Feminist Institute of Social Transformation
(Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences)
613-520-6645
http://carleton.ca/fist
This section presents the requirements for programs in:
Program Requirements
Minor in Sexuality Studies (4.0 credits)
Open to all undergraduate degree students.
Students are required to present a Minor CGPA of 4.00 or higher at graduation in order to be awarded a Minor in Sexuality Studies.
Requirements | ||
1. 1.0 credit from: | 1.0 | |
FYSM 1402 [1.0] | Issues in Feminist Social Transformation | |
WGST 1808 [1.0] | Introduction to Feminist Social Transformation | |
2. 0.5 credit in: | 0.5 | |
SXST 2101 [0.5] | Sexuality Studies: A Critical Introduction | |
3. 1.0 credit in SXST or Approved Sexuality Studies Electives at the 2000-level or higher | 1.0 | |
4. 1.5 credits in SXST or Approved Sexuality Studies Electives at the 3000-level or higher | 1.5 | |
5. The remaining requirements of the major discipline(s) and degree must be satisfied | ||
Total Credits | 4.0 |
Notes:
- Other courses may be substituted for the credits specified in items three and four, when material on sexuality is central to the course. Such substitutions must be individually approved by the Feminist Institute of Social Transformation. Students are encouraged to consult course descriptions of Special Topics courses.
Approved Sexuality Studies Electives
Note: access to these courses is not guaranteed, and may depend on space availability and the satisfaction of other requirements such as course prerequisites.
Anthropology | ||
ANTH 2040 [0.5] | Anthropology and Gender | |
ANTH 4780 [0.5] | Anthropology of Personhood | |
Art History | ||
ARTH 3600 [0.5] | Art Since 1945 | |
ARTH 4600 [0.5] | Art, Architecture, and Gender | |
Canadian Studies | ||
CDNS 3400 [0.5] | Feminist and Queer Canadas | |
Communication and Media Studies | ||
COMS 4604 [0.5] | Media, Gender and Sexuality | |
Critical Race Studies | ||
CRST 2001 [0.5] | Introduction to Critical Race Studies | |
CRST 3812 [0.5] | Interdisciplinary Topics in Critical Race Studies | |
CRST 4001 [0.5] | Advanced Critical Race Studies | |
Disability Studies | ||
DBST 2001 [0.5] | Introduction to Disability Studies | |
DBST 3001 [0.5] | Disability Studies: Policy and Activism | |
DBST 3002 [0.5] | Mad Studies | |
DBST 3060 [0.5] | Critical Disability Studies | |
DBST 3304 [0.5] | Disability and Childhood: Transnational Perspectives | |
DBST 3812 [0.5] | Interdisciplinary Topics in Disability Studies | |
DBST 4812 [0.5] | Interdisciplinary Topics in Disability Studies | |
English Language and Literature | ||
ENGL 2109 [0.5] | Gender, Sexuality and Literature | |
Film Studies | ||
FILM 3301 [0.5] | Topics in Cinema, Gender, and Sexuality | |
History | ||
HIST 3106 [0.5] | Social History of Sexuality | |
HIST 3115 [0.5] | Childhood and Youth in History | |
HIST 3120 [0.5] | History of the Body | |
HIST 3406 [0.5] | African-American Women | |
HIST 3505 [0.5] | Women in Canada | |
HIST 3604 [0.5] | Gender and Sexuality in Modern Europe | |
HIST 3717 [0.5] | Gender and Sexuality in Africa | |
HIST 4505 [1.0] | Seminar in Women's and Gender History | |
Human Rights and Social Justice | ||
HRSJ 1001 [1.0] | Introduction to Human Rights | |
HRSJ 2301 [0.5] | Human Rights and Sexualities | |
HRSJ 3305 [0.5] | Anti-Black Racism | |
HRSJ 4302 [0.5] | Transgender Human Rights | |
Law | ||
LAWS 3001 [0.5] | Women and the Legal Process | |
LAWS 3503 [0.5] | Equality and Discrimination | |
LAWS 3804 [0.5] | Law of the Family | |
LAWS 4001 [0.5] | Law, Family and Gender | |
LAWS 4002 [0.5] | Feminist Theories of Law | |
LAWS 5302 [0.5] | Feminism, Law and Social Transformation | |
Consuming Passions: The Regulation of Consumption, Appearance and Sexuality | ||
Music | ||
MUSI 3302 [0.5] | Music and Gender I | |
Philosophy | ||
PHIL 1500 [1.0] | Contemporary Moral, Social and Religious Issues | |
PHIL 2306 [0.5] | Philosophy and Feminism | |
Political Science | ||
PSCI 2500 [0.5] | Gender and Politics | |
PSCI 3109 [0.5] | The Politics of Law and Morality | |
PSCI 3303 [0.5] | Feminist Political Theory | |
PSCI 3502 [0.5] | Gender and Politics: Global South | |
PSCI 4500 [0.5] | Gender and Globalization | |
PSCI 4501 [0.5] | Politics of Identity in Europe and the Russian Area | |
PSCI 4605 [0.5] | Gender in International Relations | |
Psychology | ||
PSYC 3603 [0.5] | Psychology of Women | |
Social Work | ||
SOWK 3804 [0.5] | Law of the Family | |
SOWK 4206 [0.5] | Feminist Counselling | |
Sociology | ||
SOCI 2043 [0.5] | Sociology of the Family | |
SOCI 2045 [0.5] | Gender and Society | |
SOCI 3040 [0.5] | Studies in the Sociology of Gender | |
SOCI 3044 [0.5] | Sociology of Sex and Sexuality | |
SOCI 3050 [0.5] | Studies in the Sociology of Health | |
SOCI 3420 [0.5] | Studies in Gender and Criminal Justice | |
SOCI 4040 [0.5] | Feminist Sociology of Intersectionality | |
SOCI 4043 [0.5] | Families in the 21st Century | |
Women's and Gender Studies | ||
WGST 2801 [0.5] | Activism, Feminisms, and Social Justice | |
WGST 2803 [0.5] | Body Matters: The Politics of Bodies | |
WGST 2810 [0.5] | Sex For Sale | |
WGST 2811 [0.5] | Masculinities | |
WGST 2812 [0.5] | Selected Topics in Women’s and Gender Studies | |
WGST 2814 [0.5] | Gender, Sexuality and Cultural Production | |
WGST 3803 [0.5] | Feminisms and Transnationalism | |
WGST 3806 [0.5] | Girlhoods | |
WGST 3807 [0.5] | Gendered Violence | |
WGST 3812 [0.5] | Selected Topics in Women's and Gender Studies | |
WGST 4060 [0.5] | African Feminisms | |
WGST 4812 [0.5] | Selected Topics in Women’s and Gender Studies |
Sexuality Studies (SXST) Courses
Sexuality Studies: A Critical Introduction
While sexuality is often considered the most private and 'natural' of personal concerns, it is saturated with issues of social power, historical change, and public politics. This course offers a critical introduction to interdisciplinary studies of sexuality, focusing on history, theory, and cultural practice.
Precludes additional credit for DIST 2101 (no longer offered).
Prerequisite(s): second-year standing or permission of the Institute.
Lectures and discussion groups three hours a week.
Sexuality, Gender, and Security
Historical and contemporary analysis of surveillance, security, and regulation of sexuality, race, class, and gender. Students will critically examine how ‘subversives’ were created through discourse and administrative logics such as policy and law.
Also listed as HUMR 2102.
Prerequisite(s): second year standing.
Lectures and discussions three hours a week.
Sexuality and Disability
Exploration of ways that embodied categories of sex and gender, as well as desire are mediated through mainstream and alternative discourses of disability. Topics may include: crip theory, mental health issues, and LGBTQ sexualities.
Lecture three hours a week.
Transnational Sexualities
Students analyze sex, gender and sexuality as power relations within, and between nation-states comprising the Global North and South, as well as new knowledge created through national border crossings. Topics may include: Orientialism, colonialization, and diasporic identities.
Queer(ing) Archives
Examination of the archival turn in historical and theoretical perspective with an emphasis on sexuality, race, and gender as subjectivities in queer, trans, and colonial archives.
Interdisciplinary Topics in Sexuality Studies
An interdisciplinary analysis of one or more topics in sexuality studies. The topics of this course will vary year to year and are announced in advance of registration.
Prerequisite(s): Third year standing and SXST 2102 OR permission of the Institute of Women's and Gender Studies.
Lecture three hours per week. This course is repeatable as long as each topic is different.
Interdisciplinary Studies of Sexuality
A study of selected issues in sexuality studies considered from an interdisciplinary perspective. The course may focus on any one, or combination of, sexuality studies in relation to history, theory, and/or cultural practice.
Precludes additional credit for DIST 4101 (no longer offered).
Prerequisite(s): SXST 2101 and fourth-year standing.
Seminar three hours a week.
Queer Theory
A critical approach to gender and sexuality by engaging in key debates and texts in the field of queer theory and studies.
Also offered at the graduate level, with different requirements, as WGST 5102, for which additional credit is precluded.
Seminar three hours a week.
Politics of Kink
This seminar analyzes critically the existence and regulation of non-normative sexual attitudes, behaviours and practices. Topics may include: non-monogamy, sadomasochism, pornography.
Seminar three hours a week.
Sexuality and Political Economy
An interdisciplinary and intersectional approach to issues in the area of Sexuality Studies focusing on socio-economic relations (e.g. class location, consumption) and the ways they mediate sex, gender, and sexual subject formation and governance. SXST 4101.
Prerequisite(s): fourth year standing.
Seminar three hours a week.
Queer Ecologies
Students engage with debates within sexuality studies and transgender studies regarding the interwoven relationships between gender, race, indigeneity, desire, bodies and ecological politics. Topics may include: climate change, gendered and sexualized landscapes, and speciesism.
Seminar three hours a week.
Queer Aesthetics: Affect, Cultural Production, Sexuality
Critical examination of affective economies made in and through LGBTQ cultural production. Drawing from feminist, queer, trans and queer of colour critique, students will consider how queer affect, sentiment and emotions uniquely circulate in art and aesthetic objects.
Seminar three hours a week.
Note: Not all courses listed are offered in a given year. For an up-to-date statement of course offerings for the current session and to determine the term of offering, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca.
Summer session: some of the courses listed in this Calendar are offered during the summer. Hours and scheduling for summer session courses will differ significantly from those reported in the fall/winter Calendar. To determine the scheduling and hours for summer session classes, consult the class schedule at central.carleton.ca
Regulations
In addition to the requirements listed here, students must satisfy:
- the University regulations including the process of Academic Continuation Evaluation (see the Academic Regulations of the University section of this Calendar).