The
Humanities Degree Program is offered cooperatively by three
separate departments:
Classics,
Philosophy and
Religious Studies. Our major is unique in two ways:
students may choose course work equivalent to a major in a
single department or create a broader curriculum of their
choice from various humanities courses; and our program also
has a strong interdisciplinary side. The final degree
certificate shows both the departmental discipline and the
Humanities major.
The
goal of the program is to help us deepen our understanding
of ourselves and our culture, by exploring the ways human
beings find meaning in their experience. We explore these
ways by studying both our own individual insights and the
artistic, philosophical and religious works that have
expressed and shaped human experience.
Each
student selects five upper-level courses reflecting her or
his own interests, in addition to one prescribed
introductory course in each department, and three required
team-taught, interdisciplinary courses.
Three courses introducing the specific goals and methods of
the three disciplines (9 hours).
These courses place special emphasis on the particular
discipline's approaches to knowledge, critical thought,
skills of expression, and human development. Students must
choose from those listed below, one for each discipline:
Classics: 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 319
Philosophy: any 200 or 300 level course, except 302
and 304
Religious Studies: 205, 206, 300
Three interdisciplinary, team-taught courses (9 hours).
These may be taken in any combination of levels, but must
include at least one 400 level course as the senior capstone
experience. These courses make use of the combined resources
of any two of our disciplines to gain insight into a wide
variety of topics, depending on the current interests of
students and faculty. The capstone course also aims to
reflect on skills and themes the students have explored in
their progress through the program. We offer:
CL/PHL/RST 250 (Orientation in Humanities)
CL/PHL/RST 390, 391, 392, 393, 394
CL/PHL/RST 490, 491, 492, 493, 494 (all Humanities
Seminar).
Five upper-level courses by contract (15 hours).
These are chosen by the student. Each student may also
choose to select a small faculty advisory committee to
assist with contract course selection, advising, and
long-range planning. The committee should consist of two or
more faculty members from at least two disciplines. Contract
courses need not be restricted to those our departments
offer, and may be structured, for example, on the basis of
chronological period, comparative cultures, traditional
departmental emphasis, theme, or topic.
Humanities professors are strongly interested in the
progress of our students, their problems and strengths.
Teachers and students work together in class discussion and
in small groups to learn how to read, think critically, and
write effectively. And our students get to know one another
and to learn to think on their own feet, in preparation for
life on and off the job.
The
Three Departments
Classics:
explores the languages, history,
and literature of ancient Greece and Rome. These eras
represent the beginnings of western culture that help shape
who we are today.
Philosophy:
investigates the nature of thinking and uses the history of
human thought to help us
figure out what we need to think about and how
to think about it.
Religious Studies: examines beliefs about the nature of
human beings and our place in the universe, beliefs
belonging to our culture and to other cultures, now and in
the past.
The
Faculty
Classics
Caroline Perkins (Chair), Ph.D. (Ohio State)
E. Del
Chrol, Ph.D. (University
of Southern California)
Charles Lloyd, Ph.D. (Indiana)
Philosophy
John Vielkind (Chair),
Ph.D. (Duquesne)
Jeremy Barris, Ph.D. (SUNY-Stony
Brook)
Jeffrey Powell, Ph.D. (DePaul)
Religious Studies
Clay McNearney (Chair),
Ph.D. (Iowa)
Jeffrey Ruff, Ph.D. (UC-Santa Barbara