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TMD: Practice + Process — DAN4831B.03, section 3

Instructor: Jasmine Hearn
Days & Time: MO,TH 3:40pm-5:30pm
Credits: 2

Each Practice + Process course is designed around the research/pedagogic interests of the faculty member leading the class. The overall curricular structure positions studio practice, creative process and critical reading, thinking and languaging as integrated elements within one course, enabling students to move between modes of learning, reflection and making.

TMD: Practice + Process — DAN4831B.04, section 4

Instructor: Kayla Farrish
Days & Time: TU,FR 4:10pm-6:00pm
Credits: 2

Each Practice + Process course is designed around the research/pedagogic interests of the faculty member leading the class. The overall curricular structure positions studio practice, creative process and critical reading, thinking and languaging as integrated elements within one course, enabling students to move between modes of learning, reflection and making.

Tolstoy's Short Fiction — LIT2395.01

Instructor: Brooke Allen
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 2
In this class we will read a number of the shorter works of Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910). These will probably include, but might not be limited to, "The Death of Ivan Ilyitch," The Kreutzer Sonata,"  "Master and Man," "Hadji Murad," "The Cossacks," "Father Sergius," "The Devil," "Family Happiness," and "Strider."

Tom Stoppard — LIT4376.01

Instructor: Maya Cantu
Credits: 4
Exemplified by works like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Travesties, and Arcadia, the plays of Tom Stoppard perform dazzling high-wire acts of language and theatricality. Jumping between literary erudition and vaudevillian hijinks, Stoppard’s plays use meticulous technical precision to chart the enigmas of the brain and the chaos of the heart. As the playwright

Toni Morrison and Afro-Diasporic (Re)Mything — LIT2256.01

Instructor: Michael Dumanis
Credits: 4
Toni Morrison is one of America’s most cherished, studied, and criticized writers. Using antebellum and contemporary American history as her thematic and temporal foundation, Morrison has written about race, gender, class, and sexuality with a keen eye on mythology and fable. In this class, we will read through many of her novels, including but not limited to Sula, Song of

Toni Morrison and Afro-Diasporic (Re)Mything — LIT4538.01

Instructor: Phillip B. Williams
Credits: 4
Toni Morrison is one of America’s most cherished, studied, and criticized writers. Using antebellum and contemporary American history as her thematic and temporal foundation, Morrison has written about race, gender, class, and sexuality with a keen eye on mythology and fable. In this class, we will read through many of her novels, including but not limited to Sula, Song of

Tools for the Advancement of Public Action: The Destruction and Rebuilding of a Democratic Future-An Intergenerational Conversation — APA2031.02

Instructor: Susan Sgorbati
Credits: 1
Staggering change and suffering have occurred around the world in the last month. These changes are leaving many scared and uncertain for their futures and for the future of a free and civil society. This series aims to understand the gravity of the problems before us and how to address them. Students and guests will contrast the former workings of American politics to the

Topics in Applied Philosophy: Privacy — PHI2126.01

Instructor: Paul Voice
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 2
Privacy has long been regarded as important and yet claims to privacy have been frequently challenged and often overridden by political, economic, and technological considerations. Do we have a right to privacy? If so, what is its philosophical justification and what essential human goods and capacities does it protect? In what circumstances and for what reasons can we be asked

Topics in Applied Philosophy: Privacy — PHI2126.01

Instructor: Paul Voice
Credits: 2
Privacy has long been regarded as important and yet claims to privacy have been frequently challenged and often overridden by political, economic, and technological considerations. Do we have a right to privacy? If so, what is its philosophical justification and what essential human goods and capacities does it protect? In what circumstances and for what reasons can we be asked

Topics in Applied Philosophy: Privacy — PHI2126.01

Instructor: Paul Voice
Credits: 2
Privacy has long been regarded as important and yet claims to privacy have been frequently challenged and often overridden by political, economic, and technological considerations. Do we have a right to privacy? If so, what is its philosophical justification and what essential human goods and capacities does it protect? In what circumstances and for what reasons can we be asked

Topics in Applied Philosophy: Privacy — PHI2126.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Credits: 2
Privacy has long been regarded as important and yet claims to privacy have been frequently challenged and often overridden by political, economic, and technological considerations. Do we have a right to privacy? If so, what is its philosophical justification and what essential human goods and capacities does it protect? In what circumstances and for what reasons can we be asked

Topics in Applied Philosophy: War — PHI2140.01

Instructor: paul voice
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 2
This course examines philosophical debates concerning war. In particular, we will look at the distinction between just and unjust war, as well as moral issues concerning the use of military technologies such as drones, and arguments for humanitarian military interventions. This course will be offered the first seven weeks of term.

Topics in Ceramic History: Global Perspectives — CER2148.01

Instructor: Anina Major
Credits: 4
The study of ceramics is the study of human history in all of its cultural diversity, from artisanal pottery to highly sophisticated modern product design or contemporary sculpture. This course will explore ancient, indigenous and historical ceramics with lectures and discussions around clay materials, technology, art, and culinary traditions.

Topics in Video Game Programming — CS4113.01

Instructor: Justin Vasselli
Credits: 4
Video Game development draws on many different sub-disciplines of computer science.  The game engine that the game is built on is a combination of graphics and physics programming; non-player characters, both friend and foe, are driven by Artificial Intelligence;  network programming connects players from across the room to across the globe.  This course will

Topics In Video: Experimental Documentary — FV4236.01

Instructor: Kate Purdie
Credits: 4
This course explores documentary possibilities through screenings and video projects. The class will look at and consider non-fiction techniques from early cinema verite films to recent attempts to address point of view and outsider status in documentary and experimental video work. In collaborative and individual projects, the class will take a hands-on approach to documentary

Topology — MAT4220.02

Instructor: Andrew McIntyre
Credits: 4
On the surface of a doughnut, there are fundamentally two different ways to wrap a closed path on the surface (through the whole or around the ring); every possible way is a combination of these two. This doesn’t depend on the exact dimensions of the doughnut. For another example, a loop of string tied into a trefoil knot can’t be deformed into a square knot. Topology can be

Topping It Off — DRA4115.01

Instructor: Richard MacPike
Credits: 2
Nothing can inform, conceal or embellish like a hat. Students in this course will learn a variety of millinery techniques through the making of buckram, wire framed, and felt hats.

Topping It Off — DRA2138.01

Instructor: Richard MacPike
Credits: 2
Nothing can inform, conceal, or embellish like a hat. Students in this course will learn about a variety of millinery techniques and materials by making a series of hats.

Topping It Off — DRA2138.01

Instructor: Richard MacPike
Days & Time: TU,FR 4:10pm-6:00pm
Credits: 2

Nothing can inform, conceal, or embellish like a hat. Students in this course will learn about a variety of millinery techniques and materials by making a series of hats.

Topping it Off — DRA2138.01

Instructor: Richard MacPike
Credits: 2
Nothing can inform, conceal or embellish like a hat. Students in the course will learn about a variety of millinery techniques and materials by making a series of hats.

Total Theory — HIS4215.01

Instructor: Jonathan Pitcher
Credits: 4
Whether we love theory or hate it, rejecting it on the basis of a lack of understanding of its esoteric hermeneutics or jargon isn’t really a viable position, and certainly not an excuse. It’d be nice to know why, thus debating it on its own terms and perceiving its implications in all manner of contexts beyond them. The plan is to give at least an introduction to historicism,

Total Theory — HIS4215.01

Instructor: Jonathan Pitcher
Credits: 4
Whether we love “theory” or hate it, rejecting it on the basis of a lack of understanding of its esoteric hermeneutics or jargon isn’t really a viable position, and certainly not an excuse. It’d be nice to know why, thus debating it on its own terms and perceiving its implications in all manner of contexts beyond them. The plan is to give at least an introduction to historicism