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Butler University Schedule of Classes for Fall 2013 Core Curriculum ...

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<strong>Butler</strong> <strong>University</strong> Page No. 9 <strong>of</strong> 54<br />

<strong>Schedule</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Classes</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Fall</strong> <strong>2013</strong> Run Date: 10/23/<strong>2013</strong><br />

Run Time: 11:45:07<br />

<strong>Core</strong> <strong>Curriculum</strong> - First Year Seminar - Subject: First Year Seminar<br />

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________<br />

Subject Catalog Nbr Section Class Nbr Course Title Component Units Topics<br />

FYS 101 21 4054 First-Year Seminar Lecture 3 Rock and Roll High School<br />

Class Dates: 08/28/<strong>2013</strong> - 12/21/<strong>2013</strong><br />

Bldg: Jordan Hall Room: 303 Days: MWF Time: 11:00am - 11:50am Instructor: Stapleton,Robert L<br />

Class Enrl Cap: 18 Class Enrl Tot: 18 Class Wait Cap: 0 Class Wait Tot: 0 Class Min Enrl: 0<br />

This is a two-semester course. Students who enroll in this topic in the fall are expected to enroll in this topic in the spring. Semester one is a<br />

prerequisite <strong>for</strong> semester two.Like rock and roll itself, this class will be a hybrid, an extended jam <strong>of</strong> threads and themes as we map the ideological<br />

geography <strong>of</strong> youth culture through literature, music, film, and art. This is not a history <strong>of</strong> rock and roll class, but rather an ongoing inquiry into the<br />

collective expressions <strong>of</strong> rebellion, coming-<strong>of</strong>-age, and generational battles. Semester one will examine the rise <strong>of</strong> youth culture through 1975.<br />

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________<br />

FYS 101 22 4055 First-Year Seminar Lecture 3 Rock and Roll High School<br />

Class Dates: 08/28/<strong>2013</strong> - 12/21/<strong>2013</strong><br />

Bldg: Jordan Hall Room: 303 Days: MWF Time: 12:00pm - 12:50pm Instructor: Stapleton,Robert L<br />

Class Enrl Cap: 18 Class Enrl Tot: 18 Class Wait Cap: 0 Class Wait Tot: 0 Class Min Enrl: 0<br />

This is a two-semester course. Students who enroll in this topic in the fall are expected to enroll in this topic in the spring. Semester one is a<br />

prerequisite <strong>for</strong> semester two.Like rock and roll itself, this class will be a hybrid, an extended jam <strong>of</strong> threads and themes as we map the ideological<br />

geography <strong>of</strong> youth culture through literature, music, film, and art. This is not a history <strong>of</strong> rock and roll class, but rather an ongoing inquiry into the<br />

collective expressions <strong>of</strong> rebellion, coming-<strong>of</strong>-age, and generational battles. Semester one will examine the rise <strong>of</strong> youth culture through 1975.<br />

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________<br />

FYS 101 23 4097 First-Year Seminar Lecture 3 The Call <strong>of</strong> the Wild<br />

Class Dates: 08/28/<strong>2013</strong> - 12/21/<strong>2013</strong><br />

Bldg: Irwin Library Room: GBR Days: TuTh Time: 11:00am - 12:15pm Instructor: H<strong>of</strong>stetter,Angela D<br />

Class Enrl Cap: 18 Class Enrl Tot: 18 Class Wait Cap: 0 Class Wait Tot: 0 Class Min Enrl: 0<br />

Drawings <strong>of</strong> horses, stags, and bulls on the caves <strong>of</strong> Lascaux illustrate that animals have captured the human imagination since the dawn <strong>of</strong> the Paleolithic<br />

era as food, workers, companions, and fellow warriors: our path to modernity tells the tales <strong>of</strong> a relationship paradoxically fraught with violence and<br />

love. The intensity <strong>of</strong> this primordial fascination erupted with new vehemence in nineteenth-century America, England, and France as discussions <strong>of</strong><br />

transmutation (what became evolution) destabilized the already fragile line distinguishing man and beast. This First Year Seminar adopts an<br />

interdisciplinary approach to how questions <strong>of</strong> animals and animality were developed across both generic and national boundaries: the burgeoning fields <strong>of</strong><br />

anthropology, zoology, and sociology will be read alongside art and literature <strong>of</strong> the period. In addition to the controversial writings <strong>of</strong> Charles Darwin,<br />

Carol Adams, and Marc Bek<strong>of</strong>f, texts will include Edgar Allen Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," Robert Louis Stevenson¿s The Strange Case <strong>of</strong> Dr. Jekyll<br />

and Mr. Hyde, Anna Sewell's Black Beauty, Jack London's The Call <strong>of</strong> the Wild, and Bram Stoker's Dracula.<br />

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________<br />

FYS 101 24 4052 First-Year Seminar Lecture 3 Irish Literature<br />

Class Dates: 08/28/<strong>2013</strong> - 12/21/<strong>2013</strong><br />

Bldg: Jordan Hall Room: 176 Days: MW Time: 1:00pm - 2:15pm Instructor: Spyra,Ania<br />

Class Enrl Cap: 18 Class Enrl Tot: 16 Class Wait Cap: 0 Class Wait Tot: 0 Class Min Enrl: 0<br />

This seminar surveys recent Irish literature to trace Ireland's trans<strong>for</strong>mation from a poor province <strong>of</strong> the British Empire, which produced a great number <strong>of</strong>

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