You are now in the main content area

Arts and Contemporary Studies Core Elective Table I

Students are not required to complete an Option in order to graduate.

Students who do not choose an Option will select any 13 courses from any of the nine Options listed throughout this Table, including at least one of ACS 800 or ACS 900 in order to graduate.

Students must complete at least one capstone course, marked below with an asterisk (*), in order to graduate.

For students completing the Philosophy option please see all required courses listed below in the Philosophy Option curriculum.

If an Option is chosen, students must select it by the end of first year in order to make the appropriate Option's course intentions. A total of nine Options is available, and each Option's requirements are identified below. Once an Option is selected, students must complete all the requirements of that Option to graduate.

 

This option examines the study of anthropology in its attempts to understand the human experience, past and present, using holistic, comparative, and field based evolutionary perspectives and practices. Students will earn a strong base in anthropological history, theory and methods as well as acquire important skills allowing them to conduct research and analysis in the mode of an anthropologist, examining and interpreting the immediate world around them.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below.

REQUIRED (6 courses):

  • ANT 100 Introduction to Anthropology
  • ANT 200 Anthropological Perspectives
  • ANT 900* Anthropology Capstone
  • BLG 133 Fundamentals of Biological Anthropology I
  • BLG 233 Biological Anthropology II
  • LIR 400 Ethnographic Practices

Four (4) of the following:

A maximum of two (2) courses marked with a dagger (†) may be selected from this group.

  • GEO 326 The Geography of Early Hominins
  • HIS 275† Ancient Greece and Rome
  • HIS 277† Mediaeval Europe, 400-1350
  • HIS 461† Cradle of Civilization: Ancient Near East
  • HIS 501 Archaeology and Material Culture
  • HIS 502 Life Stories: Oral History
  • HIS 510 Museology and Public History
  • HIS 559 The World of Ancient Egypt
  • HIS 560 History of Ancient Egypt
  • HIS 561 The Ottoman Empire
  • HIS 610 Curating the Past
  • HIS 662 The Mughal Empire, 1526-1764
  • HIS 710 Museum and Heritage Management
  • HIS 755 Themes in Material Culture
  • HIS 903 Senior Seminar I: Cross-Field Study
  • HST 111† World Turned Upside Down: Europe 1350-1789
  • HST 211† Century of Revolution: Europe 1789-1914
  • HST 325† History of Science and Technology I
  • HST 407† Canada from 1885: The Struggle for Identity
  • HST 425† History of Science and Technology II
  • HST 533 Africa Before 1850
  • HST 580 Indigenous History: An Introduction
  • HST 680 Treaties, Land and Indigenous Governance
  • HST 701 Scientific Technology and Modern Society
  • HST 777 Medicine from Antiquity to 1500 CE
  • HST 786 Science and Technology in Middle East History
  • NPF 559 Advanced Topics in Curatorial Practices
  • NPF 571 Introduction to Museum and Gallery Studies

Three (3) of the following:

Many of these courses have prerequisites.

  • CHY 183 Intro to Forensic Sciences
  • CRM 302 Criminological Theories
  • ECN 340 The Economics of Human Behaviour
  • LIR 100 Global Models in Intercultural Relations
  • LIR 200 Critical Practices in Intercultural Relations
  • LIR 300 Intercultural Negotiations
  • PPA 703 Dispute Resolution in Indigenous Context
  • PPA 705 Sustainable Development and First Nations
  • PSY 102 Introduction to Psychology I
  • PSY 124 Social Psychology
  • PSY 202 Introduction to Psychology II
  • PSY 300 Psychology and Law
  • PSY 324 Biological Psychology
  • PSY 434 Brain and Behaviour
  • PSY 802 Death, Dying and Bereavement
  • SEM 101 Sign, Sense and Meaning
  • SEM 102 Introduction to Visual Semiotics
  • SOC 105 Introduction to Sociology
  • SOC 107 Sociology of the Everyday
  • SOC 108 Indigenous Peoples and Decolonization
  • SOC 300 Sociology of Equity and Diversity
  • SOC 305 Sociology of Deviance
  • SOC 319 Sociological Perspectives on Crime
  • SOC 427 Indigenous Perspectives on Canada

Students examine the forms of cultural expression that have become a measure of who we are and who we dream of becoming. They explore cultural identity through both high culture and popular entertainment.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below†.

REQUIRED:

 Introduction to Culture Studies

Twelve (12) from the following:

* All students must complete a minimum of one of: ACS 800 or ACS 900.

† Students must successfully complete one of ACS 800 or ACS 900 before enrolling in ACS 950.

Our diverse and politically charged social space is the focus of this interdisciplinary option. It explores the encounters of language, perspective and value that shape contemporary politics, culture and society.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below.

REQUIRED:

  • ACS 403 Introduction to Diversity and Equity

Twelve (12) from the following:

 

  • ACS 800* Senior Group Project
  • ACS 900* Senior Seminar
  • ACS 910 Fellowship Practicum
  • ACS 950† Directed Research Course
  • CRB 100 Introduction to the Caribbean
  • CRB 500 Families in the Caribbean
  • CRB 501 Racism and Caribbean Peoples in Canada
  • CRB 502 Cultural Traditions in the Caribbean
  • CRB 605 Caribbean Tourism: Impacts and Resistance
  • CRB 614 Caribbean Critical Thought
  • CRM 250 Criminalizing Blackness 
  • CRM 335 History and Politics of Abolition 
  • CRM 515 Gendering Justice
  • DST 501 Rethinking Disability
  • DST 503 Current Topics in Disability I
  • DST 504 Mad People's History
  • DST 525 Disability and Representation
  • DST 613 Strategies for Community Building
  • ENG 110 Literatures Across Borders
  • ENG 142 Black Arts, Black Power
  • ENG 203 The Literature of Indigenous Peoples
  • ENG 413 Literature, Empire, and Colonization
  • ENG 621 Women's Texts, Global Contexts
  • ENG 650 Indigenous World View
  • ENG 653 Black Literatures and Cultures
  • ENG 941 Gender and Sex in Literature and Culture
  • ENG 942 Decolonizing Literature
  • FRS 502 Feminism and French Literature
  • HIS 107 Colonization, Colonialism and Independence
  • HIS 392 African-Canadian History
  • HIS 830 The Indian Act: 1876-Present
  • HIS 854 African-American History
  • HST 112 East Meets West: Asia in the World
  • HST 219 Decolonization: History through Film
  • HST 375 LGBTQ2S+ Histories
  • HST 526 Women and Gender in U.S. History
  • HST 580 Indigenous History: An Introduction
  • HST 657 Culture/Politics of Difference in the U.S.
  • HST 658 Sex in the City
  • HST 680 Treaties, Land and Indigenous Governance
  • HST 807 The Canadian Revolution: Canada 1968-2000
  • MUS 211 Music Cultures of the City
  • MUS 401 Music, Religion and Spirituality
  • MUS 501 Traditional Musics of the World
  • PHL 102 What is Philosophy?
  • PHL 400 Human Rights and Justice
  • PHL 420 Philosophy, Diversity and Recognition
  • PHL 501 Oppression and the Critique of Power
  • PHL 535 Introduction to Indigenous Philosophy
  • PHL 544 Feminist Philosophy
  • PHL 570 Black Political Thought
  • POG 100 People, Power and Politics
  • POG 313 The Politics of Race and Ethnicity
  • POG 315 Equity and Human Rights in Canada
  • POG 320 Social Identity and Citizenship
  • POL 501 Women, Power and Politics
  • POL 510 The Politics of Sexual Diversity
  • POL 688 Colonialism and Imperialism
  • PSY 102 Introduction to Psychology I
  • PSY 550 Human Sexuality
  • PSY 560 Sport, Exercise, and Performance
  • SOC 105 Introduction to Sociology
  • SOC 203 Social Class and Inequality
  • SOC 350 Queer Sociology
  • SOC 427 Indigenous Perspectives on Canada
  • SOC 474 Immigration, Borders and Belonging
  • SOC 507 Race and Ethnicity in Canadian Society
  • SOC 525 Media and Images of Inequality
  • SOC 530 Blackness and Freedom
  • SOC 576 Colonialism and Anti-Blackness
  • SOC 603 Sociology of Gender
  • SOC 608 Women, Power and Change
  • SOC 633 Sex, Gender Identities and Sexualities
  • SOC 885 Women, Islam and Modernity
  • SOC 941 Colonialism and Racialization

* All students must complete a minimum of one of: ACS 800 or ACS 900.

† Students must successfully complete one of ACS 800 or ACS 900 before enrolling in ACS 950.

This option provides students with a course of study that focuses on how to read critically—that is, analyze, historicize, and politicize—a wide range of literary and cultural texts. Students examine how such things as genre, form, method, historical period, geography and nation inform narrative media, including works of literature, film, television, digital culture, and the visual arts. Through an engagement with narratives of the past and the present, students develop a critical understanding of contemporary cultural production.

Thirteen (13) courses are required, grouped as follows:

REQUIRED:

  • ENG 110 Literatures Across Borders
  • ENG 208 Introduction to Non-Fiction
  • ENG 400 Literary and Cultural Theory
  • ENG 810 Approaches to English Research
  • ENG 910* English Capstone Seminar

One course from the following:

  • ENG 302 Practicum: Writing for Magazines
  • ENG 304 Practicum: Making Digital Work
  • ENG 306 Practicum: Writing Poetry
  • ENG 307 Practicum: Writing Fiction
  • ENG 308 Practicum: Grammar Principles for Editors 
  • ENG 340 Practicum: Making Little Magazines
  • ENG 390 Practicum: Open Topics

Two courses from the following:

For students admitted Fall 2021 and after:
One course from the following:

  • ENG 223  Literatures of Exile and Migration
  • ENG 413  Literature, Empire and Colonization
  • ENG 620  Literatures of the Caribbean
  • ENG 623  Film/Literature: Middle East, North Africa
  • ENG 640  Literatures of Asia and its Diasporas
  • ENG 650  Indigenous World View
  • ENG 653  Black Literatures and Cultures
  • ENG 942  Decolonizing Literature
     

For students admitted Fall 2021 and after: Four courses from the following are required.

For students admitted Fall 2020 and before:
Five course from the following are required.

Students may opt for depth by selecting courses within thematic categories, or may opt for breadth by sampling broadly across those categories.

Media + Cultural Studies:
  • ENG 590 Studies in Word and Image
  • ENG 611 Film and Literature
  • ENG 703 Popular Literatures
  • ENG 705 Studies in Visual Cultures
  • ENG 706 Shakespeare and Performance
  • ENG 921 Narrative in a Digital Age
  • ENG 941 Gender and Sex in Literature and Culture
World Views + Experiences:
  • ENG 142 Black Arts, Black Power
  • ENG 223 Literatures of Exile and Migration
  • ENG 409 Literatures of the City
  • ENG 413 Literature, Empire, and Colonization
  • ENG 416 American Literatures
  • ENG 417 Special Topics in American Literatures
  • ENG 620 Literatures of the Caribbean
  • ENG 621 Women's Texts, Global Contexts
  • ENG 623 Film/Literature: Middle East, North Africa
  • ENG 640 Literatures of Asia and its Diasporas
  • ENG 650 Indigenous World View  
  • ENG 701 Canadian Literatures
  • ENG 710 Special Topics in Canadian Literatures
  • ENG 942 Decolonizing Literature
  • ENG 653 Black Literatures and Cultures
Literary Histories + Movements:

Creative Writing  

  • ENG 230  Creativity, Writing and Everyday Life
  • ENG 406  Visionary Poetics
  • ENG 407  Writing Short Stories
  • ENG 517  Techniques and Topics in Creative Writing
  • ENG 577  Getting the Word Out: Publishing
  • ENG 662  Shiny Writing: The Editing Process
  • ENG 680  The Art of Oral Storytelling
Rhetoric, Writing + Culture:
  • ENG 200 Writing as a Cultural Act
  • ENG 520 The Language of Persuasion
  • ENG 529 Controversies in Public Discourse
  • ENG 730 Cultures of the Book
Genre Studies:
Independent Study:

NOTE: English courses cannot be used toward the liberal studies requirement if the English Option is chosen. Students in the English Option cannot complete the English Minor.

This option provides students with the opportunity to gain a specialization in this important linguistic and cultural field. It allows students to develop a better understanding of the culturally diverse populations of the Francophone world in Africa, Asia, Europe and North America, while acquiring critical insights into the important role that French and Francophone culture play both at a national level in this country and in the broader international context.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below.

REQUIRED:

A minimum of four (4) courses from the following:

  • FRE 301 Intermediate French I
  • FRE 302 French Food, Wine and Hospitality
  • FRE 401 Intermediate French II
  • FRE 402 French Conversation and Pronunciation
  • FRE 501 Speaking and Writing French I
  • FRE 502 Communication and Business French
  • FRE 507 English-French Translation I
  • FRE 515 Introduction to Business French
  • FRE 516 Politics and Play in French Poetry
  • FRE 601 Speaking and Writing French II
  • FRE 602 Business French in Practice
  • FRE 607 English-French Translation II
  • FRE 701 French for Today 
  • FRE 707 Introduction to French-English Translation
  • FRE 801 French and New Media 

A minimum of two (2) courses from the following:

  • FRE 303 French and Fashion
  • FRE 503 Middle Ages to Classicism
  • FRE 508 Intro to 20th C French Literature I
  • FRE 509 Franco-Canadian Literature I
  • FRE 603 Enlightenment to La Belle Époque
  • FRE 608 Intro to 20th C French Literature II
  • FRE 609 Franco-Canadian Literature II
  • FRE 703 French Theatre: Classicism to Romanticism
  • FRE 704 Intro to Franco-Canadian Culture I
  • FRE 706 The Life and Times of the French Language
  • FRE 709 Children's Literature in French
  • FRE 801 French and New Media 
  • FRE 803 French Theatre: 20th C and Contemporary
  • FRE 804 Intro to Franco-Canadian Culture II
  • FRE 805 French Language Teaching Methodologies 
  • FRE 901 Francophone Women Writers
  • FRE 902 Gender and Decadence 1850-1920
  • FRE 903 The Francophone Short Story
  • FRS 602 French Caribbean Literature and Culture

NOTE: French courses cannot be used toward the liberal studies requirement if the French Option is chosen. Students in the French Option cannot complete The French Minor.

This option explores the often volatile mix of global issues and perspectives, environmental concerns and corporate interests that drive contemporary society and culture at a time when global transformations are transcending political boundaries.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below.

REQUIRED:

  • ACS 402 Introduction to Global Studies

Twelve (12) courses from the following:

 

  • ACS 800* Senior Group Project
  • ACS 900* Senior Seminar
  • ACS 910 Fellowship Practicum
  • ACS 950† Directed Research Course
  • BSM 100 The New Business: From Idea to Reality
  • BSM 200 The Growing Business: Breaking Even
  • ECN 110 The Economy and Society
  • ECN 220 Evolution of the Global Economy
  • ECN 511 Economy and Environment
  • ENG 110 Literatures Across Borders
  • ENG 413 Literature, Empire, and Colonization
  • ENG 621 Women's Texts, Global Contexts
  • ENG 623 Film/Literature: Middle East/North Africa
  • ENG 942 Decolonizing Literature
  • GEO 108 Geography of the Global Village
  • GEO 206 Regions, Nations and the Global Community
  • GEO 208 Geography of the Global Economy
  • GEO 372 Global Shift in the 21st Century
  • HIS 106 Technology, Warfare and Social Change
  • HIS 265 Asia: Foundations and Modern Nations
  • HIS 461 Ancient Near East
  • HIS 475 Human Rights in Global History
  • HIS 590 Modern International Relations
  • HIS 760 African Diaspora
  • HIS 830 The Indian Act: 1876-Present 
  • HST 112 East Meets West: Asia in the World
  • HST 522 The Middle East: 1908 to the Present
  • HST 523 Colonial South Asia
  • HST 540 Espionage: A Modern History
  • HST 602 Propaganda!
  • HST 604 The Uneasy Peace: The Cold War, 1945-90
  • HST 633 Modern Africa
  • HST 651 Problems in 20th-Century Eastern Europe
  • HST 655 People's Republic of China, 1949-Present
  • HST 702 The First World War
  • HST 711 Canada and the United States
  • HST 802 The Second World War
  • INP 916 Nonprofits on the Global Stage
  • NNS 101 Introduction to News Studies
  • NNS 502 Follow the Money: Business Journalism
  • NNS 507 Justice and the Courts
  • PHL 102 What is Philosophy?
  • PHL 521 Personal Identity in East and West
  • PHL 585 Violent Conflict and Reconciliation
  • PHL 622 Classical Arabic
  • POG 100 People, Power and Politics
  • POG 225 Global Governance
  • POG 323 The Politics of International Development
  • POG 328 Peace and Security in Asia
  • POG 342 Politics in Africa
  • POG 411 Canadian Foreign Policy
  • POG 423 Nationalism and Identity
  • POG 424 Human Rights and Global Politics
  • POG 426 Global Conflict and Peace
  • POG 443 Global Urban Politics
  • POL 203 Politics of the Environment
  • POL 607 Politics of Technology and Globalization
  • POL 688 Colonialism and Imperialism
  • SOC 105 Intro to Sociology
  • SOC 474 Immigration Borders and Belonging
  • SOC 479 Social Networks and the World Wide Web
  • SOC 885 Women, Islam and Modernity
  • SPN 704 Latin American Culture I
  • SPN 804 Latin American Culture II

* All students must complete a minimum of one of: ACS 800 or ACS 900.

† Students must successfully complete one of ACS 800 or ACS 900 before enrolling in ACS 950.

This option offers not only a study of the past, as a way to understand the present, but also a range of skills applicable to many jobs – those which require an understanding of research techniques, analysis, and logic. Each of these is a requirement of historical studies, as students must understand how to collect data, how to analyze it as to accuracy and sufficiency, and how to construct a logical argument from the evidence, if it is judged that there is sufficient evidence to support an argument.

(13) courses, grouped as follows: REQUIRED:

  • HIS 401 Hearing, Seeing and Speaking History
  • HIS 505 Locating The Past: Archival Research

 

One (1) Senior Seminar from the following*:

  • HIS 903 Senior Seminar I: Cross-Field Study
  • HIS 916 Senior Seminar II: Science, Technology and Medicine
  • HIS 931 Senior Seminar III: Americas
  • HIS 956 Senior Seminar IV: Africa
  • HIS 957 Senior Seminar V: Middle East
  • HIS 958 Senior Seminar VI: Asia
  • HIS 976 Senior Seminar VII: Europe
  • HIS 990 Senior Seminar VIII: International Relations

 

Four (4) courses from the following:

  • HIS 104 Ten Days That Shook The World
  • HIS 105 Inventing Popular Culture
  • HIS 106 Technology, Warfare and Social Change
  • HIS 107 Colonization, Colonialism and Independence
  • HIS 238 Canada to 1885: Creating a Nation
  • HIS 248 American History to 1877
  • HIS 265 Asia: Foundations and Modern Nations
  • HIS 275 Ancient Greece and Rome
  • HIS 277 Mediaeval Europe, 400-1350
  • HIS 279 Europe, 1715-1870
  • HIS 350 The Fight for Rights in North America
  • HIS 338 Canada since 1885: Defining a Nation
  • HIS 348 American History from 1877
  • HIS 377 Europe, 1350-1715
  • HIS 379 Europe, 1870-Present
  • HIS 392 African Canadian History
  • HIS 461 Cradle of Civilization: Ancient Near East
  • HIS 462 Introduction to the Islamic World
  • HIS 490 International Relations from 1945

 

One (1) course from the following:

  • HIS 500 History and New Media
  • HIS 501 Archaeology and Material Culture
  • HIS 502 Life Stories: Oral History
  • HIS 755 Themes in Material Culture

Five (5) courses from the following:

  • HIS 500 History and New Media
  • HIS 501 Archaeology and Material Culture
  • HIS 502 Life Stories: Oral History
  • HIS 510 Museology and Public History
  • HIS 541 Canada and the First World War
  • HIS 556 Colonial Africa
  • HIS 559 The World of Ancient Egypt
  • HIS 560 History of Ancient Egypt
  • HIS 561 The Ottoman Empire
  • HIS 590 Modern International Relations
  • HIS 594 War to War: World Conflict, 1900-45
  • HIS 610 Curating the Past
  • HIS 615 Film, Television and 20th C History
  • HIS 656 Post-Colonial Africa
  • HIS 661 The Middle East from 1908
  • HIS 662 The Mughal Empire, 1526-1764
  • HIS 677 Society in the High Middle Ages, 1000-1500
  • HIS 678 The Renaissance in Europe
  • HIS 683 Victorian Britain
  • HIS 696 The History of Terrorism
  • HIS 710 Museum and Heritage Management
  • HIS 742 Canadian Cultural Industries
  • HIS 755 Themes in Material Culture
  • HIS 762 The Making of Modern South Asia, 1757-1947
  • HIS 783 20th-Century Britain
  • HIS 790 Modern Germany
  • HIS 826 Science and World Exploration
  • HIS 828 Science, Corporations and the Environment
  • HIS 845 Canada in the International Sphere
  • HIS 854 African-American History
  • HIS 886 The British Empire and the World
  • HIS 898 A History of International Organizations
  • HIS 900 Experiential Learning I
  • HIS 901 Experiential Learning II

Students in the History Option cannot complete the History Minor.

NOTE: History courses cannot be used toward the liberal studies requirement if the History Option is chosen.

This option explores the institutions and ideas that generate – and depend on – scientific discovery and technological innovation. The focus is on ways in which science and technology influence our lives, individually and as a society, in the 21st century.

Thirteen (13) courses are required as grouped and noted below.

REQUIRED:

  • HST 325 History of Science and Technology I

Twelve (12) courses from the following:

  • ACS 800* Senior Group Project
  • ACS 900* Senior Seminar
  • ACS 910 Fellowship Practicum
  • ACS 950† Directed Research Course
  • BLG 181 Biology of a Living City
  • CHY 182 Chemistry Applications to Living Systems
  • ECN 511 Economy and Environment
  • ENG 503 Science Fiction
  • ENG 507 Science and the Literary Imagination
  • ENG 921 Narrative in a Digital Age
  • GEO 110 The Physical Environment
  • HIS 826 Science and World Exploration
  • HIS 828 Science, Corporations and the Environment
  • HST 425 History of Science and Technology II
  • HST 701 Scientific Technology and Modern Society
  • HST 777 Medicine from Antiquity to 1500 CE
  • HST 786 Science and Tech in Middle East History
  • HST 787 Astronomy vs Astrology
  • HST 788 HST 788 Water Use in History
  • PCS 181 Introduction to Astronomy
  • PHL 500 Philosophy of the Natural Environment
  • PHL 509 Bioethics
  • PHL 552 Philosophy of Natural Science
  • PHL 709 Religion, Science and Philosophy
  • SOC 611 Future Worlds: Technology and Social Change
  • SOC 708 Environmental Sociology

* All students must complete a minimum of one of: ACS 800 or ACS 900.

† Students must successfully complete one of ACS 800 or ACS 900 before enrolling in ACS 950.

This option provides students with a broad understanding of the main historical trends and contemporary developments within the discipline of philosophy. With its sustained and systematic plan of study in Philosophy, the option has two general objectives. First, it encourages students to read and think about philosophical issues and problems in an active and critical manner. Second, it provides students with an understanding of, and appreciation for, the contributions made by some of the greatest thinkers of the past and present.

Last offered 2025-2026 for students admitted Fall 2022 (or Winter 2023) and earlier. Students admitted Fall 2023 and after see revised curriculum below.

Thirteen (13) courses, grouped as noted below:

REQUIRED:

  • PHL 201 Problems in Philosophy
  • PHL 503 Ancient and Modern Ethics
  • PHL 600 Classic Readings in Analytic Philosophy
  • PHL 601 Classic Readings in Continental Philosophy
  • PHL 708 Early Modern Philosophy

One (1) course from the following:

  • PHL 101 Plato and the Roots of Western Philosophy
  • PHL 333 Philosophy of Human Nature
  • PHL 366 Existentialism and Art and Culture

Revised curriculum begins Fall 2023 for students admitted in Fall 2023 and after.

Thirteen (13) courses, grouped as noted below:

REQUIRED:

One (1) course from the following:

  • PHL 101 Plato and the Roots of Western Philosophy
  • PHL 110 Philosophy of Religion I
  • PHL 187 Classical Philosophy
  • PHL 201 Problems in Philosophy
  • PHL 212 Introductory Logic
  • PHL 306 Freedom, Equality, Limits of Authority
  • PHL 333 Philosophy of Human Nature
  • PHL 366 Existentialism and Art and Culture
  • PHL 365 Philosophy of Beauty
  • PHL 406 Issues of Life, Death and Poverty

CORE ELECTIVE: One (1) course from the following:

  • PHL 404 Introduction to Ethics
  • PHL 405 Introduction to Political Philosophy

CORE ELECTIVE: One (1) course from the following:

  • PHL 210 Introduction to Indian Philosophy
  • PHL 535 Introduction to Indigenous Philosophy
  • PHL 547 Jewish Philosophy
  • PHL 570 Black Political Thought
  • PHL 622 Classical Arabic Philosophy

CORE ELECTIVE: One (1) course from the following:

CORE ELECTIVE: One (1) course from the following:

For all students in the Philosophy Option.

Courses completed to satisfy another degree requirement cannot also count towards the Core Elective Table I requirement.

Students admitted Fall 2022 and before must complete seven (7) additional Philosophy courses from Table I.

Students admitted Fall 2023 and after must complete five (5) additional Philosophy courses from Table I.

For all students, a minimum of three (3) courses must be advanced as grouped below.

Non-advanced courses:

NOTE: *Course can be used as an advanced course for students admitted Fall 2022 and before.

Advanced courses: