609486 Gender Studies B

summer semester 2017 | Last update: 07.06.2017 Place course on memo list
609486
Gender Studies B
VU 2
5
weekly
each semester
English

This course introduces students to key concepts, trends, and directions in the field of Gender Studies through the analysis of a selection of texts in critical theory, contemporary literature, and Hollywood film.

Women's and Gender Studies is an interdisciplinary field that examines feminist and queer theoretical perspectives including race/ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, nationality, religion, and other identities. This course teaches students to think critically about the social construction of identity and the politics of knowledge production. Students will use these critical-thinking skills to understand people's lives within a global context and analyse the systems of oppression that contribute to continuing economic, political, and cultural inequalities. They will not only be encouraged to use gender as a category of analysis, but also to reflect on the manifestation of gender in their own lives, leading to a range of personal and intellectual discoveries.

Continuous assessment (based on regular written and/or oral contributions by the participants). 

Course examination according to § 7, statute section on "study law regulations".

Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble. Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York and London: Routledge, 1990. Print.
---. Bodies That Matter. New York: Routledge, 1993. Print.
---. Undoing Gender. New York: Routledge, 2004. Print.
Lindhoff, Lena. Einführung in die Feministische Literaturtheorie. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1995. Print.
Nfah-Abbenyi Makuchi, Juliana. Gender in African Women’s Writing. Identity, Sexuality, and Difference. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1987. Print.
Osinski, Jutta. Einführung in die Feministische Literaturwissenschaft. Berlin: ESV, 1998. Print.
Robbins, Ruth. Literary Feminisms. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2000. Print.
Rooney, Ellen, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Feminist Literary Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Print.

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09.03.2017
Group 0
Date Time Location
Thu 2017-03-09
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-03-16
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-03-23
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-03-30
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-04-06
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-04-27
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-05-04
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-05-11
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-05-18
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-06-01
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-06-08
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-06-22
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-06-29
10.15 - 11.45 40134 40134 Barrier-free
Thu 2017-06-29
10.15 - 11.45 Hörsaal B Hörsaal B Barrier-free