Catalog
General Education Concentrations
A defining component of a Bates education is a General Education program that ensures breadth and depth of study. The General Education requirements are described in the Academic Program section of the catalog.
General Education concentrations challenge students to develop significant expertise outside their major. Each concentration consists of four courses chosen from a faculty-designed menu that is structured on the basis of a clearly articulated organizing principle. Some concentrations focus on a particular issue or topic or area of inquiry identified by several professors working across different disciplines; others are formed within a single discipline. Some concentrations may include relevant co-curricular experiences such as significant community service, orchestra, theatrical performance, or volunteer work. The required concentrations may also be fulfilled by completing a minor or a second major. General Education concentrations appear on the transcript.
The concentrations currently offered are described below, including requirements, exclusions, course lists, and eligible co-curricular components. Please note, courses taken pass/fail do not count toward any General Education requirements, including General Education concentrations. For more information, please consult the Academic Program section of the Catalog.
- Ancient Greek (C020)
- The Ancient World (C054)
- Applying Mathematical Methods (C006)
- Archaeology and Material Culture (C025)
- Asian Art and Literature (C033)
- Asian Modernity (C053)
- Asian Narrative Traditions (C052)
- Beauty and Desire (C055)
- Bridging El Atlántico (C016)
- Buddhism (C002)
- Chemistry (C003)
- Children, Adolescents, School (C030)
- Chinese Language (C044)
- Chinese Society and Culture (C047)
- The City in History: Urbanism and Constructed Spaces (C057)
- Class, Inequity, Poverty, and Justice (C008)
- The Collaborative Project (C012)
- Colonialism (C059)
- Color: Sight and Perception (C036)
- Conflict and Threat: War and Disease (C064)
- Considering Africa (C022)
- Culture and Meaning (C026)
- Culture and Public Health in Chile (C092)
- Dance (C011)
- Diasporas (C038)
- Digital and Computational Studies (C093)
- Early Modern World (C066)
- English (C086)
- Environment, Place, History (C068)
- Evidence: Documentation and Reality (C017)
- Field Studies: Natural Science (C058)
- Film and Media Studies (C019)
- French and Francophone Studies (C034)
- The Geosphere (C007)
- German Language and Culture (C071)
- Globalization (C014)
- Hazards in Nature (C063)
- The Human Body (C027)
- Identity, Race, and Ethnicity (C037)
- Improvisation and Experimentation in the Arts (C023)
- Japanese Language (C043)
- Japanese Society and Culture (C046)
- Knowledge, Action, and the Public Good (C091)
- Latin (C010)
- Latin American Studies (C072)
- Law and Society (C013)
- Learning and Teaching (C084)
- Material Culture (C083)
- Medieval Worlds (C051)
- Middle East in Global Context (C090)
- Modern Europe (C024)
- Music and Culture (C080)
- Philosophy (C042)
- Philosophy and Psychology (C031)
- Physics of the Large and Small (C056)
- Popular Culture (C040)
- Post/Colonial Issues in French and Spanish (C032)
- Premodern History (C048)
- Producing Culture: Arts and Audience (C061)
- Public Health (C065)
- Queer Studies (C009)
- Racisms (C041)
- Religious Studies (C001)
- Renaissance: Arts and Letters (C035)
- Russian Language (C069)
- Sound (C005)
- South Asian Studies (C087)
- Spanish in Tarragona (C089)
- Theater Arts (C028)
- The Translated World (C067)
- Visible Ideas: 2D and 3D Design (C029)
- Water and Society (C070)
- Women and Gender in Asia (C050)
- Women and Writing (C060)
- Writing Spain (C018)
Ancient Greek (C020)
This concentration advances students with skills and insights in ancient Greek language, literature, and culture. H. Walker.
Requirements
Four credits, two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Major sin classical and medieval studies may pursue the concentration only if ancient Greek is not used to fulfill their major requirements. No more than two courses from this concentration may count towards a major in Classical and Medieval Studies
Courses
- GRK 101. Elementary Ancient Greek I.
- GRK 102. Elementary Ancient Greek II.
- GRK 201. Classical Prose.
- GRK 202. Classical Poetry.
- GRK 203. Prose about Archaic Greece.
- GRK 204. Poetry from Archaic Greece.
- GRK 301. Classical Prose: Advanced.
- GRK 302. Classical Poetry: Advanced.
- GRK 303. Prose about Archaic Greece: Advanced.
- GRK 304. Poetry from Archaic Greece: Advanced.
- GRK s10. Elementary Ancient Greek II.
The Ancient World (C054)
This concentration introduces students to peoples of the Greco-Roman and Judaic traditions in the ancient world. Students examine the history, literature, religions, social practices, and material cultures of the Greeks, Romans, and Israelites, as well as the different methodologies scholars employ to understand a distant and different past that still critically shapes the experience of the modern Western world. L. Maurizio.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Only one course from this concentration may count for a major in Classical and Medieval Studies.
Courses
- CM/GS 204. Classics and the History of Sexuality.
- CM/GS 217. Sex and Gender in Ancient Rome.
- CM/HI 101. Introduction to the Ancient World.
- CM/HI 108. Roman Civilization: The Republic.
- CM/HI 109. Roman Civilization: The Empire.
- CM/HI 112. Ancient Greek History.
- CM/HI 298. Slavery in Ancient Greece and Rome.
- CM/PL 271. Ancient Philosophy.
- CM/RE 218. Greek and Roman Myths.
- CM/RE 235. Introduction to the Hebrew Bible.
- CM/RE 236. Introduction to the New Testament.
- CM/RE 238. Jews and Judaism in Antiquity.
- FYS 191. Love and Friendship in the Classical World.
- FYS 345. Classical Myths and Contemporary Art.
- RFSS 100. What is Rhetoric?.
Applying Mathematical Methods (C006)
This concentration encourages students to appreciate the utility of mathematics, make connections between mathematics and other subjects, and apply mathematical methods in a relevant discipline (e.g., natural or social sciences, arts, humanities) or in a real-world setting (e.g., traffic control, scheduling, manufacturing). A. Salerno.
Requirements
Four credits including two from list A and two from list B, with no more than two credits from the same department/program.
List A (Mathematics-based Courses): BI/MA255A; BIO 244; DC/NA 355A; ECON 250, 255; EC/MA 342; FYS 466; MA/PH 255E; MATH 205, 206, 214, 215, 219, 355B, 355D, s45M; NRSC 205; PHYS 301
List B (Application-based Courses): BI/NS 308; BIO 270; CHEM 107A, 108A, 301, 302, 310; EACS 210, 230, 240; EA/PH 220; ECON 260, 270; ENVR 203; MUS 231, 232; NS/PY 357; PHIL 195; PHYS 103, 105, 106, 107, 108, 112, 211, 216, 222; PLTC 310; THEA 132, 232, 236
One of the courses may be replaced by a supervised research position or internship approved by the appropriate department. In addition to the four courses or co-curricular components, students are encouraged to complete an integrative project that demonstrates mastery of applied mathematical methods. This project is usually completed in the context of a course or co-curricular experience. Students are expected to present their project in a public forum (e.g., class presentation, conference, Mount David Summit). Students are required to consult with the concentration coordinator as early as possible for advice and guidance in completing this project. A maximum of two courses taken abroad (one in mathematics and one in an applied discipline) may be substituted for Bates courses, with prior approval of the concentration coordinator. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in mathematics or a major in economics.
Courses
- BI/MA 255A. Mathematical Models in Biology.
- BI/NS 308. Neurobiology.
- BIO 244. Biostatistics.
- CHEM 107A. Atomic and Molecular Structure/Lab.
- CHEM 108A. Chemical Reactivity/Lab.
- CHEM 301. Quantum Chemistry.
- CHEM 302. Statistical Thermodynamics.
- CHEM 310. Biophysical Chemistry.
- DC/MA 355A. Numerical Analysis.
- DC/MA 355D. Dynamical Systems and Computer Science.
- EA/PH 220. Dynamical Climate.
- EACS 210. Sedimentary Processes and Environments/Lab.
- EACS 230. Earth Structure and Dynamics/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- ECON 250. Statistics.
- ECON 255. Econometrics.
- ECON 260. Intermediate Microeconomic Theory.
- ECON 270. Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory.
- ENVR 203. Scientific Approaches to Environmental Issues/Lab.
- FYS 466. Math and the Art of M. C. Escher.
- MA/PH 255E. Nonlinear Models and Chaos.
- MATH 205. Linear Algebra.
- MATH 206. Multivariable Calculus.
- MATH 214. Probability.
- MATH 215. Statistics.
- MATH 219. Differential Equations.
- MATH 221. Introduction to Abstraction.
- MATH 355B. Graph Algorithms.
- MUS 231. Music Theory I.
- MUS 232. Music Theory II.
- NRSC 205. Statistical Methods.
- NS/PY 357. Computational Neuroscience.
- PHIL 195. Introduction to Logic.
- PHYS 103. Musical Acoustics/Lab.
- PHYS 106. Energy and Environment.
- PHYS 107. Introductory Physics of Living Systems I/Lab.
- PHYS 108. Introductory Physics of Living Systems II/Lab.
- PHYS 211. Newtonian Mechanics.
- PHYS 216. Computational Physics.
- PHYS 222. Electricity and Magnetism.
- PHYS 301. Mathematical Methods of Physics.
- PLTC 310. Public Opinion.
- THEA 132. Theater Technology.
- THEA 232. Lighting Design.
- THEA 236. Pattern Drafting and Draping.
Co-curricular Activities
Research Experience/Internship.
A supervised research experience such as an NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) position or an appropriate internship may replace one mathematics-based or one applications-based course, depending on the content. Supervised by the appropriate department or program.
Archaeology and Material Culture (C025)
This concentration acquaints students with archaeology, the subfield of anthropology dealing with the study of material remains and the study of material culture from other theoretical perspectives. K. Barnett.
Requirements
Four credits, one of which must be a methodology class from the following list: ANTH 103, INDS 219, or ANTH s32. One co-curricular component involving substantial archaeological fieldwork may be substituted for a credit, at the discretion of the anthropology department. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in anthropology.
Courses
Co-curricular Activities
Fieldwork.
Substantial archaelogical fieldwork. Supervised by the anthropology department.
Internship.
Supervised by the anthropology department.
Asian Art and Literature (C033)
This concentration focuses on Asian art history, visual cultures, and traditional literature. Y. Liu.
Requirements
Any four credits, with not more than two credits from any one subject designation. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration with prior approval by the concentration coordinator. Not open to students who have declared a major in East Asian studies, a minor in Asian studies, or who have declared the following concentrations: 046 (Japanese Society and Literature), 047 (Chinese Society and Culture), and 052 (Asian Narrative Traditions).
Courses
- AS/CI 207. Traditional Chinese Literature in Translation.
- AS/CI 223. Communism, Capitalism, and Cannibalism: New and Emerging Voices in Chinese Literature.
- AS/CI 225. Art and Politics in China.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 130. Japanese Film: Exploring Japanese Horror Films from the Silent Era to the Present.
- AS/JA 215. Film, Literature, and the Cultures of Postwar Japan.
- AS/RE 308. Buddhist Texts in Translation.
- ASIA 235. Supernatural in East Asia.
- AV/AS 234. Chinese Arts and Visual Culture.
- AV/AS 236. Japanese Arts and Visual Culture.
- AV/AS 243. Buddhist Arts and Visual Cultures.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- AV/AS 246. Visual Narratives: Storytelling in East Asian Art.
- AV/AS 247. The Art of Zen Buddhism.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- AV/AS s29. Modern Vietnamese Culture through Film.
- AVC 224. The Japanese Tea Bowl.
Asian Modernity (C053)
This concentration offers students an opportunity to consider the effects of imperialism, globalization, and rapid development on the societies of Asia. W. Chaney.
Requirements
Any four credits. Courses taken while studying in an off-campus program in Asia may substitute for up to two credits with prior approval of the coordinator. This concentration is not available to students majoring or minoring in Chinese, Japanese, or Asian studies.
Courses
- AS/CI 225. Art and Politics in China.
- AS/HI 110. East Asia between Tradition and Modernity.
- AS/HI 274. China in Revolution.
- AS/HI 301B. From Tibet to Taiwan: Frontiers in Chinese History, 1700 to the Present.
- AS/HI s15. Sport, Gender, and the Body in Modern China.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 130. Japanese Film: Exploring Japanese Horror Films from the Silent Era to the Present.
- AS/JA 215. Film, Literature, and the Cultures of Postwar Japan.
- AS/PT 283. International Politics of East Asia.
- AS/PY 260. Cultural Psychology.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
Asian Narrative Traditions (C052)
This concentration explores stories and strategies of storytelling in Asian traditions past and present in literature and in film and other visual arts. T. Nguyen.
Requirements
Any four courses. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Not open to students who have declared a major or minor in Chinese or Japanese, a major in East Asian studies, or a minor in Asian studies, or to students who have declared the following concentration(s): C033 (Asian Art and Literature), C046 (Japanese Society and Culture), C047 (Chinese Society and Culture), or C050 (Women and Gender in Asia).
Courses
- AS/CI 207. Traditional Chinese Literature in Translation.
- AS/CI 223. Communism, Capitalism, and Cannibalism: New and Emerging Voices in Chinese Literature.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 130. Japanese Film: Exploring Japanese Horror Films from the Silent Era to the Present.
- ASIA 235. Supernatural in East Asia.
- AV/AS 246. Visual Narratives: Storytelling in East Asian Art.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
Beauty and Desire (C055)
What does beauty mean? Who arbitrates the boundary between the beautiful and the aberrant? How do we embody desire? This concentration analyzes the manufacture and manipulation of beauty, the politics of desire, and their cultural significance. E. Harwood.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit with a focus on issues of beauty and desire comparable to courses listed below may be applied toward this concentration if judged appropriate upon application to the coordinator.
Courses
- AF/DN 252. Contemporary Issues in Dance.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- AV/CM 241. The Art of Islam.
- AV/CM 250. Vikings, Vandals, and Visigoths: Art in Early Medieval Europe.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 271. Italian Baroque Art.
- AVC 281. Realism and Impressionism.
- AVC 314. Advanced Painting.
- AVC 350. Visual Meaning: Process, Material, Format.
- AVC 390B. Pre-Raphaelitism to Modernism.
- CM/EN 395E. Medieval Romance.
- CM/GS 204. Classics and the History of Sexuality.
- ENG 243. Global Romanticism.
- FYS 191. Love and Friendship in the Classical World.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
- FYS 381. Visualizing Identities.
- FYS 455. Neuroscience Fiction.
- FYS 461. Gut Microbiome: The Next Frontier.
- THEA 235. Fashion: A Survey of Western Culture.
Bridging El Atlántico (C016)
The Spanish language has been a bridge to communicate experiences and artistic expression on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. This concentration explores the cultural production of the Spanish-speaking world, including but not limited to the courtly love tradition that emerged among Spanish-speaking Arab and Jewish poets and its modern home in Latin American popular music; issues of environmental justice, gender, and race; the development of a transnational Spanish-language cinema industry that facilitates the circulation of artists and ideas; and the tradition of human rights in Latin America and Spain. C. Aburto Guzmán.
Requirements
Four credits in Spanish or cross-listed. At least one credit must be a 300-level course. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a minor or major in Hispanic studies.
Courses
- HISP 205. Advanced Spanish.
- HISP 211. Introduction to Literary and Cultural Analysis.
- HISP 222. Short Narrative in the Spanish-speaking World.
- HISP 224. Protest and Justice.
- HISP 228. Screen and Media.
- HISP 360. Independent Study.
- HS/LL 341. Lectura americana de Cervantes.
- INDC 321. Afroambiente: Escritura negra y medio ambiente.
- INDC 390. Afro-Latinoamérica.
Buddhism (C002)
This concentration brings together courses on Buddhism from a variety of perspectives. A. Melnick Dyer.
Requirements
Any four credits. Participation in an appropriate off-campus study program listed below may be substituted for two credits with prior approval:
ISLE Program, Sri Lanka;
SIT Program, Nepal;
Emory Tibetan Studies in Dharamsala;
Antioch College Buddhist Studies in Japan Program - Buddhist studies in Japan;
Antioch College Buddhist Studies in India, Bodhgaya, India.
One non-Bates credit from other programs or institutions may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AS/RE 250. Buddhist Traditions.
- AS/RE 251. Religions of Tibet.
- AS/RE 308. Buddhist Texts in Translation.
- AS/RE 348. Epics of Asia: Myth and Religion.
- AS/RE s28. From Shangri-la to Radical Dharma: Buddhism in North America.
- AV/AS 243. Buddhist Arts and Visual Cultures.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- AV/AS 246. Visual Narratives: Storytelling in East Asian Art.
- AV/AS 247. The Art of Zen Buddhism.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- AV/AS 289. Stupa Towers: Forms, Symbols, and Narratives in Buddhist Architecture.
- GS/RE 311. Buddhism and Gender.
- PHIL 310. Buddhist Philosophy.
Chemistry (C003)
This concentration exposes students to core principles in chemistry and selected additional topics that students can tailor to their interests. T. Lawson.
Requirements
Any four chemistry credits, except for CHEM 218. At least one credit must be at the 200-level or above, and may include CHEM s37 or CHEM s42.
Only one non-Bates course may be applied toward the concentration. That course must be judged comparable to one of those below and must have prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in chemistry, biology, neuroscience, or biochemistry.
Courses
Co-curricular Activities
Independent Research.
A departmentally-approved summer research experience may be applied toward this concentration. Supervised by the chemistry department.
Children, Adolescents, School (C030)
This concentration integrates the study of children and adolescents with the study of education. B. Sale.
Requirements
Four credits, from the list below, no more than two from the same department/program. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Not open to students who declare a minor in teacher education or educational studies.
Courses
- AM/PY 372. Racial and Ethnic Identity Development.
- AS/PY 260. Cultural Psychology.
- DN/ED s29. Tour, Teach, Perform.
- ED/GS 384. Education in a Globalized World.
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- ED/SO 380. Education, Reform, and Politics.
- EDUC 231. Perspectives on Education.
- EDUC 235. Teaching in the Sciences.
- EDUC 255. Adolescent Literacy.
- EDUC 263. Comparative and International Education.
- EDUC 265. Teaching through the Arts.
- EDUC 290. Internship in Education.
- EDUC 343. Learning and Teaching: Theories and Practice.
- EDUC 362. Basic Concepts in Special Education.
- EDUC 378. Ethnographic Approaches to Education.
- EDUC 390. Discipline, Race, and Schooling.
- EDUC s19. Theory and Practice of Writing and Tutoring.
- EDUC s50. Independent Study.
- FYS 300. Exploring Education through Narratives.
- PHIL s32. Teaching Philosophy: Course Design and Classroom Instruction.
- PSYC 101. Principles of Psychology.
- PSYC 240. Developmental Psychology.
- PSYC 262. Community-Based Research Methods.
- PSYC 341. Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology.
- PSYC 378. Experiencing the Power of Picture Books.
- PSYC s50. Independent Study.
- PY/SO 210. Social Psychology.
Co-curricular Activities
Internship in Education.
EDUC 290. Education internships must be preapproved by the EDUC 290 Instructor. Supervised by the concentration coordinator.
Chinese Language (C044)
This is a concentration in the study of Chinese language. L. Miao.
Requirements
Any four credits from among the list below. Students entering Bates with proficiency in the language should begin the sequence of four credits of the concentration at the level at which they are initially placed. No more than two language courses taken in an approved study-abroad program in China may be counted toward the concentration with prior approval. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in Chinese or a major in East Asian Studies with a concentration on Chinese language or the following concentation(s): C047 (Chinese Society and Culture).
Courses
- CHI 101. Beginning Chinese I.
- CHI 102. Beginning Chinese II.
- CHI 201. Intermediate Chinese I.
- CHI 202. Intermediate Chinese II.
- CHI 301. Upper-Level Modern Chinese I.
- CHI 302. Upper-Level Modern Chinese II.
- CHI 401. Advanced Chinese I.
- CHI 402. Advanced Chinese II.
- CHI 415. Readings in Classical Chinese.
Chinese Society and Culture (C047)
The concentration offers courses from a range of disciplines including history, literature, religious studies, economics, and language, which focus on China. N. Faries.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than two of the following: CHI 101, 102, 201, 202, 301, 302, 401, 402. Up to two non-Bates study abroad credits may be applied toward the concentration if they are determined to be equivalent to a Bates course in the list below, or if they are judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in Chinese or East Asian Studies with a concentration on Chinese language or the following concentration(s): C044 (Chinese Language).
Courses
- AS/CI 207. Traditional Chinese Literature in Translation.
- AS/CI 223. Communism, Capitalism, and Cannibalism: New and Emerging Voices in Chinese Literature.
- AS/CI 225. Art and Politics in China.
- AS/HI 171. Imperial China.
- AS/HI 274. China in Revolution.
- AS/HI 301B. From Tibet to Taiwan: Frontiers in Chinese History, 1700 to the Present.
- AS/HI s15. Sport, Gender, and the Body in Modern China.
- AS/RE 251. Religions of Tibet.
- ASIA 235. Supernatural in East Asia.
- AV/AS 234. Chinese Arts and Visual Culture.
- AV/AS 246. Visual Narratives: Storytelling in East Asian Art.
- CHI 101. Beginning Chinese I.
- CHI 102. Beginning Chinese II.
- CHI 201. Intermediate Chinese I.
- CHI 202. Intermediate Chinese II.
- CHI 301. Upper-Level Modern Chinese I.
- CHI 302. Upper-Level Modern Chinese II.
- CHI 401. Advanced Chinese I.
- CHI 402. Advanced Chinese II.
- CHI 415. Readings in Classical Chinese.
- CHI s21. Chinese Language, Culture, Health, and Chinese Traditional Medicine.
- INDC 301S. Environmental History of China.
The City in History: Urbanism and Constructed Spaces (C057)
This concentration addresses the role of urban centers in human culture from their emergence in earliest recorded history to the present. The study of urban forms, architecture, and spaces is by definition interdisciplinary, integrating social, political, historical, theoretical, geographical, technological, and aesthetic considerations. E. Harwood.
Requirements
Any four creditss. One non-Bates credit that focuses on urban history, design, and/or function may be applied toward this concentration if judged appropriate upon application to the coordinator. This may include supervised archaeological fieldwork, with approval of the coordinator.
Courses
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AFR 100. Introduction to Africana.
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- AM/HI 141. Rise of the American Empire.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- AV/AS 289. Stupa Towers: Forms, Symbols, and Narratives in Buddhist Architecture.
- AV/CM 241. The Art of Islam.
- AV/CM 250. Vikings, Vandals, and Visigoths: Art in Early Medieval Europe.
- AV/CM 251. The Age of the Cathedrals.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AV/CM 265. Florence to Bruges: The Early Renaissance in Europe.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 377A. Picturesque Suburbia.
- CM/HI 102. Medieval Worlds.
- CM/HI 108. Roman Civilization: The Republic.
- CM/HI 109. Roman Civilization: The Empire.
- ECON 348. Urban Economics.
- ENG 395Y. Medieval London.
- ENVR 209. Sustainable Cities.
- ENVR 308. Urban and Regional Food Systems.
- EU/GR 254. Berlin and Vienna, 1900–1914.
- INDC 301A. Sex and the Modern City: European Cultures at the Fin-de-Siècle.
- SOC 236. Urban Sociology.
Co-curricular Activities
Research project, internship, fieldwork, performance experience, volunteer work, or community work-study.
Supervised by the art and visual culture department.
Class, Inequity, Poverty, and Justice (C008)
This concentration focuses on class inequality and poverty from a social justice perspective. Courses are drawn from a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives, and include attention to national and international issues, the gendered and raced dynamics of class, material inequality and poverty, and social movements and social change. E. Kane.
Requirements
Four credits offered in at least two different departments or programs. At least one credit must include a community engagement component, including the following: ACS 220; ANTH 339; ED/SO 242; EDUC 231, s27; ED/GS 384; ENVR 417; FYS 376; GS/SO 270, 395K; HIST 390W; SOC 104, 250, s20. One non-Bates credit on a social justice theme may be applied toward the concentration if it is judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 227. #BlackLivesMatter.
- AFR 100. Introduction to Africana.
- AN/ES 242. Environment, Human Rights, and Indigenous Peoples.
- ED/GS 384. Education in a Globalized World.
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- EDUC 231. Perspectives on Education.
- EDUC 290. Internship in Education.
- ENVR 350. Environmental Justice.
- ENVR 417. Practicum in Community-Engaged Research.
- FYS 300. Exploring Education through Narratives.
- FYS 376. Inequality, Community, and Social Change.
- GS/PT 155. Gender, Power, and Politics.
- GS/SO 270. Sociology of Gender.
- GS/SO 340. Work, Family, and Social Inclusion.
- GS/SO 346. Knowledge, Action, and Social Change.
- GSS 356. Marriage in America.
- HISP 224. Protest and Justice.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
- INDC 257. African American Women's History and Social Transformation.
- INDC 321. Afroambiente: Escritura negra y medio ambiente.
- LL/PT 249. Politics of Latin America.
- PLTC 295. Reading Marx, Rethinking Marxisms.
- PLTC 394. Contemporary Liberalism and Democratic Action.
- SOC 104. Contemporary Social Problems: Sociological Perspectives.
- SOC 235. Global Health: Sociological Perspectives.
- SOC 250. Privilege, Power, and Inequality.
The Collaborative Project (C012)
To collaborate is to labor cooperatively with others toward an intellectual goal. In this concentration, students gain experience in an array of methods used to achieve effective collaboration in different contexts. Each course emphasizes collaborative process to generate action, original work, and/or live performance. P. Johnson.
Requirements
Four credits or three credits and one co-curricular component, with a maximum of two credits from any one department/program. Students selecting MUS 290 need to complete any two sections to receive one concentration credit. Students selecting DANC 270 need to complete two sections to receive one concentration credit. One non-Bates credits may be applied toward this concentration if it is determined to be equivalent to a Bates course in the list below, or if they are judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared concentration C023 (Improvisation and Experimentation in the Arts).
Courses
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 316. Printmaking Workshop.
- AVC 350. Visual Meaning: Process, Material, Format.
- AVC 361. Museum Internship.
- BIO 133. Biology of Cooperation.
- DANC 151. Making Dance.
- DANC 251. Making Dance II.
- DANC 270A. Studio: Modern I.
- DANC 270D. Studio: Repertory Styles.
- DANC 270E. Studio: Jazz I.
- DANC 270F. Studio: Advanced Jazz, Musical Theater.
- DANC 270G. Studio: Dance Ensemble, Intermediate.
- DANC 270I. Studio: Improvisation.
- DANC 270M. Studio: Dance Ensemble, Advanced.
- DANC 270N. Studio: Ballet III.
- DANC 270P. Studio: Flamenco.
- DANC 300. Bates Dance Festival.
- DANC 351. Composition Seminar.
- DN/ED s29. Tour, Teach, Perform.
- EDUC s26. Qualitative Methods of Education Research.
- ENVR 417. Practicum in Community-Engaged Research.
- MUS 222. Jazz Performance Workshop.
- PLTC s23. Simulating the Legislative Process.
- PSYC 262. Community-Based Research Methods.
- THEA 231. Scene Design.
Co-curricular Activities
Music Performance.
Participation for two consecutive semesters in any one of the following ensembles may replace one course: College Choir, College Orchestra, Fiddle Band, Gamelan Ensemble, Jazz Band, Steel Pan Orchestra. Supervised by the music department.
Colonialism (C059)
Colonial expansion of has had a profound effect in shaping the modern world culturally, politically, demographically, and ecologically. Its implications are addressed in one way or another by a majority of humanities and social science courses offered at Bates, and it has important implications for the sciences as well. This concentration addresses colonialism itself, allowing an examination of the commonalities and differences that have characterized the phenomenon. C. Shaw.
Requirements
Any four credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/EN 223. Survey of Literatures of the Caribbean.
- AF/HI 105. Africa: Special Topics in African History, 1500-1900.
- AF/HI 280. Health and Healing in Africa.
- AFR 304. Decolonization.
- AM/AN 222. Archaeology and Colonial Entanglements in North America.
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- AM/HI 244. Native American History.
- AN/ES 242. Environment, Human Rights, and Indigenous Peoples.
- AN/LL 238. Culture, Conflict, and Change in Latin America.
- AN/MU 212. How Music Performs Culture: Introduction to Ethnomusicology.
- ANTH s32. Introduction to Archaeological Fieldwork.
- BIO 117. Plants and Human Affairs.
- CM/HI 109. Roman Civilization: The Empire.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- ES/HI 301M. New England: Environment and History.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 240E. Le Maghreb: Vue de l'Enfance.
- FRE 240F. Borders and Disorders.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- GSS 205. Queer Indigenous Studies.
- HI/LL 181. Latin American History: From the Conquest to the Present.
- HI/LL 270. The Spanish Empire: From Madrid to Manila.
- HI/LL 279. The Age of Revolution: Latin American Edition.
- HI/RE 320. Religion and Government in the Middle East: Colonialism to the Arab Spring.
- HIST 140. Origins of New Nations, 1500–1820.
- HIST 287. History of East Africa.
- HIST 301F. African Nationalism and Decolonization.
- HIST 301P. South Africa: The Rise and Fall of Apartheid.
- HIST s21. Crime and Punishment in Africa.
- INDC 390. Afro-Latinoamérica.
- MUS 103. Music in World Cultures.
Color: Sight and Perception (C036)
The perception of color is contextual and culturally determined. This concentration provides the opportunity to study color in theory and in practice, as cultural construct, and as concrete physical phenomenon. P. Johnson.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than two from any one department/program. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward this concentration if it is determinded to be equivalent to a Bates course in the list below, or if it is judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major in art and visual culture or physics.
Courses
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AM/AV 288. Visualizing Race.
- ASTR 106. Introduction to Astronomy/Lab.
- AV/GS 295. The Decorated Body.
- AVC 202. Painting: Color and Design.
- AVC 203. Ceramic Design and Techniques.
- AVC 215. Painting: Abstraction and Invention.
- AVC 219. Photography: The Digital Image.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 271. Italian Baroque Art.
- AVC 281. Realism and Impressionism.
- AVC 282. Modern European Art.
- AVC 314. Advanced Painting.
- PHYS 108. Introductory Physics of Living Systems II/Lab.
- PHYS 373. Classical and Modern Optics.
- PSYC 302. Sensation and Perception.
Conflict and Threat: War and Disease (C064)
This concentration explores war and militarism, conflict and panic in the face of real and perceived threats, and the various social, cultural, political, and scientific responses to them. E. Harwood.
Requirements
Any four courses. One non-Bates course may be applied toward this concentration if judged appropriate upon application to the coordinator.
Courses
- AM/HI 141. Rise of the American Empire.
- AM/HI 244. Native American History.
- AS/HI 274. China in Revolution.
- AS/HI 301B. From Tibet to Taiwan: Frontiers in Chinese History, 1700 to the Present.
- AS/JA s27. Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
- AV/CM 250. Vikings, Vandals, and Visigoths: Art in Early Medieval Europe.
- BIO 127. Emerging and Reemerging Infections across the Globe.
- BIO 315. Microbiology/Lab.
- CM/EN 121D. The Many Lives of King Arthur.
- CM/HI 102. Medieval Worlds.
- ENVR 227. Catastrophes and Hope.
- FRE 374. Écrire la Révolution: French Literature in the Nineteenth Century.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 341. King Arthur: Myth and Legend.
- FYS 425. Politics and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe.
- FYS 440. Roots of Nonviolence.
- GER s26. The Split Screen: Reconstructing National Identities in West and East German Cinema.
- HIST 294. The Revolutionary Black Atlantic, 1770–1840.
- HIST s21. Crime and Punishment in Africa.
- PLTC 344. Ethnicity and Conflict.
- REL 133. Religion, Violence, and Nonviolence.
- SOC 350. Race, Crime, and Punishment in America.
- SOC 351. Crime and Justice over the Life Course.
Considering Africa (C022)
Through a variety of disciplines students develop a complex understanding of various African worldviews, social practices, art forms, political initiatives, economic challenges, and ecological issues. Courses train students to think critically about African identities as historically produced and currently contested. P. Otim.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than two courses from any one department/program. Students are strongly advised to consider taking INDS 100, the gateway course. Two non-Bates credits and/or co-curricular activities may be applied toward this concentration if they are judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration.
Courses
- AF/HI 105. Africa: Special Topics in African History, 1500-1900.
- AF/HI 280. Health and Healing in Africa.
- AF/RE 233. Literary Representations of the Africana Religions.
- AV/GS 299. Gender in African Art.
- ECON 309. Economics of Less-Developed Countries.
- ED/GS 384. Education in a Globalized World.
- EDUC 310. Critical Perspectives on English Language Learning.
- ENVR 223. Politics of Wildlife Conservation.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 240E. Le Maghreb: Vue de l'Enfance.
- FRE 240F. Borders and Disorders.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 468. Beyond Nelson Mandela: Themes and Personalities in South African History.
- HIST 287. History of East Africa.
- HIST 301F. African Nationalism and Decolonization.
- HIST 301P. South Africa: The Rise and Fall of Apartheid.
- HIST s21. Crime and Punishment in Africa.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
- INDC 306. Queer Africana: History, Theories, and Representations.
- PLTC 247. Transition and Transformation in Southern Africa.
- PLTC 290. Politics of Sub-Saharan Africa.
- PLTC 336. Explaining Wartime Violence.
Co-curricular Activities
Museum Project.
Long-term (one semester or one summer) museum project on Africa. Supervised by the concentration coordinator.
Volunteer Work.
Long term (one semester or one summer) volunteer work with an African or African migrant community, including mandatory journal writing. Supervised by the concentration coordinator.
Performance experience.
Supervised by the concentration coordinator.
Culture and Meaning (C026)
This concentration focuses on culture and meaning, the interpretive subfield of anthropology. M. Beasley.
Requirements
ANTH 101 and any three additional credits from the list below. One non-Bates credit may be substitute for courses listed below with prior approval of the coordinator. This concentration is not open to students who have declared an anthropology major or minor.
Courses
- AF/AM 227. #BlackLivesMatter.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AFR 100. Introduction to Africana.
- AM/AN 125. Critical Perspectives on Sport and Society.
- AN/LL 205. Citizenship, Borders, and Belonging.
- AN/LL 238. Culture, Conflict, and Change in Latin America.
- AN/MU 212. How Music Performs Culture: Introduction to Ethnomusicology.
- ANTH 101. Cultural Anthropology.
- ANTH 210. Encountering Community: Ethnographic Fieldwork and Community-Engaged Learning.
- ANTH 333. Culture and Interpretation.
- AS/RE 250. Buddhist Traditions.
- EDUC 263. Comparative and International Education.
- EDUC 378. Ethnographic Approaches to Education.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
- MUS 103. Music in World Cultures.
Culture and Public Health in Chile (C092)
The Bates Fall Semester Abroad program in Chile is an intensive study abroad experience based in Santiago. C. Aburto Guzmán, T. Lawson.
Requirements
Successful completion of the Bates Fall Semester Abroad in Santiago. In the event that a student fails one of the FSA credit, the student may still earn credit for this concentration by passing a Bates credit approved by the concentration coordinator.
Dance (C011)
Focusing on dance as a performing art form, the concentration considers the practice of the art, its production, and an understanding of its cultural context. C. Dilley.
Requirements
Four credits in dance earned from full-credit courses (not 270 studio dance) listed or cross-listed in dance. One approved co-curricular component may be substituted for one of the four required credits. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a dance major or minor or C027 (The Human Body).
Diasporas (C038)
The concept of the diaspora plays an extraordinarily important role in our understanding of contemporary culture. Through the diasporic processes of movement and displacement, cultures become caught up in an ongoing flow that links local communities to a rich global network of cultural practices and worldviews. These flows raise a number of questions: In what way do diasporic cultures respond to the dynamics of displacement, migration, and oppression? How might different media or diverse perspectives offer alternative understandings and expressions of these responses? In what way do diasporas from previous eras differ from those that have emerged from the contemporary contexts of globalization, the migration of refugees, and the turbulence of contemporary geopolitics? D. Chapman.
Requirements
Four credits from at least two departments/programs. Courses must include at least one credit from each of the following lists:
List A: AF/EN 223, 268; AF/HI 390E;
List B: ENG 260; EN/GS 121G, FRE 208.
Students are encouraged to participate in service-learning experiences with local diasporas in Lewiston/Auburn and Maine. One approved co-curricular component may be substituted for one of the four required courses. One non-Bates course may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/EN 223. Survey of Literatures of the Caribbean.
- AF/EN 269. Narrating Slavery.
- AF/GS 201. Race, Ethnicity, and Feminist Thought.
- AF/HI 301E. African Slavery in the Americas.
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 240F. Borders and Disorders.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FRE s50. Independent Study.
- INDC 321. Afroambiente: Escritura negra y medio ambiente.
- INDC 325. Black Feminist Literary Theory and Practice.
- INDC 390. Afro-Latinoamérica.
Co-curricular Activities
Service-Learning.
Long-term (one semester or one summer) community-engaged project in a local diasporic community. Supervised by Harward Center for Community Partnerships.
Supervised research project.
Supervised by concentration coordinator.
Internship.
Supervised by concentration coordinator.
Supervised field work.
Supervised by concentration coordinator.
Supervised performance experience.
Supervised by concentration coordinator.
Digital and Computational Studies (C093)
This concentration allows students to explore the breadth of digital and computational studies. Students engage in work regarding equity and justice, design as explicit process, and the development and expression of ideas in digital spaces and code. M. Greer.
Requirements
Any four credits in digital and computational studies. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Early Modern World (C066)
This concentration comprises courses that address the cultural and historic developments during the period from about 1450 and 1800. J. Hall.
Requirements
Four credits from the list below. Credits must be from at least two different departments/programs. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if they are determined to be equivalent to a Bates course in the list below, or if they are judged to be appropriate by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/HI 301E. African Slavery in the Americas.
- AM/AN 222. Archaeology and Colonial Entanglements in North America.
- AS/RE 251. Religions of Tibet.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 271. Italian Baroque Art.
- ENG 129. Introduction to Early Modern English Literature.
- ENG 142. Early American Literature.
- ENG 213. Shakespeare.
- ENG 214. Shakespeare and Early Modern Racialization.
- ENG 222. Seventeenth-Century Literature: Animal and Political Lives.
- ENG 232. The Eighteenth-Century and Global Enlightenment.
- FRE 250. Power and Resistance through Writing.
- FRE 372. Woman Writer/Women Written.
- HI/LL 181. Latin American History: From the Conquest to the Present.
- HI/LL 270. The Spanish Empire: From Madrid to Manila.
- HI/LL 279. The Age of Revolution: Latin American Edition.
- HI/LL s29. Montezuma's Mexico: Aztecs and their World.
- HIST 140. Origins of New Nations, 1500–1820.
- HIST 294. The Revolutionary Black Atlantic, 1770–1840.
- HS/LL 341. Lectura americana de Cervantes.
- INDC 221. Venice to Tokyo: Religion and Trade along the Spice and Silk Routes.
- INDC 301Y. The Spanish Inquisition.
- MUS 210. Classical Music in Western Culture.
- PHIL 272. Philosophy in the Modern Era (1600-1800).
- REL 216. American Religious History, 1550–1840.
English (C086)
This concentration introduces students to a range of literatures written in English, and to various genres and critical methods. S. Dillon.
Requirements
Four English credits (also First-year seminars as noted, and any credit cross-listed in English), taught by at least three different faculty members in the department. Students must take one 100-level course (with a maximum of two). Only credits in U.S., British, or Commonwealth literature, or creative writing count toward the concentration —not literature from a foreign language. Short Term courses do not count toward the concentration. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward this concentration if determined to be equivalent to a Bates English credit, or if with prior approval judged appropriate by the concentration coordinator. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major in English.
Environment, Place, History (C068)
This concentration explores the interconnections among ecological change, community history, and the social construction of place. It has a marked, but not exclusive, focus on Maine, including inquiry into Maine's transformations and conflicts over environmental, economic, and community change. The concentration is strongly interdisciplinary, mixing ecological learning, social-historical and ethnographic inquiry, and cultural studies. It includes community partnerships and public-environmental projects. D. Ray.
Requirements
Four credits, two of which must be from list A (foregrounding scientific study in geology or ecology) and two of which must be from list B (foregrounding social, cultural, historical, or literary study). At least one of these courses from list A or B must also appear on list C (courses involving significant field or community-based experience). Alternatively, students may meet the community/field requirement by completing one co-curricular component, substituting it for one of the four credits. Students should consult with the Harward Center for Community Partnerships to determine if a particular course or co-curricular experience qualifies. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
List A: BI/ES s14, 302; EACS 103, 104, 107, 240; EA/ES 217, s20; ECES s11, ENVR 124, 220, 240, 310.
List B: AM/DC s32; AM/FR 240I; EDUC s20; ENVR 205, 209, 273; ES/HI 301M; FYS 2 427; INDS 211.
List C: BI/ES s14, 302; EDUC s20; ENVR 124, 209, 310n, 350, s10; GEO 107, s20.
Courses
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- BI/ES 302. Restoration Ecology/Lab.
- BI/ES s14. The Ecology of Place: Field Methods for Coastal Research at Bates-Morse Mountain.
- EA/ES 217. Mapping and GIS/Lab.
- EACS 103. Earth Surface Environments and Environmental Change/Lab.
- EACS 104. Plate Tectonics and Hazards/Lab.
- EACS 107. Katahdin to Acadia: Field Geology in Maine/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- EC/ES s11. In Search of Higher Ground: Sea-Level Rise, Coastal Flooding and the Future of the Eastern Seaboard.
- EDUC s20. Creating Educational Experiences at Morse Mountain.
- ENVR 124. Managing the Gulf of Maine: Climate Change and Impacts on Coastal Communities.
- ENVR 205. Lives in Place.
- ENVR 209. Sustainable Cities.
- ENVR 220. GIS across the Curriculum.
- ENVR 240. Water and Watersheds/Lab.
- ENVR 273. Land and Livelihood.
- ENVR 310. Soils/Lab.
- ENVR 350. Environmental Justice.
- ES/HI 301M. New England: Environment and History.
- FYS 427. Introduction to Ecopsychology: The Human-Nature Relationship.
- INDC 211. U.S. Environmental History.
Evidence: Documentation and Reality (C017)
This concentration is a study of documentation and representation, including consideration of persuasive strategies often employed in representations—and misrepresentations. Emphasis is on the use of images as points of inquiry, including photographs, film, broadcasts, documents, and printed matter, as well as speech and artifacts. E. Morris.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than three from any one department/program. Either AVC 361 or AVC s31 may count toward the concentration, but not both. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration with prior approval by the concentration coordinator.
Courses
- ANTH 103. Introduction to Archaeology.
- AV/AS s29. Modern Vietnamese Culture through Film.
- AV/ES s15. Photographing the Landscape.
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 219. Photography: The Digital Image.
- AVC 220. The Digital Composite: A Creative Process.
- AVC 318. Photography: Perception and Expression.
- AVC 320. Contemporary Photography: A Body of Work.
- AVC 361. Museum Internship.
- AVC s26. Museum Studies.
- AVC s31. Museum Internship.
- EDUC 378. Ethnographic Approaches to Education.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 381. Visualizing Identities.
- GER 358. Literature and Film of the German Democratic Republic.
- GER s26. The Split Screen: Reconstructing National Identities in West and East German Cinema.
- PSYC 317. Psychology and Law.
- RFSS 265. The Rhetoric of Women's Rights.
- RFSS 276. Television Criticism.
- RFSS 391A. The Rhetoric of Alien Abduction.
- RFSS 391B. Presidential Campaign Rhetoric.
Field Studies: Natural Science (C058)
Field studies are the primary mode of data collection for natural scientists studying the Earth and its ecosystems. This concentration offers an introduction to field methods used in ecology, environmental science, and geology. Courses include a strong component of data collection and/or sampling in the field, and/or mapping from field data. J. Eusden.
Requirements
Four credits, at least one of which must be from list A, one from list B, and one from list C. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
List A: EACS 103, 104, 107, 109; ENVR 203; FYS 447; (introductory level courses without prerequisites that have a significant component of fieldwork);
List B: BI/ES 271; BIO 211, 221, 270, 313; EACS 210, 223, 230, 240; EA/ES 217, 226; ENVR 220, 240, 310; (upper level courses with minimal prerequisites that have a significant amount of advanced fieldwork involving original data collection and analysis).
List C: BIO s30, s31, s37; EACS s23, s50 (immersion courses that are almost entirely devoted to field-based study).
Courses
- BI/ES 271. Dendrology and the Natural History of Trees/Lab.
- BIO 221. Plant and Fungal Diversity/Lab.
- BIO 313. Marine Ecology/Lab.
- BIO s30. Ecology and Natural History of the Maine Coast.
- BIO s31. Avian Biology/Lab.
- EA/ES 217. Mapping and GIS/Lab.
- EA/ES 226. Hydrogeology.
- EACS 103. Earth Surface Environments and Environmental Change/Lab.
- EACS 104. Plate Tectonics and Hazards/Lab.
- EACS 107. Katahdin to Acadia: Field Geology in Maine/Lab.
- EACS 109. Earth’s Climate System/Lab.
- EACS 210. Sedimentary Processes and Environments/Lab.
- EACS 223. Earth Materials/Lab.
- EACS 230. Earth Structure and Dynamics/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- EACS s50. Independent Study.
- ENVR 203. Scientific Approaches to Environmental Issues/Lab.
- ENVR 220. GIS across the Curriculum.
- ENVR 240. Water and Watersheds/Lab.
- ENVR 310. Soils/Lab.
- FYS 447. Holocaust on Stage.
Film and Media Studies (C019)
An interdisciplinary concentration that focuses on the history, theory, production, and criticism of cinema and other moving-image media. Courses examine cinema's artistic and cultural contributions, moving-image media as practices of social significance, and techniques of directing, acting, and editing sound and image. C. Nero.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than two from the same department/program. Students are encouraged to take one credit with a film production component, such as FRE 235, AVC 209, or AVC 211. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AF/RF 202. Coming of Age While Black.
- AS/JA 130. Japanese Film: Exploring Japanese Horror Films from the Silent Era to the Present.
- AV/AS s29. Modern Vietnamese Culture through Film.
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 211. Animation I: Hand-Drawn Animation.
- AVC 309. Advanced Video Production.
- EN/TH 242. Screenwriting.
- ENG 105. 9/11 in Literature and Film.
- ENG 395B. Godard and European Film.
- FR/GS 151. Gender, Race, and Social Class in French and Francophone Film.
- FRE 235. Advanced French Language and Introduction to Film Analysis.
- FRE 340. Social Pulse, Documentary Impulse.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- GER s26. The Split Screen: Reconstructing National Identities in West and East German Cinema.
- HISP 228. Screen and Media.
- PHIL s20. Film as Philosophy.
- REL 100. Religion and Film.
- RFSS 120. Introduction to Screen Studies.
- RFSS 220. Constructions of Italian American Men and Masculinities.
- RFSS 240. Film Theory.
- RFSS 260. Lesbian and Gay Images in Film.
- RFSS 276. Television Criticism.
- RFSS 391F. Bollywood.
- RFSS 391J. Film Festival Studies.
- THEA s33. Central European Theater and Film.
French and Francophone Studies (C034)
This interdisciplinary concentration encompasses the language, literatures, and cultures of the French-speaking world. It aims to develop increased linguistic proficiency in oral and written French and knowledge of the rich cultural production of the French-speaking regions of the globe over time using a variety of critical approaches. M. Rice-DeFosse.
Requirements
Four credits, one of which must be from list A, one of which must be from list B, and one of which must be from list C. Only one of the following courses, taught in English, may be counted toward the concentration: FYS 318, HIST 254, or CM/HI 102. One co-curricular component may be substituted for one of the courses from list A or C. Co-curricular components include applicable internships, supervised research, projects, or fieldwork; a supervised performance experience; or supervised volunteer work or community work-study.
List A (Language): FRE 102, 201, 205, 235, 271
List B (Literature): AM/FR 240I; FRE 240E, 240F, 240G, 250, 360, 365, 372, 374, 378, s39, s50; FR/GS 151, 377
List C (Culture and Civilization): AM/FR 240I; CM/HI 102; FRE 207, 208, 240E, 240F, 240G, 339, 340 360, s24; FYS 318; INDS 100. One non-Bates course may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in French.
Courses
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- CM/HI 102. Medieval Worlds.
- FR/GS 151. Gender, Race, and Social Class in French and Francophone Film.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 102. Elementary French II.
- FRE 201. Intermediate French.
- FRE 205. Oral French.
- FRE 207. Introduction to Contemporary France.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 235. Advanced French Language and Introduction to Film Analysis.
- FRE 240E. Le Maghreb: Vue de l'Enfance.
- FRE 240F. Borders and Disorders.
- FRE 240G. Science and Literature.
- FRE 250. Power and Resistance through Writing.
- FRE 271. Translation: Theory and Practice.
- FRE 339. Rereading Tintin.
- FRE 340. Social Pulse, Documentary Impulse.
- FRE 360. Independent Study.
- FRE 372. Woman Writer/Women Written.
- FRE 374. Écrire la Révolution: French Literature in the Nineteenth Century.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FRE s24. Cooking up French Culture.
- FRE s50. Independent Study.
- FYS 318. Through the Eyes of Children.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
Co-curricular Activities
Community Service.
Significant community service in the French-speaking community, such as participation in the Franco-American Oral History Project, over the course of one semester, one Short Term, or one internship period may be substituted for one course. Supervised by French and Francophone studies faculty.
The Geosphere (C007)
The Earth is in a constant state of change. Creation and destruction of the lithosphere with attendant earthquakes and volcanoes and interactions of the atmosphere and hydrosphere producing climate change illustrate the interconnection of the geosphere and humankind. The study of geologic processes spans scales of time measured in minutes to billions of years; such studies are a key to understanding past, present, and future global and planetary environmental changes. To fully understand and appreciate such changes, the courses in this concentration emphasize the integration of field- and laboratory-based inquiry both in New England and, remotely, on more distant worlds. J. Eusden.
Requirements
Any four credits chosen from the following list. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in earth and climate sciences.
Courses
- BI/EA 113. Marine Science.
- EA/ES 217. Mapping and GIS/Lab.
- EA/ES 226. Hydrogeology.
- EA/PH 220. Dynamical Climate.
- EACS 103. Earth Surface Environments and Environmental Change/Lab.
- EACS 104. Plate Tectonics and Hazards/Lab.
- EACS 107. Katahdin to Acadia: Field Geology in Maine/Lab.
- EACS 109. Earth’s Climate System/Lab.
- EACS 210. Sedimentary Processes and Environments/Lab.
- EACS 223. Earth Materials/Lab.
- EACS 230. Earth Structure and Dynamics/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- ENVR 220. GIS across the Curriculum.
- ENVR 310. Soils/Lab.
- FYS 476. Coastal Hazards/Lab.
- FYS 477. The Story of Earth.
German Language and Culture (C071)
This concentration expands students' knowledge of the German language and the cultures of German-speaking countries. R. Cernahoschi.
Requirements
Four courses. One course from the Bates Fall Semester Abroad in either Austria or Germany may count as noted below. No non-Bates courses may be applied toward the concentration. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in German or concentrations C073 (German in Berlin) or C082 (German in Vienna).
Courses
- Any Bates Bates Fall Semester Abroad, Germany course.
- Any Bates Bates Fall Semester Abroad, Austria course.
- GER 101. Introduction to German Language and Culture I.
- GER 102. Introduction to German Language and Culture II.
- GER 201. Intermediate German Language and Culture I.
- GER 202. Intermediate German Language and Culture II.
- GER 233. Advanced German Language and Introduction to German Studies.
- GER 256. The Age of Materialism, 1830-1899.
- GER 350. Margins and Migrations.
- GER 358. Literature and Film of the German Democratic Republic.
Globalization (C014)
Globalization may be defined as the set of economic, political, social, technological, and cultural changes that give rise to growing interdependence and interactions among people, cultures, and corporations scattered around the world. It is one of the defining paradigms of the early twenty-first century, and perhaps the most controversial. Students in this concentration examine the phenomenon of globalization—its positive and negative aspects—from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. D. Riera-Crichton.
Requirements
Four credits, including at least one of the following: ANTH 339; AN/SO 232; ECON 221; PLTC 125, 171; or SOC 260. No more than two of the four credits may be from the same department or program. Up to two comparable non-Bates credits preapproved by the concentration coordinator may be applied to the concentration.
Courses
- AN/LL 205. Citizenship, Borders, and Belonging.
- EC/PT 284. The Political Economy of Capitalism.
- ECON 221. The World Economy.
- ECON 305. International Financial Stability.
- ECON 309. Economics of Less-Developed Countries.
- ED/GS 384. Education in a Globalized World.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- EU/PT 305. Money and Power.
- EU/SO 290. Political Sociology.
- FYS 249. Global Economy and Nation-State.
- HI/LL 270. The Spanish Empire: From Madrid to Manila.
- PLTC 122. Government and Politics in Comparative Perspective.
- PLTC 125. States and Markets.
- PLTC 171. International Politics.
- PLTC 222. International Political Economy.
- PLTC 225. International Security.
- PLTC 236. The Global Politics of Climate Change.
- PLTC 315. International Cooperation.
- SOC 103. Macrosociology: Institutions and Structures.
- SOC 235. Global Health: Sociological Perspectives.
- SOC 260. Economic Sociology.
Hazards in Nature (C063)
For human populations, living on planet Earth means living with the risk of natural hazards and living with the unintended consequences of our interactions with the natural world. Earthquakes, floods, and climate change, and emerging infections, invasive plant species, and environmental toxins are examples of global challenges presented by the physical and biological world. The courses offered in this concentration explore this interface between human populations and the natural world.
M. Retelle.
Requirements
EACS 103, 109, or EAPH 119 and 104 or 107, and any two other credits from the list. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration with prior approval.
Courses
- BI/EA 113. Marine Science.
- BIO 127. Emerging and Reemerging Infections across the Globe.
- EA/PH 119. The Anthropocene.
- EACS 103. Earth Surface Environments and Environmental Change/Lab.
- EACS 104. Plate Tectonics and Hazards/Lab.
- EACS 107. Katahdin to Acadia: Field Geology in Maine/Lab.
- EACS 109. Earth’s Climate System/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- ECON 222. Environmental Economics and Policy.
- ECON 325. Prices, Property, and the Problem of the Commons.
- ENVR 203. Scientific Approaches to Environmental Issues/Lab.
- ENVR 204. Environment and Society.
- FYS 476. Coastal Hazards/Lab.
- PLTC 303. States of Emergency.
The Human Body (C027)
This concentration focuses on knowledges acquired through observation, articulation, and experience of the body. E. Harwood.
Requirements
Any four credits. Any two in DANC 270 or DN/TH 270 courses complete one concentration credit. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Dance majors and minors are limited to two concentration credits in dance.
Courses
- Any Bates Dance course.
- Any Bates course cross-listed in Dance.
- AS/CI 225. Art and Politics in China.
- AS/HI s15. Sport, Gender, and the Body in Modern China.
- AV/GS 295. The Decorated Body.
- AVC 212. Drawing: From Still Life to the Model.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 312. Drawing the Figure.
- AVC 314. Advanced Painting.
- AVC 366. Drawing the Model/Sustained Study.
- BIO 129. Human Nutrition.
- BIO 217. Human Anatomy and Physiology I.
- BIO 218. Human Anatomy and Physiology II.
- BIO 301. Pathophysiology.
- BIO 311. Comparative Anatomy of the Chordates/Lab.
- BIO 326. Cancer Biology/Lab.
- BIO 328. Developmental Biology/Lab.
- BIO 337. Animal Physiology/Lab.
- CH/NS 320. Mechanisms of Memory.
- CHEM 125. Bioenergetics and Nutrition.
- CM/GS 204. Classics and the History of Sexuality.
- DC/GS 106. TechnoGenderCulture.
- ENG 131. Tragedy and the Drama of Voice.
- FYS 305. Corporal Culture: Body and Health in America.
- FYS 395. The Sporting Life.
- FYS 425. Politics and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe.
- FYS 455. Neuroscience Fiction.
- FYS 461. Gut Microbiome: The Next Frontier.
- GSS 202. Queer and Trans Sports Studies.
- INDC 267. Blood, Genes, and American Culture.
- INDC 305. Art, Power, and Politics.
- MU/PY 253. Music and the Embodied Mind.
- NS/PY 160. Introduction to Neuroscience.
- NS/PY 304. Embodied Cognition, Technoculture, and the Future of Identity.
- NS/PY 363. Physiological Psychology/Lab.
- NS/PY 366. Physiological Psychology.
- PSYC 215. Medical Psychology.
- PSYC 235. Abnormal Psychology.
- PSYC 275. Psychology of Sport, Exercise, and Performance.
- THEA 235. Fashion: A Survey of Western Culture.
- THEA 236. Pattern Drafting and Draping.
- THEA 261. Beginning Acting.
- THEA 263. Voice and Speech.
Identity, Race, and Ethnicity (C037)
The goal of this concentration is to encourage students to think in an interdisciplinary manner about the construction of racial and ethnic identities in social, cultural, and political contexts. K. Barnett.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/AM 227. #BlackLivesMatter.
- AF/EN 114. Introduction to African American Literature I: 1600–1910.
- AF/EN 115. Introduction to African American Literature II: 1910–Present.
- AF/EN 259. Contemporary African American Literature.
- AF/GS 201. Race, Ethnicity, and Feminist Thought.
- AF/MU 249. African American Popular Music.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AF/RF 202. Coming of Age While Black.
- AFR 100. Introduction to Africana.
- AM/AV 288. Visualizing Race.
- AM/EN 247. Contemporary Arab American Literature.
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- AM/HI 244. Native American History.
- AM/HI 299. White Supremacy: An American History.
- AM/PY 372. Racial and Ethnic Identity Development.
- AN/ES 242. Environment, Human Rights, and Indigenous Peoples.
- ANTH 101. Cultural Anthropology.
- AS/HI 301B. From Tibet to Taiwan: Frontiers in Chinese History, 1700 to the Present.
- AS/JA 261. Cultural History of Japan: From Jōmon Pottery to Manga.
- AV/GS 299. Gender in African Art.
- CM/HI 112. Ancient Greek History.
- CM/HI 216. Conflict and Community in Medieval Spain.
- CM/HI 292. The Dawn of the Middle Ages.
- CM/HI 293. Trans-Saharan Africa in the Middle Ages.
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 105. 9/11 in Literature and Film.
- ENG 143. Nineteenth-Century American Literature.
- ENG 214. Shakespeare and Early Modern Racialization.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 240E. Le Maghreb: Vue de l'Enfance.
- FRE 240F. Borders and Disorders.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 203. Family Stories.
- FYS 318. Through the Eyes of Children.
- FYS 381. Visualizing Identities.
- FYS 425. Politics and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe.
- GS/PT 282. Constitutional Law II: Rights and Identities.
- GS/PT 326. The Politics of Authenticity.
- GS/SO 340. Work, Family, and Social Inclusion.
- GSS 312. Transgender Narratives.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
- INDC 306. Queer Africana: History, Theories, and Representations.
- LL/PT 352. Participatory Democracy in the Americas.
- PLTC 203. Colorblind or Racialized? Law and Policy in the Making of Race.
- PLTC 260. Nationalism and Nation Building.
- PLTC 344. Ethnicity and Conflict.
- SOC 250. Privilege, Power, and Inequality.
- SOC 350. Race, Crime, and Punishment in America.
Improvisation and Experimentation in the Arts (C023)
This area of inquiry emphasizes the development of creative work in response to various modern and postmodern practices. Improvisation is a working method that emphasizes the moment, bringing past experience to bear in the concrete immediacy of the present. Experimentation typically involves innovating or even undermining the status quo. Students working in this concentration experience these generative methods—including chance operations, contact improvisation, sampling, gesture invention, appropriation, and quotation—across multiple disciplines. P. Johnson.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than two credits from any one department/program. Any two studio dance courses count as one concentration credit. No non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration. This concentration is not open to students who have declared concentration C012 (The Collaborative Project).
Courses
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 210. Drawing and Intention.
- AVC 211. Animation I: Hand-Drawn Animation.
- AVC 213. Drawing: Realism to Abstraction.
- AVC 215. Painting: Abstraction and Invention.
- AVC 279. Abstract Expressionism.
- AVC 316. Printmaking Workshop.
- AVC 350. Visual Meaning: Process, Material, Format.
- DANC 151. Making Dance.
- DANC 251. Making Dance II.
- DANC 270A. Studio: Modern I.
- DANC 270G. Studio: Dance Ensemble, Intermediate.
- DANC 270I. Studio: Improvisation.
- DANC 270K. Studio: Hip Hop.
- DANC 270N. Studio: Ballet III.
- DANC 270P. Studio: Flamenco.
- DANC 300. Bates Dance Festival.
- MUS 222. Jazz Performance Workshop.
- MUS s27. Exploring Jazz Guitar.
Japanese Language (C043)
A concentration in the study of modern Japanese language. K. Konoeda.
Requirements
Any four credits. Students entering Bates with proficiency in the language should begin the sequence of four credits for the concentration at the level at which they are initially placed. No more than two language credits taken in an approved off-campus study program in Japan may be counted toward the concentration. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward this concentration if judged appropriate upon application to the coordinator. Not open to students who declare an East Asian Studies major (Japanese track), a major or minor in Japanese, or the concentration C046 (Japanese Society and Culture).
Japanese Society and Culture (C046)
This concentration offers courses in a range of disciplines including history, literature, religious studies, economics, and language, all of which focus on Japan. B. Ruppert.
Requirements
Four credits, including no more than two of the following: JPN 101, 102, 201, 202, 301, 302, 401, 402. Up to two credits on an approved study-abroad program in Japan may be counted toward the concentration with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who declare a major or minor in Japanese, a major in East Asian studies, or a minor in Asian studies, the concentration C043 (Japanese Language).
Courses
- Any Bates Bates Fall Semester Abroad, Japan course.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 130. Japanese Film: Exploring Japanese Horror Films from the Silent Era to the Present.
- AS/JA 215. Film, Literature, and the Cultures of Postwar Japan.
- AS/JA 261. Cultural History of Japan: From Jōmon Pottery to Manga.
- AS/JA s27. Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
- ASIA 235. Supernatural in East Asia.
- AV/AS 236. Japanese Arts and Visual Culture.
- JPN 101. Beginning Japanese I.
- JPN 102. Beginning Japanese II.
- JPN 201. Intermediate Japanese I.
- JPN 202. Intermediate Japanese II.
- JPN 305. Upper Intermediate Japanese.
- JPN 350. Topics in Advanced Japanese.
Knowledge, Action, and the Public Good (C091)
This concentration is designed to recognize and cultivate two elements of the college’s mission, informed civic action and responsible stewardship of the wider world. The concentration focuses on coursework and other learning experiences related to civic and community engagement at the local, state, regional, national and global levels, as well as exploration of the reciprocal co-creation of knowledge and its role in promoting the public good. E. Kane.
Requirements
Four credits offered in at least three departments or programs and participation in occasional reflection activities if requested by the Harward Center for Community Partnerships. The list below includes courses tagged as “Community Engaged Learning” (CEL), as well as other approved courses. Only one of the credits applied to the GEC may be a non-CEL tagged course. One independent study or thesis credit, pre-approved by the Harward Center, may count toward the concentration. One credit may be replaced by a co-curricular experience approved by the Harward Center (guidelines for the process of approval are available on the Harward Center website). One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AM/HI 299. White Supremacy: An American History.
- AM/RE 272. Islam in the Americas.
- AN/LL 205. Citizenship, Borders, and Belonging.
- ANTH 210. Encountering Community: Ethnographic Fieldwork and Community-Engaged Learning.
- ANTH 333. Culture and Interpretation.
- ANTH s32. Introduction to Archaeological Fieldwork.
- ASTR 106. Introduction to Astronomy/Lab.
- AVC 309. Advanced Video Production.
- BI/EA 113. Marine Science.
- BI/ES 246. Conservation Biology.
- BI/ES 302. Restoration Ecology/Lab.
- BI/ES 303. Restoration Ecology.
- BIO 126. Science Communication.
- BIO 133. Biology of Cooperation.
- BIO 315. Microbiology/Lab.
- DC/GS 106. TechnoGenderCulture.
- DC/MA 316. PIC Math: Topics in Industrial Mathematics.
- DCS 304. Online Community Building and Digital Activism.
- DN/ED s29. Tour, Teach, Perform.
- ED/GS 384. Education in a Globalized World.
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- ED/SO 380. Education, Reform, and Politics.
- EDUC 231. Perspectives on Education.
- EDUC 235. Teaching in the Sciences.
- EDUC 255. Adolescent Literacy.
- EDUC 265. Teaching through the Arts.
- EDUC 290. Internship in Education.
- EDUC 310. Critical Perspectives on English Language Learning.
- EDUC 343. Learning and Teaching: Theories and Practice.
- EDUC 360. Independent Study.
- EDUC 362. Basic Concepts in Special Education.
- EDUC 365. Special Topics.
- EDUC 378. Ethnographic Approaches to Education.
- EDUC 447. Curriculum and Methods.
- EDUC 448. Senior Seminar in Teacher Education: Reflection and Engagement.
- EDUC 450. Seminar in Educational Studies.
- EDUC 460. Student Teaching I.
- EDUC 461. Student Teaching II.
- EDUC s26. Qualitative Methods of Education Research.
- ENVR 308. Urban and Regional Food Systems.
- ENVR 417. Practicum in Community-Engaged Research.
- ENVR 450. Senior Capstone in Environmental Studies.
- FYS 300. Exploring Education through Narratives.
- FYS 376. Inequality, Community, and Social Change.
- FYS 395. The Sporting Life.
- FYS 460. Environmentalism, Social Justice, and Education.
- FYS 491. Reading Japan in Multicultural Picture Books.
- FYS 497. Community Science of Brain Injury in Sports.
- GS/SO 270. Sociology of Gender.
- GS/SO 346. Knowledge, Action, and Social Change.
- GSS 312. Transgender Narratives.
- GSS 335. Tobacco: Gender Matters.
- INDC 238. Queer Power: Political Sociology of U.S. Sexuality Movements.
- MUS 290A. College Choir.
- NS/PY 366. Physiological Psychology.
- PLTC 377. Experiences in Policy Process.
- PLTC s13. Immigration Reform.
- PSYC 240. Developmental Psychology.
- PSYC 262. Community-Based Research Methods.
- PSYC 303. Health Psychology.
- PSYC 340. Infancy.
- PSYC 378. Experiencing the Power of Picture Books.
- PSYC 457B. Senior Thesis/Community-Based Research.
- PSYC 458B. Senior Thesis/Community-Based Research.
- REL 110. Death and Afterlife: Bodies and Souls in Comparative Perspective.
- REL 133. Religion, Violence, and Nonviolence.
- REL 313. Human Suffering: Job, Genesis, and Revelation.
- SOC 104. Contemporary Social Problems: Sociological Perspectives.
- SOC 211. Crime, Justice, and Society.
- SOC 250. Privilege, Power, and Inequality.
- SOC 401. Law and Community Internships.
- SOC s26. Life Course and Aging.
Co-curricular Activities
Community-based Project.
One course may be replaced by a co-curricular experience (guidelines for the process of approval are available on the Harward Center website). Supervised by Harward Center.
Latin (C010)
This concentration advances students' skills and insights in Latin language and literature as well as Roman civilization. L. Maurizio.
Requirements
Four credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Majors in classical and medieval studies may pursue the concentration only if Latin is not used to fulfill their major requirements.No more than two courses from this concentration may count towards a major in Classical and Medieval Studies.
Courses
- LATN 101. Elementary Latin I.
- LATN 102. Elementary Latin II.
- LATN 201. Introduction to Latin Prose.
- LATN 202. Introduction to Latin Poetry.
- LATN 203. Republican Prose.
- LATN 204. Republican Poetry.
- LATN 301. Prose of the Empire.
- LATN 302. Poetry of the Empire.
- LATN 303. Republican Prose.
- LATN 304. Republican Poetry.
- LATN 360. Independent Study.
- LATN s50. Independent Study.
Latin American Studies (C072)
This concentration offers courses in various disciplines that focus on Latin America, including the Caribbean. It provides students with a range of perspectives, covering the period from initial European encounters to the present. C. Pérez-Armendáriz.
Requirements
Four courses with no more than two from any one department or program.
One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. If studying abroad in Latin America, up to two non-Bates credits may be applied to the concentration if the above conditions are met. This concentration is not open to students who have declared:
a) in the a mjor in Latin Ameican studies;
b) a major in history with a primary concentration on Latin America.
Courses
- Any Bates Latin American Studies course.
- Any Bates course cross-listed in Latin American Studies.
- AN/ES 242. Environment, Human Rights, and Indigenous Peoples.
- ENVR 223. Politics of Wildlife Conservation.
- FYS 443. Heroes or Villains? Columbus and Fidel (Castro).
- GS/HS 327. Gendered Experiences in the Américas Borderlands.
- GS/PT 219. Social Movements in Latin America.
- GSS 205. Queer Indigenous Studies.
- GSS 206. Gender Traditions and Transformations in the Americas.
- HISP 222. Short Narrative in the Spanish-speaking World.
- HISP 224. Protest and Justice.
- HISP 230. Readings in Spanish American and Spanish Caribbean Literature.
Law and Society (C013)
The "law" as embodied in its text, institutions, function, and outcomes both shapes and is shaped by the culture and society in which it exists. This concentration encourages students to explore the place of law in societies from a variety of disciplines and perspectives. S. Engel.
Requirements
Any four credits from a minimum of three departments/programs. No more than one non-Bates credit, pre-approved by the concentration coordinator, may be applied toward this concentration. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/AM 227. #BlackLivesMatter.
- ECON 222. Environmental Economics and Policy.
- ECON 223. Law and Economics.
- ES/PL 314. The Environment and What We Owe to Each Other.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- EU/HI 301R. Freedom of Speech, a Modern History.
- FYS 362. Biomedical Ethics.
- FYS 440. Roots of Nonviolence.
- FYS 513. Out of Order: Justice and Injustice in World Legal Histories.
- FYS 522. The Least Dangerous Branch? Grappling with Judicial Power in the United States.
- GS/PT 282. Constitutional Law II: Rights and Identities.
- HI/SO s16. Crime and Deviance in the American Civil War.
- HIST s21. Crime and Punishment in Africa.
- INDC 238. Queer Power: Political Sociology of U.S. Sexuality Movements.
- INDC s18. Wilde Times: Scandal, Celebrity, and the Law.
- NRSC 130. The Neuroscience of Morality.
- NRSC 208. Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society.
- PHIL 213. Biomedical Ethics.
- PHIL 255. Human Nature, Politics, and Morals.
- PHIL 258. Philosophy of Law.
- PHIL 268. Capitalism and Its Critics.
- PLTC 115. U.S. Political Institutions and Processes.
- PLTC 191. Western Political Theory.
- PLTC 203. Colorblind or Racialized? Law and Policy in the Making of Race.
- PLTC 216. Constitutional Law I: Balance of Powers.
- PLTC 230. The U.S. Congress.
- PLTC 292. Political Freedom.
- PLTC 319. The U.S. Presidency: Development and Problems.
- PLTC 328. Representation in Theory and Practice.
- PLTC 329. Problems and Progress in U.S. Political Development.
- PLTC s23. Simulating the Legislative Process.
- PSYC 317. Psychology and Law.
- PY/SO 371. Prejudice and Stereotyping.
- REL 120. Muslims, Christians, and Jews.
- SOC 211. Crime, Justice, and Society.
- SOC 217. Correcting and Controlling Behavior: A Sociological Perspective on Corrections and Social Control.
- SOC 350. Race, Crime, and Punishment in America.
- SOC 351. Crime and Justice over the Life Course.
Learning and Teaching (C084)
This concentration is designed for students who wish to explore K–12 teaching, but do not wish to commit to the full Teacher Education minor. The concentration integrates practical experience with a framework that connects the teacher, student, and subject matter. B. Sale.
Requirements
EDUC 343 and any three additional credits from the list below. The field placement associated with EDUC 343 is at a grade level determined by the student's teaching interest. Not open to students who declare a minor in teacher education or educational studies. One non-Bates credit may count toward concentration with prior approval of concentration coordinator if judged comparable to those below.
Courses
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- EDUC 231. Perspectives on Education.
- EDUC 235. Teaching in the Sciences.
- EDUC 255. Adolescent Literacy.
- EDUC 263. Comparative and International Education.
- EDUC 265. Teaching through the Arts.
- EDUC 310. Critical Perspectives on English Language Learning.
- EDUC 343. Learning and Teaching: Theories and Practice.
- EDUC 362. Basic Concepts in Special Education.
- EDUC 390. Discipline, Race, and Schooling.
- EDUC s19. Theory and Practice of Writing and Tutoring.
Material Culture (C083)
Material culture has been defined from numerous perspectives most notably anthropology, archaeology, art history, cultural theory, and history. Since the 1970s in particular, scholars in these and other disciplines have used material culture sources of evidence to explore the everyday lives of ordinary citizens. The term material culture refers both to the psychological role, the meaning, that all physical objects in the environment have to mean something to people in a particular culture and to the range of manufactured objects that are typical within a socio-culture and form an essential part of cultural identity. Generally speaking, the phrase "material culture" refers to the "things" of our daily lives. This can mean things we purchase, create, or otherwise come by. Our material lives range from our bodies to the clothes we wear, the specific objects we use, the food we eat, and the places we go. In essence, it is the "stuff" of our daily lives—products of culture. M. Beasley.
Requirements
ACS 100 or 280 and three additional credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AM/AN 222. Archaeology and Colonial Entanglements in North America.
- AM/GS 353. Critical Theory/Critical Acts.
- AMST 200. Introduction to American Studies.
- ANTH 101. Cultural Anthropology.
- ANTH 103. Introduction to Archaeology.
- AV/AS 236. Japanese Arts and Visual Culture.
- AV/AS 243. Buddhist Arts and Visual Cultures.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AV/GS 295. The Decorated Body.
- AVC 361. Museum Internship.
- AVC 374. Methods in the Study of Art and Visual Culture.
- FRE 207. Introduction to Contemporary France.
- INDC 210. Technology in U.S. History.
- INDC 267. Blood, Genes, and American Culture.
- PSYC 378. Experiencing the Power of Picture Books.
- THEA 235. Fashion: A Survey of Western Culture.
Medieval Worlds (C051)
An interdisciplinary exploration of the medieval West, medieval Islam, and Byzantium, 300–1500 C.E. A. Akhtar.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. A college-level Latin course may be substituted for one of the four required credits.
Courses
- AV/CM 241. The Art of Islam.
- AV/CM 250. Vikings, Vandals, and Visigoths: Art in Early Medieval Europe.
- AV/CM 251. The Age of the Cathedrals.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AV/CM 373. Art of the Global Middle Ages.
- AV/CM s22. Hell and Damnation: Imaging the Afterlife.
- CM/EN 104. Introduction to Medieval English Literature.
- CM/EN 121D. The Many Lives of King Arthur.
- CM/EN 206. Trans/Atlantic Chaucer: Colonizing Identities in the Middle Ages.
- CM/EN 344. Chaucer and His Context.
- CM/EN 395E. Medieval Romance.
- CM/HI 102. Medieval Worlds.
- CM/HI 292. The Dawn of the Middle Ages.
- CM/HI 293. Trans-Saharan Africa in the Middle Ages.
- ENG 395Y. Medieval London.
- FYS 341. King Arthur: Myth and Legend.
- INDC 221. Venice to Tokyo: Religion and Trade along the Spice and Silk Routes.
Middle East in Global Context (C090)
This concentration focuses on the Middle East and Middle Eastern identities in non-Middle Eastern contexts, including Africa, Europe, and the United States. S. Aslan, A. Akhtar.
Requirements
Any four credits from a minimum of three departments/programs. No more than two Religious Studies credits may be applied to this GEC. If studying abroad in the Middle East and North Africa, up to two non-Bates credits may be applied to the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AM/EN 247. Contemporary Arab American Literature.
- AV/CM 241. The Art of Islam.
- CM/HI 293. Trans-Saharan Africa in the Middle Ages.
- CM/RE 238. Jews and Judaism in Antiquity.
- CM/RE 264. Islamic Civilization: Politics, History, Arts.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 240E. Le Maghreb: Vue de l'Enfance.
- HI/RE 320. Religion and Government in the Middle East: Colonialism to the Arab Spring.
- INDC 221. Venice to Tokyo: Religion and Trade along the Spice and Silk Routes.
- PLTC 205. State-Society Relations in the Modern Middle East.
- PLTC 260. Nationalism and Nation Building.
- PLTC 262. Politics of the Modern Middle East.
- PLTC s24. Politics of Imagery in the Middle East.
- REL 112. Introduction to Islam: Religion, Practice, and Culture.
- REL 120. Muslims, Christians, and Jews.
Modern Europe (C024)
This concentration encourages students to improve their ability to communicate in one of four languages spoken in Europe, and to increase their knowledge of the dynamic nature of European development from World War I to the present. J. Richter.
Requirements
Four credits, including two credts in a single European language (French, German, Russian, or Spanish) and two credits in European studies. One language credit in French, German, Russian, or Spanish, and one credit in modern European history, politics, sociology completed on a Bates-approved study-abroad program in Europe may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval of the concentration coordinator.
Not open to European Studies majors.
Courses
- AVC 279. Abstract Expressionism.
- AVC 281. Realism and Impressionism.
- AVC 282. Modern European Art.
- ENG 254. Modern British Literature since 1900.
- ES/RU 216. Nature in the Cultures of Russia.
- EU/GR 254. Berlin and Vienna, 1900–1914.
- EU/HI 104. Revolutionary Europe and Its Legacies, 1789 to Yesterday.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- EU/SO 290. Political Sociology.
- EUS 101. Introduction to Europe.
- EUS 215. Jewish Lives in Eastern Europe: History, Memory, Story.
- EUS 240. Daily Life under Hitler and Stalin.
- EUS 261. Slavic Europe.
- FR/GS 151. Gender, Race, and Social Class in French and Francophone Film.
- FRE 101. Elementary French I.
- FRE 102. Elementary French II.
- FRE 201. Intermediate French.
- FRE 205. Oral French.
- FRE 207. Introduction to Contemporary France.
- FRE 235. Advanced French Language and Introduction to Film Analysis.
- FYS 297. The Idea of Europe.
- FYS 425. Politics and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe.
- GER 101. Introduction to German Language and Culture I.
- GER 102. Introduction to German Language and Culture II.
- GER 201. Intermediate German Language and Culture I.
- GER 202. Intermediate German Language and Culture II.
- GER 233. Advanced German Language and Introduction to German Studies.
- GER 350. Margins and Migrations.
- GER 358. Literature and Film of the German Democratic Republic.
- GER s26. The Split Screen: Reconstructing National Identities in West and East German Cinema.
- GS/HS 344. Gendering Social Awareness in Contemporary Spain.
- HISP 201. Intermediate Spanish I.
- HISP 202. Intermediate Spanish II.
- HISP 205. Advanced Spanish.
- HISP 228. Screen and Media.
- HISP 362. Culture in Franco Spain.
- INDC 301A. Sex and the Modern City: European Cultures at the Fin-de-Siècle.
- INDC s18. Wilde Times: Scandal, Celebrity, and the Law.
- PLTC 344. Ethnicity and Conflict.
- RUSS 101. Elementary Russian I.
- RUSS 102. Elementary Russian II.
- RUSS 201. Intermediate Russian I.
- RUSS 202. Intermediate Russian II.
- RUSS 301. Advanced Russian I.
- RUSS 302. Advanced Russian II.
- RUSS 306. Advanced Russian Culture and Language.
- THEA s33. Central European Theater and Film.
Music and Culture (C080)
This concentration provides opportunities to examine and consider the ways that music and culture shape each other. Individually and collectively, the courses cover a vast range of musical traditions and their cultures, as well as introducing many ways of combining musical, historical, anthropological, and cultural-theoretical tools of analysis. G. Fatone.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied to the concentration, if judged comparable to one of those below, with pre-approval by the coordinator. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in music.
Courses
- AF/MU 249. African American Popular Music.
- AN/MU 212. How Music Performs Culture: Introduction to Ethnomusicology.
- AN/MU 298. Musical Ethnography: Writing Music Culture.
- MU/PY 253. Music and the Embodied Mind.
- MUS 103. Music in World Cultures.
- MUS 210. Classical Music in Western Culture.
- MUS 247. History of Jazz.
- MUS 248. Music in Contemporary Popular Culture.
Philosophy (C042)
This concentration introduces students to the reflective enterprise that is philosophy. There is a sense in which philosophy is the original interdisciplinary subject. In the words of the twentieth-century American philospher Wilfrid Sellars: "The aim of philosophy, abstractly formulated, is to understand how things in the broadest possible sense of the term hang together in the broadest possible sense of the term." As such, philosophy attempts to understand how all of the many descriptions and explanations of things that are given by the other disciplines are related to one another. D. Cummiskey.
Requirements
Any four credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a philosophy major or minor.
Philosophy and Psychology (C031)
This concentration is intended to acquaint students with scholarly work on questions of interest to both philosophers and psychologists, and to facilitate students' own clear thinking on such issues. Given the breadth of the disciplines of philosophy and psychology, a wide variety of issues is addressed in these courses. Topics include moral judgment, moral responsibility, sensation and perception, the self, theory of mind, and the relationship between mind and brain. Students consider such issues from both disciplinary perspectives. D. Cummiskey.
Requirements
Four credits from the list below, two of which must be from philosophy and two of which must be from psychology or neuroscience. FYS 362, 427, 481, or 503 may be substituted for one of the philosophy credits and FYS 308 or 455 may be substituted for one of the psychology credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AM/PY 372. Racial and Ethnic Identity Development.
- AS/PY 260. Cultural Psychology.
- BI/PL 323E. Philosophy of Evolution.
- FYS 308. Searching for the Good Life.
- FYS 362. Biomedical Ethics.
- FYS 427. Introduction to Ecopsychology: The Human-Nature Relationship.
- FYS 429. Thinking and Feeling.
- FYS 455. Neuroscience Fiction.
- FYS 481. Truth.
- FYS 503. Making Moral Minds: Nature, Nurture, and the Sources of Morality.
- GS/PL 262. Feminist Philosophy.
- MU/PY 253. Music and the Embodied Mind.
- NRSC 208. Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society.
- NS/PY 304. Embodied Cognition, Technoculture, and the Future of Identity.
- NS/PY 330. Cognitive Neuroscience/Lab.
- NS/PY 331. Cognitive Neuroscience.
- NS/PY 361. Topics in Affective Neuroscience.
- NS/PY 362. Psychopharmacology.
- NS/PY 363. Physiological Psychology/Lab.
- NS/PY 366. Physiological Psychology.
- PHIL 195. Introduction to Logic.
- PHIL 210. Philosophy of Cognitive Science.
- PHIL 211. Philosophy of Science.
- PHIL 213. Biomedical Ethics.
- PHIL 233. Making Moral Minds: Nature, Nurture, and the Sources of Morality.
- PHIL 235. Philosophy of Mind.
- PHIL 236. Theory of Knowledge.
- PHIL 245. Metaphysics.
- PHIL 255. Human Nature, Politics, and Morals.
- PHIL 256. Moral Philosophy.
- PHIL 257. Moral Luck and Social Identity.
- PHIL 272. Philosophy in the Modern Era (1600-1800).
- PHIL 310. Buddhist Philosophy.
- PHIL 321J. Self-Knowledge.
- PHIL 321K. Philosophy of Animal Minds.
- PHIL 323C. The Metaphysics of Action.
- PHIL 324E. Virtue and Emotions.
- PHIL 332. Moral Psychology.
- PHIL s29. Logic: Possibility, Proofs, and Paradox.
- PL/RE 260. Philosophy of Religion.
- PSYC 101. Principles of Psychology.
- PSYC 211. Psychology of Personality.
- PSYC 215. Medical Psychology.
- PSYC 222. Applied Cognitive Psychology.
- PSYC 230. Cognitive Psychology.
- PSYC 235. Abnormal Psychology.
- PSYC 240. Developmental Psychology.
- PSYC 302. Sensation and Perception.
- PSYC 317. Psychology and Law.
- PSYC 341. Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology.
- PSYC 374. Psychology of Language.
- PSYC 380. Social Cognition.
- PY/RL 312. Psychology of Religion.
- PY/SO 210. Social Psychology.
Physics of the Large and Small (C056)
Physics is the study of matter and energy. A very small number of fundamental physical principles provide a coherent and unified understanding of an enormous variety of phenomena, ranging in scale from the subnuclear to the cosmological. Any set of physics and astronomy courses illustrates these principles and their coherence. J. Smedley.
Requirements
Any four credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration. Students may not use more than one of the following toward the concentration: CHEM 301, 302, or 310. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in physics.
Courses
- Any Bates Astronomy course.
- Any Bates course cross-listed in Astronomy.
- Any Bates Physics course.
- Any Bates course cross-listed in Physics.
- CHEM 301. Quantum Chemistry.
- CHEM 302. Statistical Thermodynamics.
- CHEM 310. Biophysical Chemistry.
- ENVR 229. Electric Grids.
- FYS 336. Nanotechnology Project: Manipulating Atoms/Lab.
Popular Culture (C040)
This concentration encourages students to explore different genres of popular culture from a variety of cultures in order to understand the powerful impact they have on shaping peoples' values and attitudes. C. Nero, M. Beasley.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/MU 249. African American Popular Music.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AM/AV 288. Visualizing Race.
- AS/JA 261. Cultural History of Japan: From Jōmon Pottery to Manga.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FYS 423. Humor and Laughter in Literature and Visual Media.
- MUS 248. Music in Contemporary Popular Culture.
- PHIL s20. Film as Philosophy.
- RFSS 276. Television Criticism.
- RFSS 391A. The Rhetoric of Alien Abduction.
Post/Colonial Issues in French and Spanish (C032)
The French and Spanish empires left linguistic, cultural, and sociopolitical legacies throughout the world. Colonial territories and postcolonial nations have responded to colonial power structures through self-inquiry and contestation. The courses included in this concentration approach colonial and postcolonial issues in French and Spanish through various critical perspectives. The concentration requires intermediate proficiency in both French and Spanish. K. Read.
Requirements
Four credits, at least one of which must be from French and at least one of which must be from Hispanic studies. Students are expected to have at least an intermediate level of proficiency in both languages. An approved co-curricular project may substitute for one credit or two non-Bates credits may be applied toward this concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a major or minor in French or Spanish.
Courses
- AM/FR 240I. French in Maine.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 207. Introduction to Contemporary France.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 374. Écrire la Révolution: French Literature in the Nineteenth Century.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 318. Through the Eyes of Children.
- GS/HS 327. Gendered Experiences in the Américas Borderlands.
- HISP 224. Protest and Justice.
- HISP 230. Readings in Spanish American and Spanish Caribbean Literature.
- INDC 321. Afroambiente: Escritura negra y medio ambiente.
Co-curricular Activities
Community-based Project.
An approved community-based project may replace one course Supervised by concentration coordinator.
Premodern History (C048)
The historical study of peoples and cultures to 1500 C.E. S. Federico.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AS/HI 171. Imperial China.
- AV/CM 251. The Age of the Cathedrals.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AV/CM 265. Florence to Bruges: The Early Renaissance in Europe.
- CM/HI 101. Introduction to the Ancient World.
- CM/HI 102. Medieval Worlds.
- CM/HI 108. Roman Civilization: The Republic.
- CM/HI 109. Roman Civilization: The Empire.
- CM/HI 112. Ancient Greek History.
- CM/HI 216. Conflict and Community in Medieval Spain.
- CM/HI 292. The Dawn of the Middle Ages.
- CM/HI 293. Trans-Saharan Africa in the Middle Ages.
- ENG 395Y. Medieval London.
- HI/LL s29. Montezuma's Mexico: Aztecs and their World.
Producing Culture: Arts and Audience (C061)
Composers, choreographers, directors, curators, and producers often interact with performing artists, studio artists, and writers in order to engage audiences. What is produced, for whom, and in support of which values? Work in this concentration considers the interrelationship between cultural producers and cultural consumers. T. Nguyen.
Requirements
Any four credits from at least two departments/programs. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/DN 252. Contemporary Issues in Dance.
- AF/MU 249. African American Popular Music.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AV/AS 246. Visual Narratives: Storytelling in East Asian Art.
- AV/AS 247. The Art of Zen Buddhism.
- AV/AS s29. Modern Vietnamese Culture through Film.
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 361. Museum Internship.
- AVC s26. Museum Studies.
- DANC 250. Dance History.
- DANC 300. Bates Dance Festival.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- MUS 103. Music in World Cultures.
- MUS 247. History of Jazz.
- THEA 231. Scene Design.
- THEA 233. Costume Design.
Public Health (C065)
This concentration explores public and community health from interdisciplinary perspectives, looking at such issues as medical practice; public policy concerning health care; sociology of race, class, and gender; and cultural constructions of health and sickness. It aims to expose students to public health issues at global, national, and local levels. It may include community-engaged learning, courses from abroad, community-based research, and internships. K. Low.
Requirements
Four credits (or three credits and one co-curricular activity) including at least one from List A (foregrounding science) and at least one credit from List B (foregrounding the social sciences and the humanities). No more than two credits can come from any single department or program. Up to two non-Bates credits may be counted if judged equivalent to the courses listed below, or if they contain substantial public health content and have been approved beforehand by the concentration coordinator. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count towards the concentration. A co-curricular experience may substitute for one concentration requirement when the experience has a significant academic component, is supervised by a faculty member, and is pre-approved by the concentration coordinator. Students declaring this concentration may not also declare concentration C027 (The Human Body).
List A: BIO 108, 127, 129, 301, 314, 315, 321, 326, 331, 351, s23, s40; CHEM 125, 321; ENVR 203; FYS 236, 262; GS/PY 343; NS/PY 362;
List B: AF/HI 280; AM/PY 372, ECON 222, 325, 335; ENG 263; ENVR 350; FYS 362, 419; GS/PT s14; GS/PY 343; GSS 335, 400C; HIST 294; INDS 236, 267; NRSC 208, s15; PHIL 213; PSYC 303; SOC 230, 235, 330.
Courses
- AF/HI 280. Health and Healing in Africa.
- AM/PY 372. Racial and Ethnic Identity Development.
- BI/MA 255A. Mathematical Models in Biology.
- BIO 127. Emerging and Reemerging Infections across the Globe.
- BIO 129. Human Nutrition.
- BIO 301. Pathophysiology.
- BIO 315. Microbiology/Lab.
- BIO 321. Cellular Biochemistry.
- BIO 326. Cancer Biology/Lab.
- BIO 331. Molecular Biology/Lab.
- CHEM 125. Bioenergetics and Nutrition.
- CHEM 321. Biological Chemistry I/Lab.
- CHI s21. Chinese Language, Culture, Health, and Chinese Traditional Medicine.
- ECON 222. Environmental Economics and Policy.
- ECON 325. Prices, Property, and the Problem of the Commons.
- ECON 335. Health Economics.
- ENG 263. Literature, Medicine, Empathy.
- ENVR 203. Scientific Approaches to Environmental Issues/Lab.
- ENVR 350. Environmental Justice.
- FYS 236. Epidemics: Past, Present, and Future.
- FYS 305. Corporal Culture: Body and Health in America.
- FYS 362. Biomedical Ethics.
- FYS 419. Tobacco in History and Culture.
- FYS 486. Wildlife Diseases: The Nature of Parasitism.
- GS/PY 343. Women, Culture, and Health.
- GSS 335. Tobacco: Gender Matters.
- GSS 400C. Understanding Disease.
- HIST 294. The Revolutionary Black Atlantic, 1770–1840.
- INDC 236. Race Matters: Tobacco in North America.
- INDC 267. Blood, Genes, and American Culture.
- NRSC 208. Neuroscience, Ethics, and Society.
- NS/PY 362. Psychopharmacology.
- PHIL 213. Biomedical Ethics.
- PSYC 303. Health Psychology.
- SOC 230. Sociology of Health and Illness.
- SOC 235. Global Health: Sociological Perspectives.
Co-curricular Activities
Fieldwork.
Experiential public health community projects must be preapproved by the concentration coordinator and the Harward Center for Community Partnerships. Supervised by the concentration coordinator.
Queer Studies (C009)
Queer studies looks at sexuality and gender while foregrounding non-normative or anti-normative perspectives. Queer studies includes considerations of lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, and genderqueer history, culture, and politics, with mindful attention to the limits and alternatives to those time- and culture-bound terms. E. Rand.
Requirements
Four credits, one of which must be at the 300 level. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if it is determined to be equivalent to a Bates credit in the list below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Ordinarily, a non-Bates credit may not be substituted for the required 300-level credit.
Courses
- AF/DN 252. Contemporary Issues in Dance.
- AM/GS 353. Critical Theory/Critical Acts.
- AV/GS 287. Gender and Visual Culture.
- AV/GS 345. Trans Studies in the Politics of Visibility.
- CM/GS 204. Classics and the History of Sexuality.
- CM/GS 217. Sex and Gender in Ancient Rome.
- FYS 177. Sex and Sexualities.
- FYS 191. Love and Friendship in the Classical World.
- FYS 203. Family Stories.
- FYS 455. Neuroscience Fiction.
- GS/PT 219. Social Movements in Latin America.
- GS/PT 282. Constitutional Law II: Rights and Identities.
- GS/PT 326. The Politics of Authenticity.
- GS/PY 309. The Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity.
- GS/RE 310. Gender, Race, and Judaism.
- GS/SO 270. Sociology of Gender.
- GSS 100. Introduction to Gender and Sexuality Studies.
- GSS 202. Queer and Trans Sports Studies.
- GSS 205. Queer Indigenous Studies.
- GSS 208. Transgender Studies.
- GSS 312. Transgender Narratives.
- GSS 335. Tobacco: Gender Matters.
- GSS 356. Marriage in America.
- INDC 238. Queer Power: Political Sociology of U.S. Sexuality Movements.
- INDC s18. Wilde Times: Scandal, Celebrity, and the Law.
- RFSS 260. Lesbian and Gay Images in Film.
Racisms (C041)
Racism is a system of ideas and practices that deny the humanity of individuals who are ascribed to certain groups and collectivities. The practice of racism has deep historical roots and there is not one single type of racism. Religious, social, scientific, political, and cultural discourses have contributed to racist regimes. C. Nero.
Requirements
Any four credits, no more than two of which may be from the same department/program. One credit should be at the 300 level. With prior permission of the concentration coordinator two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below, but, ordinarily may not be substituted for the required 300-level credit.
Courses
- AF/AM 119. Cultural Politics.
- AF/AM 227. #BlackLivesMatter.
- AF/DN 252. Contemporary Issues in Dance.
- AF/EN 115. Introduction to African American Literature II: 1910–Present.
- AF/EN 223. Survey of Literatures of the Caribbean.
- AF/ES 239. Anti-Blackness and the Environment.
- AF/GS 201. Race, Ethnicity, and Feminist Thought.
- AF/GS 303. Birthing while Black.
- AF/HI 301E. African Slavery in the Americas.
- AF/MU 249. African American Popular Music.
- AF/RF 162. White Redemption: Cinema and the Co-optation of African American History.
- AF/RF 202. Coming of Age While Black.
- AF/SO 320. Immigrant Racialization.
- AFR 100. Introduction to Africana.
- AFR 304. Decolonization.
- AM/AN 222. Archaeology and Colonial Entanglements in North America.
- AM/AV 288. Visualizing Race.
- AM/EN 247. Contemporary Arab American Literature.
- AM/EN 281. Arab American Poetry.
- AM/HI 141. Rise of the American Empire.
- AM/HI 244. Native American History.
- AM/HI 299. White Supremacy: An American History.
- AM/PY 372. Racial and Ethnic Identity Development.
- AV/EN 208. Asian American Graphic Narrative.
- DANC 250. Dance History.
- ED/SO 242. Race and Justice in American Education.
- EDUC 390. Discipline, Race, and Schooling.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 105. 9/11 in Literature and Film.
- ENG 119. "I, Too, Sing America": Poetry of this Moment/Movement.
- ENG 143. Nineteenth-Century American Literature.
- ENG 214. Shakespeare and Early Modern Racialization.
- ENVR 350. Environmental Justice.
- EU/HI 206. The Empire Strikes Back: The Ends of European Empires in the Twentieth Century.
- EUS 240. Daily Life under Hitler and Stalin.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 208. Introduction to the Francophone World.
- FRE 379. Documenting the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda.
- FYS 439. Defining Difference: How China and the United States Think about Racial Diversity.
- FYS 440. Roots of Nonviolence.
- FYS 471. Race, Gender, and Identity in STEM.
- GS/HS 327. Gendered Experiences in the Américas Borderlands.
- GSS 205. Queer Indigenous Studies.
- GSS 312. Transgender Narratives.
- HI/LL 181. Latin American History: From the Conquest to the Present.
- HI/LL 279. The Age of Revolution: Latin American Edition.
- HIST 294. The Revolutionary Black Atlantic, 1770–1840.
- INDC 100. African Perspectives on Justice, Human Rights, and Renewal.
- INDC 257. African American Women's History and Social Transformation.
- INDC 267. Blood, Genes, and American Culture.
- INDC 301G. Black Resistance from the Civil War to Civil Rights.
- INDC 301Z. Race and U.S. Women's Movements.
- INDC 305. Art, Power, and Politics.
- INDC 321. Afroambiente: Escritura negra y medio ambiente.
- INDC 325. Black Feminist Literary Theory and Practice.
- INDC 390. Afro-Latinoamérica.
- LL/PT 208. Latinx Politics.
- PHIL 257. Moral Luck and Social Identity.
- PHIL 365D. Reparations and Responsibility.
- PLTC 247. Transition and Transformation in Southern Africa.
- PY/SO 371. Prejudice and Stereotyping.
- PY/SO 373. Racism: A Multilevel Approach.
- REL 255. African American Religious Traditions.
- SOC 250. Privilege, Power, and Inequality.
- SOC 350. Race, Crime, and Punishment in America.
Religious Studies (C001)
This concentration focuses on different aspects of religious studies. C. Baker.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in religious studies.
Courses
- Any Bates Religious Studies course.
- Any Bates course cross-listed in Religious Studies.
- AV/AS 243. Buddhist Arts and Visual Cultures.
- AV/AS 247. The Art of Zen Buddhism.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- AV/AS 289. Stupa Towers: Forms, Symbols, and Narratives in Buddhist Architecture.
- AV/CM 251. The Age of the Cathedrals.
- AV/CM 252. Art of the Middle Ages.
- AV/CM 373. Art of the Global Middle Ages.
- AV/CM s22. Hell and Damnation: Imaging the Afterlife.
- FYS 152. Religion and Civil Rights.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
- FYS 445. The Nature of Spirituality.
- INDC 301Y. The Spanish Inquisition.
- PHIL 310. Buddhist Philosophy.
Renaissance: Arts and Letters (C035)
The literature and visual arts from the late fourteenth through the early eighteenth centuries in Europe and its American colonies helped shape many of our contemporary cultural models. The Renaissance marked a shift in worldview: Humanism shaped the centrality of the individual; religion once again became an ideological battleground; new national states developed capitalism; slavery took hold in the Americas; technology advanced the spread of empire; and national languages acquired a new prestige. E. Harwood.
Requirements
Four credits, at least one of which must be from List A (courses in the visual arts) and at least one of which must be from List B (courses in literature and textual culture.) Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
List A: AVC 264, 271, 285, s18; AV/CM 251, 265.
List B: ENG 129, 202, 204213, 214, 222, 226, 395A, s43; FRE 250, 375; HIST 140; HS/LS 341; INDS 301Y.
Courses
- AV/CM 251. The Age of the Cathedrals.
- AV/CM 265. Florence to Bruges: The Early Renaissance in Europe.
- AVC 264. Leonardo and His Heirs: High Renaissance and Mannerism.
- AVC 271. Italian Baroque Art.
- ENG 129. Introduction to Early Modern English Literature.
- ENG 213. Shakespeare.
- ENG 214. Shakespeare and Early Modern Racialization.
- ENG 222. Seventeenth-Century Literature: Animal and Political Lives.
- FRE 250. Power and Resistance through Writing.
- FRE 372. Woman Writer/Women Written.
- HIST 140. Origins of New Nations, 1500–1820.
- HS/LL 341. Lectura americana de Cervantes.
- INDC 301Y. The Spanish Inquisition.
Russian Language (C069)
This concentration encourages the study of the Russian language, culture, and literature. R. Cernahoschi.
Requirements
Four of the following credits. Up to two credits in Russian language, culture, or literature taken in an off-campus study program may substitute for up to two credits with the approval by the coordinator. Not open to students who declare a major or minor in Russian, or Bates Fall Semester Abroad in Russia (C078).
Courses
- Any Bates Bates Fall Semester Abroad, Russia course.
- ES/RU 216. Nature in the Cultures of Russia.
- EUS 240. Daily Life under Hitler and Stalin.
- EUS 261. Slavic Europe.
- RUSS 101. Elementary Russian I.
- RUSS 102. Elementary Russian II.
- RUSS 201. Intermediate Russian I.
- RUSS 202. Intermediate Russian II.
- RUSS 301. Advanced Russian I.
- RUSS 302. Advanced Russian II.
- RUSS 306. Advanced Russian Culture and Language.
Sound (C005)
This concentration is a wide-ranging exploration of the nature of sound. Topics include the physical nature of sound production, organismal perception of sound, and sonic elements in the performing arts. J. Smedley.
Requirements
Four course credits including two from list A and two from list B. Students selecting MUS 270 or 290 need to complete any two sections to receive one course credit. One music performance co-curricular component may substitute for one music course. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration.
List A: MUS 101, 110, 218, 231, 232, 235, 237, 238, 270, 290A, 290B, 290C, 290D, 290E, 290F, 290H, s27.
List B: AN/PY 213; AV/TH 221; BIO 102, s31; DC/MU 219, s15; ENG 121W; HISP 337; MU/PY 253; NS/PY 160; PHYS 103; PSYC 302; THEA 132, 261, 263.
Courses
- BIO s31. Avian Biology/Lab.
- DC/MU 219. Composing Sonic Systems.
- DC/MU s15. Sonic Arts and Crafts.
- MU/PY 253. Music and the Embodied Mind.
- MUS 101. Introduction to Listening.
- MUS 103. Music in World Cultures.
- MUS 110. Music Theory for Beginners.
- MUS 218. Soundscapes: Recording and Designing Sound.
- MUS 231. Music Theory I.
- MUS 232. Music Theory II.
- MUS 235. Music Composition.
- MUS 270. Applied Music.
- MUS 290A. College Choir.
- MUS 290B. American String Band Ensemble.
- MUS 290C. Gamelan Ensemble.
- MUS 290D. Jazz Band and Jazz Combo.
- MUS 290E. Orchestra.
- MUS 290F. Steel Pan Orchestra.
- MUS 290H. Brass Ensemble.
- MUS s27. Exploring Jazz Guitar.
- NS/PY 160. Introduction to Neuroscience.
- PHYS 103. Musical Acoustics/Lab.
- PSYC 302. Sensation and Perception.
- THEA 132. Theater Technology.
- THEA 261. Beginning Acting.
- THEA 263. Voice and Speech.
Co-curricular Activities
Music Performance.
Participation for two consecutive semesters in one of the following ensembles: College Choir, American String Band Ensemble, Gamelan, Jazz Band, Orchestra, Steel Pan Orchestra; Brass Ensemble; or in private instruction. Supervised by music department.
South Asian Studies (C087)
This concentration introduces students to different aspects of the history, culture, religion, literature, and art of South Asia, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Southeast Asia. A. Melnick Dyer.
Requirements
Any four credits. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. Participation in the SITA (South India Term Abroad) Program may be substituted for two credits with prior approval. Not open to minors in Asian studies.
Courses
- AS/RE 249. The Hindu Tradition.
- AS/RE 250. Buddhist Traditions.
- AS/RE 251. Religions of Tibet.
- AS/RE 308. Buddhist Texts in Translation.
- AV/AS 243. Buddhist Arts and Visual Cultures.
- AV/AS 245. Architectural Monuments of Southeast Asia.
- AV/AS 248. The Art of Rock-Cut Architecture in Asia.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
- MUS 290C. Gamelan Ensemble.
- PHIL 310. Buddhist Philosophy.
- RFSS 391F. Bollywood.
Spanish in Tarragona (C089)
The Bates Fall Semester Abroad in Tarragona consists of intensive language instruction, cultural immersion in a modern European city, and focused study on the history and culture of Spain and its regions. K. Melvin.
Requirements
Successful completion of the Bates Fall Semester Abroad in Tarragona. In the event that a student fails one of the FSA credits, the student may still earn credit for this concentration by passing a credit offered in the Hispanic studies department at Bates.
Theater Arts (C028)
This concentration serves as an introduction to the study and making of theater. C. Dilley, J. Fox.
Requirements
Four credits in theater, one of which must be THEA 101. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
The Translated World (C067)
In this concentration, students explore national literatures as well as literatures from different historical epochs in translation. Students consider how these literatures represent culturally distinct experiences and contribute to a complex understanding of global imaginations, values, and societies. L. Maurizio.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AS/CI 207. Traditional Chinese Literature in Translation.
- AS/CI 223. Communism, Capitalism, and Cannibalism: New and Emerging Voices in Chinese Literature.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 215. Film, Literature, and the Cultures of Postwar Japan.
- AS/JA s27. Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
- ASIA 235. Supernatural in East Asia.
- CM/GS 204. Classics and the History of Sexuality.
- CM/RE 218. Greek and Roman Myths.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- ES/RU 216. Nature in the Cultures of Russia.
- EU/GR 254. Berlin and Vienna, 1900–1914.
- FYS 191. Love and Friendship in the Classical World.
- FYS 318. Through the Eyes of Children.
- FYS 345. Classical Myths and Contemporary Art.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
- FYS 447. Holocaust on Stage.
- FYS 518. Ancient Magic and its Practitioners.
- PLTC 243. Politics and Literature.
Visible Ideas: 2D and 3D Design (C029)
A design is a plan. In art, the study of design is the study of the relationship between idea and physical form, and how this interaction expresses content. These courses emphasize ways to track and manipulate the relationship between the essential elements of visual language, including line, color, light, volume, scale, and space. E. Morris.
Requirements
Four credits, with no more than three from any one department/program. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. One independent study, pre-approved by the coordinator, may also count toward the concentration.
Courses
- AV/ES s15. Photographing the Landscape.
- AVC 202. Painting: Color and Design.
- AVC 203. Ceramic Design and Techniques.
- AVC 207. Ceramics: Making Sculptural Form.
- AVC 209. Video: Moving Image as an Artistic Practice.
- AVC 211. Animation I: Hand-Drawn Animation.
- AVC 212. Drawing: From Still Life to the Model.
- AVC 213. Drawing: Realism to Abstraction.
- AVC 215. Painting: Abstraction and Invention.
- AVC 219. Photography: The Digital Image.
- AVC 220. The Digital Composite: A Creative Process.
- AVC 224. The Japanese Tea Bowl.
- AVC 312. Drawing the Figure.
- AVC 314. Advanced Painting.
- AVC 315. Studio Pottery.
- AVC 316. Printmaking Workshop.
- AVC 318. Photography: Perception and Expression.
- AVC 320. Contemporary Photography: A Body of Work.
- AVC 350. Visual Meaning: Process, Material, Format.
- AVC 360. Independent Study.
- AVC 366. Drawing the Model/Sustained Study.
- AVC s21. Soda Firing.
- AVC s35. Materials and Techniques of Drawing and Painting.
- DANC 151. Making Dance.
- DANC 240. A Kinesthetic Approach.
- DANC 251. Making Dance II.
- ENG 105. 9/11 in Literature and Film.
- ENVR 220. GIS across the Curriculum.
- FYS 466. Math and the Art of M. C. Escher.
- PSYC 302. Sensation and Perception.
- THEA 130. Introduction to Design.
- THEA 132. Theater Technology.
- THEA 231. Scene Design.
- THEA 232. Lighting Design.
- THEA 233. Costume Design.
- THEA 236. Pattern Drafting and Draping.
Water and Society (C070)
Water is essential to life. Consequently, people often live along the coast, the banks of rivers, the margins of lakes or in regions with groundwater resources for drinking, irrigation, industry, recreation, and the food supply. Water is also one of the most highly politicized resources on earth and has been the source of numerous and continuing conflicts among humans. Our dependence on water necessitates that we share and preserve this resource, yet increasing pressures on our water bodies are resulting in reduced access to potable water, collapse of marine ecosystems, and a decrease in biodiversity. This concentration explores the connections between humans and water and includes scientific, aesthetic, economic, political, and ethical perspectives. B. Johnson.
Requirements
Four credits, no more than two of which are from the same department or program. Two non-Bates credits may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- BI/EA 113. Marine Science.
- BIO 313. Marine Ecology/Lab.
- EA/ES 226. Hydrogeology.
- EACS 103. Earth Surface Environments and Environmental Change/Lab.
- EACS 109. Earth’s Climate System/Lab.
- EACS 210. Sedimentary Processes and Environments/Lab.
- EACS 230. Earth Structure and Dynamics/Lab.
- EACS 240. Environmental Geochemistry/Lab.
- ECON 222. Environmental Economics and Policy.
- EN/ES 121Q. The Lives of Rivers.
- ENVR 221. Ecology of Food and Farming.
- ENVR 240. Water and Watersheds/Lab.
- ENVR 319. Imagining Climate Change.
- ES/PL 214. Environmental Ethics.
- FYS 476. Coastal Hazards/Lab.
Women and Gender in Asia (C050)
Focusing on gender issues, this concentration affords students a context for studying individuals and their interactions in an Asian context. A. Melnick Dyer.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AS/HI s15. Sport, Gender, and the Body in Modern China.
- AS/JA 125. Japanese Literature and Society.
- AS/JA 215. Film, Literature, and the Cultures of Postwar Japan.
- ASIA 320. Individual and Society in East Asia.
- AV/EN 208. Asian American Graphic Narrative.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 260. Passages to and from India.
- FYS 346. Desire, Devotion, Suffering.
- GS/RE 311. Buddhism and Gender.
Women and Writing (C060)
This concentration focuses on women's writing across cultures and in different time periods. The concentration includes both historical and theoretical perspectives on women's writing. M. Rice-DeFosse.
Requirements
Any four credits. One non-Bates credit may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval.
Courses
- AF/EN 265. The Writings of Toni Morrison.
- EN/GS 121G. Asian American Women Writers.
- ENG 231. Women Writers of the 1950s.
- ENG 238. Jane Austen: Then and Now.
- FR/GS 377. Colon/Colonisé: Récits de l'Expérience Nord-Africaine.
- FRE 372. Woman Writer/Women Written.
- GS/HS 327. Gendered Experiences in the Américas Borderlands.
- INDC 325. Black Feminist Literary Theory and Practice.
Writing Spain (C018)
This concentration offers students a framework for exploring in depth the plurality and diversity of the literary production of Spanish-speaking writers from the Iberian Peninsula from the Middle Ages to the present. Courses examine writing in Spain as a mode of aesthetic expression, as a means of affirmation and contestation of individual and national identities, and as a force for revolution and reaction. D. George.
Requirements
SPAN 231 plus three additional credits. One non-Bates credit which may be applied toward the concentration if judged comparable to one of those below by the concentration coordinator and with prior approval. This concentration is not open to students who have declared a minor in Spanish.