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Academic Catalog 2025-26

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Your search for courses · during 24FA · meeting requirements for IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies · returned 35 results

  • AFST 225 Black Music, Resistance, and Liberation 6 credits

    For every defining moment in black history, there is a song. Every genre of black music makes a statement not only about the specific historical epoch it was created but also about the people’s dreams. For black people, songs are a means of resistance to oppression and an expression of the will to live. Through the analysis of black music, this course will expose students to black people’s struggles, hopes, and aspirations, and also American history, race relations, and much more. The class will read insightful texts, listen to songs, watch films, and engage in animated discussions.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): One course that applies toward the Humanistic Inquiry requirement with a grade of C- or better.

    • AFST Core AFST Humanistic Inquiry AMMU Soundtracks America CL: 200 level MUSC Elective MUSC Ethnomusicolgy or Pop
    • AFST  225.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Chielo Eze 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 330 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • AMST 100 Walt Whitman’s New York City 6 credits

    "O City / Behold me! Incarnate me as I have incarnated you!" An investigation of the burgeoning metropolitan city where the young Walter Whitman became a poet in the 1850s. Combining historical inquiry into the lives of nineteenth-century citizens of Brooklyn and Manhattan with analysis of Whitman’s varied journalistic writings and utterly original poetry, we will reconstruct how Whitman found his muse and his distinctively modern subject in the geography, demographics, markets, politics, and erotics of New York.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1 IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 100 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture
    • AMST  100.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Peter Balaam 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WLaird 206 9:50am-11:00am
    • FLaird 206 9:40am-10:40am
  • AMST 115 Introduction to American Studies 6 credits

    This overview of the “interdisciplinary discipline” of American Studies will focus on the ways American Studies engages with and departs from other scholarly fields of inquiry. We will study the stories of those who have been marginalized in the social, political, cultural, and economic life of the United States due to their class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, religion, citizenship, and level of ability. We will explore contemporary American Studies concerns like racial and class formation, the production of space and place, the consumption and circulation of culture, and transnational histories.

    Sophomore Priority

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMMU Music Foundations CL: 100 level HIST Pertinent Courses CCST Seeing and Being Cross-Cultural EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST United States
    • AMST  115.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Christopher Elias 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THWeitz Center 230 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • AMST 215 Trains of Thought: Contemplating Local Commuter and Passenger Rail 6 credits

    Meeting with mass-transit professionals, urban planners, and community organizers to discuss contemporary rail policy, students in this seminar will search local archives and develop public-facing informational materials about the Dan Patch Corridor, which passes through Northfield. This rail line was identified by MnDOT in 1998 as the most feasible southbound commuter-rail route for the Twin Cities. From 2002 until 2023, however, the state legislature prohibited it from further transportation studies. Meanwhile, grassroots rail advocates proposed reestablishing long-distance passenger service from Minneapolis to Kansas City. What are the arguments for and against reviving rail services? What does the community think?

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning
    • ACE Applied AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 200 level
    • AMST  215.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Baird Jarman 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 161 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • AMST 238 9/11 and the War on Terror in American Culture 6 credits

    An exploration of how the terrorist attacks of 9/11/2001 and the subsequent War on Terror impacted American culture. We will focus on issues of both form (the elements determining the look and feel of post-9/11 artwork) and content (the social and moral concerns driving post-9/11 culture). Shared texts will include novels, short stories, poetry, music, art, and films. Particular attention will be paid to themes such as race and racism, religion and religious discrimination, immigration and xenophobia, debates over American exceptionalism, critiques of American capitalism, the “death of irony,” attempts to define “truth,” and the spread of conspiracy theories. 

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AMST America in the World CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • AMST  238.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Christopher Elias 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THWillis 203 10:10am-11:55am
  • AMST 250 Asian American Reckonings 3 credits

    As both targets of racism and beneficiaries of privilege, Asian Americans defy easy categorization. In a timely intervention, Cathy Park Hong, in her 2020 essay collection Minor Feelings, undertakes an “Asian American Reckoning.” Following Hong’s lead, this five-week course will reckon with Asian America in its most vexing aspects. Through an exploration of memoir, cultural criticism, poetry, fiction, and film/media, we will think hard about questions of privilege and discrimination, interracial politics, settler colonialism, and transnational ties. Grappling with the past and looking towards the future, this course asks: What does it mean to be Asian American?

    Meets for the 1st 5 Weeks

    • First Five Weeks, Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • AMST  250.00 First Five Weeks, Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Nancy Cho 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLaird 007 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FLaird 007 1:10pm-2:10pm
    • Meets for the 1st 5 Weeks

  • ARTH 240 Art Since 1945 6 credits

    Art from abstract expressionism to the present, with particular focus on issues such as the modernist artist-hero; the emergence of alternative or non-traditional media; the influence of the women’s movement and the gay/lesbian liberation movement on contemporary art; and postmodern theory and practice.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): One Art History (ARTH) course with a grade of C- better.

    • AMST America in the World AMST Space and Place ARTH Post-1800 ARTS ARTH Post 1900 CAMS Extra Departmental CL: 200 level GWSS Elective AMST Production Consumption of Culture EUST Transnational Support
    • ARTH  240.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Vanessa Reubendale 🏫
    • Size:25
    • T, THBoliou 161 10:10am-11:55am
  • CAMS 100 Rock ‘n’ Roll in Cinema 6 credits

    This course is designed to explore the intersection between rock music and cinema. Taking a historical view of the evolution of the "rock film," this class examines the impact of rock music on the structural and formal aspects of narrative, documentary, and experimental films and videos. The scope of the class will run from the earliest rock films of the mid-1950s through contemporary examples in ten weekly subunits.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1 IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CAMS Elective CL: 100 level
    • CAMS  100.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Jay Beck 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WWeitz Center 136 9:50am-11:00am
    • FWeitz Center 136 9:40am-10:40am
  • CAMS 270 Nonfiction 6 credits

    This course addresses nonfiction media as both art form and historical practice by exploring the expressive, rhetorical, and political possibilities of nonfiction production. A focus on relationships between form and content and between makers, subjects, and viewers will inform our approach. Throughout the course we will pay special attention to the ethical concerns that arise from making media about others’ lives. We will engage with diverse modes of nonfiction production including essayistic, experimental, and participatory forms and create community videos in partnership with Carleton’s Center for Community and Civic Engagement and local organizations. The class culminates in the production of a significant independent nonfiction media project.

    Extra Time

    • Fall 2024
    • ARP, Arts Practice IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): CAMS 111 with grade of C- or better.

    • ACE Applied AMST Democracy Activism CAMS Elective CAMS Production CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture
    • CAMS  270.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Laska Jimsen 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THWeitz Center 133 10:10am-11:55am
  • DANC 266 Reading the Dancing Body 6 credits

    Dance is a field in which bodies articulate a history of sexuality, nation, gender, and race. In this course, the investigation of the body as a “text” will be anchored by intersectional and feminist perspectives. We will re-center American concert dance history, emphasizing the Africanist base of American Dance performance, contemporary black choreographers, and Native American concert dance. Through reading, writing, discussing, moving, viewing videos and performances the class will “read” the gender, race, and politics of the dancing body in the cultural/historical context of Modern, Post Modern and Contemporary Dance.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 200 level GWSS Elective AFST Literary Artistic Analysis AMST Production Consumption of Culture DANC History Theory Literature
    • DANC  266.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Judith Howard 🏫 👤
    • Size:20
    • T, THWeitz Center 165 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • EDUC 110 Introduction to Educational Studies 6 credits

    This course will focus on education as a multidisciplinary field of study. We will explore the meanings of education within individual lives and institutional contexts, learn to critically examine the assumptions that writers, psychologists, sociologists and philosophers bring to the study of education, and read texts from a variety of disciplines. What has “education” meant in the past? What does “education” mean in contemporary American society? What might “education” mean to people with differing circumstances and perspectives? And what should “education” mean in the future? Open only to first-and second-year students.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • Student has Sophomore Priority.

    • CL: 100 level EDUC Core
    • EDUC  110.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Anita Chikkatur 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THWeitz Center 233 10:10am-11:55am
    • Sophomore Priority

  • EDUC 250 Fixing Schools: Politics and Policy in American Education 6 credits

    How can we fix American public schools? What is “broken” about our schools? How should they be repaired? And who should lead the fix? This course will examine the two leading contemporary educational reform movements: accountability and school choice. With an emphasis on the nature of the teaching profession and the work of foundations, this course will analyze the policy agendas of different reform groups, exploring the dynamic interactions among the many different stakeholders responsible for shaping American education.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • AMST Democracy Activism CL: 200 level PPOL Education Policy EDUC 3 Public Policy Educational Reform
    • EDUC  250.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Jeff Snyder 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WWillis 114 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FWillis 114 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • ENGL 211 Haunting the Margins of American Literature 6 credits

    Nineteenth-century Americans were hardly strangers to ghosts and the world beyond. In fact, many actively sought communion with the dead by attending table-rapping séances and sitting for spirit photographs. This class will analyze a variety of literary hauntings from the long nineteenth century to explore the cultural anxieties and desires they might represent. Paying particular attention to questions of race, gender, and sexuality, we will consider how figures ghosted from history become present in ways that demand attention and, at times, redress. Authors will include Edgar Allen Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rose Terry Cooke, Alice Brown, and Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 2 ENGL Tradition 2 AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • ENGL  211.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Emily Coccia 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLaird 205 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • ENGL 227 Imagining the Borderlands 6 credits

    This course engages the borderlands as space (the geographic area that straddles nations) and idea (liminal spaces, identities, communities). We examine texts from writers like Anzaldúa, Butler, Cervantes, Dick, Eugenides, Haraway, and Muñoz first to understand how borders act to constrain our imagi(nation) and then to explore how and to what degree the borderlands offer hybrid identities, queer affects, and speculative world-building. We will engage the excess of the borderlands through a broad chronological and generic range of U.S. literary and visual texts. Come prepared to question what is “American”, what is race, what is human.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMST Space and Place CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 GWSS Elective LTAM Electives LTAM Pertinent Courses AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • ENGL  227.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Adriana Estill 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLaird 205 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FLaird 205 12:00pm-1:00pm
  • ENGL 228 Banned. Censored. Reviled. 6 credits

    What makes a work of art dangerous? While present-day attacks on books, libraries, and schools feel unprecedented, writers and artists have always had to fight efforts to suppress their work, often at great personal and societal cost. We will study literature, films, graphic novels, images, music, and other materials that have been challenged and attacked as offensive, taboo, or transgressive, and also explore strategies of resistance to censorship.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • ACE Theoretical AMST Democracy Activism CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 AMST Production Consumption of Culture
    • ENGL  228.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Pierre Hecker 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLaird 205 10:10am-11:55am
  • ENGL 233 Writing and Social Justice 6 credits

    Social justice is fairness as it manifests in society, but who gets to determine what fairness looks, sounds, feels like? The self-described Black Canadian poet Dionne Brand says that she doesn’t write toward justice because that doesn’t exist, but that she writes against tyranny. If we use that framework, how does that change our own writing and our own notions of justice in our or any time? What is the role of literary writing, especially fiction, the essay, and poetry in the collective and individual quest to understand and build conditions that could yield increased potential for social justice? In this course, students will read, analyze, discuss, and write about various texts that might be considered to be against myriad tyrannies, if not necessarily toward social justice. Authors may include Octavia Butler, Phillip Metres, Toni Morrison, Myung Mi Kim, and M. NourbeSe Philipe.

    • Fall 2024
    • ARP, Arts Practice IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMST Democracy Activism CL: 200 level ENCW Creative Wtg Workshop ENGL Creative Writing ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 AFST Literary Artistic Analysis AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • ENGL  233.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Sun Yung Shin 🏫
    • Size:15
    • T, THLaird 206 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • HIST 125 Roots and Resistance: Africa to the U.S. Civil War 6 credits

    This course is a survey of early African American history. It will introduce students to major themes and events while also covering historical interpretations and debates in the field. Core themes of the course include migration, conflict, and culture. Beginning with autonomous African politics, the course traces the development of the United States through the experiences of enslaved and free African American women and men to the Civil War. The main aim of the course is for students to become familiar with key issues and developments in African American history and their centrality to understanding U.S. history.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AFST Humanistic Inquiry AFST Pertinent AMMU Music Foundations AMST Democracy Activism AMST Survey 2 CL: 100 level HIST Modern AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 2 Social Cultural Context HIST Africa & Its Diaspora HIST United States
    • HIST  125.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Rebecca Brueckmann 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 236 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • HIST 301 Indigenous Histories at Carleton 6 credits

    Carleton’s new campus land acknowledgement affirms that this is Dakota land, but how did Carleton come to be here? What are the histories of Indigenous faculty, students, and staff at Carleton? In this course, students will investigate Indigenous histories on our campus by conducting original research about how Carleton acquired its landbase, its historic relationships to Dakota and Anishinaabeg people, histories of on-campus activism, the shifting demographics of Native students on campus, and the histories of Indigenous faculty and staff, among others. Students will situate these histories within the broader context of federal Indian policies and Indigenous resistance.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies No Exploration WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Applied ACE Theoretical AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 300 level AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity DGAH Cross Disciplinary Collaboration HIST United States
    • HIST  301.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Meredith McCoy 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THCMC 210 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • LING 135 Introduction to Sociolinguistics 6 credits

    There is a complex relationship between language and society. This course examines how language variation is tied to identity and the role of language in human social interaction. We will consider language as it relates to social status, age, gender, ethnicity, and location as well as theoretical models used to study variation. We will also examine how language is used in conversation, in the media, and beyond using ethnography of communication and discourse analysis. You will become more aware of how language is used in your own daily life and will be able to argue sociolinguistic perspectives on language attitudes.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • CL: 100 level LING Elective
    • LING  135.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Andrew Bray 🏫
    • Size:30
    • M, WWeitz Center 132 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FWeitz Center 132 12:00pm-1:00pm
  • MUSC 205 Disability in Popular Music: Representations, Roles, and Receptions 6 credits

    How do public discourses around bodies and minds shape different styles of popular music? How do musicians and fans challenge ableism? Are certain disabilities more prominent in certain kinds of musics? And: can any of this even be heard? To address these questions, we will explore the life and music of artists such as Stevie Wonder, Joni Mitchell, Victoria Canal, Billie Eilish, and Django Reinhart, and examine how disability functions in subcultures such as punk, hip hop, and K-pop. Readings will be drawn from cultural disability studies, music theory, media studies, and the medical humanities.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 200 level MUSC Ethnomusicolgy or Pop
    • MUSC  205.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Jeremy Tatar 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WWeitz Center 230 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FWeitz Center 230 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • MUSC 232 Golden Age of R & B 6 credits

    A survey of rhythm and blues from 1945 to 1975, focusing on performers, composers and the music industry.

    Not open to students who have taken MUSC 132

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • Not open to students that have taken MUSC 132.

    • AMMU Soundtracks America CL: 200 level MUSC Ethnomusicolgy or Pop AFST Literary Artistic Analysis AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • MUSC  232.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Andy Flory 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WWeitz Center M215 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FWeitz Center M215 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • MUSC 244 Music Studies at the Border 6 credits

    Where is music found? What can we learn about musical practices beyond the score and recording? This course introduces students to hands-on, ethnographic approaches to the study of music. We will consider the ethical, legal, interpersonal, and philosophical challenges of writing about the musical lives of others — and ourselves. Throughout the course, we will work together to design and carry out ethnographic research projects. Selected interested students will develop and carry out a project involving a significant on-site project through a significant on-site visit to the U.S./Mexico border during December. Previous coursework in music is helpful, but not required.

    An optional, Carleton-funded site visit during the first week of December is planned to travel to the U.S./Mexico border. Students enrolled in MUSC 244 will indicate their interest in this visit by the Fall 2024 drop/add deadline; due to limited funding, only 12 students will be able to participate. Participants will be selected by random lottery among those who are interested. Students participating in the December travel are required to enroll in a 2-credit Winter 2025 MUSC 245 (Thursdays 10:45–11:50am, first five weeks).

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Applied CL: 200 level MUSC Ethnomusicolgy or Pop
    • MUSC  244.01 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Melissa Scott 🏫
    • Size:20
    • T, THWeitz Center 231 10:10am-11:55am
  • PHIL 257 Contemporary Issues in Feminist Philosophy 6 credits

    We will analyze different theories about the distinction between sex and gender. Then we will turn to contemporary issues in feminism for the remainder of the course. These issues include, but are not limited to, conservative feminism, reproductive justice, fetishes, disability, ethics of pronouns, whether men are oppressed, and responsibility for oppression. We will read selections from Oyèrónké Oyewùmí, Robin Dembroff, Karina Ortiz Villa, Robin Zheng, Anne Fausto-Sterling, Audre Lorde, and more. In addition, there will be room for student choice of topics.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CGSC Elective CL: 200 level GWSS Elective PHIL Interdisciplinary 1 PHIL Prac/Value Theory PHIL Social and Political Theory 2
    • PHIL  257.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Hope Sample 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WWeitz Center 230 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FWeitz Center 230 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • PHIL 260 Critical Philosophy of Race 6 credits

    What is race? How do we define racism? How have philosophers defined race historically? What does it mean to examine race philosophically? US history, culture, and politics are haunted by the specters of race, racism, and slavery. Ideas about race and racism permeate nearly all aspects our lives evidenced by the mainstream media’s obsession with questions like: Does racism still exist? Should critical race theory be taught in schools? Do “Black Lives” or “All Lives” matter? In this course, we will investigate the ways in which ideas about race and racism in the US have been and are continuously re-defined for the sake of preserving white supremacy and white-supremacist institutions.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • AFST Humanistic Inquiry CL: 200 level PHIL Prac/Value Theory PHIL Social and Political Theory 1 PHIL Value Theory 2 AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • PHIL  260.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Cynthia Marrero-Ramos 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 301 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • POSC 122 Politics in America: Liberty and Equality 6 credits

    An introduction to American government and politics. Focus on the Congress, Presidency, political parties and interest groups, the courts and the Constitution. Particular attention will be given to the public policy debates that divide liberals and conservatives and how these divisions are rooted in American political culture.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning SI, Social Inquiry
    • AFST Pertinent AMST America in the World AMST Democracy Activism AMST Survey 1 CL: 100 level POSI Core POSI Elective AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity EDUC 3 Public Policy Educational Reform
    • POSC  122.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Ryan Dawkins 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • M, WWillis 204 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FWillis 204 12:00pm-1:00pm
  • POSC 204 Media and Electoral Politics: 2024 United States Election 6 credits

    Our analysis of media influences on politics will draw from three fields of study: political psychology, political behavior and participation, and public opinion. Students will conduct a study of the effects of campaign ads and news using our multi-year data set of content analyzed election ads and news. We study a variety of quantitative and qualitative research methods to learn how political communication affects U.S. elections.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning SI, Social Inquiry
    • ACE Theoretical AMST Democracy Activism CAMS Extra Departmental CL: 200 level POSI Elective AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity DGAH Critical Ethical Reflection
    • POSC  204.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Barbara Allen 🏫 👤
    • Size:28
    • T, THHasenstab 002 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • POSC 304 Media and Electoral Politics: 2024 United States Elections 6 credits

    Our analysis of media influences on politics will draw from three fields of study: political psychology, political behavior and participation, and public opinion. Students will conduct a study of the effects of campaign ads and news using our multi-year data set of content analyzed election ads and news. We study a variety of quantitative and qualitative research methods to learn how political communication affects U.S. elections. Students enrolled in the POSC 304 version will conduct more extensive analysis of data for their seminar papers.

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning SI, Social Inquiry
    • CL: 300 level
    • POSC  304.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Barbara Allen 🏫 👤
    • Size:28
    • T, THHasenstab 002 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • RELG 100 The Historical Jesus and the Christ of Faith 6 credits

    For nearly two thousand years, Christians have considered Jesus the unique, miracle-working Son of God who came to earth to save humanity from its sins. But does this picture hold up to historical scrutiny? Who do historians think Jesus was? This seminar introduces the tools of historical inquiry that scholars use to reconstruct Jesus's original message. It also surveys how Americans in different cultural contexts have imagined Jesus, from the liberating Christ of Black theology, to the eastern sage and hippie of the 1960s, to the rabbi who never intended a non-Jewish movement.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1 IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CL: 100 level MARS Core Course MARS Supporting RELG Christian Traditions
    • RELG  100.01 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Sonja Anderson 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WLeighton 301 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FLeighton 301 12:00pm-1:00pm
  • RELG 100 The Qur’an as Literature 6 credits

    The Qur'an is best known as the sacred text of Islam, but it is also one of the most widely read, dynamic, and influential texts in human history. It is not every text that can compel people to regard it as divine revelation. In fact, Muslims consider the Qur'an's literary composition a miracle. This course explores the literary style and structure of the Qur'an through close reading of its English translation. It also introduces students to the history of the Qur'an and its significance in Muslims' everyday lives. No background knowledge is assumed; nor is this an introduction to Islam.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CL: 100 level MARS Supporting RELG Islamic Traditions RELG Pertinent Course
    • RELG  100.02 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Kambiz GhaneaBassiri 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WCMC 328 9:50am-11:00am
    • FCMC 328 9:40am-10:40am
  • RELG 100 Christianity and Colonialism 6 credits

    From its beginnings, Christianity has been concerned with the making of new persons and worlds: the creation of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth. It has also maintained a tight relationship to power, empire, and the making of modernity. In this course we will investigate this relationship within the context of colonial projects in the Americas, Africa, India, and the Pacific. We will trace the making of modern selves from Columbus to the abolition (and remainders) of slavery, and from the arrival of Cook in the Sandwich Islands to the journals of missionaries and the contemporary fight for Hawaiian sovereignty.

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1 IS, International Studies
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CL: 100 level RELG Christian Traditions
    • RELG  100.03 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Kristin Bloomer 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THLeighton 301 10:10am-11:55am
  • RELG 100 Religion, Science, and the Moral Imagination 6 credits

    How do we imagine the relationship between religion and science? Are they at odds, in harmony, or different ways of imagining ourselves, our world, and our futures? This course explores historical understandings of religious and scientific thought, and asks how the two came to be separated in the modern world. We use the imagination to explore the power dynamics and moral judgments embedded in assumptions about matter, nature, bodies, persons, and progress. We draw on literature, philosophy, and theology to consider questions about authority, ethics, and existential hope, focusing on climate crisis, AI and personhood, racism, and the possibility of alternative futures. Argument & Inquiry

    Held for new first year students

    • Fall 2024
    • AI/WR1, Argument & Inquiry/WR1
    • Student is a member of the First Year First Term class level cohort. Students are only allowed to register for one A&I course at a time. If a student wishes to change the A&I course they are enrolled in they must DROP the enrolled course and then ADD the new course. Please see our Workday guides Drop or 'Late' Drop a Course and Register or Waitlist for a Course Directly from the Course Listing for more information.

    • CL: 100 level RELG Pertinent Course
    • RELG  100.04 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Lori Pearson 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WLeighton 303 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FLeighton 303 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • RELG 110 Understanding Religion 6 credits

    How can we best understand the role of religion in the world today, and how should we interpret the meaning of religious traditions–their texts and practices–in history and culture? This class takes an exciting tour through selected themes and puzzles related to the fascinating and diverse expressions of religion throughout the world. From politics and pop culture, to religious philosophies and spiritual practices, to rituals, scriptures, gender, religious authority, and more, students will explore how these issues emerge in a variety of religions, places, and historical moments in the U.S. and across the globe.

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CCST Encounters CL: 100 level RELG Pertinent Course CCST Seeing and Being Cross-Cultural
    • RELG  110.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Sonja Anderson 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLeighton 330 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FLeighton 330 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • RELG 130 Native American Religions 6 credits

    This course explores the history and contemporary practice of Native American religious traditions, especially as they have developed amid colonization and resistance. While surveying a broad variety of ways that Native American traditions imagine land, community, and the sacred, the course focuses on the local traditions of the Ojibwe and Lakota communities. Materials include traditional beliefs and practices, the history of missions, intertribal new religious movements, and contemporary issues of treaty rights, religious freedom, and the revitalization of language and culture.

    Sophomore Priority

    • Fall 2024
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Applied AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 100 level RELG Breadth RELG Pertinent Course RELG Traditions Americas
    • RELG  130.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Michael McNally 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 426 10:10am-11:55am
  • SOAN 125 Southeast Asian Migration and Diasporic Communities 6 credits

    2025 is the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War. Many Southeast Asian (SEAn) refugees resettled in the U.S. in the aftermath. First, we begin in Southeast Asia (SEA) to understand the social, political, and historical circumstances that have led to SEA migration. Then we will examine how SEAn have adapted to life in the U.S. and how those communities—many are here in Minnesota—are thriving today. We’ll work on a project in collaboration with SEAn organizations to commemorate the 50th anniversary and also travel to SEAn communities in the Twin Cities, dates TBD. 

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • ACE Applied AMST America in the World AMST Space and Place CL: 100 level AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity SOAN Elective Eligible
    • SOAN  125.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Cheryl Yin 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • T, THLeighton 236 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • SOAN 252 Growing Up in an Aging Society 6 credits

    Both the U.S. and global populations are trending toward a world with far fewer young people than ever before. So, what does it mean to grow up in a rapidly aging society? This course explores age, aging, and its various intersections with demographic characteristics including gender, sexuality, race, and social class. We situate age and aging within the context of macro-structural, institutional, and micro-everyday realms. Some topics we will examine include: media depictions and stereotypes; interpersonal relationships and caregiving; the workplace and retirement; and both the perceptions and inevitable realities of an aging population.

    The department strongly recommends that Sociology/Anthropology 110 or 111 be taken prior to enrolling in courses numbered 200 or above

    • Fall 2024
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies QRE, Quantitative Reasoning SI, Social Inquiry WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • AMST Democracy Activism AMST Space and Place CL: 200 level AMST Production Consumption of Culture PPOL Social Policy & Welfare
    • SOAN  252.00 Fall 2024

    • Faculty:Annette Nierobisz 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WWeitz Center 230 11:10am-12:20pm
    • FWeitz Center 230 12:00pm-1:00pm

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2025–26 Academic Catalog

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Registrar: Theresa Rodriguez
Email: registrar@carleton.edu
Phone: 507-222-4094
Academic Catalog 2025-26 pages maintained by Maria Reverman
This page was last updated on 10 September 2025
Carleton

One North College StNorthfield, MN 55057USA

507-222-4000

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