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Search results - riri the twist gal

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Courses

40 results

ENGL / English-Miscellaneous
ENGL 8400
The Romantic Period

Course Description: The poetry and prose of the Romantic period. For more details on this class, please visit the department website at http://www.engl.virginia.edu/courses.

MDST / Media Studies
MDST 3320
The Politics of Video Games

Course Description: Video gaming is the fastest growing form of media: Americans spend twice as much on gaming as on recorded music and it is estimated that young men average over 670 hours a year playing video games. Yet we know relatively little about the broader social and political impact of this new medium. This class will sample the existing literature and explore ways of understanding the political implications (broadly defined) of gaming.

MDST 3281
Reimagining the News

Course Description: In this course, we will explore the obstacles confronting the news industry -- disinformation, declining trust in institutions, eroding business models, inequitable practices -- but we won't dwell on what's gone wrong. Instead, we'll focus on what can be done about it. We'll define the role of journalism in society, we'll examine emerging models of solutions-based journalism, and we'll envision new models for community-minded news-sharing.

HIUS / History-United States History
HIUS 3261
History of the American West

Course Description: The course examines the relationships of environment and culture and of native and settler peoples in transforming North America west of the Mississippi River, 1750 to present. We will explore the expansion of the United States; its environmental consequences; and the emergence of a mythic culture casting violence as heroic.

RELH / Religion-Hinduism
RELH 5173
The History of Yoga

Course Description: As yoga has risen to global prominence, the scholarly study of yoga has flourished. This course offers an introduction to this scholarship, as well as an overview of the theory and practice of yoga from its ancient past to the present day. The course will focus primarily on historically Hindu traditions, though some attention will devoted to parallel traditions from Buddhism and Jainism.

RELH 3426
The History of Yoga

Course Description: Yoga is practiced by millions of people across the world and comes in an astonishing variety of forms. Historically, yoga has roots in ancient Indian practices of asceticism and meditation. But how are these practices related to yoga as it practiced today? This seminar will trace the history of yoga from its earliest origins to the present. Readings will include both primary sources (in translation) and works of contemporary scholarship.

AAS / African-American and African Studies
AAS 3671
History of the Civil Rights Movement

Course Description: This course examines the history and legacy of the African American struggle for civil rights in twentieth century America. It provides students with a broad overview of the civil rights movement -- the key issues, significant people and organizations, and pivotal events -- as well as a deeper understanding of its scope, influence, legacy, and lessons for today.

LAW / Law
LAW 9122
Governing the World

Course Description: This seminar will examine the role of international law and institutions in addressing major policy concerns that transcend the boundaries of individual states.

MESA / Middle Eastern & South Asian Languages & Cultures
MESA 2125
Gateway to the Middle East & South Asia

Course Description: From the ancient history of games like chess and backgammon, to sports like badminton and falconry, to the "Great Game" of imperial conquests, this course offers a theme-based gateway to the long-connected regions of the Middle East and South Asia. Over the semester, we'll explore this region of the world through short stories, films, tv shows, games themselves, and cameo visits by other faculty--all on the topic of "playing games"!

AMST / American Studies
AMST 4601
Gender, Race, and the Prison

Course Description: In this course, we will study the intersection of social scientific and humanistic scholarship, showing how the prison deploys and produces gender and its imbrications with race, class, and sexuality as a tool of control, punishment, and dehumanization. Our materials will highlight the experiences of women as we consider the carceral state that is fundamentally organized by gendered assumptions that shape the experiences of all social groups.

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Departments

8 results

  • ENGL
    English-Miscellaneous
  • MDST
    Media Studies
  • HIUS
    History-United States History
  • RELH
    Religion-Hinduism
  • AAS
    African-American and African Studies
  • LAW
    Law
  • MESA
    Middle Eastern & South Asian Languages & Cultures
  • AMST
    American Studies
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