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Showing 25 Results of 7304

Writing Landscape — LIT2201.01

Instructor: akiko busch
Days & Time: TBA
Credits: 4
"Nature is our widest home," Edward Hoagland once wrote, and the workshop would examine why this is so. The course would consider how the cycles, rhythms, and disturbances of the natural world have always had a place in American letters. Some students would have the opportunity to use their observations from and experience in fieldwork as raw material from which to develop

Writing on Music — MUS2156.02

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Days & Time:
Credits: 1
A brief, intensive workshop on writing about music, an essential act of multidisciplinary translation. We will read a range of short-form journalistic essays from across the musical spectrum. Students will write short concert and album reviews, developing a musical ear for language, while providing feedback and editing for each other. Special attention will be focused on

Writing on Music — MUS2156.01

Instructor: Nicholas Brooke
Days & Time:
Credits: 1
A brief, intensive workshop on writing about music, an essential act of multidisciplinary translation. We will read a range of short-form journalistic essays from across the musical spectrum. Students will write short concert and album reviews, developing a musical ear for language, while providing feedback and editing for each other. Special attention will be focused on

Writing on Music — MOD2124.03

Instructor: Nicholas Brooke
Days & Time:
Credits: 1
"Writing about music is like dancing about painting," goes a chestnut attributed to Elvis Costello. Yet the art of putting music into words is one of the oldest artistic collaborations. In this class, we'll look at examples of contemporary musical prose, and talk about this essential act of multidisciplinary translation. Students will write short concert and album reviews

Writing on Music — MOD2124.04

Instructor: Nicholas Brooke
Days & Time:
Credits: 1
"Writing about music is like dancing about painting," goes a chestnut attributed to Elvis Costello. Yet the art of putting music into words is one of the oldest artistic collaborations. In this class, we'll look at examples of contemporary musical prose, and talk about this essential act of multidisciplinary translation. Students will write short concert and album reviews,

Written California, 1850s to the Present — LIT2374.01

Instructor: Kathleen Alcott
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
“Though every prospect pleases, and only man is vile.” Traveling through the brand new state of California to conduct a survey of its geology, William. H. Brewer couldn’t help but think of this line from Heber. Even in its earliest iteration, California was a place where the fantasy of expansion—whether mental, geographical, technological—came at a dramatic cost. As the

YEAR ONE | SOCIAL PRACTICE as PUBLIC ACTION — APA4248.01) (cancelled 10/18/2023

Instructor: Elæ Moss, MFA Teaching Fellow
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
The YEAR ONE project asks you to imagine that you begin a new timeline for yourself starting now: whenever you begin, that’s your YEAR ONE. To participate in YEAR ONE, the question you ask yourself is, essentially, this: if you came to the conclusion that you couldn’t rely on currently existing systems and institutions to teach you the skills you need for a range of

Yeats and Visions of the Apocalypse — LIT4167.01

Instructor: Anna Maria Hong
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
This course takes William Butler Yeats’s poem “The Second Coming” as its starting point, launching from this often invoked poem to other poems and writings by Yeats that concern his unusual concepts of time, aging, and apocalypse including his prose work A Vision. We will examine Yeats’s prosodic choices regarding meter, rhyme, and form and how these musical decisions enhance

Yoga: Mindfulness and Cultivating a Peaceful Practice — DAN2023.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Days & Time:
Credits: 1
This course will introduce students to the basic shapes and movements of yoga, along with a close reading of the yoga sutras. The yoga sutras serve as a guide to obtain wisdom and practice yogic philosophy in our everyday lives. Students will learn how to practice yoga on and off their mats, and will engage in exercises for both the body and mind. Beginners, intermediate, and

You Do You, Feldenkrais and Dancing: Scores for Improvisation — DAN2144.01

Instructor: Miguel Gutierrez
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
The Feldenkrais Method® reawakens, restores and revitalizes the capacity for movement and function in all bodies. It is an spectacularly generative practice for people who are devoted to movement as a means of exploration and expression. In this workshop we will begin each day with an Awareness Through Movement lesson and from there go into scores for embodied improvisational

Your French Films — FRE2112.01

Instructor: Noelle Rouxel-Cubberly
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Never seen a Godard film? You couldn't name a French female filmmaker? You wonder what French-speaking Arabic films look like? In this exploratory course on French cinema, each student will select, with the help of the instructor, the film they want to include in the syllabus. Critique and theoretical readings will be included in the analysis of the films. Group work and scene

Youth Politics in Bennington: A Group Research Project — ANT4225.01

Instructor:
Days & Time:
Credits:
This course seeks to answer the question: What are the avenues available for youth to mobilize politically in Bennington? The course will be structured around a team research project where students will practice skills such as interviewing, conducting surveys, participant-observation research and conceptual mapping. Students will survey various community organizations,

Zappa Meets P-Funk — MHI2107.01

Instructor: Michael Wimberly
Days & Time:
Credits: 2
Frank Zappa, (1940-1993) was one of the most innovative musicians of the 20th century. He led the sixties California psychedelic music scene and then went on to compose mind bending jazz and classical compositions. He was a prolific composer and also a hero of free speech by speaking out against proposed censorship laws in the ’80’s. George Clinton, (1941 - ), was the principal

Zeitgeist and the Political Poem — LIT2325.01

Instructor: Natalie Scenters-Zapico
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
“Poets are: a) clowns b) parasites c) legislators d) terrorists” —“Quiz” Linh Dinh In this course we will explore the ever changing role of the political poem. We will begin by reading Hegel’s Phenomenology of the Spirit to use as a lens with which to explore how art reflects the zeitgeist of the culture that creates it. What role does the poet play in reflecting the popular

Zen Buddhism — CHI4218.01

Instructor: Ginger Lin
Days & Time: TU,FR 4:10pm-6:00pm
Credits: 4

Although it was born in India, Buddhism has had a deep and profound influence on Chinese and East Asian culture, but this philosophy remains relevant to modern life in both the East and West. Students will be introduced to the spirit of Buddhism through modern Mandarin interpretations of classic Chinese Buddhist poems and stories. Students

Zen Buddhism — CHI4218.01

Instructor: Ginger Lin
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Although it was born in India, Buddhism has had a deep and profound influence on Chinese and East Asian culture, but this philosophy remains relevant to modern life in both the East and West. Students will be introduced to the spirit of Buddhism through modern Mandarin interpretations of classic Chinese Buddhist poems and stories. Students will explore Chinese Buddhist concepts

Zen Buddhism — CHI4218.01

Instructor: Ginger Lin
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Although it was born in India, Buddhism has had a deep and profound influence on Chinese and East Asian culture, but this philosophy remains relevant to modern life in both the East and West. Students will be introduced to the spirit of Buddhism through modern Mandarin interpretations of classic Chinese Buddhist poems and stories. Students will explore Chinese Buddhist concepts

Zen Buddhism — CHI4405.01) (cancelled 10/9/2023

Instructor: Ginger Lin
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
Although it was born in India, Buddhism has had a deep and profound influence on Chinese and East Asian culture, but this philosophy remains relevant to modern life in both the East and West. Students will be introduced to the spirit of Buddhism through modern Mandarin interpretations of classic Chinese Buddhist poems and stories. Students will explore Chinese Buddhist concepts

[BBA class-don't publish] Conflict Resolution: Theory and Practice — APA2128.01

Instructor: Michael Cohen
Days & Time:
Credits: 3
This course will present an interdisciplinary approach to the theory of conflict resolution. Theories of conflict resolution will be introduced and then explored through a number of different prisms. These will include the macro issues of the nature of peace, the environment, the media, NGOs, as well as the role of religion and the Bible. There will also be a focus for part of

[Hold:] Language Series —

Instructor: Ikuko Yoshida
Days & Time:
Credits:
The Isabelle Kaplan Center for Languages and Cultures presents the Language Series every term.  The purpose of the Language Series is to provide students opportunities to explore and deepen their knowledge in the study of foreign languages and cultures.  The Language Series events such as presentations and workshops are related to the foreign language courses that are

“Beastly and Beautiful”: Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita — LIT2571.01

Instructor: Jenny Boully
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
(Important Notice: This course focuses on the novel Lolita, which can be disturbing to some readers. Our class discussions will not be able to circumvent the narrative of an older man exploiting a child. Please be aware of this difficult material before registering for the course.) In Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita (1955), Humbert Humbert writes, “I am

“Call Me Maybe”: The Telephone as Multimedia — MS4111.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
From pop songs like “You Used to Call Me on My Cell Phone” (Hotline Bling) to “Call Me Maybe,” and from our contemporary uses, it’s clear that the telephone has become so much more than a phone. In this course, we will study the telephone as an interdisciplinary device with a long history and divergent uses in order to learn key topics in media studies that also apply to many

“Culture” in a Globalized World: A Critique — ANT2115.01

Instructor: Carly Rudzinski
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
The ability to easily share culture across borders is often viewed as one of the benefits of globalization. But while enjoying the next Bad Bunny or BTS track, we should keep in mind that powerful global institutions like the United Nations also participate in globalizing culture, frequently with serious consequences. This introductory course explores the ways that the 

“First World Problems” in Chinese Microcinema — CHI4520.01

Instructor: Ginger Lin
Days & Time:
Credits: 4
“First world problems” has become a prolific meme generating phrase. However, it can have deeper meaning. How is Chinese society dealing with its own “First world problems” , while simultaneously dealing with those of its own unique history? These are some of the questions we will explore through the lenses of Chinese Microcinema makers. Students will naturally advance their