Cultural studies combines diverse fields, including literary theory, critical theory, film and video studies, popular culture studies, sociology, and cultural anthropology to study cultural phenomena.
This course provides a broad introduction to the comparative study of peoples, cultures, and languages from major regions of the world. Topical themes may include health, the environment, language, ...
Classes listed under Cultural Electives, Part A, may also be used to satisfy this requirement, but the same course cannot be used for both requirements (a minimum of 36 semester hours are required for ...
Develop and perfect your French and other foreign language skills, celebrate the diversity of cultures from around the world, and even study abroad with our Foreign Language & Culture Studies major.
Work toward an M.A. in American Studies at UW in the Department of American Cultural Studies. Our 2 year program offers students professional development in interdisciplinary cultural studies. Through ...
Cultural studies is inherently an interdisciplinary field in which insights from language, literature, history, politics, economics, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, and other scholarly fields ...
Tufts’ Department of Romance Studies will offer a new French & Francophone cultural studies major, in addition to a French Literary Studies track this Fall. The new major reflects a push within the ...
For over three decades, the Center for Cultural Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has been a vibrant hub for intellectual exploration. The center brings together a multidisciplinary ...
But really–who is your daddy? Phillip Maciak teaches literature and American studies at Washington University in St. Louis and pens TV criticism for The New Republic, but his current academic interest ...
Students in last semester’s “North Korea and Religion” course studied eleven memoirs written by North Korean defectors. Then, on the final day of class in December, they heard directly from one. The ...
Some of the differences are truly remarkable (White, 2020). Africans who grow up in rural villages are much less susceptible to the Müller-Lyer illusion than Europeans who grow up in cities. The ...
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