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Interdisciplinary Critical Thinking

Advisory Board:

Dr. Wairimu Njambi
Dr. Jacqueline Fewkes
Dr. Daniel White
Dr. Michael Harrawood
Dr. Dorotha Lemeh
Dr. William O'Brien

OVERVIEW: The concentration in Interdisciplinary Critical Theory (ICT) is designed to enhance the WHC’s curriculum in the humanities and the sciences by creating strategic connections among different disciplines. Critical Theory includes perspectives in aesthetics, visual studies, media studies, cultural studies, studies in multicultural literatures, and studies in science, technology, medicine, and the humanities.

HISTORY: Critical theory stems from philosophical aesthetics or the “theory of the arts” which, from the time of Plato and Aristotle, has included studies in a range of visual media as well as music and literature. Because it includes broad questions of design, however, aesthetics has also been a significant preoccupation of the sciences. Kant, for example, dedicated the second half of his treatise in the field, The Critique of Judgment, to the study of teleology (by which he meant “apparent design”) in living systems. Critical theory took on socially critical dimensions after World War II in the work of the Frankfurt School, which connected the theory of the arts to the social sciences. Building on that legacy, contemporary critical theory provides valuable perspectives to shape interdisciplinary enquiry across the arts and sciences, including: visual formations from the plastic arts to biotechnology; communications from scriptographic to typographic, electronic, analog, and digital media; cultural studies from the perspectives of ethnography, feminist theory, gender theory, and postcolonial theory; multicultural and multiethnic studies in literatures read in terms of various critical frameworks; and emerging perspectives arising at the intersection of the arts and sciences in the fields of technology, medicine, philosophy and the arts. Overall, although critical theory draws on various academic disciplines and interdisciplinary areas, it is ideally transdisciplinary.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES: Students completing the Interdisciplinary Critical Theory major should have developed their talents in critical observation and thinking regarding a range of contemporary and historical phenomena. Thus they should become versatile thinkers able to approach problems in a variety of traditional disciplines in terms of multiple critical and creative perspectives. Graduates might expect to become informed citizens, public intellectuals, and promising candidates for admission to graduate schools in disciplines across the arts and sciences. Students might consider, for example, taking the content track in Science, Technology, Medicine and the Humanities below in combination with Premedical requirements to complete the Critical Theory concentration in preparation for medical school.

Available Options: Concentration in ICT;   Studies in Natural Science Program in ICT;   Premedical Program in ICT.


Concentration in Interdisciplinary Critical Thinking
Course #Course NameCredits
 2 Core Courses in Critical Theory6
HIS 3152Content Area Courses (taken from two content areas, in any combination)24-30
IDS 4970Honors Thesis in Interdisciplinary Critical Thinking6
 Total Credits36-42
No more than 4 credits counted for the ICT concentration may be counted for core or graduation requirements.
Core Courses in Critical Theory
(Students take 2 courses from the following list)
Course #Course NameCredits
PHI 3882Honors Philosophy of Literature3
PHP 3552Honors Seminar in Nietzsche3
PHI 4804Honors Critical Theory3
ANT 4417Honors Theory in Cultural Anthropology3
HIS 3252Honors Historiography: Methods and Theory3
SYG 1933Honors Introduction to Critical Social Theory3
WST 3015Honors Introduction to Women's Studies3

Content Areas (8 courses, 24-30 credits)

Students take 8 courses from any two content areas, in any combination (e.g. 4 in each, 6 in one and 2 in another, etc.) that provides a coherent body of coursework. At least 18 credits must be upper level (3000 or 4000).
In addition to the content areas listed below, other courses from any area of the WHC curriculum may be taken in a coherent sequence that fits a student’s program with the approval of 2 faculty who presumptively will be readers of the thesis. Guidelines for selecting other content areas, or for substituting courses to satisfy the content areas listed below, are:
(1) Courses to be counted for one of the existing content areas or for a new content area should be appropriate to that content area. Substitute courses for one of the content areas below must be approved by one of the advisory board faculty listed for that content area;
(2) Content areas other than those listed below must be approved by 2 HC faculty, one of whom must be on the ICT advisory board. Students are to submit a proposal that describes the content areas and lists appropriate courses for that area. Courses and content areas should fit into a coherent disciplinary or interdisciplinary area of enquiry and provide ample opportunity for analysis in terms of critical theory;
(3) Combinations of content areas should be coherent and thematically focused, e.g. premedical studies may be conjoined with medical humanities, the former organized to study medicine and the latter organized to study the relationship between medical sciences and arts to the humanities (for example, through coursework addressing issues in bioethics and environmental philosophy, technology and culture, representations of bodies in medical science, or narratives of illness and recovery);
(4) Content area courses may be selected from more than 2 content areas with approval of a member of the ICT advisory board.
Content Areas: Select 8 Courses from 2 Areas in Any Combination
Visual Studies
Critical, analytical and historical perspectives in the visual arts and media.   Advisors: Dorotha Lemeh Jacqueline Fewkes.
Course #Course NameCredits
ART 1014CHonors Elements of Visual Thinking3
ART 4837CHonors Contemporary Art,
Gender and Technology
4
ART 4840CHonors Art, People of the Earth and Environment4
ART 4841CHonors The Body in Art:
Figure in Context
4
ARH 2000Honors Art Appreciation3
ARH 2050Honors History of the Arts I3
ARH 2051Honors History of the Arts II3
ARH 2701Honors Still and Moving Images3
ARH 4930CHonors Understanding Art
of the 21st Century
4
ANT 4930Honors Visual Ethnography3
Media Studies
Historical and critical perspectives on communications media, including their roles in cultural, artistic, and epistemic formations.   Advisor: Daniel White.
Course #Course NameCredits
PHI 3224Honors Media Philosophy3
HUM 3320 or IDS 4932Honors Contemporary Multicultural Studies3
HUM 2210Honors Multicultural Perspectives
from Antiquity to Modernity
3
HUM 2230Honors Multicultural Perspectives
from Modernity to Post-Modernity
3
ART 3618CHonors Digital E-magination3
ENG 4114 or LIT 1933Honors Literature and Film3
IDS 4933Honors Critical Social Theory and Media3
IDS 4933Honors Africans in Film3
MUS 1933Honors Rock and American Society3
CLA 4436Honors Ancient Greece3
Cultural Studies
Critical, frames of reference for studies of culture, nature, urbanity, gender, class, race, sexuality, and the culture industry. Advisors: Wairimu Njambi Jacqueline Fewkes.
Course #Course NameCredits
ASN 3006Honors Introduction to Asian Studies3
HUM 3320 or IDS 4932Honors Contemporary Multicultural Studies3
SYG 3401Honors Introduction to Cultural Studies3
WST 4563Honors Representation of Female Bodies:
Science, Medicine, Culture
3
SYD 4792Honors Race, Gender, Class,
Sexuality, Science
3
SYP 4303Honors Sex Panics in History and Society3
WST 3015Honors Introduction to Women's Studies3
WST 4504Honors Feminist Theory3
IDS 4933Honors Meanings of Nature3
IDS 4933Honors Race, Gender, Environmentalism3
IDS 3933Honors Seminar in Disney3
IDS 4930Honors The City and its Underground3
Studies in Literature
Critical and historical perspectives on national and transnational literatures in their cultural contexts.
Advisor:
Michael Harrawood.
Course #Course NameCredits
PHI 3224Honors Media Philosophy3
HUM 3320 or IDS 4932Honors Contemporary Multicultural Studies3
HUM 2210Honors Multicultural Perspectives
from Antiquity to Modernity
3
HUM 2230Honors Multicultural Perspectives
from Modernity to Post-Modernity
3
ART 3618CHonors Digital E-magination3
ENG 4114 or LIT 1933Honors Literature and Film3
IDS 4933Honors Critical Social Theory and Media3
IDS 4933Honors Africans in Film3
MUS 1933Honors Rock and American Society3
CLA 4436Honors Ancient Greece3
CLA 4436Honors Ancient Greece3
Science, Technology, Medicine and the Humanities
Humanistic perspectives on the interactions among the applications of science and technology in medicine.
Advisors:
Dorotha Lemeh Wairimu Njambi Daniel White.
Course #Course NameCredits
IDS 4933Honors Technology and Culture3
SYP 1445Honors Gender and Technology3
WST 4563Honors Representation of Female Bodies: Science, Medicine, Culture3
SYD 4792Honors Race, Gender, Class, Sexuality and Science3
EVR 2017Honors Environment and Society3
IDS 4933Honors Meanings of Nature3
PHI 1933Honors Bioethics3
PHI 1933Honors Perspectives on Science3
PHI 3682Honors Environmental Philosophy3
PHI 4930Honors Philosophy of Science3

Studies in Natural Science Track


TOP
Courses in biology, chemistry, and/or physics are taken in coherent sequences to provide a rigorous foundation for interdisciplinary studies in the sciences
and the humanities.
Course #Course NameCredits
 2 Core Courses in Critical Theory6
 4 Courses from one or two ICT Content Areas (above)12-16
 4 Courses from 'Studies in Natural Sciences' (below)14-18*
IDS 4970Honors Thesis in Interdisciplinary Critical Thinking6
 Total Credits38-46*
* Not including prerequisites
No more than 4 credits counted for the ICT concentration may be counted for core or graduation requirements.

Studies in Natural Sciences Courses (please note prerequisites)
Advisors: Nicholas Quintyne Michelle Ivey Chitra Chandrasekhar Paul Kirchman Jon Moore
Biology
Course #Course NameCredits
BSC 1010, 1010LHonors Biological Principles, and Lab4
BSC 1011, 1011LHonors Biodiversity with Lab4
PCB 3063Honors Genetics
(prereq: BSC 1010/1011)
3
PCB 4102Honors Cell Biology (prereq: PCB 3063)3
BSC 2084, 2084LHonors Essentials of Human Anatomy and Physiology, and Lab
(prereq: 8 credits of biology)
4
OCB 3012, 3012LHonors Marine Biology and Oceanography, and Lab
(prereq: BSC 1010/1011, or permission)
4
PCB 3411Honors Animal Behavior (prereq:
8 credits of biology, 3 credits of ecology)
3
ZOO 2303, 2303LHonors Vertebrate Zoology with Lab (prereq: BSC 1010/1011)4
Chemistry
Course #Course NameCredits
CHM 2045, 2045LHonors General Chemistry I with Lab4
CHM 2046, 2046LHonors General Chemistry II, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2045/L)4
CHM 2210, 2210LHonors Organic Chemistry I, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2046/L)4
CHM 2211, 2211LHonors Organic Chemistry II, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2210/L)4
BCH 3033, 3033LHonors Biochemistry with Lab
(prereq: CHM 2211/L)
4
CHM 3085Honors Environmental Chemistry (prereq: CHM 2046/L)3
CHM 3609, 3609LHonors Inorganic Chemistry, and Lab4
CHM 4135, 4135LHonors Instrumental Methods of Analysis, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2046/L)4
CHM 3121, 3121LHonors Quantitative Analysis with Lab (prereq: CHM 2046/L)4
Physics
Course #Course NameCredits
PHY 2048, 2048LHonors General Physics I, and Lab (prereq: MAC 2311)5
PHY 2049, 2049LHonors General Physics II, and Lab (prereq: PHY 2048/L, MAC 2312)5
Upper-level physics courses as offered.

Pre-Medical Track


TOP
Course #Course NameCredits
 2 Core Courses in Critical Theory6
 Pre-Medical studies requirements42
 8 credits of Biology*8
CHM 2045, 2045LHonors General Chemistry I, and Lab4
CHM 2046, 2046LHonors General Chemistry II, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2045/L)4
CHM 2210, 2210LHonors Organic Chemistry I, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2046/L)4
CHM 2211, 2211LHonors Organic Chemistry II, and Lab (prereq: CHM 2210/L)4
PHY 2048, 2048LHonors General Physics I, and Lab (prereq: MAC 2311)5
PHY 2049, 2049LHonors General Physics II, and Lab (prereq: PHY 2048/L, MAC 2312)5
MAC 2311Honors Calculus and Analytic Geometry I4
MAC 2312Honors Calculus and Analytic Geometry II4
 4 Courses from one or two ICT Content Areas (above)12-16
IDS 4970Honors Thesis in Interdisciplinary Critical Thinking6
 Total Credits66-70
* In preparing for the MCAT, students may wish to take Biological Principles, Genetics, Anatomy & Physiology, and Cell Biology. In addition, some medical schools may require Biochemistry.