The Kenyon College faculty voted to change from Kenyon units to semester hours. This change will go into effect for all students who start at the College in the fall of 2024. Both systems will be used throughout the course catalog with the Kenyon units being listed first. Please see the table below for details or jump to the list of courses.
Units to Semester Credits Conversion Chart
Units | Semester Credits |
---|---|
0.13 | 1 |
0.25 | 2 |
0.37/0.38 | 3 |
0.5 | 4 |
0.62/0.63 | 5 |
0.75 | 6 |
1 | 8 |
This course provides students with critical frameworks for thinking about the social construction of gender at the personal and institutional levels. Emphasis is placed on diverse women’s significant contributions to knowledge and culture; to other areas of gender studies, including men’s studies, family studies and the study of sexuality; and to the intersections of various forms of oppression both within and outside of the U.S. The course includes both scholarly as well as personal texts, visual as well as written text. This counts toward the introductory requirement for the major. This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. No prerequisite. Offered every semester.
This course is designed to help students develop a critical framework for thinking and writing about intersectional issues related to sexuality, sex, gender identity and gender expression. The course takes a broad view of examining queer and transgender issues from sociopolitical, legal, psychological, biological, cultural, ethical, philosophical and historical frameworks. We look at the fields of queer theory and LGBTQ+ studies out of which some of the most innovative and challenging developments in modern cultural studies are arising. Additionally, we examine the ways in which society interacts with queer and transgender identities in a number of spheres, including politics, health care, the arts, the sciences and more. This counts toward the introductory and diversity and globalization requirements for the major. This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. No prerequisite.
This course examines how popular culture (e.g., media) represents gender through making observations, reading background theory, examining content analysis research and conducting our own research. We examine the extent to which popular culture depicts gender-stereotyped behavior, the content of the gender stereotypes, the possible reasons that stereotypes are portrayed, and the likely effects of these stereotypes on the behavior of individuals and the structure of society. To the extent possible, we examine the intersection of stereotypes about gender with those associated with race/ethnicity, social class, age and sexuality. This course satisfies the quantitative reasoning requirement because students learn about descriptive statistics and put them to use by conducting their own content analysis (in a small group) and presenting and writing about the results of their research. In a service-learning component to the course, students develop a media literacy lesson for high school students based on what they learn about their topic. This course is designed for first-year students. This counts toward the introductory requirement for the major. This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. No prerequisite. Offered occasionally.
Through focus on a specific topic, this course explores how men’s lives are shaped by and shape the gendered social order. Macro and micro perspectives guide discussions focusing on how men behave in particular contexts and how they perceive themselves, other men and women in diverse situations. Specific topics investigating the production of masculinities take into account the interplay among the cultural, interpersonal and individual layers of social life while considering how men’s efforts are enabled or constrained by key socially relevant characteristics (primarily age, race/ethnicity, class and sexual orientation) through investigations, for instance, of particular sites (e.g., playgrounds, work space, home, schools, athletic venues, prisons). This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. No prerequisite. Offered occasionally.
This course examines the impact of globalization on feminist discourses that describe the cross-cultural experiences of women. Transnational feminist theories and methodologies destabilize Western feminisms, challenging notions of subjectivity and place and their connections to experiences of race, class and gender. The course builds on four key concepts: development, democratization, cultural change and colonialism. Because transnational feminisms are represented by the development of women's global movements, the course considers examples of women's global networks and the ways in which they destabilized concepts such as citizenship and rights. We also examine how transnational feminisms have influenced women's productions in the fields of literature and art. Key questions include: How does the history of global feminisms affect local women's movements? What specific issues have galvanized women's movements across national and regional borders? How do feminism and critiques of colonialism and imperialism intersect? What role might feminist agendas play in addressing current global concerns? How do transnational feminisms build and sustain communities and connections to further their agendas? This counts toward the diversity and globalization requirement for the major. This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. Prerequisite: Any GSS course. Offered every other year.
In this course, we read both historical and contemporary feminist theory with the goal of understanding the multiplicity of feminist approaches to women’s experiences, the representation of women and women’s relative positions in societies. Theoretical positions represented include liberal, cultural, psychoanalytic, socialist and poststructuralist feminism. We explore the relationship of these theories to issues of race, class, sexual preference and ethnicity through an examination of the theoretical writings of women of color and non-Western women. This counts toward the concentration and the mid-level requirement for the major. This course paired with any other 0.5 unit WGS/GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. Prerequisite: any WGS/GSS course, approved departmental course. Offered every other year.
This class examines feminist critiques of dominant methodologies and theories of knowledge creation. It focuses on the following questions: How do we know something? Who gets to decide what counts as knowledge? How do gender, sexuality, race, class and other identity categories matter in research? In exploring these questions, we will discuss how power is exercised in the production of knowledge, how the norms of objectivity and universalism perpetuate dominance and exclusion, why marginalized people are often seen as lacking epistemic authority, and what it means to have knowledge produced from a feminist standpoint. We explore a variety of alternative epistemologies and methodologies proposed by feminist and LGBTQ theorists and researchers. Participants in this class will learn several qualitative methods and practice using these methods in their own research. In addition, we will discuss ethical issues within a variety of research contexts and what responsibilities feminist researchers have to the broader community. This course counts towards the methodology requirement for the GSS major and is one of the foundational courses for the GSS concentration. This course paired with any other .50 unit/4 semester hour GSS course counts toward the social science diversification requirement. Prerequisite: any GSS course, approved departmental course.
Stories of sexual violence against women serve as foundational myths of a Western culture that bases its prestige upon the rule of law. This course examines some of those narratives, beginning with medieval ideals of courtly love, alongside of legal discourse on sexual assault. The aim is to unpack the parallel practices by which literary and legal narratives are mutually implicated in the system of gender relations that sustains sexual assault, and those that cordon off implementation of sexual assault law from cultural practices that continue to encourage sexual assault (rape culture). Because contemporary American scripts about sex and romance arguably go back to the ideologies of romance, courtship, and seduction represented in courtly love literature of the Middle Ages, there is much to be gained by looking at literature in tandem with legal procedures. To explore the complementary roles of law and literature in sustaining and challenging sexual assault, we use the recent history of Title IX. We are interested in the ways that the existing legal order challenges, but also contributes to--perhaps even perpetuates--the disempowerment and devaluation of women. As sexual assault deprives women of physical, spiritual and psychic integrity, we return throughout the course to narratives of resistance, justice, survival and healing. This class engages difficult, often deeply personal issues. We approach all material, topics and content from an academic perspective, but it will engage difficult topics that may elicit a highly emotional response. This course counts toward the elective requirement for the major. No prerequisites.
This course provides the opportunity for those students taking WGS 481 in the spring to plan the course. Students select a topic, order books, plan the syllabus and design a project. In addition, they read about course design and pedagogy so that they are prepared to take responsibility for collaboratively teaching the course in the spring. Offered only on a credit/no credit basis. This course is required for the major. This interdisciplinary course does not count toward the completion of any diversification requirement. No prerequisite. Senior standing.
The senior colloquium is organized around a theme determined by senior majors and concentrators in consultation with the instructor during the semester prior to the beginning of the course. Previous topics include "Women and Madness," "The Politics of the Bathroom" and "Gender and Tourism." This course is required for the major. Prerequisite: GSS 480 or permission of instructor. Offered every spring.
Individual study enables students to examine an area not typically covered by courses regularly offered in the program. The course can be arranged with a faculty member in any department but must conform to the usual requirements for credit in the program: Gender is a central focus of the individual study, and the course draws on feminist theory and/or feminist methodologies. The amount of work should be similar to that in any other 400-level course. Individual study courses may be used toward the major or concentration. To enroll, a student should first contact a faculty member and, in consultation with that professor, develop a proposal. The proposal, which must be approved by the program director, should provide a brief description of the course/project (including any previous classes that qualify the student), a preliminary bibliography or reading list, an assessment component (what will be graded and when) and major topical areas to be covered during the semester. The student and faculty member should plan to meet approximately one hour per week or the equivalent, at the discretion of the instructor. Because students must enroll for individual studies by the end of the seventh class day of each semester, they should begin discussion of the proposed individual study by the semester before, so that there is time to devise the proposal and seek departmental approval. This interdisciplinary course does not count toward the completion of any diversification requirement.
The major who wishes to participate in the Honors Program must have an overall GPA of 3.33 and a GPA of 3.5 in the major. The candidate in honors completes all requirements for the major, the Senior Capstone and two semesters of independent study and designs and completes a research project. This project should integrate feminist theory and methodologies as well as the student’s chosen disciplinary or interdisciplinary cluster. Each honors student prepares an annotated bibliography on the chosen project midway through the fall semester. After approval, the senior honors project is undertaken in consultation with a project advisor. Students are encouraged to think boldly and innovatively about the kinds of projects they undertake and about how those projects interact with and benefit their communities. Senior honors projects might include gender-focused sociological or historical studies undertaken locally; exhibitions, productions or installations of gender-exploratory art, music or theater; or political, social and/or environmental service-oriented or activist work. Students are closely mentored throughout their projects and, in the spring, are evaluated by an external evaluator and faculty in the program and in relevant disciplines. The evaluators assess the strength of the students’ overall work, as well as the strength of their self-designed, project-appropriate public presentations of that work. Permission of instructor and department chair required.
The major who wishes to participate in the Honors Program must have an overall GPA of 3.33 and a GPA of 3.5 in the major. The candidate in honors completes all requirements for the major, the Senior Capstone and two semesters of independent study and designs and completes a research project. This project should integrate feminist theory and methodologies as well as the student’s chosen disciplinary or interdisciplinary cluster. Each honors student prepares an annotated bibliography on the chosen project midway through the fall semester. After approval, the senior honors project is undertaken in consultation with a project advisor. Students are encouraged to think boldly and innovatively about the kinds of projects they undertake and about how those projects interact with and benefit their communities. Senior honors projects might include gender-focused sociological or historical studies undertaken locally; exhibitions, productions or installations of gender-exploratory art, music or theater; or political, social and/or environmental service-oriented or activist work. Students are closely mentored throughout their projects and, in the spring, are evaluated by an external evaluator and faculty in the program and in relevant disciplines. The evaluators assess the strength of the students’ overall work, as well as the strength of their self-designed, project-appropriate public presentations of that work. Permission of instructor and department chair required.
Concentration
Courses that meet the requirement for this concentration:
AFDS 410 | Between Womanist and Feminist Theories |
ARHS 375 | Topics in Renaissance and Baroque Art |
CHNS 222 | Women of the Inner Chambers (in English) |
ECON 378 | Economics of Women and Work |
ENGL 210 | Proper Ladies and Women Writers |
ENGL 214 | Reading and Writing Gender and Sexuality |
ENGL 223 | Writing Medieval Women |
ENGL 227 | Love, Sex and Desire in Medieval Romance |
ENGL 266 | Decolonization and Violence |
ENGL 269 | Introduction to Caribbean Literature |
ENGL 286 | Transgressive Friendships in American Literature |
ENGL 359 | Middlemarch |
ENGL 361 | Pacific Poetry |
ENGL 362 | 20th-Century Irish Literature |
ENGL 368 | Departures and Arrivals |
ENGL 370 | Transnational South Asia |
ENGL 371 | Whitman and Dickinson |
ENGL 381 | Multiple Americas: Narratives of the Hemisphere |
ENGL 384 | Imagining America in the Novel |
ENGL 386 | Toni Morrison |
ENGL 388 | Studies in 20th-Century African American Literature |
ENGL 389 | Gender Sexuality in Native American Literature |
ENGL 390 | Black Women Writers |
ENGL 453 | Jane Austen |
ENGL 461 | Virginia Woolf |
FREN 340 | Identity in the Francophone Novel |
GERM 250 | Politics and Gender in German Cinema after 1990 (in English) |
HIST 208 | U.S. Women's History |
HIST 232 | Modern European Women’s History |
HIST 236 | Modern Germany: Gender, Race, and Class |
HIST 341 | African Women in Film and Fiction |
HIST 352 | Family and State in East Asia |
HIST 370 | Women and Gender in the Modern Middle East |
HIST 407 | Manhood/Masculinity in U.S. History |
PHIL 209 | Feminist Philosophy |
PSCI 315 | Gender and Politics in the U.S. |
PSYC 221 | Adult Psychopathology and Social Suffering |
PSYC 227 | Cross-Cultural Psychology |
PSYC 228 | Latino Psychology |
PSYC 246 | Psychology of Women & Gender |
RLST 103 | Encountering Religion: Gender and Sexuality |
RLST 219 | Christian Mysticism |
RLST 345 | Religion for Robots: Cyborgs, Sci-Fi and Posthumanism |
SOCY 225 | Notions of Family |
SOCY 231 | Gender, Power, and Policy |
SOCY 232 | Sexual Harassment: Normative Expectations and Legal Questions |
SOCY 241 | Sociology of Gender |
SOCY 250 | Systems of Stratification |
SOCY 255 | Women, Crime and the Law |
SOCY 277 | Sociology of Sexualities |
SOCY 421 | Gender Stratification |
SOCY 422 | Topics in Social Stratification |
SOCY 463 | Intersectional Theory |
SPAN 280 | Cultural Productions of the Borderlands |
SPAN 281 | Resisting Borders: Contemporary Latino(a) Literature and Film |
SPAN 347 | Sex, Science and the Realist Novel in Spain |
SPAN 353 | The Literature of National Experience in Argentina |
SPAN 371 | Gender, Identity and Power in Women's Literature |