|
Feminist Studies
180 Kresge College
(831) 459-4324
fmst@ucsc.edu
http://feministstudies.ucsc.edu/
Program Description | Faculty
| Course Descriptions
Program Description
Feminist studies (formerly Women's Studies) is an
interdisciplinary field of analysis that investigates how relations of gender
are embedded in social, political, and cultural formations. The undergraduate
program in feminist studies provides students with a unique interdisciplinary
and transnational perspective. The department emphasizes theories and practices
derived from multiracial and multicultural contexts.
Feminist studies prepares undergraduates for a
variety of careers. The B.A. degree in feminist studies, for example, provides
excellent grounding for undergraduates who have career aspirations in law,
health, public administration, community organizations, and social services.
Students wishing to pursue doctoral work will also find that interdisciplinary
training in feminist studies equips them with theoretical and methodological
strengths in most disciplines and applied research fields. Specialists in
feminist studies are being hired as consultants in industry, higher education,
and human resources. State and federal government agencies employ people who
have special training in understanding gender relations. Educational
institutions need specialists to develop and administer feminist studies
programs, women's centers, and other institutional structures designed
specifically to study and assist women.
Requirements for the Major
Feminist studies majors must complete 10 courses and a
senior comprehensive exit requirement in the feminist studies program. Students
must choose one of the following concentrations within the major: Culture,
Power, and Representation; Law, Politics, and Social Change; Science,
Technology, and Medicine; or Sexuality Studies. Courses appropriate for each
concentration are listed in the Feminist Studies office at Kresge College and at http://feministstudies.ucsc.edu.
A proposal for an independent concentration will be
approved only when a student presents a clear, coherent, and rigorous plan of
study that does not fit the existing concentrations. Both the student's adviser
and the Feminist Studies Department chair must approve a proposal for an
independent concentration.
Required courses include course 1, Introduction to Feminisms, or 80 or another 80 course
taught by feminist studies affiliated faculty; course 100, Feminist Theories (must be taken at UCSC); five courses
in the concentration; two electives, both of which must be upper-division
courses; and an exit (comprehensive) requirement course. One independent study
(course 199) may count toward the concentration or toward the elective
requirements. Either course 193 or 198 may be used to count toward the elective
requirements.
Because feminist studies is an interdisciplinary
major and lists courses taught by affiliate faculty in other departments,
feminist studies majors must take a minimum of five courses at UCSC taught
directly in the Feminist Studies Department, i.e., courses designated FMST, not
including course 193, 198, or 199. Two EAP courses may count towards the major;
three transfer courses may count towards the major; and the total combined
number of EAP and transfer courses that may count towards the major is a
maximum of three.
Exit requirement options include a senior thesis or
a senior project (course 195) or a senior seminar (course 194) taught by core
or affiliated faculty. Course 1, course 100, and the composition (general
education code C) requirement are prerequisites to course 195 and the senior
seminars. A fourth option for fulfilling the exit requirement is to develop and
teach a student-directed seminar. Only two student-directed seminars may be
offered each year, and they must be approved by the feminist studies
undergraduate program committee before being recommended for final course
approval. Guidelines for completion of the exit requirement are available in
the Feminist Studies office or online at http://feministstudies.ucsc.edu/.
Transfer students are encouraged to declare the major
as soon as possible to be assured entrance into the required core courses.
Feminist studies advisers or the chair determine which courses from other
institutions are transferable. Course 1 and course 100 must be completed in the
junior year so that the exit requirement may be completed in the senior year.
Graduate Studies
Graduate students may work toward a Ph.D. degree that
notes a concentration in feminist studies on the graduation documents. The
request must originate in the degree-granting department. The Anthropology,
History, History of Consciousness, Literature, Politics, Psychology, and
Sociology Departments participate in this parenthetical notation program with
the Feminist Studies Department. Students in other departments wishing to
pursue this option should consult with the chairs of their respective Ph.D.
programs and the chair of feminist studies. A list, updated annually, of regularly
offered, approved graduate courses is available in the Feminist Studies
Department office.
The following are required for the notation:
- Committee
composition. The student must have a designated graduate adviser from the
feminist studies core or affiliated faculty who serves on the qualifying
examination committee or in some other appropriate capacity.
- Writing. The student
must prepare a significant piece of writing in the area of feminist studies.
This writing must be a master's essay or a chapter of the doctoral
dissertation.
- Course requirements.
The student must take four graduate courses in feminist studies. The courses
can be selected from among the graduate offerings of any UCSC department, as
long as they are taught by core or affiliated feminist studies faculty.
- Teaching. The student
must be a teaching assistant in at least one feminist studies course or teach a
feminist studies course independently (designated FMST) in the regular
curriculum or in Summer Session.
Note: Upper-division undergraduates are admitted only
with permission of the instructor.
History 204 Engendering China, E. Honig
History 222 History of Gender Research Seminar,
A. Yang Murray
History of Consciousness
210A-B
Cultural and Historical Studies of Race
and Ethnicity, A. Y. Davis
History of Consciousness
213A-B
Representation,
T. de Lauretis
History of Consciousness
215A-B-C
Critical Theory in the Marxist Tradition,
A. Y. Davis
History of Consciousness
217A-B-C
Seminar: Topics in Feminist Theory,
D. Haraway
History of Consciousness
250A-B
Foundation in Science Studies,
D. Haraway
History of Consciousness 251
Readings in Science Studies, D.
Haraway
Sociology 242
Feminist Research Seminar, P. Roby
|