• Click on the course title to view the description of each class.
  • In-Person: This class will be taught in person with all students attending each scheduled class.
    HY-InPerson/Remote: This class will be taught using a combination of in-person and online or remote instruction modes. This means that some coursework may be completed online at a student's own pace (asynchronous) or remotely at designated times, in addition to having an in person meeting pattern. Watch your CU email for more information from the instructor/department prior to the start of classes.
    Remote: This class will be taught synchronously as a remote section, which means classes will be held virtually during the days and times listed.
    HR-Hybrid remote/online: This class will be taught using a combination of online and remote instruction modes.  This means that while some coursework may be completed online at a student’s own pace (asynchronous), the class will also meet remotely at designated days/times each week.
    Online: This class will be taught online and delivered asynchronously which means there are not scheduled days and times. Students can complete the coursework throughout the week when it is convenient for them.

Course Number Course Title Semester Time Instructor
WGST 2000-001
Introduces students to the field of Women & Gender Studies. Examines gender issues in the United States from interdisciplinary, multicultural, and feminist perspectives. Covers such topics as sexuality, beauty ideals, women’s health, violence against women, work, the economy, peace and war, and the environment. Meets MAPS requirement for social science: general. Approved for arts and sciences core curriculum: human diversity
May Online A. Hatch

WGST 3767-001
ENGL 3767-001

Examines a series of literary texts to consider how writers across the world have used fiction to creatively stage and reimagine gender and sexuality. Attends to the formal and narrative techniques by which these texts call attention to the fictionality, and thereby the creative malleability, of gender itself. Some cinematic and performance texts will also be included.
May HR-Hybrid Remote/Online
12:30-3:30pm
D. Misri
WGST 2600-100
Examines the positionality of women in terms of gender, race, ethnicity, class, and power relations in a global context. Approved for arts and sciences core curriculum: contemporary societies.
A Online L. Bayard de Volo
WGST 3250-200
It comes as no surprise that the mediated world in which we live is awash in Disney products. From theme parks to films to a television channel to a global media presence, Disney’s reach is extensive. Disney’s media products are, for the most part, uncritically accepted as good, clean entertainment and, most importantly, good for children. Indeed, Disney-branded productions are seen as a kind of media “safe haven,” praised both for not pandering to the sex and violence crowd and for offering content that provides positive role models for young girls, introduces audiences to important moments in history, and offers culturally diverse characters.
In this course we will examine these assumptions. Working from the perspective of media literate consumers looking through a feminist lens, we will take a critical look at a representative sample of Disney’s animated films, paying particular attention to Disney’s representations of gender, race, class and sexual orientation. Too, we will examine some of the practices of the corporation itself in order to better understand the Disney phenomenon in its totality.
Recommended prereq., WMST 2000 or 2600.
B HR-Hybrid Remote/Online
9:15 - 11am
S. Leone
WGST 3712-200

COURSE CANCELLED
Topics: Black Latina/x Feminisms in the Americas

This course examines Black Latina/x Feminisms in the Americas. We will draw on a number of theoretical decolonial frameworks, in particular Black Feminist Thought and Black Latinx Feminist Thought to interrogate questions of gender, race, class, sexuality, language and other social identities in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the U.S. In particular, we will read texts, listen to podcasts, and engage with visual representations that consider the experiences of Black Latinx people in the U.S., the Caribbean, and in Brazil. We will also analyze how art (music, visual and performance) and activism from Black Latina/x represent important sites of resistance to contemporary struggles their communities experience.
B HR-Hybrid Remote/Online
1:15-2:50pm
M. Mena

For more WGST courses please check with other departments as many of our courses are cross-listed.