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Faculty

ProfessorsÌýJulien, Loe,ÌýSimonson
Associate Professors Rajasingham (Director)
Assistant Professors Hill, Jordan

The Women's, Gender, and SexualityÌýStudies Program (WGSS) recognizes gender and sexualityÌýasÌýprimary categoriesÌýof human knowledge and action. WGSSÌýunderstands the complexity of human lives as gender and sexuality intersectÌýwith race, class, ability, nationality, ethnicity, religion, and age in the constitution of experience and identities. Centering underrepresented voices and knowledge, our students analyze how social power and cultural norms shape the ways in which class, gender, race, and sexuality assign value to bodies, and why this matters.

The program is interdisciplinary, integrating knowledge from different disciplines to encourage critical engagement with all forms of experience from feminist perspectives. Interdisciplinarity leads students to question existing frameworks, concepts, and methods, enabling them to understand better both the past and the contemporary world while also envisioning a future beyond traditional roles and inequities. In other words, WGSS classes teach students to unlearn what they have been taught about institutions, people and places, a valuable lifelong skill.Ìý

Women's, Gender, and Sexuality courses are anchored in five pillars: praxis, self-reflexivity, intersectionality, gender lens, and context. In emphasizing interdisciplinarity, the program helps students acquire the intellectual and praxis-based tools to allow them to critically analyze the societal, cultural, global, and personal issues that shape their lives, and challenge them to look at these issues from multiple perspectives and with a gendered lens, across time and space.Ìý

Program courses are intersectional, meaning we encourage students to reflect on the ways in which knowledge is produced within different, intersecting, and oftentimes unrecognized systems of oppression and to examine categories that are presented as natural and permanent in their cultural and historical context. In this way, theÌý program prioritizes self-reflexivity. Lastly, the program aims to help students acquire the skills of critical analysis and imagine alternatives that challenge the naturalizing of inequalities, by reading deeply and writing well as the basis of praxis. Our senior capstone experience invites majors and minors to move from theory to practice, and translate their values into a final praxis project that can generate dialogue and action in their communities.


Honors and High Honors

To be considered for Honors, concentrators must have a cumulative GPA of 3.30 in Women's Studies. Students who choose to pursue honors must announce their intention to do so by submitting proposals preceding their final term of study at ¸Ô±¾ÊÓƵ. Additionally, these honors projects must be completed and approved by faculty sponsors and by the program'sÌýdirector. High honors in women's studies may be awarded to successful honors candidates who have been invited to present the results of their written projects in oral form to the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies faculty. A committee of faculty will vote on granting high honors for exceptionally strong intersectional projects that engage feminist theory and communicate across disciplines.


Related Minor


Awards

The Combahee River Collective Feminist Praxis Award — awarded to graduating seniors who have demonstrated sustained intersectional leadership and coalition-building that highlight and challenge the ways major systems of oppression are interlocking. It recognizes them for working toward a nonhierarchical distribution of power on our campus and in our community as they promote the vision of a revolutionary society.

The Women's Studies Award for Academic Excellence — awarded by the program to a senior major in women's studies on the basis of the highest grade point average within the Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program.


Courses

The courses listed below are offered by the WGSS program. As an interdisciplinary program, select courses from other departments/programs may also count toward the major and minor requirements.ÌýUse the major/minor links below to find otherÌýcourses that count toward these requirements.Ìý

Majors and Minors

Major

Minor

Courses