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Dec 17, 2024
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School of Graduate Studies Calendar, 2022-2023 [-ARCHIVED CALENDAR-]
Cultural Studies and Critical Theory Courses
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Required Courses for All Graduate Students
All graduate students, including part-time students, must complete the following courses within the first month after their admission to graduate studies at McMaster: SGS 101 / Academic Research Integrity and Ethics and the SGS 201 / Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) . The purpose of SGS 101 is to ensure that the standards and expectations of academic integrity and research ethics are communicated early and are understood by incoming students. The purpose of SGS 201 is to ensure that students gain an understanding of, and learn how to identify and reduce attitudinal, structural, informational, technological, and systemic barriers to persons with disabilities. A graduate student may not obtain a graduate degree at McMaster without having passed these courses. In the event that a student fails either course, he/she must retake it at the earliest opportunity. The course descriptions for SGS 101 and SGS 201 may be found in Section 11.
Note: Not all of these courses will be offered every year, please see http://english.humanities.mcmaster.ca/graduate-courses-and-resources/ for a current list of elective courses.
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Elective Courses
- CULTR ST 708 / Selfie/Culture
- CULTR ST 710 / Decolonial, Anti-Racist, and Anti-Oppressive Pedagogies: Teaching and Learning Otherwise
- CULTR ST 711 / Celebrity/Culture
- CULTR ST 712 / Queer, Two-Spirit, & Trans- Indigenous Writings
- CULTR ST 716 / Bob Dylan and American Culture: Memory, Consciousness and Meaning
- CULTR ST 717 / Global Sex
- CULTR ST 721 / Writing, Land, and Place
- CULTR ST 725 / Romanticism, War, and Peace
- CULTR ST 729 / Cultural Studies and the Politics of Cultural Pedagogy
- CULTR ST 730 / Indigenous Literature of North America
- CULTR ST 731 / Anxiety Disorders: The Cultural Politics of Risk
- CULTR ST 734 / Appropriation and Canadian Literature: History, Theory, Controversies
- CULTR ST 742 / Mapping South Asian Masculinities
- CULTR ST 743 / Reimagining Nature: Science and Empire in the Long Eighteenth Century
- CULTR ST 746 / American Counterculture Literature, 1950-1990: Beat, Hippie, Punk
- CULTR ST 747 / Discourses of Empire 1700-1820
- CULTR ST 748 / Last Things: Life and Death in the Anthropocenes
- CULTR ST 749 / Getting and Spending: The Birth of Consumer Culture
- CULTR ST 750 / Gothic, Sensation and Victorian Discourses of the Body
- CULTR ST 752 / Trans-Atlantic Indigeneity: Indigenous Literary Presence in Europe
- CULTR ST 755 / Neoliberalism and the Limits of the Social
- CULTR ST 756 / The Secret Life of Things in the Eighteenth Century
- CULTR ST 757 / Gender, Civility, and Courtliness in Early Modern Europe
- CULTR ST 758 / Literature as Witness
- CULTR ST 759 / Victorian Natures
- CULTR ST 761 / Framing CanLit
- CULTR ST 762 / Queer Historicisms and British Cultural Memory
- CULTR ST 765 / Biopolitics: An Introduction
- CULTR ST 767 / Regarding Animals: Theories of Non-Human Life
- CULTR ST 770 / Queer Caribbean Writing: Sex, Gender, Politics
- CULTR ST 773 / “Revolt and Remember”: Resilience in the Postcolonial Environmental Humanities
- CULTR ST 775 / Topics in South Asian Literature and Culture
- CULTR ST 776 / Community Engaged Narrative Arts
- CULTR ST 779 / The Times We Live In
- CULTR ST 781 / Public Mourning in Canada: What Makes a Life Grievable?
- CULTR ST 785 / Migratory Routes: Indian Diasporic Fiction and Film
- CULTR ST 791 / Rethinking Politics: Thinking Past War, Democracy, and Terror
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