 154 SC - Japanese Prints


    CrsNo ARHI154 SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 155 SC - History of Gardens, East and West


    CrsNo ARHI155 SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    <p>See the <a href=”http://catalog.scrippscollege.edu/preview_course_incoming.php?cattype=Scripps%20%20college%20catalog&amp;prefix=ARHI&amp;code=155&amp;suffix=SC target=_blank”>Scripps College Catalog</a> for a description of this course.</p>

  
  • ARHI 158 HM - Visualizing China: Chinese Art


    CrsNo ARHI158 HM

    See the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 170 PO - The Early Renaissance of Italy


    CrsNo ARHI170 PO

    When Offered: Last offered fall 2012.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Painting, sculpture and architecture in 15th-century Italy. Emphasis on Florence and the princely courts as artistic center of the new style. Artists and major works considered in their historical context.

  
  • ARHI 171 PO - High Renaissance and Mannerism in Italy


    CrsNo ARHI171 PO

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Art and architecture in Florence, Rome and Venice during the 16th century. The invention of the High Renaissance style by Bramante, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael, Giorgione and Titian. Major works of the post-High Renaissance masters. The interaction of artists and patrons in historical context.

  
  • ARHI 172 PO - Northern Renaissance Art


    CrsNo ARHI172 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Painting, sculpture and architecture in northern Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. Developments in painting emphasized; special attention to the Low Countries and Germany.

  
  • ARHI 173 PO - Medieval and Renaissance City


    CrsNo ARHI173 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    . The rise of Italian city-states and how their urban designs go hand-in-hand with their social, political, and economic institutions. Compares Florence, Venice, Rome, Genoa, Pisa, Siena, and the small princely courts. City dwellers’ civic, religious, and family rituals.

  
  • ARHI 174 PO - Italian Baroque Art


    CrsNo ARHI174 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2013

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Painting, sculpture and architecture in Italy, 1600-1750. Rome and the development of the Baroque style in the works of Caravaggio, the Carracci, Gentileschi, Bernini, Borromini and Pietro da Cortona. Church and social history as background.

  
  • ARHI 175 PO - Baroque Art of Northern Europe


    CrsNo ARHI175 PO

    When Offered: Fall 2015.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Painting, sculpture and architecture of the 17th century in Germany, France, Spain, England and the Low Countries. Poussin, Velásquez, Rembrandt, Leyster, Rubens, Vermeer, Wren, Neumann, Fischer von Erlach.

  
  • ARHI 176 JT - Italian Cities


    CrsNo ARHI176 JT

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse; S. Ovan

    An interdisciplinary approach to the development of cities and urban spaces in Italy from the Middle Ages through the Twentieth Century. How have urban structures and social group identities changed from early city states to modern metropolis with sprawling urbanization? What are the “narratives” produced around the city? Italian cities under the rubrics art history, architecture, literature and film.

  
  • ARHI 177 PO - 18th C. European Arts


    CrsNo ARHI177 PO

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2012.

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    The European Enlightenment will be explored, with a focus on the visual and performing arts, and with concern for the popularization of the arts through public displays and performances. Field trips to see original 18th-century works are planned.

  
  • ARHI 177 SC - Eighteenth Century European Arts


    CrsNo ARHI177 SC

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 178 PO - Black Aesthetics and the Politics of (Re)presentation


    CrsNo ARHI178 PO

    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    The visual arts produced by people of African descent in the U.S. from the colonial era to the present. Emphasis on Black artists’ changing relationship to African arts and cultures, the emergence of an oppositional aesthetic tradition that interrogates visual constructions of “Blackness” and “Whiteness,” gender and sexuality as a means of revisioning representational practices. Recommended prior course in art history, Africana studies, gender and women’s studies or media studies.

  
  • ARHI 179 PO - Modern Architecture, City, Landscape and Sustainability


    CrsNo ARHI179 PO

    When Offered: Offered alternate years; next offered spring 2015.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Survey of “Modernist” traditions of architecture and city planning (19th – 21st centuries), tracing the “roots” of “sustainability” from the Spanish tradition through Arts and Crafts Movement to Bauhaus machine aesthetic to “post-modernism” and “sustainable architecture”—the new “Gesamtkunstwerk” (“total work of art”). Los Angeles within these global contexts.

  
  • ARHI 180 SC - Early 20th Century European Avant-Gardes


    CrsNo ARHI180 SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 181 PO - Modern Into Contemporary


    CrsNo ARHI181 PO

    When Offered: One-time only; spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    An overview of significant issues and movements in art from 1945-1989. Mainstream and alternative art movements are discussed in relation to the cultural politics of the post-World War Two era. Topics include Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Minimalism, Performance and Conceptual Art, Process Art, Land Art, Site-Specificity, Institutional Critique, Feminist Art, and the Culture Wars of the 1980s. Emphasis is on North American and Western Europe, with comparisons to emerging global art centers.

  
  • ARHI 181 PZ - Modern Into Contemporary


    CrsNo ARHI181 PZ

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 183 PZ - The Art World Since 1989


    CrsNo ARHI183 PZ

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 184 PO - Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism: A Social History of North American Art


    CrsNo ARHI184 PO

    When Offered: Spring 2015.

    Instructor(s): F.Pohl

    A comparative analysis of artistic production in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico in the 20th and 21st centuries. Examines issues of race, class, gender, sexuality and the relationships between artistic theories and practices, economic developments and social and political movements (e.g., the Mexican Revolution, the Depression, the Women’s Movement).

  
  • ARHI 185 SC - History of Photography


    CrsNo ARHI185 SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 185K PO - Topics: History of Photography: American Landscape


    CrsNo ARHI185K PO

    When Offered: Fall 2014.

    Instructor(s): K. Howe

    Seminar: Topics in the History of Photography. Intensive investigation of the production, distribution and reception of photographs through the lens of a specific theme, region, or historical moment. Topic Fall 2014: The American Landscape in Photographs: 19th century to Contemporary Critique. Includes field trips. Letter Grade only. May be repeated twice for credit.

  
  • ARHI 186A PO - Theories of Contemporary Art


    CrsNo ARHI186A PO

    When Offered: Spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Based on close readings of key writings by artists, critics, curators, and scholars, this discussion-based seminar focuses on the evolving aesthetic, social-political, and theoretical discourses that have informed the art world since World War Two. Topics to be addressed include modernism, postmodernism, mass media, feminism and gender theory, censorship, notions of identitiy, multiculturalism, postcolonialism, and globalization.

  
  • ARHI 186B PZ - Seminar: Topics in Contemporary Art


    CrsNo ARHI186B PZ

    Instructor(s): B. Anthes

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 186CSC - Seminar: Topics in Asian Art


    CrsNo ARHI186C SC

    Instructor(s): B. Coats

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 186E PO - Art and Activism


    CrsNo ARHI186E PO

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): F. Pohl

    Examines ways in which North American (Canada, the U.S. and Mexico) artists have used their work in the 20th and 21st centuries to engage in political activism, either on the street through performances and protests, or at specific physical and/or virtual sites through murals, paintings, posters, prints, sculptures, installations or websites.

  
  • ARHI 186G PO - Gendering the Renaissance


    CrsNo ARHI186G PO

    When Offered: Spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): G. Gorse

    Takes up historian Joan Kelly’s challenge, “Did women have a Renaissance?” Expands the question to cultural constructs of the male and female body, sexuality, identity, homosexuality and lesbianism and their implications for the visual arts, literature and the history of early modern Europe (14th – 17th centuries).

  
  • ARHI 186KSC - Seminar in Modern Art


    CrsNo ARHI186K SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 186L PO - Critical Race Theory, Representation and the Rule of Law


    CrsNo ARHI186L PO

    When Offered: Spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    Examines the role of law in constructing and maintaining racialized, gendered and classed disparities of justice, as well as the intellectual, aesthetic, scientific and political convergences of critical jurisprudence with representational practices in African Diasporic visual arts. Suggested: previous course in either Africana, Asian American, Chicano/a or gender and women’s studies.

  
  • ARHI 186MSC - Seminar in 20th Century Art


    CrsNo ARHI186M SC

    Instructor(s): M. MacNaughton

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 186P PO - Women, Art and Ideology


    CrsNo ARHI186P PO

    When Offered: Spring 2015.

    Instructor(s): F. Pohl

    Examines images of and by women and the critical writings that attempt to locate these images within the history of art. First year students need permission. Topic for 2015: Image and Text in Feminist Art of North America (Canada, the US., and Mexico). Letter grade only. May be repeated twice for credit.

  
  • ARHI 186Q PO - Reading the Art Museum


    CrsNo ARHI186Q PO

    When Offered: Fall 2013.

    Instructor(s): K. Howe

    Investigation of the art museum through history. The emphasis is on reading the ways in which museums structure the experience of art as they relate to intellectual history of “experience” as a form of knowledge, integration, consumption. Our field is the Euro-American museum from the 19th century to the present. Includes field trips. Instructor permission only. Letter grade only.

  
  • ARHI 186T PO - Art and Time


    CrsNo ARHI186T PO

    When Offered: Last offered spring 2013.

    Instructor(s): A. Reed

    Technological developments over the past 200 years have altered relations between art and time. How has moving from painting to lithography, photography, film and digital media influenced the creation of art and its relation to beholders? Considering North America and Europe since 1800, we explore relations between still and moving images and ask how artists manipulate our experience of time. First-year students require instructor permission to enroll.

  
  • ARHI 186W PO - Whiteness: Race, Sex and Representation


    CrsNo ARHI186W PO

    When Offered: Spring 2014.

    Instructor(s): P. Jackson

    Interrogation of linguistics, conceptual and practical solipsisms that contribute to the construction and normalization of  “Whiteness” in aesthetics and visual culture. Questions dialectics of “Blackness” and “Whiteness” that dominate Western intellectual thought and popular culture, thereby informing notions and representations of race, gender and women’s or media studies. Letter grade only.

  
  • ARHI 187 SC - Old New Media


    CrsNo ARHI187 SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 188 SC - Representing the Metropolis


    CrsNo ARHI188 SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 189 SC - European Modernism 1840-1940


    CrsNo ARHI189 SC

    Instructor(s): J. Koss

    See the Scripps College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ARHI 190 PO - Senior Seminar


    CrsNo ARHI190 PO

    When Offered: Each fall.

    Instructor(s): J. Koss; B. Anthes; F. Pohl; G. Gorse; E. Emerick

    An examination of methodological and theoretical issues in art history through readings and student-led discussions. Guidance on research and writing the thesis. Students also meet outside of class with their primary thesis readers throughout the semester and turn in one thesis chapter at the end of the semester.

  
  • ARHI 191 PO - Senior Thesis - Art History


    CrsNo ARHI191 PO

    When Offered: Each spring.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    The continuation of the researching and writing of an original investigation of a topic in art history begun in ARHI 190 PO. Students will work independently, but in constant contact with their thesis readers. Letter grade only. “C” or better required to satisfy the major requirement.

  
  • ARHI 199DRPO - Art History: Directed Readings


    CrsNo ARHI199DRPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Syllabus reflects workload of a standard course in the department or program. Examinations or papers equivalent to a standard course. Regular interaction with the faculty supervisor. Weekly meetings are the norm. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • ARHI 199IRPO - Art History: Independent Research


    CrsNo ARHI199IRPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    A substantial and significant piece of original research or creative product produced. Pre-requisite course work required. Available for full- or half-course credit.

  
  • ARHI 199RAPO - Art History: Research Assistship


    CrsNo ARHI199RAPO

    When Offered: Each semester.

    Instructor(s): Staff

    Lab notebook, research summary or other product appropriate to the discipline is required. Half-course credit only.


Asian American Studies

  
  • ASAM 022 PZ - Asian American Wellness


    CrsNo ASAM022 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 030 PZ - Asian American Food Politics


    CrsNo ASAM030 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 075 AA - Asian American and Queer Zines


    CrsNo ASAM075 AA

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 075 PZ - Asian American and Queer Zines


    CrsNo ASAM075 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 077 PZ - Tattoos in American Pop Culture


    CrsNo ASAM077 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 082 PZ - Racial Politics of Teaching


    CrsNo ASAM082 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 086 PZ - Social Documentation


    CrsNo ASAM086 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 090 PZ - Asian American and Multi-Racial Community Studies


    CrsNo ASAM090 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 102 PZ - Fieldwork: Asian Americans


    CrsNo ASAM102 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 103 PZ - Asian American Voices


    CrsNo ASAM103 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 110 PZ - (Mis)Representations: Near and Far East


    CrsNo ASAM110 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 111 PZ - Asian Americans in Education


    CrsNo ASAM111 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 115 PZ - Theories and Methods in Asian American Studies


    CrsNo ASAM115 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 120 PZ - Critical Readings in Filipino American Studies


    CrsNo ASAM120 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 125 PZ - Intro to Asian American History


    CrsNo ASAM125 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 128 AA - Tattoos, Piercing, and Body Adornment


    CrsNo ASAM128 AA

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 128 PZ - Tattoos, Piercing and Body Adornment


    CrsNo ASAM128 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 130 PZ - Science, Technology, Asian America


    CrsNo ASAM130 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 134 PZ - South Asian American Experiences


    CrsNo ASAM134 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 135 PZ - Filam Experiences


    CrsNo ASAM135 PZ

    Please see the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 135 PZ - Filipino American Experiences


    CrsNo ASAM135 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 142 PZ - Transatlantic Black and Asian Experiences


    CrsNo ASAM142 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 150 AA - Contemp Asian American Issues


    CrsNo ASAM150 AA

    Instructor(s): H. Thai

    Survey of contemporary empirical studies focusing on Asian American experiences in the U.S. and globally; major themes include race, class, gender, sexuality, marriage/family, education, consumption, childhoods, aging, demography and the rise of transmigration. Readings and other course materials will primarily focus on the period since 1965. Spring 2010; offered alternate years.

  
  • ASAM 160 AA - Asian American Women’s Experiences


    CrsNo ASAM160 AA

    Instructor(s): Staff

    An interdisciplinary examination of Asian and Pacific Islander American women: gender roles, mass-media stereotypes, Asian women’s feminism versus mainstream feminism and the impact of sexism and racism on lives of Asian American women through education, work and home life.

  
  • ASAM 179 AA - Spec Topics: Asian Amer Studies


    CrsNo ASAM179 AA

    Please see the Harvey Mudd College Catalog for a description of this course.

  
  • ASAM 188 PZ - Decolonizing Education


    CrsNo ASAM188 PZ

    See the Pitzer College Catalog for a description of this course.

 

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