Requirements for the Global Cultural Studies Major (36 Semester Hours)
Core courses (8 semester hours)
- GCS 105 Introduction to Global Cultural Studies (4)
- GCS 499W Senior Seminar in Global Cultural Studies (4) (or departmentally-approved substitution)*
Anthropology (4 semester hours)
Take 4 semester hours with an ANTH prefix.
Cultural Electives, Part A (16 semester hours)
Take 16 semester hours from the following approved list of electives that focus on different cultures around the world, including the United States.
- ANTH 232 Peoples and Cultures of Africa (4)
- ANTH 235 Cultures of Mexico and Ecuador (4)
- ANTH 335 Visual Anthropology (4)
- ANTH 344 Medical Anthropology (4)
- ANTH 356 Language and Culture (4)
- ANTH 399 Topics in Anthropology (1-4)
- ANTH 429 Topics in Anthropology (1-4)
- ARCH 237 Introduction to Global Archaeology (4)
- ARCH 337 Archaeological Theories and Methods (4)
- ARTH 112 Introduction to South Asian Art History (4)
- ARTH 113 Introduction to Chinese Art History (4)
- ARTH 114 Introduction to Japanese Art History (4)
- ARTH 116 Introduction to Renaissance and Early Modern Art (4)
- ARTH 202W Introduction to Museum Studies (4)
- ARTH 230W Principles of Visual Literacy (4)
- ARTH 237 Modern and Contemporary Chinese and Chinese-American Art and Cisual Culture (4)
- ARTH 243 Contemporary Art: 1970-present (4)
- ARTH 263 Baroque and Neoclassical Visual Culture (4)
- ARTH 267 Renaissance Visual Culture (4)
- ARTH 275W Art Literature and Criticism (4)
- ASIA 201 Gateway to East Asian Studies (4)
- ASIA 210 Making and Playing of Traditional Musical Instruments (4)
- ASIA 352 Field Study in Asia (4)
- CCM 258 Gender and Mass Communication in Asia (4)
- CCM 288 Introducing Asia to the World (4)
- CCM 301 Asian Visual and Creative Culture (4)
- CCM 310 Asian Social Media in a Global Context: Critique and Design (4)
- CHNSE 254 Folklore and Identity (4)
- CHNSE 352 Rites of Passage in Chinese Societies (4)
- CLAS 252 Poetics of Magic, Magic of Poetry
- FREN 275 African Cinema (4)
- FREN 285W Gender and Sexuality in African Literature and Cinema (4)
- FREN 331W French Composition and Discussion (4)
- FREN 336 France and the Other (4)
- FREN 337 French and Francophone Studies II (4)
- FREN 340 Readings in French Literature (4)
- FREN 341 Oral Tradition and Performance in African Literature (4)
- FREN 430 Civilization and Its Critics (4)
- FREN 432 Language in Society (4)
- FREN 439 Advanced Topics in French Literature (4)
- GERM 241 German Cinema and Visual Culture (4)
- GERM 333 Contemporary German Culture (4)
- GERM 432 Media in Context: Literature, Film and Art (4)
- HIST 233 Asian Empires on the Silk Road (4)
- HIST 256 Colonial Latin America (4)
- HIST 270 Cinema in the Middle East (4)
- IDS 205 Chemawa Indian School Partnership Program (2)
- IDS 396 Chemawa Indian School Partnership Program Internship (2 or 4)
- JAPN 201W Modern Japanese Society and Culture (4)
- JAPN 314W Japanese Literature in Translation (4)
- JAPN 340 The Japanese Cinema (4)
- PHEAL 120 Global Health through Film (4)
- PHIL 112/113W Philosophy and Religion (4)
- PHIL 370W Philosophy of Language (4)
- RUSS 233W Russian Culture: Russian Ways and Views of Russia (4)
- RUSS 235 Russian and Soviet Cinema (4)
- RUSS 320W The Nineteenth-Century Russian Novel (4)
- RUSS 325 Topics in Russian Literature (4)
- RUSS 333 Russian Civilization and Culture (4)
- SPAN 331W Spanish Composition and Discussion (4)
- SPAN 332 Spanish Conversation and Culture (4)
- SPAN 333 Hispanic Civilization (4)
- SPAN 335 Cultural Institutions of Spain (4)
- SPAN 352 Peninsular Literature I: Medieval, Early Modern, and American Colonial (4)
- SPAN 353 Peninsular Literature II: Modern and Contemporary (4)
- SPAN 355 Latin American Literature I: Conquest to Independence (4)
- SPAN 356 Latin American Literature II: Modernismo to the Present (4)
- SPAN 365 Spanish Translation (4)
- SPAN 380 Latin American Cinema (4)
- SPAN 399 Topics in Spanish (1-4)
- SPAN 427 Topics in Latin American Literature (4)
- SPAN 428 Contemporary Mexican Literature (4)
- SPAN 430 History of Hispanic Thought (4)
- SPAN 431 Contemporary Novel and Short Story of Latin America (4)
- SPAN 435 Contemporary Latin American Women Writers (4)
- SPAN 438 Contemporary Spanish Women Writers (4)
- SPAN 445 Topics in Medieval and Early Modern Spanish Literature (4)
- SPAN 446 Topics in Modern and Contemporary Peninsular Literature (4)
- THTR 212 Global Fashion History (4)
Cultural Electives, Part B (8 semester hours)
Take two classes (8 semester hours) that meet the following conditions: .
- Most importantly, these two classes must have a prefix of CHNSE, FREN, GERM, JAPN, RUSS, or SPAN.
- Both classes may be from the same prefix, or may be different;
- Classes may be taught in any language, including English;
- Classes listed under Cultural Electives, Part A, may also be used to satisfy this requirement, but the same course cannot be used for both requirements (a minimum of 36 semester hours are required for the major);
- Classes may be at any level, but cannot include courses used to satisfy the Non-English Language General Education requirement: that is, 131/132 language classes cannot be used to satisfy GCS major or minor requirements unless they are courses in a student's second non-English language;
- This requirement cannot be satisfied through AP/IB credit or any form of language proficiency exam or exemption.
Stipulations
Students majoring in Global Cultural Studies cannot count for GCS major credit more than four classes from any single course prefix other than ANTH or GCS; there is no limit on ANTH or GCS courses.
The GCS major values training in areas of transregional and global connection. Thus, students are required to take one course from at least three of the following world region categories: 1) North America or Europe, 2) Central or South America, 3) Africa, 4) Asia, 5) Middle East, or 6) Global (students are allowed to take 2 of these 3 courses from the Global category). Students can choose these three regional classes from any category in the major (Core, Anthropology, Cultural Electives). No classes can count in more than one category in the major. Classes, supervised research, or internship work done during study abroad may qualify for GCS credit, but must be approved by the GCS chair. With GCS chair approval, "Special Topics" and other courses at Willamette may also count for GCS credit and will at that time be assigned to the proper regional category.
Students must take eight credits at the 300-level or above. These 300/400-level classes can be from Anthropology or Cultural Electives A or B, but not Senior Capstone.
Requirements for the Global Cultural Studies Minor (20 Semester Hours)
Core courses
- GCS 105 Introduction to Global Cultural Studies (4)
- One course from the Anthropology Category (see major above) (4)
- Three additional courses from any category in the GCS major: Core, Anthropology, Cultural Electives A or B (see major above) (12)
Stipulations
Students minoring in Global Cultural Studies are required to take one course from at least two of the following world region categories: 1) North America or Europe, 2) Central or South America, 3) Africa, 4) Asia, 5) Middle East, or 6) Global (students are allowed to take both courses from the Global category). Students can choose these two regional classes from any category in the minor. Classes, supervised research, or internship work done during study abroad may qualify for GCS credit, but must be approved by the GCS chair. With GCS chair approval, "Special Topics" and other courses at Willamette may also count for GCS credit and will at that time be assigned to the proper regional category.