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Women's Studies

women's studies collage
The MIT Program in Women's Studies is an interdisciplinary undergraduate program, providing an academic framework and broad-based community for scholarly inquiry focusing on women, gender, and sexuality. Exploring gender with the tools of different, and often multiple, disciplines, Women's Studies subjects strive to help MIT students better understand how knowledge and value take different forms depending on a variety of social variables. In the course of their inquiry, students not only learn how to use gender as a category of analysis, but also reflect on the manifestation of gender in their own lives, leading to a range of personal and intellectual discoveries. Although gender is a central component of every subject, the study of gender requires attention to connections between gender, sexuality, race, class, religion, nationality, and other social categories; different subjects shed light on different aspects of such connections.

The Program is also an important resource for faculty with an advanced knowledge of gender studies within particular disciplines who are interested in learning more across disciplinary lines; it also welcomes faculty who have an emerging interest in the field of Women's Studies.

The Program in Women's Studies offers an undergraduate curriculum consisting of core classes and cross-listed subjects from several departments. Students may concentrate, minor, and petition for a major departure in WS. There are more than 30 faculty members who are affiliated with the Program from fields as diverse as architecture, history, comparative media studies, brain and cognitive sciences, literature, and political science, for example. The Program in Women's Studies offered 22 subjects during the academic year 2002-2003, with approximately 300 students enrolled.

For more information visit http://web.mit.edu/womens-studies/www/

Available Courses
Undergraduate Courses
MIT Course #Course Title
WMN.412JFeminist Political Thought, Fall 2000
WMN.421JRace and Gender in Asian America, Fall 2002
WMN.430Literary Interpretation: Virginia Woolf's Shakespeare, Spring 2001
WMN.454JIdentity and Difference, Fall 2002
WMN.456JThe Contemporary American Family, Spring 2004
WMN.457JGender, Power, and International Development, Fall 2003
WMN.461JInternational Women's Voices, Spring 2004
WMN.472Traditions in American Concert Dance: Gender and Autobiography, Spring 2003
WMN.512Major Authors: Melville and Morrison, Fall 2003
WMN.514Medieval Literature: Medieval Women Writers, Spring 2004
WMN.517American Authors: American Women Authors, Spring 2003
WMN.575JWriting About Race, Spring 2003
WMN.607JGender and the Law in U.S. History, Spring 2004
Graduate Courses
MIT Course #Course Title
Undergraduate/Graduate Courses
MIT Course #Course Title
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