Humanities
[ courses ]
Galbraith Hall, Room 180, Revelle College
http://humanities.ucsd.edu
All courses, faculty listings, and curricular and degree requirements described herein are subject to change or deletion without notice.
The humanities program offers interdisciplinary courses in history, philosophy, and literature, with a focus on major aspects of the Western humanistic tradition. In these courses, students examine the development of a wide variety of ideas and forms of expression that exert a major influence on modern America. Through lectures and class discussions, and through the writing of essays, students learn to interpret literary, historical, and philosophical texts and to conduct independent critical assessments of documents and ideas.
The sequence of courses, HUM 1 through HUM 5, meets the humanities and writing requirement of Revelle College. Instruction in university-level writing is part of all five courses, but students in HUM 1 and 2 (six units each) receive intensive writing instruction.
Students must have satisfied the UC Entry Level Writing requirement before registering for any part of the humanities sequence. HUM 1 and HUM 2 must be taken before HUM 3-4-5.
For detailed description of the Revelle College humanities requirement, see “Revelle College, General-Education Requirements, Humanities.”
The Humanities Minor
The humanities minor consists of at least seven courses chosen from the listings of the departments of history, philosophy, literature, visual arts, music, and theatre and dance. All seven courses may be selected from the upper-division offerings, but at least five upper-division courses must be included. Students for whom HUM 1–5 fulfill general-education requirements may use two of these courses toward fulfillment of requirements for the humanities minor.
Courses selected for the minor must be selected from the offerings of more than one department. They must concern themselves with more than one historical, national, or ethnic culture; and they must offer broad treatment of centrally important topics in the humanities. Thus, a course on the history of the United States since the Civil War would be appropriate for the humanities minor, while a course in the history of California would not.
Here are some examples of study lists appropriate for the present humanities minor:
Example 1
HIEU 143. European Intellectual History, 1870–1945
HILD 2A-B. United States
HILD 11. East Asia and the West 1279–1911
LTEA 110B. Modern Chinese Fiction in Translation
PHIL 160. Ethical Theory
PHIL 177. Philosophy and Literature
VIS 121B. Church and Mosque: Medieval Art and Architecture between Christianity and Islam
Example 2
HIAF 111. Modern Africa since 1880
HILA 102. Latin America in the Twentieth Century
LTAM 110. Latin American Literature in Translation
MUS 114. Music of the Twentieth Century
TDGE 11. Great Performance on Film
TDHT 109. African American Theatre
VIS 105D. Art Forms and Chinese Calligraphy
Example 3
HUM 1. The Foundations of Western Civilization: Israel and Greece
HUM 2. Rome, Christianity, and the Middle Ages
LTEN 112. Shakespeare I: The Elizabethan Period
LTEN 158. Modern American Literature
LTWL 183. Film Studies and Literature: Director’s Work
PHIL 175. Aesthetics
PHIL 177. Philosophy and Literature
Students should review their plans for the minor with the humanities adviser as well as with the advisers in their college. Before undertaking the minor, students must submit a study list for approval to the humanities office.
The Humanities Majors
Normally, students interested in majoring in humanities must choose a specific major in the humanities departments, e.g., history, literature, or philosophy. But students from Revelle and Muir Colleges may request to graduate with an approved individual/special project major in the humanities.