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Current Course Outlines

Course Outlines for 2024-2025

Course outlines will be available in mid-August and posted as they become available.
Please refer to and archived course outlines.

1000 Level Courses

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HUMS 1000A Foundational Myths and Histories

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HUMS 1200A Humanities and Classical Civilization

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HUMS 1200B Humanities and Classical Civilization

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HUMS 1300A Classical Literature and Its Reception College of the Humanities

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RELI 1731A Religion and Culture

2000 Level Courses

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HUMS 2000A Reason and Revelation

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HUMS 2101A Art from Antiquity to the Medieval World

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HUMS 2102 Modern European Art c.1300-present

3000 Level Courses

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HUMS 3000A Culture and Imagination

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HUMS 3102A Western Music: 1000-1850

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HUMS 3103 Western Art Music: 1820-2000

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HUMS 3200A European Literature

4000 Level Courses

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HUMS 4000 Politics, Modernity and the Common Good, Winter 2025

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HUMS 4000A Politics, Modernity and the Common Good

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HUMS 4103 Science in the Modern World

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HUMS 4500A Modern Intellectual History

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HUMS 4902/ENGL 4301 A Studies in Renaissance Literature, Tudor Queens: Sex, Power, and Writing in the Lives of Katherine Parr, Mary Tudor, and Elizabeth I

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HUMS 4903A Research Seminar: Nietzsche & Zarathustra

4th Year HUMS Seminar Descriptions Fall Winter 2024/2025

HUMS 4902B/ENGL 4301/ENGL 5303 (Winter Term): Tudor Queens

Professor Micheline White

Renaissance queens have long fascinated the reading public, but their political power and literary writings have only recently become the objects of academic study. In this seminar, students will develop an in-depth understanding of three Renaissance queens who made the most of their unusual social status and made lasting contributions to English culture. In this course, we will explore early modern attitudes towards the concepts of a 鈥渜ueen consort,鈥 a 鈥渜ueen regent,鈥 a 鈥渜ueen regnant鈥 and a 鈥渄owager queen,鈥 and we will focus on three English queens鈥 textual and visual productions including speeches, published prose works, diplomatic letters, poetry, translations, and portraits. Students will be introduced to early modern paleography and book history. Those who wish can also explore digital versions of manuscript writing. We will also consider the depictions of these queens in recent films and TV programs.

HUMS 4903B/RELI 4850/RELI 5850 (Winter Term):  Hermeneutics: Interpreting texts

Professor Noel Salmond

Large-scale religious traditions generally rely on texts regarded as sacred scripture. But how are we to understand what these texts mean? This seminar examines modes of understanding internal to religious traditions (both Western and Asian) while also examining philosophical thinking concerned with the whole question of interpretation (hermeneutics) extending beyond religion to include literary theory. Our purview extends to texts of that broader canon referred to as 鈥淕reat Books鈥 and may extend to works of visual art or symbolism. We will be guided by a rubric of did, has, and could. What did the text mean originally in the intent of its original composers? What has the text meant according to commentators over its history of reception? Finally, what could the text mean for us today?  This last question is clearly different from the previous two and is located at, or beyond in some perspectives, the frontier of scholarly endeavor. We will examine a range of case studies from a variety of traditions, genres, and historical periods and students will develop their own case study into a final presentation and paper.