Page 134 - 2018-2019 Academic Catalog
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joyful connection, but sometimes also as irrational and unruly desire that leads to pain and suffering. Similarly humans are embodied as gendered beings and all human experience is gendered experience. While we were meant to delight in our maleness or femaleness, gender is often experienced through shame and confusion. This course provide an overview of the broad field of human sexuality exploring psychological, developmental, relational, sociocultural, political, ethical, theological, and spiritual aspects of human sexuality and gender. Special attention will be paid to the phenomenology of sexual and gendered experience. (3 credits) (Cross-listed as PSY 225)
300 Critical Theory
This course helps students refine a range of literary-critical skills, including close-reading, and contextual analysis, as well as familiarizes them with historic schools of literary theory , such as structuralism, deconstruction, reader-response, psychoanalysis, and gender theory. The student will gain skills in evaluating, reflecting on and writing about both primary literary texts and secondary criticism. A few novels of the instructor’s choosing will help to orient the course around pertinent themes and subject matter. Required for ENG, HIS, and HUM concentrations. Prerequisites: ENG 101, ENG 102, and ENG 201. (3 credits) (Cross-listed as ENG 300)
311 Aesthetics
  In this course, we will explore beauty and imagination in human life. The course will include a brief historical overview of perspectives on beauty and imagination in classical and biblical thought, during the medieval period, during the Renaissance and Reformation, and into the Modern age, with particular attention to the late 19th and 20th century Reformed perspectives. We will continue with a few of the key questions raised in philosophical aesthetics: What is the aesthetic? What is art? What is beauty? We will also turn our attention to beauty and the
 imagination in everyday life and in popular culture. (3 credits) (Cross-listed as PHL 311)
313 American Civilization and Culture
This course unfolds the history of the American regime through a careful study of key public documents, speeches, literary works, films, and other cultural artifacts. Special attention is given to the colonial antecedents of the American republic, the principles and practice of the founding generation, controversies among the second and third generations of American statesmen over slavery, and the democratization and the reconceptualization of the American regime that paved the way for the introduction of Pragmatism, Pluralism, Progressivism, Imperialism, and the growth of the American administrative state. The course closes with a discussion of the nature and trajectory of the twenty-first century American regime. (3 credits)
385- Special Topics in Humanities
395 These courses will cover a variety of topics that are not studied in depth in other departmental
courses. Topics will be chosen according to student interest and instructor expertise. (1-3 credits)
499 Humanities Capstone: Paper/Project and Presentation
The Liberal Studies major at Providence Christian College culminates in two capstone courses. These courses are designed to allow students to demonstrate their mastery of institution-wide
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