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First-Year Seminars & First-Year Launches

Description

First-Year Seminars and First-Year Launches are designed for incoming first-year students with no prior college experience. Students may take either a First-Year Seminar or a First-Year Launch to fulfill this First-Year Foundations Requirement.

First-Year Seminars

These small classes introduce you to the intellectual life of the University. You will make personal connections with distinguished faculty members who are active scholars and accomplished teachers. This small setting gives you the opportunity to engage with your peers and your instructor as you learn how scholars pose problems, discover truths, resolve controversies, and evaluate knowledge, while exploring specific questions or issues in depth.

First-Year Seminars go beyond the traditional lecture and discussion format. They invite you to explore new and old ideas, engage with complex issues, and become an active learner through inquiry, analysis, discovery, and action!

First-Year Launches

You will join a faculty member who is an accomplished teacher in a small class that offers an introduction to a major. This small setting gives you the opportunity to engage actively with your peers and your instructor as you learn the foundations of a long-term sequence of study. You will also fulfill a requirement in your prospective major by taking a First-Year Launch course.

Learning Outcomes

These are the learning outcomes that are expected of students after completing a course.

check Connect with a faculty member early in the educational process.
check Learn intensively among a small cohort of students.
check Apply methods for how scholars pose problems, discover solutions, resolve controversies, and evaluate knowledge – FY-SEMINAR.
check Produce knowledge through self-directed inquiry and active learning – FY-SEMINAR
check Analyze and communicate issues associated with a broad, introductory topic, covering a wide range of knowledge – FY-LAUNCH
check Learn the foundation of a discipline – FY-LAUNCH

Explore Shark Ecology and Conservation in a Maymester First-Year Seminar

Thank you for your interest in this course. At this time, the course is full.

Interested in studying sharks in the field while fulfilling your First-Year Seminar requirement? Do you need to complete your High-Impact Experience General Education requirement? Join a small group of students for a unique First-Year Seminar at UNC’s Institute of Marine Sciences in Morehead City, NC, next summer. Guided by Professor Joel Fodrie, you’ll have the opportunity to deepen your knowledge of shark biology, conduct individual-based research on shark ecology, and gain hands-on experience in techniques for sampling and studying sharks.

 

Researchers tag a shark from a boat

Fall 2025 Course Offerings

Check Connect Carolina for the most up-to-date information about offerings, meeting times, instructional modes, and availability.

  • Seats are limited to first-year students (and transfer students in their first year who completed fewer than 24 hours of post-college class credit at another institution prior to arrival at UNC-CH). Students may only register for one first-year seminar or one first-year launch during their time at UNC-CH.
  • Honors (noted by the “H” in the course number) seats are limited to Honors Carolina students until Open Enrollment. At that time, all first-year students and qualifying transfer students are welcome to register for these classes. Honors Carolina students may only register for an honors first-year seminar or honors first-year launch.


AAAD 50-001: Defining Blackness

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Nadia Mosquera Muriel

This class will explore the meanings of race and ethnicity through a transnational perspective, examining how racial and ethnic identities are constructed, negotiated, and contested across different national and cultural contexts, with a focus on the Americas, particularly Latin America.

Nadia Mosquera Muriel

Dr. Mosquera Muriel specializes in Afro-Latin American social movements and structural inequalities at the intersection of race, class, and gender, with a focus on Venezuela and Colombia. Her research focuses on the intersections of race, class, gender, culture, space, and Black political mobilizations under Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution (1999-present). As a Black Feminist ethnographer, her work sheds light on the struggles for spatial justice among Black grassroots cultural producers, artists, and political activists as they challenge structural forms of anti-Blackness and spatial inequalities in Latin America.

Her current book project, titled “Building Blackness: Culture and Resistance in the Afterlives of the Plantation in Venezuela,” deploys an ethnographic approach to theorize the role of popular culture as a tactic to galvanize anti-racist politics among Afro-descendant populations in Venezuela’s central coast. Additionally, Dr. Mosquera Muriel conducts comparative research with Afro-Colombian feminist organizations in the Departments of Cauca and Cauca Valley in southwestern Colombia to comprehend Black Colombian women’s cultural politics and their responses against misogynoir (sexism and racism). From 2021-2023 she held a position as a Postdoctoral Provost Fellow at the University of Texas in Austin. She has also held fellowships at the Institute of Latin American Studies (ILAS), School of Advanced Studies, University of London in 2019, and the United Nations Fellowship Program for People of African Descent (Geneva, Switzerland) in 2016.

Her work is published in Bulletin of Latin American Research, Journal of Latin American Studies, and The Concise Encyclopedia of Human Geography. She currently serves on the editorial board of Gender, Place, and Culture.

 

AAAD 58-001: Health Inequality in Africa and the African Diaspora

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Lydia Boyd

This seminar examines the ways that healthcare access and health itself are shaped by social, racial, and economic inequalities in our society and others. The geographic focus of this course is Africa and the United States, but case studies from the Caribbean and other African diasporic communities will be included. Drawing on research in medical anthropology, sociology, public health, and history we will gain an understanding of the political, economic, and social factors that create health inequalities. Topics include gender inequality and HIV/AIDS in Africa; race and chronic disease in the U.S.; inequality and the practice of global health; and how racial difference has historically been used to justify and explain health disparities. Students will gain experience with ethnographic research methods, and work on small qualitative research projects investigating health inequality in their own communities.

Lydia Boyd

Lydia Boyd is an associate professor of African, African American, and Diaspora studies and is trained as a cultural and medical anthropologist, with a research focus in Uganda. Her work considers issues of health, culture, and the moral and political frameworks that shape health behavior. Her first book examined the impact and reception of the U.S.'s global AIDS treatment and prevention policy (PEPFAR) in Uganda. Her current work focuses on Ugandan women's decision-making during pregnancy and perceptions and experiences of both biomedical and non-biomedical forms of care.

 

AAAD 89-001: Reading Beyond the Page

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): LeRhonda Manigault-Bryant

What does it mean to truly read? What are “texts” and how do we read them closely, carefully, critically? How does reading separate us from the machines that seek to streamline our learning and work at best, or displace us at worst? And, with the swift changes in technology exemplified by the rise of artificial intelligence, how do we read to learn and positively inform what we know? Reading Beyond the Page is a first-year seminar designed to teach students how to read critically for general knowledge across different forms of media. Through close reading, discussion, and collaborative projects, students will explore how texts shape our collective understanding. By the end of the course, students will not only have honed their ability to read critically across multiple genres but will also have developed a more nuanced understanding of how knowledge is constructed, communicated, and contested in the world around them.

LeRhonda Manigault-Bryant

Whether investigating practices of specific communities, exploring cultural production at the popular level, considering the impact of new technologies, or creating documentary shorts, critical to Dr. Manigault-Bryant’s research and teaching are explorations of how Black women throughout the Diaspora engage religion and spirituality to navigate the contours of life. Her research straddles the disciplines of religion, anthropology, art, music, and media.

 

AAAD 89-002: Women of the Black Atlantic

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Alicia Monroe

This course examines constructions of gender and individual and collective responses to developing systems of inequality in the Atlantic world shaped by sex, race, and class. Students analyze and compare how African, European, and American societies constructed the category of “woman” and the constraints and liberties these constructions imposed.

Course participants document and examine how concepts of race and processes of racialization impacted experience for African and African descent women throughout the Atlantic World. Course readings survey societies from the early modern period to the twentieth century focusing on power, kinship, labor, and sexuality in daily life. The course highlights women’s cultures of resistance to interlocking systems of oppression in West and West Central Africa, the Caribbean, and North and South America. Students will engage travel writing, visual art, and historic Afro-Atlantic spiritual traditions as critical source materials.

Alicia Monroe

Alicia L. Monroe is a historian of modern Latin America specializing in the study of slavery, freedom, and black-identified religious and secular associations in nineteenth and twentieth century southeastern Brazil. Her research focuses on African diaspora religious experiences, post-emancipation civic societies, and representations of Afro-Brazilian laborers in early Brazilian photography with an emphasis on gender and lived experience. Her research has received support from the J. William Fulbright Fellowship, the Lapidus Center for the Historical Analysis of Transatlantic Slavery, and UNC’s Institute for the Arts and Humanities. Her recent publications have appeared in the Hispanic American Historical Review and the Journal of Africana Religions.

 

AAAD 89-003: African Americans and Education

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Robert Porter

This course explores the African American experience in education, from the days of slavery to the present. All levels of education, from elementary to university will receive consideration, though high school and college will get particular attention. Course topics will range widely, from self-education in the 19th century to the crisis at Little Rock’s Central High in the 1950s to African American education at UNC across the years, particularly as revealed in the built environment of the university.

Robert Porter

Robert Porter has taught in his department for 36 years, during which time he has taught some 16 different AAAD courses. He has won numerous teaching awards and gets consistently high evaluations from students. His popularity is reflected in the fact that a quarter of the students enrolled in his last FYS in 2023 are still enrolled in various courses he teaches, definitely including people who had no plans to take an additional AAAD course after their FYS.

 

AMST 89-001: The American Body

FY Seminar | MWF, 9:05 AM – 9:55 AM | Instructor(s): Steve Marston

In this course, students will explore American culture through a focus on the human body. While maintaining an eye on the material, flesh-and-blood body, we will also consider it as a “text” that carries meanings about (dis)ability, gender, race, nationality, and other themes. We will do so by exploring various representations, from memoirs to audio/visual culture; students will ultimately conduct a project in which they explore and develop their own bodily practices. Ultimately, we aim to understand how material bodies are deeply intertwined with broad social and political issues.

Steve Marston

Steve Marston is a teacher and researcher in the area of cultural studies, sport studies, and U.S. history. His research has addressed such topics as baggy basketball shorts, Colin Kaepernick’s role in BLM activism, and the online circulation of “gruesome” injury videos. Over the past decade, Prof. Marston has taught broadly on 20th- and 21st-century American culture. In the classroom, Prof. Marston seeks to have students actively engage with a variety of materials, analyzing and conversing with the voices of the past and present.

 

ANTH 62-001: Indian Country Today

FY Seminar | MWF, 10:10 AM – 11:00 AM | Instructor(s): Valerie Lambert

With the United States as our geographic focus, this seminar explores a range of 20th- and early-21st-century American Indian topics and current issues. We look at Indian casinos, tribal colleges, identity, gender, tribal courts, sports, and other topics. An exploration of the history of American Indians before and after the arrival of Europeans, a history with which we begin the seminar, provides essential background for looking at the present and recent past. This seminar will help students better understand the challenges facing American Indian communities both internally and externally and the creative solutions being forged to address these challenges. It will also help students further develop skills in reading, writing, critical analysis, and public speaking.

Valerie Lambert

Valerie Lambert is professor of anthropology and an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. She received her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology from Harvard University and has won awards for undergraduate teaching and for each of her two single-authored books. Her first book is about her Tribe; her second one is about American Indian and Alaska Native workers in the Bureau of Indian Affairs. She has twice been elected president of the Association of Indigenous Anthropologists. She is the mother of two daughters, both of whom are in their twenties.

 

ANTH 67-001: Blackness and Racialization: A Multidimensional Approach

FY Seminar | MWF, 2:30 PM – 3:20 PM | Instructor(s): Charles Price

Blackness and Racialization is an introduction to the history, social construction, cultural production, and lived experience of race. The course focuses on Blackness in the United States and Jamaica (for comparison), though it necessarily addresses other race formations such as Whiteness and Brownness. The course approaches racialization from three angles: historical; social; and personal. It utilizes historical, theoretical, ethnographic, and popular culture productions to explain the effects, uses, durability, and pliability of racial formations.
Some questions that the course will address include:
• What does the social construction of race mean in practice? How is race socially constructed?
• How do racial categories and identities develop, persist, and change?
• How does race work at various “levels,” such as the level of the individual, collectivity, and history?
• What are the origins of various racial stereotypes?
• Why do people have very different understandings of race, some embracing race, some rejecting race, and some claiming to not understand race at all?

Charles Price

Charles Price is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Charles’s research, writing and activity focus on Black racial identity, Rastafari identity, life narrative genres, action research, community organizations and community organizing, people-centered community development, and social movements, with a geographic concentration on the United States and Jamaica. Charles authored the book Becoming Rasta: The Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica (2009, New York University Press), co-authored the monograph Community Collaborations: Promoting Community Organizing (2009, Ford Foundation), and is under contract with NYU Press to write a sequel to Becoming Rasta, a book on collective identity formation and ethnogenesis among the Rastafari people of Jamaica. He is developing a historically grounded qualitative approach to explaining collective identity formation. Another project in development involves a collaboration with a faculty member to develop an action-oriented study of how Black men in North Carolina and Connecticut negotiate challenges and obstacles in their lives.

 

ANTH 72-001: Archaeology and Popular Culture

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Douglas Smit

Archaeology often captures the popular imagination through fantastic and farfetched portrayals of lost civilizations, aliens, and spectacular treasures. While these depictions of archaeology and the past may not be accurate, the story being told is nonetheless significant and reflects something about the culture that produced it.

This course explores how these films, televisions shows, books, and video games tell stories about the past, what stories are being told, and what these representations imply about the relationship between archaeology and society. We will critically analyze popular representations of archaeology, comparing how competing visions of fact and fiction operate in the public sphere.

Douglas Smit

Douglas Smit is a Teaching Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology. He is an archaeologist who currently directs projects in Peru and Philadelphia. His research focuses on the archaeology of the recent past, how local people have interacted with big processes like globalization over the past five hundred years. He is also a newcomer to UNC, having just moved with his partner, an infant, two dogs, and one cat to North Carolina from Philadelphia in the summer of 2022. Beyond archaeology, he loves hiking, basketball/soccer, and reading, non-fiction, although these days, it is mostly child-care.

 

ANTH 89-001: Walking in the World: The Anthropology of Moving, Knowing, and Creating

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Christopher Nelson

We learn about the world as we move through it. In moving, we change the world around us and we are transformed by our experiences. However, we are not free to move wherever we wish. We live with boundaries, some only dimly understood. And yet, sometimes we come together to challenge these boundaries and struggle to create something new.

In this class, students will learn how anthropologists create research projects to explore these questions. While our focus will be on cultural anthropology, students will be exposed to the ways in which artists, historians, geographers, novelists, philosophers, outdoor athletes, soldiers, and activists approach similar problems.

Beyond readings and small-group discussions, students will step out of the classroom to design and carry out short research projects. They will share their result in journals entries and critical essays, and I will mentor each student as they develop their ideas.

Christopher Nelson

Christopher Nelson is a cultural anthropologist. His research interests include the relationship between history and memory; the critical study of everyday life; storytelling, ritual and performance; value, exchange and sacrifice. He has done ethnographic fieldwork in Japan for nearly three decades, and recently completed book about the relationship between workers, artists, anthropologists, political activists, shaman and the dead in Okinawa. Nelson has been a Marine infantry officer, a truck driver, a factory worker, an editor of the journal Cultural Anthropology, and has taught at Carolina for the past twenty years. He is also an enthusiastic walker and hiker.

 

ANTH 89-002: Anthropology of Disability

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): Dariia (Dafna) Rachok

Disability is a part of life: we all get sick, age, and require care. This course examines debates on disability from a perspective of cultural and medical anthropology. We focus on the diversity and richness of disability worlds, learning how different societies make sense of disability and how living with disability leads to a proliferation of identities and cultures. This course covers a wide range of topics, from the history of disability to cross-cultural approaches to mental health to the intersections of disability with gender and sexuality to caregiving. Course material illustrates that disability is a collective project that encourages individuals and communities to engage in creative modes of thinking and being in a world that moves beyond the binary of “normal” and “abnormal.” This course shows that studying disability unveils new ways to see the world and helps us to better understand what it means to be human.

Dariia (Dafna) Rachok

Dafna Rachok is a medical and political anthropologist, researching global health, medical humanitarianism, and patient communities. Her current research, Affective Belonging: Vulnerable Groups’ Political Subjectivity and HIV in Ukraine explores what underpins the strength of a public health system in a supposedly weak post-socialist state. It centers on political mobilization of Ukrainian vulnerable communities (people living with HIV, sex workers, people who use drugs) as citizens through interactions with the state public health bureaucracy. Dafna's research was supported by the Wenner-Gren Foundation and the National Science Foundation, among others. When Dafna’s not working, she’s spending time with her Malinois-mix named Doxa.

 

ANTH 89-047: Canine Cultures

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Margaret Wiener

Dogs are humanity’s oldest companions. While researchers dispute how, where, and when our mutual involvement arose, it has affected both species. This class will use the tools of sociocultural anthropology—its concepts, types of evidence, and forms of analysis—to examine human-canine relations. While our main experience of dogs is as pets (and kin), most dogs around the world have only a loose affiliation with humans, and their lives will be a major focus. We also will chew over the services dogs perform for humans, both old (hunting, herding, guarding), and new (de-mining, assisting). We will learn about the rise and spread of our own dog-keeping practices, before exploring changes in the role of dogs in American households and their consequences. Throughout, we will ponder what it might mean to experience the world from “the dog’s point of view” (or nose!)

Margaret Wiener

Margaret Wiener is a cultural anthropologist. Her interest in dogs and their people was piqued when she met her first Balinese dog, Morris, whose humans picked up that exotic American name from TV. She was in Bali researching her first prize-winning book about Balinese ideas of power. Wiener has recently finished a book on the role the idea of magic has played in establishing differences between "the West and the rest," while beginning to work on relations between humans and other species. Recently dog-less, she has made many dog friends in her neighborhood and has a grand-dog named Bailey.

 

APPL 110-03F: Design and Making for Engineers: Developing Your Personal Design Potential

FY Launch | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Richard Goldberg

Students work in flexible, interdisciplinary teams to assess opportunities, brainstorm, and prototype solutions. Design thinking and physical prototyping skills are developed through fast-paced, iterative exercises in a variety of contexts and environments.

Richard Goldberg

Dr. Richard Goldberg is a Teaching Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Department of Applied Physical Sciences. He received his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at Duke University. Dr. Goldberg is leading the effort to develop new programs in Applied Sciences and Engineering, including a minor that started in 2020 and plans for an upcoming major. He is interested in developing programs that bridge ties between engineering and the liberal arts by promoting an entrepreneurial mindset in our students. His research interests are in engineering education, and in developing technology for people with disabilities.

 

APPL 60-001: Tree. Timber. Totem

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Richard Superfine

Trees, through their biology, meaning and uses, create an arc of understanding that spans what it means to be human. Ultimately, we will explore the meaning of trees and wood and why we seek happiness in nature, cherish wood and the creation of objects of wood. Tree: What is a tree from a biological perspective? How do they represent a complex community and play a vital role in life on the planet? Timber: What is the economy of wood internationally and in the state of NC? What are biophysical and material properties of trees that allow them to grow so large and be so useful to human society? Totem: Why do we respond emotionally to wood and choose it as a material in our lives and surroundings? How do we design and create objects of meaning from wood? We will walk in the woods, meet “wood people” from across the state and country and learn woodworking with projects of the students’ design and creation.

Richard Superfine

I am the son of a home builder, a first gen life-long student who is also a faculty member that has a passion for studying biology using the perspective and tools of physics. In my day job at UNC I build microscopes, materials and systems to study the wonders of the lung, the body’s immune system and biomedical diagnostic technologies – all in collaboration with brilliant scientists from across UNC and the world. I also have a woodworking shop in my basement where I make from wood furniture and gifts of meaning for family and friends.

 

APPL 89-002: Convergent Research: Solving the Grand Engineering Challenges of the Future

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Ronit Fraiman

Convergence research focuses on addressing complex problems in science, engineering, and society. Today’s and tomorrow’s grand challenges will not be solved by one discipline, but by the integration of knowledge, methods, and expertise from across various disciplines.

This first-year seminar will introduce students to the new scientific language of convergence research. Through surveying the grand challenges of engineering, we will learn how through pursuing a common research challenge, experts from various fields intermix their knowledge, theories, methods, data, and research communities, enabling new discoveries to emerge. Students will participate in various in-class activities, group discussion and problem-solving coaching to enhance understanding of how chemistry, physics, materials science, biology, math, and computer sciences are applied to engineering.

Seminar will host guest lecturers with expertise on a particular topic, allowing the students to gain a true interdisciplinary view of the subject, instead of an isolated view of each.

Ronit Fraiman

My interdisciplinary expertise in chemistry, nanotechnology, material science, and computer science allows me to study problems whose solutions are beyond the scope of a single area of research practice. I truly believe that collaborations among scientists trained in different fields are essential for exploring and tackling complex problems. As such, I am both a participant and a leader of integrated research teams involving a vast network of interdependent researchers. I develop breakthrough biologically inspired technologies to advance healthcare. My work has led to major advances in tissue engineering, nanobiotechnology, and diagnostics, and key innovations are being translated into commercial products

 

ARTH 55H-001: Art, Gender, and Power in Early Modern Europe

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Tania String

What did it mean to be a man or to be a woman in the Renaissance? This seminar will explore the ways in which constructions of gender are critical to understandings of the visual arts in the early modern period (c. 1400-1650). We will discuss and analyze a focused group of representations of men and women: portraits, mythological and biblical paintings and sculptures, and even turn our attention to the buildings these men and women inhabited. We will study the work of artists such as Michelangelo, Donatello, Titian, Holbein, and Rubens, amongst others, to find ways of understanding how masculinity and femininity were central concerns in early modern society and in the art produced in this period.

Tania String

Dr. Tania String is an art historian specializing in the art of the Tudor period in England, and the Renaissance more broadly. She is the author of numerous books and articles on the portraits of Henry VIII. Before coming to UNC in 2010 she taught in England at the University of Bristol.

 

ARTH 61-001: African American Art of the Carolinas

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): John Bowles

Focusing on the Carolinas, this seminar explores the many ways African Americans have used art to define themselves and their communities. We will ask how art has been used to maintain cultural traditions, shape American culture and build political solidarity from the era of colonialism and slavery to the present. We will study the cultivation of artistic practices from Africa; African American painters, sculptors and craftsmen who earned national reputations for the quality of their work; artists who re-imagined and redefined African American identity through art; and artists throughout the 20th century who represented the daily lives and hardships of rural and working-class blacks. Students will visit campus museums and archives and conduct original research using regional sources. Persistent questions throughout the semester will include, How does the art of African Americans in the Carolinas provoke us to question our own identities and roles within the region, and what is the contemporary role of art in shaping public discourse?

John Bowles

John Bowles received his Ph.D. from UCLA in 2002 and is a graduate of the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Independent Study Program. He is an historian of African American art, who works from the assumption that art plays an important role in determining how we see ourselves as morally responsible individuals. In his research and teaching, he attempts to convey the urgency of art by addressing moral and political dilemmas we would often rather ignore. He has published articles and art criticism in various journals and has recently completed a book that examines the work of artist Adrian Piper. He is currently writing a book that explores how African American artists have engaged simultaneously with modernism, globalization and diaspora from the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s until today.

 

ARTS 50-001: The Artistic Temperament

FY Seminar | MW, 9:05 AM – 10:20 AM | Instructor(s): Annette Lawrence

Class examines how to advance and sustain artistic production, focusing not only on being a successful artist, but also on the importance of creativity and hard work in any successful venture.

Annette Lawrence

Learn more about Dr. Lawrence: https://magazine.college.unc.edu/tar-heels-up-close/making-and-unmaking/

 

ARTS 82-001: Please Save This: Exploring Personal Histories through Visual Language

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Roxana Perez-Mendez

This class will investigate the idea of personal histories in visual art. As a studio class, the course will be organized around several art making projects. As a catalyst to our own art making, we will explore the idea of personal history and memory through readings, as well as looking at contemporary artists whose work functions in an autobiographical framework.

Roxana Perez-Mendez

 

ASIA 75-001: Love in China

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Keren He

This course is designed for Equity in Teaching. During this course we will be implementing an innovative and interactive learning method—Collaborative Online International Learning, or COIL. During this course we will engage in class discussions and lectures and a final presentation assignment with Dr. Amir Hossein Vafa and students from the Shiraz University in Iran for approximately five class session (asynchronous and synchronous options available). These activities will enhance your learning of the course content, and your participation in the COIL activities is required. COIL activities will provide you with exposure to new cultural contexts, knowledge, and perspectives on the course material. By participating in the COIL activities, you will develop and enhance cross-cultural communication skills and gain experience working in multicultural teams. As part of your grade and COIL activities, in groups with Iranian students, you will sketch, design, and create a war-related artifact using the campus MakerSpace (BeAM) facilities.

Keren He

Keren He specializes in modern Chinese literature, media, and popular culture. Her research focuses on how aging and suicide negotiated “the politics of life” in the Chinese-speaking world. She is also interested in posthumanism, queer theory, and game studies in China and Sinophone regions. She had lived in Beijing, Taipei, and Hong Kong before receiving her Ph.D. at Stanford University.

 

BIOL 104-01F: Biodiversity

FY Launch | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Jordan Claytor
Requisite(s): Prerequisites, BIOL 101; and BIOL 101L or BIOL 102L

The biological diversity we see on Earth today encompasses a variety of genetic, species, and ecosystem level variation. This course will focus on the biological principles that push biologists to understand what produces and sustains the biodiversity of life on Earth. This class will address key questions about how we identify and measure biological diversity, how it changes over time, and why biological diversity matters as our planet continues to change.

Jordan Claytor

Jordan Claytor is originally from Maryland and received his undergraduate degree in biology from Elon University. As an undergraduate, he did research investigating how anthropogenic noises impacted the behavior of bottlenose dolphins. His interest in dinosaurs and paleontology developed during an internship at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History studying landscape ecology using micro-vertebrate fossils. He was featured in the NOVA program, Dinosaur Apocalypse: The Last Day on PBS. His current research is on the evolution and ecology of early mammals using morphology independent methods to infer diet.

 

BIOL 62H-001: Mountains Beyond Mountains: Infectious Disease in the Developing World

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Mark Peifer

The global pandemic has refocused the attention of the world on the importance of using science to address pathogens in a global way, and on the inequities in our health care system in the US and globally. In this course we will examine the challenges of treating infectious disease in the developing world, and explore the root causes of global health care inequity. We will use HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis as examples, and the nation of Haiti as a case study, as we explore viral and bacterial pathogens, how they affect our bodies, and how we can use this information to develop better treatments. We’ll also explore innovative ways to bring health care to resource-poor nations.

Mark Peifer

Mark Peifer is the Michael Hooker Distinguished Professor of Biology at UNC, where he and his lab study how the animal body is assembled during embryonic development, using genetic and cell biological tools. He was raised in Minnesota and is a first generation college student. He knows diversity, equity and inclusion are core American values and hopes we once again live up to them. His interest in global public health was stimulated by a desire to help students take a closer look at the world around them, and by the experiences he has had with the people of Haiti. He and his spouse live in the woods west of town, and his two daughters are both UNC grads, one a social worker and one a student teacher in second grade.

 

CHEM 73H-001: From Atomic Bombs to Cancer Treatments: The Broad Scope of Nuclear Chemistry

FY Seminar | MW, 1:25 PM – 2:40 PM | Instructor(s): Todd Austell

Nuclear chemistry is a broad field which we all are affected by almost daily in some way, shape or form. In this course we’ll explore many aspects of nuclear chemistry in an attempt to better understand the historical development, the present technology and the future of the field. A general chemistry background in atomic history and theory will first be reviewed, followed by a survey of the applications and research topics of nuclear chemistry today. Many topics discussed in the course are surrounded by controversy. In each of these cases, students will research and discuss the various sides of each argument to better understand the topics. Field trips, guest speakers, and student research presentations will make up an integral part of the course.

Additional Information
Students should have credit for CHEM 101 before enrolling in this course.

Todd Austell

Todd Austell is a Teaching Professor and currently serves as the Associate Director of U’grad Studies for the Department of Chemistry. He serves as an academic advisor for STEM and pre-health science majors in UNC Academic Advising. Prof. Austell received his BS in Chemistry in 1987 and his PhD in Chemistry in 1996, both at UNC. He spent one year working in the pharmaceutical industry prior to graduate school and another year as an Assistant Professor at the United States Air Force Academy prior to returning to his current position in 1998. As an undergraduate, he participated in the Department of Energy and American Chemistry Society’s Summer School in Nuclear Chemistry. Topical studies in nuclear chemistry have been a hobby of his since that time. His graduate research involved separation science, and he is currently involved in both curriculum development within the chemistry department and in a long-term study of how middle school and secondary math education/preparation affects student performances in college general chemistry. His hobbies include hiking, camping, disc golf and gardening as well as following all UNC athletics. He has two young daughters whom he says are “his greatest accomplishment” and a wife who works as a physical therapist.

 

COMM 68-001: Paying Attention: The Art of Documentary

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Julia Haslett

Paying attention to the world around us is foundational to our understanding of the people, behaviors, environments, and living species that co-exist alongside us. Attention fuels our curiosity, deepens our empathy, and invites us to step outside of ourselves. Re-presenting what we pay attention to is the art and practice of documentary. At its essence, documentary is a “document” of what we observe and what we record. In this course, we will use video/sound, photography, and creative writing to document and then re-present what we are paying attention to. Students will strengthen their attention-paying capacities, develop research skills, and learn how to refine their chosen methods of documentation. Class discussion, readings, film screenings, creative assignments, site visits, and in-class exercises will provide an opportunity to experiment, ask questions, and collaborate with peers. The course will culminate in a final documentary project done in small groups on student-chosen and researched topics.

Julia Haslett

Julia Haslett is an award-winning filmmaker whose expressionistic documentaries include Pushed up the Mountain (2020) and An Encounter with Simone Weil (2010), which was a New York Magazine's Critics Pick. Before joining the faculty at UNC, she worked in public and cable television, and as a Filmmaker-in-Residence at Stanford University's Center for Biomedical Ethics. Her current research interests include environmental filmmaking, mental health, and the ethics of attention. Originally from Brooklyn, NY, Professor Haslett very much appreciates how easy it is to access the natural world in and around Chapel Hill.

 

COMM 82-001: Food Politics from an Organizational Communication Perspective

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Sarah Dempsey

The globalization of food systems is both a hotly contested subject and a central part of contemporary life. This course provides an applied introduction to key debates by adopting a critical organizational communication lens on our globalized food system. Drawing on readings, popular media texts, discussions, and experiential activities, we will explore food system labor practices, the role of multinational companies and global commodity chains, the status of hunger and food deserts, the role of food marketing and consumption practices, and the growth of local and sustainable movements devoted to food justice. Throughout, we investigate how our global food system is shaped by different types of organizations operating within particular locales, such as North Carolina, USA.

This is an APPLES-designated service-learning course that requires service hours. In addition to experiential field activities and visits, our course is organized around group-based engaged research projects. Your success will depend upon your ability to work independently and practice collective leadership. This project will increase your research and writing skills, sharpen your leadership and collaborative skills, and provide you with applied insight into the themes of the course.

Sarah Dempsey

Sarah Dempsey is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication. Her research focuses on critical theories of work and professional life and the politics of voice, representation, and accountability in social change efforts. Her most recent research examines cultural discourses about work and labor in the context of the food industry. She is currently engaged in a book length project drawing on archival research, critical analysis of popular discourses and corporate practices, and interviews with contemporary food service workers, organizers, and living wage and fair wage advocates and business owners.

 

COMM 85-001: Think, Speak, Argue

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Christian Lundberg

This seminar helps students learn to think more critically, speak more persuasively, and argue more effectively by focusing on practical skill development in reasoning and debate. Students at Carolina learn to sharpen their thinking, speaking, and argument skills in the course of their normal classwork, but this happens more or less indirectly. This seminar will focus directly on improving each of these skills. Students will learn to think more critically by reflecting on the work of philosophers who deal with reasoning and informal logic, to speak with conviction and clarity through hands-on learning about the tradition of rhetoric, and to argue more effectively by debating the pressing issues of our day. The skills that we hone in on in this course will help students become more effective in the classroom, in their chosen vocation, and as citizens in an increasingly complex global public sphere.

Christian Lundberg

Chris Lundberg is a professor of rhetoric, a political consultant, and a corporate communications strategist. He is an associate professor in the Department of Communication at UNC Chapel Hill, where he writes about and teaches courses in public speaking, debate, persuasive communication and political rhetoric.
His academic work includes multiple books and award-winning articles on rhetoric, speech, and persuasion, including: The Essential Guide to Rhetoric (Bedford St. Martin’s, 2008, 2e 2017); Public Speaking: Choices and Responsibility (Cengage Publishers, 2014, 2e 2016, 3e 2022); and a book about the psychology of public persuasion called Lacan in Public: Psychoanalysis and the Science of Rhetoric (University of Alabama Press, 2012). He has served as a debate and messaging consultant for numerous US Senate races, gubernatorial campaigns, and cabinet-level confirmation processes. His international work features extensive work in the United Kingdom, including work on the UK Prime Ministership, the Scottish leadership election, and consulting services for the “Vote Leave” campaign during the EU referendum. He is also the founder and CEO of Vocable Communications, a speech focused and data-driven communication consultancy serving senior leadership at multiple fortune 500 corporations. He received his Ph.D. in rhetoric from Northwestern University’s School of Communication in 2006, and his Master of Divinity from Emory University in 2000. In addition to his experience in the classroom and with consulting clients, he has over fifteen years of experience in speech and debate coaching, serving most recently as a coach and argument consultant for Harvard University. He has coached national championship intercollegiate debate teams at four separate universities (Liberty University, Emory University, Northwestern University, and Harvard University), and has coached multiple competitors to the top individual speaker award at the National Debate Tournament.

 

DRAM 120-01F: Play Analysis

FY Launch | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Mark Perry

Development of the skill to analyze plays for academic and production purposes through the intensive study of representative plays. DRAM 120 is the first course in the major and the minor in dramatic art.

Mark Perry

Mark Perry teaches playwriting, play analysis and dramaturgy and serves as a resident dramaturg with PlayMakers Repertory Company. His plays "A New Dress for Mona" and "The Will of Bernard Boynton" have been produced by UNC’s Department of Dramatic Art, and he recently directed Anton Chekhov's "The Seagull" with the department's Kenan Theatre Company. Mark is a graduate of the University of Iowa’s Playwrights Workshop and a former recipient of the North Carolina Arts Council’s Literature Fellowship for playwriting.

 

DRAM 79-001: The Heart of the Play: Fundamentals of Acting, Playwriting, and Collaboration

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Mark Perry

The goal of this seminar is to get you doing theatre, to spark your creativity and to connect you with the deeper lessons of this dynamic art form. You will act. You will write. You will work with others. It will not always be easy, but if you are willing to stretch yourself, you should have a good time. Each lesson is organized around a principle or virtue inherent in the practice of the art. Participants study a quotation or two that relate to that principle and then engage in drama exercises that spring from that principle. By the end of the course, you will have gained skills to make you comfortable to write, stage and perform your own 10-minute plays. Not just for those interested in pursuing theatre, this seminar will give you a more holistic understanding of essential principles in the practice of your life.

Mark Perry

Mark Perry teaches playwriting, play analysis and dramaturgy and serves as a resident dramaturg with PlayMakers Repertory Company. His plays "A New Dress for Mona" and "The Will of Bernard Boynton" have been produced by UNC’s Department of Dramatic Art, and he recently directed Anton Chekhov's "The Seagull" with the department's Kenan Theatre Company. Mark is a graduate of the University of Iowa’s Playwrights Workshop and a former recipient of the North Carolina Arts Council’s Literature Fellowship for playwriting.

 

DRAM 80-001: Psychology of Clothes: Motivations for Dressing Up and Dressing Down

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Pamela Bond

The course seeks to help students find ways to articulate their own motivations for dress and then apply the ideas they have discovered to the ways in which individuality as well as group attitudes are expressed through clothing.

Pamela Bond

Pamela Bond is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Dramatic Art. Pamela has taught at Hampton University and North Carolina Central University. Her recent work includes costume design for The Bus Stop featured at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival. She has performed professionally at the National Black Theatre Festival and featured apparel designs in Charlotte Fashion Week and Winston Salem Fashion Week. Pamela believes that in order for students to experience the full scope as theatre practitioners they must be willing to explore diverse ethnic and cultural backdrops, as well as their own. So what does your clothing say about you? What messages are you trying to send with what you put on today? Let’s explore your closet and see who you are.

 

DRAM 81H-001: Staging America: The American Drama

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Gregory Kable

This seminar examines our national drama from its colonial origins to the present. Participants read plays and criticism, screen videos, engage in critical writing, and consider performance as related means of exploring the visions and revisions constituting American dramatic history. We will approach American drama as both a literary and commercial art form, and look to its history to provide a context for current American theater practice. Readings are chosen for their intrinsic merit and historical importance, but also for their treatment of key issues and events in American life. Our focus throughout will be on the forces that shaped the American drama as well as, in turn, that drama’s ability to shed light on the national experience.

Gregory Kable

Gregory Kable is a Teaching Professor in the Department of Dramatic Art, where he teaches dramatic literature, theatre history, and performance courses and serves as an Associate Dramaturg for PlayMakers Repertory Company. He also teaches seminars on Modern British Drama and American Musicals for the Honors program. He has directed dozens of productions at UNC and throughout the local community, and is a graduate of the Yale School of Drama.

 

DRAM 83-002: Spectacle in the Theatre

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): David Navalinsky

This seminar will explore the artists, art and technology involved in creating the world of the play. It is intended as an overview for students who want to learn about theatrical design. Students will create their own designs in the areas of scenery, costumes, and lighting for three plays throughout the semester. The plays will be placed outside of their traditional setting while still maintaining the story and themes. Students have placed Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream in a trailer park and a daycare center for example. Careful historical research, close reading and analysis, text and source material, and collaboration will be the focus of the student projects.

David Navalinsky

David Navalinsky is the Director of Undergraduate Production in the Department of Dramatic Art. David has taught at the University of Texas at Arlington and the University of Mississippi. David’s recent design work includes scenery for The Uncanny Valley by Francesca Talenti. The Uncanny Valley featured a Robothespian™, which is exactly what it sounds like. He has also written a documentary theatre piece Priceless Gem: An Athlete Story, which tells the stories of UNC athletes. David has worked professionally at South Coast Repertory in Orange County California, The Utah Shakespeare Festival, The Illinois Shakespeare Festival, and the Karamu Performing Arts Theatre in Cleveland, OH. Some of David’s favorite projects were at the Dallas Children’s Theater where he made a dinosaur collapse and pirates walk the plank.

 

ECON 101H-01F: Introduction to Economics

FY Launch | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Robert McDonough | Lab/Recitation: ECON 101H-901

Introduction to Economics (Economics 101H) is the Honors section of the introductory course in Economics for undergraduates. The Honors section covers the same material as the large enrollment version but does so in more depth. This is an introductory course in both microeconomics and macroeconomics. In this one-semester course students are introduced to fundamental issues in economics including competition, scarcity, opportunity cost, resource allocation, unemployment, ination, and the determination of prices. This course is the gateway course for the major of Economics; if you wish to major in Economics, you must have at least a C in this course.

Robert McDonough

 

EMES 101-01F: Planet Earth

FY Launch | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Michelle Haskin

This course will introduce geological concepts through the lens of U.S. national parks and a plate tectonic framework. The course will take a small-group approach to in-class work where developing collaboration and communication skills will be a focus. Students will apply their talents, skills, knowledge, and creativity to investigate related topics of interest as they manifest in a specific U.S. National Park to examine the interconnectedness of the geologic sciences and other fields of study. They will present their work in a manner appropriate to their project. Because this course is geared toward students newer to the university environment, the course will also discuss adjacent issues relevant to first-year students such as studying approaches, professionalism, as well as usefulness of meta-cognition, self-reflection, and feedback. Students will practice employing these ideas and approaches though individual and small-group work. Optional laboratory: GEOL 101L.

Michelle Haskin

Michelle Haskin is an Assistant Teaching Professor who strives to facilitate undergraduate learning through equitable pedagogical practices and collaborative learning. She has an interest in metacognition and applying learning strategies to help students discover new ways to approach and reframe their learning. She has taught over 2300 UNC students and looks forward to teaching many more.

 

EMES 55-001: Change in the Coastal Ocean

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Christopher Martens

This seminar provides students with opportunities to explore recent changes in marine environments caused by the interactions of fascinating oceanographic processes. Class presentations and discussions focus on the work of active marine scientists who combine their traditional disciplinary research with knowledge and skills from other fields as needed to understand new environmental challenges. This cross-cutting scientific approach prepares class members to recognize important connections between traditional disciplines to discover interdisciplinary research areas that they might wish to further explore during their undergraduate careers at Carolina. Each week we read a series of cutting-edge, non-technical research papers focused largely on recent changes in marine ecosystems in preparation for in-class discussions, laboratory demonstrations, and “video- and photo-trip” visits to field sites. We use information from those papers, other course materials and current research at Carolina, to investigate how biological, geological, physical, and geochemical processes interact to influence coastal, open-ocean, and tropical environments. Students are expected to actively participate in discussions during classes, in demonstrations using state-of-the art instrumentation in MASC laboratories, and in “hands on” mini-field experiments (as weather allows) designed to emphasize the importance of the scientific question rather than just the technology involved. Please note that this seminar has no prerequisites.

Christopher Martens

Christopher S. Martens earned his Ph.D. in Chemical Oceanography from Florida State University in 1972, then moved to Yale to complete two years of postdoctoral study before joining the faculty at UNC in 1974. His current research focuses on how biological processes affect the chemistry of coastal and deep-sea environments, including the expanding role of sponges in coral reef ecosystems, the impacts of recently discovered natural gas seeps found off the North Carolina coast and the fate of the huge volume of hydrocarbons released to the deep sea during the Deepwater Horizon disaster. He publishes widely, has twice been co-recipient of the international Geochemical Society’s Best Paper award in Organic Geochemistry and received the Ketchum Award for Leadership in Coastal Oceanography from the famous Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He is an experienced SCUBA, hard helmet, saturation and submersible diver and an underwater videographer. He has received a “Favorite Faculty” award for recognized excellence in undergraduate teaching.

 

EMES 59-001: Extreme Microorganisms: Pushing the Limits of Life on Earth and Beyond

FY Seminar | TR, 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM | Instructor(s): Andreas Teske

We will expand our horizons in biology by learning about some of the most extreme microorganisms on the planet – microorganisms that thrive without oxygen in deep marine sediments and in the Earth’s crust, under high temperatures in boiling hot springs or in superheated deep-sea water under high pressure, and under chemical stress factors (high sulfide and heavy metal concentrations) that were once thought to be incompatible with life. Numerous extremophilic (extreme-loving) microorganisms of different metabolic types have been isolated in the laboratory as pure cultures; others have been observed in Nature but have so far resisted cultivation. Extremophiles provide opportunities to study the unusual and strange biochemistry that allows them to thrive in their unique habitats; they are also valuable model systems for potential life on other planets. We will get to know the unusual habitats where extremophiles are found, for example hot springs and volcanic areas on land (Yellowstone) and in the ocean (hydrothermal vents), and we will explore the earliest history of extremophiles as some of the most ancient microorganisms on Earth.

Andreas Teske

Andreas Teske is a biochemist by training, but became fascinated by the microbial world of the oceans and focused his Ph.D. research on the ecology and diversity of marine bacteria that catalyze the sulfur cycle. After completing his Ph.D. at Bremen University and the Max-Planck-Institute for Marine Microbiology in Germany in 1995, he spent his postdoc years at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and stayed on as Assistant Scientist. Andreas Teske joined the UNC Marine Sciences faculty in 2002. His research interests include the microbiology of the deep marine subsurface, and microbial ecosystems of petroleum seeps and hydrothermal vents. In search of novel extreme marine microorganisms, he and his students are participating in a wide range of research cruises.

 

EMES 72H-001: Field Geology of Eastern California

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Drew Coleman

Have you ever wanted to stand on a volcano, see a glacier, trace out an earthquake fault, or see the Earth’s oldest living things? This seminar is designed around a one-week field trip to eastern California, where students will study geologic features including active volcanoes, earthquake-producing faults, and evidence for recent glaciation and extreme climate change. Before the field trip (which will take place the week of Fall Break and be based at a research station near Bishop, California), the class will meet twice a week to learn basic geologic principles and to work on developing field research topics. During the field trip students will work on field exercises (e.g., mapping, measuring, and describing an active fault; observing and recording glacial features) and collect data for the research projects. After the field trip, students will obtain laboratory data from samples collected during the trip and test research hypotheses using field and laboratory data. Grading will be based on presentation of group research projects, and on a variety of small projects during the trip (notebook descriptions, mapping projects, etc.). Students may be required to pay some of the costs of the trip (typically, about $500.) This course will require missing three days of classes. The course is designed to teach basic geology “on the rocks”, so there are no prerequisites. Link to Yosemite Nature Notes video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5RQp77uVPA

Drew Coleman

Drew Coleman’s research focuses on understanding how the Earth works by determining the rates of processes (mountain building, extinction, volcanism, etc.) that occurred in the past. To accomplish this he and his students date rocks. His teaching is inquiry based and he is most happy when he is teaching “hands on” in the field or lab.

 

ENEC 201-01F: Introduction to Environment and Society

FY Launch | MWF, 10:10 AM – 11:00 AM | Instructor(s): Gregory Gangi | Lab/Recitation: ENEC 201-735 or ENEC 201-736

Human-environment interactions are examined through analytical methods from the social sciences, humanities, and sciences. The focus is on the role of social, political, and economic factors in controlling interactions between society and the environment in historical and cultural contexts. Three lecture hours and one recitation hour a week.

Gregory Gangi

In his teaching, Greg Gangi conveys a complex understanding of environmental challenges and explores innovative solutions. His teaching extends beyond the classroom as he leads students to many countries to learn firsthand about global change and innovation. He organized several educational trips to Germany, the Netherlands and the Nordic nations. Given the role that South Korea and China play in shaping the future of technology, he plans to guide students in learning from these two nations during the summer of 2019.

Gangi received various awards at UNC and a national award for his advising and mentoring of students. In 2014, he was awarded the NACADA Award for Outstanding Faculty Advisor. He received the Tanner Award for Teaching Excellence in 2010 and the University recognized him with the Massey Award for Outstanding Service in 2018.

In addition to his teaching, Gangi works to create networks in North Carolina between industry, academia, and government to help strengthen innovation. He also seeks to foster international networks that connect companies in the Clean Tech sector with North Carolina. He defines clean technology broadly to include companies in clean energy, smart cities, water technologies, innovations to make transportation more sustainable, building technologies and solutions that improve food security and agricultural sustainability. He is the lead organizer of the annual UNC Clean Tech Summit, which represents the largest event of its kind in the southeastern region of the United States.

 

ENEC 89-001: Beyond Human/Nature: The Cultural Side of Environmental Issues

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Ben Bridges

Climate change and natural disasters are not purely environmental issues: they are fundamentally tied to political and economic activities deeply rooted in cultural understandings of the relationship between humans and nature. In this class, we will explore the cultural side of ecological problems by considering how ideologies, ethics, and art shape the ways humans interact with plants, animals, and landscapes. In doing so, we will unpack a foundational dichotomy of our time—are humans separate from the natural world, or part of it? By consulting artists, poets, writers, and thinkers, students will untangle this nature-culture relationship, tapping into key existential questions about what it means to be humans who not only live in this world, but who seek to solve the environmental problems that they have caused or exacerbated. The class will include reading discussions, podcasts, projects, and—as much as possible—time spent outdoors in our campus environment.

Ben Bridges

Ben Bridges is folklorist and anthropologist who specializes in the environmental humanities, material culture studies, and critical Indigenous studies. His primary research concerns the effects of climate change and economic transition on red and yellow cedar trees in Southeast Alaska, specifically in relation to Tlingit and Haida art. Alongside his work in Alaska is a running interest in human-environment relations in North Carolina, his home state. In the classroom, his central goal is to help students draw meaningful, personal connections between the course material and their own lives, which he accomplishes through experiential education, project-based learning, and mentorship.

 

ENGL 57-001: Future Perfect: Science Fictions and Social Form

FY Seminar | MW, 4:40 PM – 5:55 PM | Instructor(s): David Baker

In this first-year seminar, we will explore science fiction as a history of the future. What we call “science fiction”—fiction that imagines a future shaped by changes in science or technology–has been around for a while, at least since Thomas More’s Utopia in 1516. Since this beginning, writers have been using the genre to ask two large questions: 1] where are we, as a society, now? As we will see, science fiction can be a shrewd instrument of social critique. And 2] what will happen next? These invented futures, whether good (“utopian”) or bad (“dystopian”) have a lot to tell us how such writers understood themselves and their place in history. But there’s a twist: the future they conceive is the one we live in! Or… do we? Did they get it right? Or wrong? Why? In this seminar, we’ll consider such questions across a range of science fiction of several types: books (Alfred Bester’s The Stars My Destination [1956], William Gibson’s Neuromancer [1984], and Martha Wells’ recent series The Murderbot Diaries [2017-], among others) and films (Forbidden Planet [1956], 2001: A Space Odyssey [1968], and Blade Runner (1982 and 2017, among others), with excursions into other media.

David Baker

David J. Baker is Peter G. Phialas Professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the author of Between Nations: Shakespeare, Spenser, Marvell and the Question of Britain (1997) and On Demand: Writing for the Market in Early Modern England (2010). With Willy Maley, he is the co-editor of British Identity and English Renaissance Literature (2002) and, with Patricia Palmer, Early Modern Criticism in a Time of Crisis (2022). In 2021, he was a Fulbright fellow in Ireland.

 

ENGL 66-001: Blake 2.0: William Blake in Popular Culture

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Joseph Viscomi

William Blake, the visionary poet, artist and printmaker of the British Romantic period, has had enormous influence on modern art and popular culture. His illuminated poetry integrated word and image anticipating graphic novels and influencing many modern musicians, poets, writers (including Pullman, His Dark Materials Trilogy, Bono, Patti Smith and Jim Morrison). Using the Blake Archive, a hypertext of Blake’s poetry and art, we will study key Blake works as well as the digital medium that enables us to study these works in new ways. We will also explore the Web for performances and adaptations of the works we study and for works by musicians, painters, poets, writers, actors, playwrights, performers, dancers and film and video makers who were or are inspired or influenced by Blake. Students will share their discoveries with the class and produce critical or creative responses to a work by Blake or by an influenced artist.

Joseph Viscomi

Joseph Viscomi, the James G. Kenan Distinguished Professor of English Literature, directs and co-edits the William Blake Archive (blakearchive.org). His special interests are British Romantic literature, art, and printmaking and digital humanities. He has co-edited 9 illuminated works for The William Blake Trust and over 172 digital editions of Blake's literary and art works for the Blake Archive. He is the author of Prints by Blake and his Followers, Blake and the Idea of the Book, and Blake’s Printed Paintings: Methods, Origins, Meanings. He has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, Rockefeller Foundation, Getty Foundation, and the National Humanities Center.

 

ENGL 86-001: The Cities of Modernism

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Shinjini Chattopadhyay

In this seminar we will embark on a world tour of modernist cities across the Global North and the Global South including London, Dublin, Paris, Kolkata, Chicago, and New York. We will read fiction and poetry and watch films by James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Langston Hughes, Gertrude Stein, Elizabeth Bishop, Mina Loy, Marianne Moore, Sam Selvon, and Satyajit Ray, among others. Modernism has been historically celebrated as an art of the cities. However, this claim has also been contested. In this seminar we will ask the following questions: how does modernism depict the theme of alienation and mental life in the city? How does modernist literature transgress conventions of gender and sexuality within the cityspace? Is the modernist city welcoming to everyone or are there individuals/communities who remain marginalized? What is distinctive about the architecture and urban planning of the modernist city and how does it relate to ideas of environmental sustainability? The course will conclude with students creating a digital storymap on a city of their choice.

Shinjini Chattopadhyay

Dr. Shinjini Chattopadhyay is a scholar of modernist literature. Her research focuses on Irish, British, and transnational modernisms. Her monograph-in-progress, “Plurabilities of the City,” investigates the construction of metropolitan cosmopolitanism in modernist and contemporary novels. Her work has been published in the James Joyce Quarterly, European Joyce Studies, Modernism/Modernity Print+, and elsewhere.

 

ENGL 89H-001: The Machine Mistake from Frankenstein to AI

FY Seminar | MWF, 12:20 PM – 1:10 PM | Instructor(s): David Ross

There is the assumption that science fiction propagandizes for the gleaming gadgetry that it depicts. It’s true that science fiction often endorses the scientific endeavor and worldview. It’s further true that the science fictionists of the 1940s and 1950s tended to pine for the space age that began in 1969. But even at its giddiest and wonkiest, science fiction remembers the lesson of Frankenstein. It remembers that our monsters develop ideas of their own; that they wind up haunting us and even hunting us; that our innovations—however seemingly benign—however fenced and fail-safe—threaten to escape our control and our comprehension. This course traces the genealogy of this machine anxiety. Our guiding questions will be: What are machines? Does the artificially intelligent “machine” cease to be a machine? Are machines “natural” or “unnatural”? Are they heretical? Are their dangers inherent? How do they change us?

Our course epigraph might paraphrase Winston Churchill: We shape our machines; thereafter they shape us.

David Ross

David A. Ross is a graduate of Yale and Oxford. He has been a member of the Department of English & Comparative Literature at UNC–Chapel Hill since 2002. He is the author of A Critical Companion to William Butler Yeats (2009) and the co-editor/co-translator of The Search for the Avant-Garde, 1946–1969 (2012), the descriptive catalogue of the Taipei Fine Arts Museum. A collector and amateur scholar of traditional Chinese paintings and Japanese woodblock prints, he has served as president of Southeast Conference of the Association for Asian Studies and as both editor and book review editor of the Southeast Review of Asian Studies.

 

ENVR 89-002: Environment-ECUIPP Lab: Connecting with Communities through Environmental Research for Public Health

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Amanda Northcross

This course is an entry into an undergraduate learning community organized by the Gillings School of Global Public Health, Department of Environmental Science and Engineering. The ECUIPP Lab (Environmentally-Engaged Communities and Undergraduate students Investigating for Public health Protection) is a creative community of students, faculty members and practice partners. Students in ENVR 89-001 will become members of the Environment-ECUIPP Lab. Over the course of the semester they will design and conduct research that addresses a pressing environmental health issue in a local community. Students will work with the local community partner to develop a research question and use the resources of the ECUIPP Lab and the Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering to answer the question through the research process. The course is a hands-on undergraduate research experience

Amanda Northcross

Professor Amanda Northcross likes to build things and enjoys working together with students and communities to explore environmental health concerns, design field campaigns, and build and deploy networks of sensors to answer environmental health questions. With BS, MS and PhD degrees in chemical and environmental engineering she is passionate about health equity. Dr. Northcross has conducted environmental health and engineering research in Guatemala, Brazil, Nigeria and the United States. She will work together with faculty from UNC’s Water Institute to conduct community-engaged environmental research with first year students.

 

EXSS 89H-001: Brain Matters: The Human Computer

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Jason Mihalik

Brain Matters: The Human Computer will explore one of the greatest anatomical and physiological mysteries known to us: the brain. The brain contains over 100 billion neurons allowing the human brain to serve as the hub for everything we do, say, or feel. It is by far the most complex and sophisticated ‘computer’ in existence. Together, we will explore this vast unknown. We will discuss and explore topics ranging from anatomy, neurodevelopment, decision-making, maturation, disease, and other topics related to our cerebral computers. The seminar will draw from faculty expertise across campus and may use examples from research and mass media to complement the teaching materials in the seminar. You will have opportunities to work together, present your work, submit article critiques, and participate in class discussion on these topics. The seminar is intended for all first-year students—regardless of intended major—interested in neuroscience.

Jason Mihalik

Dr. Jason Mihalik is a professor in the Department of Exercise and Sport Science (EXSS) where he directs the Matthew Gfeller Center and leads its THRIVE Program. In these roles, he has studied civilian and military traumatic brain injury (TBI) for the past 20 years, publishing over 170 peer-reviewed publications on these topics. His work has contributed to changing rules and policies in several major sports, concussion legislation in our state, clinical programs to help Veterans and first responders, and has secured congressional funding to support ongoing military research. He is looking forward to the opportunity to translate high level neuroscience concepts into an engaging learning experience for first year Honors Carolina students.

 

GEOG 130-01F: Development and Inequality: Global Perspectives

FY Launch | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Elizabeth Havice

This course is an introduction to historical and contemporary ideas about practices and meanings of development through the perspective of geography. Students will explore the political, economic, and cultural dimensions of struggles over inequality. They will also consider how development and inequality become constructed and institutionalized throughout history, the radical and not-so-radical ways that individuals, governments, and organizations have sought to change inequality, and the ways that geographical concepts can improve our thinking about these puzzles. SPECIAL FOR SPRING 2025: We will be collaborating with a local arts organization, Culture Mill, and a local community group on a new performance titled ‘Bloc’, in order to understand local landscapes of inequality and also of community in Chapel Hill.

Elizabeth Havice

 

GEOG 68-001: Freshwaters in the Anthropocene

FY Seminar | MWF, 10:10 AM – 11:00 AM | Instructor(s): Amanda DelVecchia

Freshwaters sustain myriad ecosystem services by providing drinking water, irrigation, inland fisheries, transportation, recreational opportunities, nutrient cycling, and biodiversity. At the same time, both water quality and quantity are impacted by land use, water abstraction, damming, contamination, and climate change. This seminar will focus (1) on understanding how these anthropogenic pressures affect freshwater ecosystems differently across ecoregions, and (2) how management, legislative, and social initiatives have adapted or developed solutions. We will focus mainly on the United States but consider case studies from around the world. Students should be prepared to read and discuss three materials per week. These reading materials will include a range of popular media including podcasts, newspaper articles, and book chapters, as well as scientific articles and overviews. We will also spend some time exploring and talking about streams accessible to the UNC campus. Class will culminate with research projects in which students get to explore a topic of their choice and presenting findings to their peers.

Amanda DelVecchia

I am a physical geographer focusing on freshwater ecosystem ecology and biogeochemistry. This involves connecting various spatial and temporal scales, and biotic and abiotic factors, within groundwater, lakes, wetlands, rivers, and their watersheds. In particular, I ask how connectivity between different parts of the landscape (including those we cannot see!), and over time, affect functions like carbon and nutrient cycling, food webs, and greenhouse gas dynamics. By understanding these connections, we can better predict how freshwaters react to climate change and anthropogenic alteration, so that we may better protect freshwater biodiversity and function. I use a mix of empirical and data science, and work across the U.S. and internationally. You can learn more about my research by visiting my website at amandadelvecchia.weebly.com, by emailing me, or by visiting during my office hours, in which case I can promise you a warm reception and an offer for tea.

 

GLBL 89-001: The Migratory Experience

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Carmen Huerta-Bapat

The course will critically analyze the migrant experience in North America and Europe with a focus on the experience of migrants from Mexico. Although the popular media often portrays migrants as agentless individuals making haphazard decisions, migration is a calculated decision that individuals, families, and groups make to improve their living conditions. We will explore the motivation of migrants, the nature of the migrant journey to their destination states, their integration and adaptation into their new host societies and the backlash endured. Through historical readings and selected works of literature we will explore what motivates and drives their choices, what guides their actions and what keeps them focus and grounded during their perilous journey. We will also discuss the significant role that the U.S and European governments have in influencing an individuals’ decisions to migrate.

Carmen Huerta-Bapat

Dr. Huerta-Bapat holds a PhD in sociology from UNC-Chapel Hill, an MA in sociology from UNC–Chapel Hill, and an MA in political science from Rice University. She has proudly “sampled” multiple Ph.D programs before settling as a sociologist and consequently her understanding of the world and how she conceptualized knowledge is multi-foci. Her research agenda takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding how institutions such as universities, schools and police bureaucracies are working to incorporate underrepresented racial and ethnic groups with a particular interest in immigrant communities. Her research ranges from exploring police behavior toward new Latino immigrants in North Carolina, the social and health impact associated with persecutory immigration policies, the negative impact of micro-aggressions on first-generation college students, and parental involvement amongst Latino families in public education. Her recent work with the School of Public Health draws on her social science training, lived experiences as a Latina immigrant to ensure that health interventions with marginalized communities are not prescriptive, paternalistic and overbearing, but instead they are grounded on respect, mutual understanding and enduring social relations to yield change for all parties involved. In addition to her research work she owns Borderless Equity- a consulting firm specializing in help organizations improve their internal cohesiveness, morale and productivity. Some of her clients include the Department of Health and Human Services in NC, The Airforce Research Lab, and various Care Management Organizations in New Jersey.

 

GSLL 56-001: Germans, Jews, and the History of Anti-Semitism

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): Adi Nester | Same as: JWST 56-001

This seminar offers first-year students an introduction to the German-Jewish experience and the history of anti-semitism in Germany, from early modernity to the present day. Students in this seminar will learn to analyze a variety of texts (both literary and philosophical), musical works, and films in relation to the history of Jews in German-speaking countries, and will be able to apply their knowledge to their analysis of present-day manifestations of antisemitism and xenophobia in Germany. The course has no requisites and presumes no prior knowledge of the subject matter.

Adi Nester

Adi Nester received her Ph.D. in German Studies from the University of Colorado Boulder and holds additional degrees in Musicology and Piano Performance from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and the University of Southern California. She joined the department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at UNC in fall 2020. Adi’s research focuses on German-Jewish Studies and the intersection of literature, music, theology, and politics in the cultures and traditions of German-speaking countries.

 

GSLL 82-001: Doctor Stories

FY Seminar | MWF, 9:05 AM – 9:55 AM | Instructor(s): Stanislav Shvabrin

Explores and reflects on the experience and significance of being a doctor in Russia and the United States, analyzing “doctors’ stories” presented in fiction, nonfiction, film, and other media. Previously offered as SLAV 82.

Stanislav Shvabrin

Stanislav Shvabrin has researched, published and lectured on the history and culture of Russian diasporas, comparative verse theory, poetics and politics of national memory and translation studies. Apart from his scholarly and editorial work on Vladimir Nabokov, he has written on Georgy Ivanov, Andrei Kurbsky, Mikhail Kuzmin and Marina Tsvetaeva.

 

HIST 51-001: Latin American Revolutions

FY Seminar | TR, 8:00 AM – 9:15 AM | Instructor(s): Andrew Walker

This course explores the problem of revolutionary upheaval in Latin American history, from the revolutionary wars of the independence era (1810-1825) to revolutionary episodes of the 20th century.

Andrew Walker

Andrew Walker is a historian of slavery, emancipation, nation-building, and racial formations in the Atlantic World, with a focus on Haiti and the Greater Caribbean in the nineteenth-century.

His current book project, Haitian Santo Domingo: From Emancipation to Separation, uses local notarial and administrative records from the city of Santo Domingo to tell the story of how Hispaniola, an island governed by independent Haiti for 22 years, became divided into two nations. The book argues that the transition from unification to division cemented revolutionary antislavery as a foundational legacy of both Haiti and the Dominican Republic, but also generated paradoxical silences surrounding racial inequalities in the modern Dominican Republic.

Dr. Walker's published work has appeared in the William & Mary Quarterly, the Law and History Review, and Slavery & Abolition. He has also contributed book chapters to the Routledge Companion to Nineteenth-Century Latin America and the edited volume Santo Domingo, 1821-2021: Bicentenario de la Independencia Efi?mera, published by the Archivo General de la Nación of the Dominican Republic.

Previously, Dr. Walker held postdoctoral fellowships at the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and at Wesleyan University. Dr. Walker received a Ph.D. in History from the University of Michigan, and a B.A. in History and French Studies from Duke University.

Dr. Walker teaches courses on Caribbean history, modern Latin American history, and Latin American studies.

 

HIST 63-001: Water, Conflict, and Connection: the Middle East and Ottoman Lands

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Sarah Shields

Despite its centrality for the lives and the livelihoods of people in the Middle East, water has seldom been examined in its own right as a contributing factor to its history. This new First Year Seminar will explore the many ways in which water has shaped the history of the region, and the effects it currently has on life in the Middle East.

Along the Mediterranean and Aegean coasts as well as the Red Sea and Arab/Persian Gulf, seafaring and fishing played important roles in the economy; in the Gulf, pearl-diving became an important local industry as well. Agricultural innovations allowed permanent settlement in areas with little rainfall. Rivers and seas were essential for transportation, connecting populations of far-flung parts of the Middle East with each other, facilitating commerce and pilgrimage. The availability of clean water has become an increasing problem as industrialization and consumerism soil beaches and sully the region’s drinking supplies. Water and conflict have been indivisible in the region, since water is one of the crucial and rare resources in the Middle East. Some have argued, for example, that the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians can only be resolved by taking water resources into account; others have pointed to recent drought in Syria as a major factor contributing to the uprising that began in 2011. This course will focus in turn on the historical, cultural, and contemporary issues surrounding the presence and absence of water in the Middle East.

Sarah Shields

Sarah Shields has been at UNC for decades, and both of her children have graduated wearing Tar Heel blue. She teaches courses on the modern Middle East, the conflict over Israel/Palestine, the history of Iraq, and a variety of courses on water in the Middle East. Her current research is on the Middle East and the establishment of borders after World War I. She has enjoyed teaching at UNC so much that she has even accompanied UNC students to programs in Turkey, England, and South Africa.

 

HIST 66-001: Film and History in Europe and the United States, 1908-1968

FY Seminar | TR, 5:00 PM – 6:15 PM | Instructor(s): Donald Reid

In this course, we will analyze the re-presentation of historical events and movements of the twentieth century in a number of landmark films. We will ask how a film can help us better understand resistance in a past situation, and, through their reactions to individual films, audiences’ relations, in particular times and places. to these representations of the past. In this class, students will view and discuss a dozen films. There is little reading for this class. The instructor will lay out the historical context and the historical situation which each film shows (and does not show), but the emphasis of the class is on students’ use of evidence from their viewings to develop insightful readings of the past and how it can and has been interpreted. Particular attention will be given to the concept of resistance–what are its qualities and attributes manifest in a wide variety of historical situations and what are the ways that film presents resistance and helps audiences understand it in new ways.

Donald Reid

Donald Reid is an historian of the French Resistance, of labor movements in France, and of the Long 1968 (1962-1981) in France.. He received the Tanner Award for excellence in undergraduate teaching. Reid has published widely on the relation of literature and film to the interpretation and presentation of history. His current book project is “Resistance in the Barracks: French Conscripts in the 1968 Years.”

 

HIST 67-001: Maid in America, Made in China: Laboring Women in Global Perspective

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Katherine Turk

Public figures ranging from former U.S. President Jimmy Carter to New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof have suggested women’s increased entry into the labor market as a cure for the problems that face their families and their societies. But scholars have demonstrated that paid work has offered women new freedoms while subjecting them to new forms of control. This course will explore that paradox by examining women’s diverse experiences as workers historically and today.

Katherine Turk

Katherine Turk is Associate Professor of History and Adjunct Associate Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at UNC-Chapel Hill. She teaches and researches on women, gender and sexuality and their intersections with work, law and social movements in the modern United States.

 

HIST 72-001: Women's Voices: 20th-Century European History in Female Memory

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Jennifer A. Boittin

The course examines 20th-century European history through the lenses of women’s autobiographical writings. It explores women’s voices from different generational, social, and national backgrounds and asks what formed their memories.

Jennifer A. Boittin

Jennifer A. Boittin is the Frank Porter Graham Distinguished Professor of Global History. She received her Ph.D. in History from Yale University and was previously a professor at Penn State University. Her research and teaching look at how colonial spaces in West Africa, Southeast Asia, North Africa, and the French Caribbean were shaped by intersections between class, politics, and urban culture around the world wars and decolonization. Completed in part thanks to a Paris Institute for Advanced Studies fellowship, her second book is entitled Undesirable: Passionate Mobility and Women’s Defiance of French Colonial Policing, 1919-1952 (2022, University of Chicago Press). Undesirable tells the virtually unknown history of hundreds of women in Southeast Asia (French Indochina) and West Africa (AOF) tracked by authorities because they were traveling alone and claiming Frenchness. Drawn from Cambodian, French, and Senegalese archives, Undesirable’s focus on how ordinary people react to being policed gives historical depth to pressing contemporary issues of migration and violence in France today and of similar reckonings on a global scale.

Boittin’s first book, Colonial Metropolis: The Urban Grounds of Anti-imperialism and Feminism in Interwar Paris (2010, University of Nebraska Press) is an innovative, intersectional history of radical interwar politics. She has also published extensively on the Nardal sisters, Lamine Senghor, Tiémoko Garan Kouyaté, Black anti-imperialism, masculinity, Black and African diaspora, Josephine Baker, and women travelers. She is a Past President of the Western Society of French History, editor of French Colonial History, and founding member on the editorial committee for Marronnages, les questions raciales au crible des sciences sociales.

 

HIST 81-001: Diaries, Memoirs, and Testimonies of the Holocaust

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Karen Auerbach

In ghettos and hiding places during the Holocaust, European Jews and other victims of Nazism recorded their experiences in diaries and other chronicles. Efforts to preserve individual histories continued after the war as survivors wrote memoirs and gave oral testimonies beginning in the earliest postwar years. In this course, students will read diaries, memoirs and literature as well as listen to oral histories to understand the history of the Holocaust through life narratives and to explore tensions between history and memory.

Karen Auerbach

Professor Karen Auerbach is assistant professor of history and Stuart E. Eizenstat Fellow in the Carolina Center for Jewish Studies. She is the author of The House at Ujazdowskie 16: Jewish Families in Warsaw after the Holocaust (2013) and editor of Aftermath: Genocide, Memory and History (2015). Prior to arriving at UNC, she taught at universities in Australia and England as well as at Virginia Tech and Brown University. She has lived for extended periods in Poland, where she was based at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw

 

HIST 89-001: Food in U.S. History

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Heather Lee

This seminar explores food as both a historical object and a lens for examining power, inequality, and migration in U.S. history. We’ll trace food’s role from the Columbian Exchange to the early 20th century, analyzing how settler colonialism, slavery, and urbanization shaped food markets and labor. Through primary sources and historical scholarship, we’ll examine immigrant foodways, racial and gendered consumption, and the political economy of food. By the course’s end, students will understand how food has functioned as both a tool of oppression and empowerment and how it helps recover the histories of marginalized communities.

Heather Lee

Heather Ruth Lee is a historian of Asian American history with expertise at the intersection of immigration, law and policy, and digital methods. Her research examines the fundamental role of legal status in shaping race and ethnicity in the United States, revealing how immigration policies structured the lives of both documented and undocumented migrants. Using both quantitative data and archival sources, she uncovers historical patterns in transnational migration and the strategies migrants used to navigate legal barriers. Her work highlights how interracial encounters—particularly between Asians and Whites—shaped broader race relations and drove social, cultural, and political transformations.

 

HIST 89-002: Global History of Food

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Michelle King

What does it mean to study food history, and how do we approach it from a global perspective? The world of food (and the food of the world) is a huge subject, and the focus in this class will be on historical texts and topics (as opposed to contemporary food issues), and on global examples (with an emphasis on non-Western regions, including Asia, Latin America, Africa, the Middle East). Class topics will center on three major themes: Food as Identity (Nation, Gender, Memory, Diaspora), Food as Value (Taste, Commodity, Feasting, Famine); Food in its Modern Forms (Industrialization, Consumption, Globalization). The course emphasis will be on giving students the opportunity to practice fundamental skills of historical methodology (written primary and secondary source analysis), and using what they have learned for a creative final project presentation, based on an oral history interview.

Michelle King

Michelle King is an Associate Professor of History, specializing in modern Chinese gender and food history. She is the editor of Culinary Nationalism in Asia (Bloomsbury Academic, 2019) and a special issue on Chinese culinary regionalism in Global Food History (Summer 2020). Her latest research project focuses on the career of Taiwan’s beloved cooking celebrity, Fu Pei-mei (1931-2004), for which she was awarded a NEH Public Scholars Fellowship. She had the best bowl of noodles in her life twenty-five years ago at a nameless farmstead in rural Hunan province and has been seeking its equal ever since.

 

HIST 89-004: America's Founding Documents

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): TBD

This first-year seminar introduces students to the foundations of U.S. democracy through its most significant speeches, declarations, letters, proclamations, and other writings. Together, we will analyze, discuss, and write about foundational documents from the Declaration of Independence to more efforts to form “a more perfect Union.”

 

IDST 89-001: The Way of Medicine

FY Seminar | T, 6:30 PM – 9:00 PM | Instructor(s): John Thorp

This seminar will discuss and explore how health should be defined and various classical and contemporary views of medical practice. Ethical controversies in modern medicine will be discused and anlayzed.

John Thorp

I am the McAllister Distinguished Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology in the UNC School of Medicine and have practiced clinical medicine since 1983 in Chapel Hill. My research interests include clinical epidemiology, biomedical ethics, perinatal substance abuse, and preterm birth.

 

JWST 56-001: Germans, Jews, and the History of Anti-Semitism

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): Adi Nester | Same as: GSLL 56-001

This seminar offers first-year students an introduction to the German-Jewish experience and the history of anti-semitism in Germany, from early modernity to the present day. Students in this seminar will learn to analyze a variety of texts (both literary and philosophical), musical works, and films in relation to the history of Jews in German-speaking countries, and will be able to apply their knowledge to their analysis of present-day manifestations of antisemitism and xenophobia in Germany. The course has no requisites and presumes no prior knowledge of the subject matter.

Adi Nester

Adi Nester received her Ph.D. in German Studies from the University of Colorado Boulder and holds additional degrees in Musicology and Piano Performance from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and the University of Southern California. She joined the department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at UNC in fall 2020. Adi’s research focuses on German-Jewish Studies and the intersection of literature, music, theology, and politics in the cultures and traditions of German-speaking countries.

 

JWST 70-001: Jewish Spain: History and Culture Across the Hispanic World

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Adam Cohn | Same as: ROML 70-001

Jewish life and civilization in Spain have been compared to a drama in which moments of cultural flourishing are mixed with tragedy and exile. This seminar explores the history and culture of the Golden Age of medieval Spanish Jewry, as well as how modern Hispanic cultures have interpreted and reimagined this historical past. We will interrogate how this fascination with Sephardic Jews overlaps with a variety of topics: national identity, anti-Semitism, liberal democracy, colonialism, exile, Holocaust memory, among others. Throughout this journey across time and space, we will think about the relevance of Sepharad, or Jewish Spain, to our present by working with a diverse group of cultural products that includes poetry, paintings, film, memoirs, and novels. The texts we will study come from numerous Hispanic cultures: Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Cuba.

Adam Cohn

Adam Cohn specializes in modern Spanish literature, with a focus on the nexus of race, diaspora, and Judaism in early twentieth-century Spain. His current research project analyzes the relationship between liberal philosephardic thought and (anti-)colonialism in the Spanish novel. He is also interested in contemporary Jewish culture in Spain, Federico García Lorca, and Spanish Civil War literature. Adam holds a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from the University of Virginia, and joined Carolina in fall 2023.

 

LING 89-001: Decipherment of Ancient Scripts

FY Seminar | MWF, 2:30 PM – 3:20 PM | Instructor(s): David Mora-Marin

The seminar deals with the origin and evolution of writing systems; the methods for deciphering ancient scripts and studying contemporary scripts; and the socio-cultural and linguistic underpinnings of literacy in the ancient and contemporary worlds. Students will study and analyze, through a series of workshops and group projects, the early Sumerian, Egyptian, Harappan, Chinese and Mesoamerican writing systems—the five writing systems that account for much of the diversity of scripts known today. These are all non-alphabetic scripts, and studying them offers insights into the cognitive processes involved in the origin and evolution of writing, the relationship between script and image, and between script and language, and the challenges of learning to read and write in any writing system. Students will use group and individual projects emphasizing linguistic methodologies to study a variety of undeciphered (or partly deciphered) scripts such as Etruscan (Italy), Cretan Hieroglyphic (Crete), Linear A (Crete), Rongorongo (Easter Island), Zapotec (Oaxaca Valley, Mexico), Olmec (Veracruz, Mexico), Harappan (India), Khipu (Peru) and the increasingly visual and pictorial multimedia literacy strategies of the contemporary world.

David Mora-Marin

David Mora-Marin is a linguistic anthropologist who specializes in historical linguistics and writing systems. He focuses on the study of the contemporary and ancient indigenous languages of Mexico and Central America. His goal is to utilize linguistic data to better understand the history of their speakers (e.g. migrations, contacts with speakers of other languages, social and political changes, economic development), as well as the nature of language itself (i.e. how languages are structured and why they change). Mora-Marin studies three of the thirteen or so Mesoamerican scripts: Olmec, Epi-Olmec and Mayan. He has also carried out field projects in Oaxaca and Yucatan (Mexico) to document contemporary indigenous languages.

 

LTAM 52-001: The Cuban Revolution, Latin America, and the United States

FY Seminar | T, 3:30 PM – 6:00 PM | Instructor(s): Louis Pérez

This course will examine facets of one of the transcendental events of the twentieth century in Latin America. Under the auspices of la revolución, Cubans embarked upon an ambitious revolutionary project. Virtually all previously existing national institutions were abolished, modified, or otherwise reorganized in the service of an egalitarian project inscribed into the claim of national sovereignty and self-determination.

The seminar will focus on the origins and development of the Cuban revolution, spanning the years of the insurrectionary war of the 1950s through the present. The seminar will direct attention to in-depth analyses of the salient facets of the Cuban experience of the past fifty years–including the context of social change, relations between Cuba and the United States, the role played by Fidel Castro, change and changelessness in gender and race relations, and the impact of the Cuban revolution in Latin America and the world–all through multi-disciplinary perspectives as a way to arrive at a deeper understanding of the multiple and interacting facets of the revolution.

This course has several objectives. First, it seeks to promote the development of knowledge of the complexities of the Cuban revolution, including the antecedents and sources of the revolution, the “whys” and the “hows” of the revolution, the personalities and the policies, the cultural context and political setting of change, and the complicated relationship between Cuba and the United States.

The seminar is also designed to promote skills for the evaluation of conflicting arguments and assessment of multi-disciplinary perspectives, with particular attention given to issues of evidence, disciplinary diversity, and the character of sources. It seeks to develop awareness of the process of critical interpretation and the means with which to make judgments on the Cuban revolution as a transcendental event of twentieth-century Latin America.

But more than the acquisition of specific knowledge relating to Cuba and the Cuban revolution, students will be encouraged to “think through” controversy, to develop analytical frameworks within which to evaluate competing–and often conflicting–claims, and most of all to develop the skills of critical thinking as a method with which to take measure of issues–often controversial issues–that matter.

Emphasis will also be given to the practice of formal writing: the experience of preparing a coherent narrative to convey ideas, render judgments, and craft arguments and to develop the skills necessary for clarity and cogency.

Students will be asked to prepare analytical written assessments of the assigned readings and to engage in thoughtful and respectful discussion and debate in a seminar environment. This implies skills related to the evaluation of information–including scholarly texts, biography, novels, and film–and the formulation of arguments based on newly-acquired knowledge. It involves also a critical reading and formulation of arguments and points of view.

Louis Pérez

Principal research interests center on nineteenth- and twentieth-century Caribbean, with emphasis on Spanish-speaking Caribbean. Current research explores the character of society and gender in nineteenth-century Cuba.

 

MATH 231-01F: Calculus of Functions of One Variable I

FY Launch | MWF, 8:00 AM – 8:50 AM | Instructor(s): Richard McLaughlin | Lab/Recitation: MATH 231-626
Requisite(s): Prerequisites, MATH 110 and 130; Requires a grade of C- or better in MATH 130 or placement by the department

Math 231 is designed to provide a detailed introduction to the fundamental ideas of calculus. It does not assume any prior calculus knowledge, but the student is expected to be proficient working with functions and their graphs as well as manipulating variable expressions and solving equations using algebra. Students may not receive credit for both MATH 231 and MATH 241.

This is the Honors section of Math 231. It offers a more demanding and deeper treatment than the regular sections as well as more involved applications. There will be more emphasis on understanding theory than in other sections, and students will be expected to understand and reproduce proofs of theorems and formulas. In addition, this section will cover extra topics. Applications will be more involved and will sometimes involve real data. Homework will be more challenging, with more emphasis on creative problem solving and less emphasis on drill. Students will be expected to complete a final project.

Richard McLaughlin

 

MUSC 120-01F: Foundations in Music

FY Launch | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Naomi André

If you are planning on majoring or minoring in music: this course is designed to open up the pathways in music at Carolina for you. It’s an introduction to the different approaches to thinking about and doing music–whether you’re an active performer, an electronic music fiend, a budding music researcher, an entrepreneurial arts administrator in the making…or more! Our classroom meetings expose students to a range of ways to “think about music,” emphasizing the breadth of routes music and sound take through human lives. As a foundational component of the music major and minor, the course emphasizes a range of genres of music making and fosters curious listening. Sometimes we’ll be challenged to think differently about very familiar sounds, sometimes challenged to connect to music very different from that we feel as ours. Expect to leave the semester with a new sense of what music can be for you at Carolina.

Naomi André

Dr. Naomi André (David G. Frey Distinguished Professor) received her B.A. in music from Barnard College and M.A. and Ph.D. in musicology from Harvard University. She was previously a professor at the University of Michigan in the Departments of Afroamerican and African Studies, Women's and Gender Studies, and the Residential College.

Dr. André's research focuses on opera and issues surrounding gender, voice, and race. Her publications include topics on Italian opera, Schoenberg, women composers, and teaching opera in prisons. Her books, including, Voicing Gender: Castrati, Travesti, and the Second Woman in Early Nineteenth-Century Italian Opera (2006) and Blackness in Opera (2012, co-edited collection) focus on opera from the nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries and explore constructions of gender, race and identity. African Performance Arts and Political Acts (2021, co-edited collection) focuses on how performance and the arts shape the narratives of cultural history and politics on the African continent. Black Opera: History, Power, Engagement (2018) is a monograph on staging race and history in opera today in the United States and South Africa. She has served on the Graduate Alumni Council for Harvard University's Graduate School of Art and Sciences, the Executive Committee for the Criminal Justice Program at the American Friends Service Committee (Ann Arbor, MI), and has served as an evaluator for the Fulbright Senior Specialist Program.

In 2019, Dr. André was named the inaugural Scholar in Residence at the Seattle Opera which has continued to the present. In her role, she advises Seattle Opera staff and leadership on matters of race and gender in opera; consults in artistic planning as it relates to representation of race and gender; and participates in company panel discussions, podcast recordings, and contributes essays to opera programs. She has continued to work with major and regional opera companies through panels, short residencies, and program essays.

In addition, Dr. André has worked with every major opera company in the United States and many regional opera companies and festivals. This summer she is a scholar-in-residence for the Des Moines Metro Opera. She has written program essays for recordings of Blue (CD, Tesori and Thompson, 2022) and Fire Shut Up in My Bones (DVD Blanchard and Lemmons 2022). On February 4, 2022 she testified before the Committee on the Judiciary as a Witness for House Resolution 301 hearing (Examining the History and Importance of Lift Every Voice and Sing to become a National Hymn (sponsored by Congressman James E. Clyburn, South Carolina).

 

MUSC 63-001: Music on Stage and Screen

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Anne MacNeil

This seminar is designed to offer students the tools and techniques for understanding multi-media, staged musical works like opera, musical theater, and film. The goal of the seminar is to develop students’ analytical skills in verbal and non-verbal media and to encourage their visualization of the potential and implications of artistic forms and structures. No ability to read music is required. We will discuss musical, visual, and textual narratives, source materials, and the various means by which such multi-media artworks are transmitted to modern audiences.

Anne MacNeil

Anne MacNeil holds a PhD in the History & Theory of Music from the University of Chicago and a Master's Degree from the Eastman School of Music. She is a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome and the Authority of Record at the Library of Congress on the Renaissance commedia dell'arte actress Isabella Andreini. Prof. MacNeil is also a founding directory of IDEA: Isabella d'Este Archive, an international research consortium that studies the music and culture of Renaissance Italy through the lens of the marchesa of Mantua, Isabella d'Este (1474-1539).

 

MUSC 89-001: Songs of the Slave: The History of the African American Spiritual

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): LaToya Lain

Born out of the oppressions of slavery, the spiritual is a folk song created by Africans forcibly brought to America and enslaved for 250 years. Spirituals were created through the combination of African melodies, rhythms, and performance practices with the influences of European Christian Hymnody. The Library of Congress has collected over 6,000 of these melodies. They contain themes of suffering, hope, rebellion, and longing. They tell the story of Africans in America through song and has become the catalyst through which all “American Music” was born. This course will examine and chronicle the origin and performance practice of the Negro Spiritual, it’s presence throughout American History and its influences on Contemporary American Music.

LaToya Lain

Applauded for her "wonderfully rich," "powerful," and "captivating" voice, American singer LaToya Lain, a native of New Orleans, Louisiana, studied voice at the University of Cincinnati - College Conservatory of Music, Florida State University, and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Before joining the voice faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Dr. Lain served on the voice faculties of Central Michigan University, New York University, and Oakwood University. Equally at home in the teaching studio and on the performance stage, LaToya continues to perform solo recitals, oratorio, and opera worldwide. She is currently a member of the star-studded cast of Porgy and Bess at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. Dr. Lain's research includes the intensive study and performance practice of Negro Spirituals. She has performed her lecture recital "Narrative of a Slave Woman: Songs of Hope, Justice, and Freedom" on concert stages and universities throughout the world. Consequently, she was one of 57 experts invited to author a short chapter in The Voice Teacher's Cookbook: Creative Recipes for Teachers of Singing, as part of a series addressed to various groups of musicians. Her chapter is called "Delectable Diction and Dialect in the Negro Spiritual" and it was published this summer by Meredith Music Resources.

 

MUSC 89-001: Music and Incarceration in the United States

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Mark Katz

This course explores the place of music within the carceral system of the United States, particularly since the early 20th century. Among the questions that guide course content and discussion are the following: How do incarcerated people claim and reclaim their humanity through music? What are the arguments for and against facilitating music-making in carceral spaces? How have incarcerated musicians and their music been represented in scholarship and by the media? What ethical challenges and considerations face those who facilitate or study music in prisons? The seminar will examine a variety of musical genres and combine historical and ethnographic approaches. Throughout the course students will engage with incarcerated and formerly incarcerated musicians.

Mark Katz

Mark Katz is John P. Barker Distinguished Professor of Music at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His books include Capturing Sound: How Technology has Changed Music, Build: The Power of Hip Hop Diplomacy in a Divided World, Music and Technology: A Very Short Introduction, and Rap and Redemption on Death Row (co-authored with incarcerated musician Alim Braxton). He was the 2016 recipient of the Royal Musical Association’s Dent Medal for his contributions to musicology and is currently at work on a third edition of Capturing Sound.

 

NURS 89-001: Navigating and Advocating for your Wellness

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Maureen Baker

Healthcare systems are responsible for fostering the competence and safety of practitioners. Patients and families are integral members of the healthcare team. Therefore, it is essential to ensure that individuals possess the necessary knowledge and skills to navigate the complex healthcare system and advocate for high-quality and safe healthcare to ensure their optimal well-being.

Navigating and Advocating for your Wellness is a dynamic and interactive freshman seminar course designed to empower students with the knowledge and skills to become actively engaged participants in their own health and healthcare. Through a combination of expert guest speakers, real-world case studies, and hands-on learning activities, students will explore the principles of patient engagement, the dynamics of the healthcare system, and the critical role of effective communication in healthcare interactions.

Maureen Baker

Dr. Baker, a Clinical Associate Professor in the School of Nursing, is deeply dedicated to education and inspiring the next generation of nurses. Holding a position as an Apple Distinguished Educator, she spearheads the UNC SON EmpowerEd program, utilizing iPads to enhance nursing education, foster student engagement, and promote scholarly productivity. Her research areas focus on patient engagement and innovation within nursing education.

Driven by a commitment to patient safety, Dr. Baker has redirected her attention from nurses to future patients. Her goal is to equip them with the knowledge and skills necessary to navigate the healthcare system effectively, contributing to the development of a robust culture of safety in healthcare. In her teaching approach, students can anticipate being challenged to employ innovative strategies, fostering both learning and the adoption of critical life skills.

 

PHIL 51-001: Who Was Socrates?

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Patricia Marechal

The historical Socrates did not write any philosophical works; instead, he engaged in philosophy through conversation. Yet, he made such a profound impression on some of his Athenian contemporaries that other philosophers wrote dialogues featuring him as the main character. Plato portrays Socrates defending the view that the unexamined life is not worth living, that no one voluntarily chooses to do wrong, that suffering injustice is worse than committing it, that all wrongdoing arises from ignorance, and that goodness amounts to wisdom. These views have been among the most influential—and, at times, the most controversial—in the history of philosophy. Even today, some philosophers agree with them, while others reject them. In this course, we will explore Socrates’ philosophical method and the philosophical theses attributed to him. Our goal will be to critically examine Socratic philosophy: Is Socrates right? What arguments does he offer in support of his views? What further arguments could be made in favor of or against them? This course will focus on developing philosophical skills through engagement with Socratic philosophy, while also addressing questions of enduring importance for how to live a good life.

Patricia Marechal

Patricia Marechal obtained her PhD from Harvard University in 2018. She specializes in Classical Greek philosophy, with a focus on ancient theories of the soul. Her research interests include ethics, moral psychology, and epistemology in the works of Plato and Aristotle. In her work, she explores the connection between affective states and intellectual capabilities, types of human motivation, and the extent to which ancient moral psychological models are shaped by the recognition that we are social beings by nature. She has also written about philosophical conceptions of non-human animals in Antiquity, the history of vegetarianism, and Greco-Roman medicine, particularly Galen’s views on philosophy of mind and teleology.

 

PHIL 85-001: Reason, Religion, and Reality in the Copernican Revolution

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Marc Lange

The reasoning by which Galileo and his contemporaries defended the Copernican model of the solar system (the “heliocentric” model – that is, with the Earth orbiting the Sun rather than the Sun orbiting the Earth) can puzzle us even today. Here are a few of the questions that we could ask about the reasoning given by Copernicus, Galileo, and their contemporaries. Did Copernicus’s arguments support the heliocentric model strongly enough to justify believing it true? Or was it unjustified until Galileo amassed telescopic evidence for it? Or was it unjustified until even later – when Newtonian physics was developed? Or did it remain unjustified until even later – when various mechanical and optical discoveries were made in the nineteenth century? Was the Catholic Church justified at the time of Galileo in regarding Copernicus’s theory as just one among many fairly successful techniques for predicting the night sky’s appearance? Did Galileo bring his sentence (at his famous – and notorious – trial) on himself? Could Galileo argue persuasively for his telescope’s reliability? Could Galileo use mere “thought-experiments” (as opposed to actual experiments) to defend Copernicanism? In this course, we will grapple with these and related questions in order to arrive at a more nuanced understanding of the logic by which scientific theories in general are tested and, ultimately, justified. We will also try to use this historical episode to understand better how political, social, and cultural factors can influence the reception of a scientific theory – even today! We will learn some of the means by which the biases and presuppositions introduced by these factors were overcome (eventually) in the Copernican Revolution, and we will apply some of these lessons to current science. At various points during our discussions, each student will submit in written form his or her own best reconstructions of some of the arguments that were given for or against the Copernican model. In other words, each student will offer his or her best advice regarding how a given scientist might have argued for or against Copernicanism, anticipating possible objections and responses. Students will occasionally form groups to examine and to critique one another’s proposals, with each group finally presenting its best thoughts orally to the rest of the class for further discussion. Students will, in effect, be putting Galileo on trial once again – not for heresy or for disobeying authority, but for having convincing or for having insufficient evidence for his Copernicanism. In all of these ways, students will learn how to appreciate sympathetically the competing astronomical theories from the perspective of the 16th and 17th centuries, when the truth was in some doubt. Along the way, students will wrestle with some of the puzzles and apparent paradoxes arising even from today’s best philosophical accounts of the logic of theory testing in science. No previous background in science will be assumed. Students will not need to purchase any books.

Marc Lange

Marc Lange is Theda Perdue Distinguished Professor of Philosophy. He specializes in the philosophy of science and related areas of metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics, along with the philosophy of physics and the philosophy of biology. He won UNC's 2016 Distinguished Teaching Award for Post-Baccalaureate Instruction and a Bowman and Gordon Gray Distinguished Term Professorship for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching. (For a brief sample of his teaching, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_SKmqh5Eu4Y)

 

PHIL 86-001: Persons and Identity

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): Jim Pryor

You are different now from how you were ten years ago; but still you are one and the same person, who underwent those changes. (You weren’t replaced by an imposter.) What makes you the particular person you are, and the same person as the youth you used to be? What kind of thing is a person, that it can maintain its identity even through such changes? Are we identical to our life stories? Is the idea of a persisting self just an illusion? What would it take for a person to stop existing? Do you have an immortal soul that could survive the death of your human body? Or are you identical to your body? Might it be possible to survive the death of your body by having your brain, or the information in your brain, transplanted into a new body? or into a computer network? Might amnesia or dementia amount to one person’s ceasing and being replaced by another? Would teleportation like they use in Star Trek be a fast means for you to travel — or would that be another way for you to cease to exist and be replaced by a perfect copy? Why do we take special interest in our own continued existence as persons, moreso than the continued existence of people similar to us, or who will push forward our projects? Should we?

Jim Pryor

Jim Pryor joined the philosophy department in 2020. Before that, he spent time at NYU, Harvard, and Princeton. His research and teaching spans epistemology, philosophy of language, and philosophy of mind. Issues he has focused on include: perception, evidence, belief, and confidence; our knowledge of our own minds; persons, memory, and the nature of the self; mistaken identity; and issues at the intersection of philosophy, linguistics, and computer science.

 

PHIL 89-001: Identity in African American Philosophy

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Tom Dougherty

In this discussion-focused First Year Seminar, we will closely read influential texts by African American philosophers that engage with issues concerning identity. We will ask questions like: What types of identity, if any, do all Black people have in common? What is the relationship between Black identity and Black culture? What types of Black identity are necessary for Black political solidarity? We will consider Black feminist insights about how some identities lie at the intersection of multiple social groups.

Tom Dougherty

Tom Dougherty is a philosophy professor who researches and teaches ethics and political philosophy. They have written books on the ethics of consent. They are from the UK and previously worked at Stanford, Cambridge, and Sydney University.

 

PHYS 118-01F: Introductory Calculus-based Mechanics and Relativity

FY Launch | MWF, 8:00 AM – 8:50 AM | Instructor(s): Muxin Zhang | Lab/Recitation: PHYS 118-401. Note: The PHYS 118-01F lecture will be combined with other PHYS 118 lecture sections, and it will be taught as a large survey class. PHYS 118-401, the studio section associated with this class, is the FY Launch section. Please be sure to enroll in the lecture, PHYS 118-01F, and the corresponding studio, PHYS 118-401, to fulfill the FY-LAUNCH requirement.
Requisite(s): Prerequisite, MATH 231; Pre- or Co-Requisite, MATH 232; permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisites

Mechanics of particles and rigid bodies. Newton’s laws; mechanical and potential energy; mechanical conservation laws; frame-dependence of physical laws; Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. Students may not receive credit for PHYS 118 in addition to PHYS 104, 114, or 116.

Muxin Zhang

Muxin Zhang received her PhD in Physics Education Research (PER) from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 2023 with Dr. Eric Kuo. Her thesis focused on analyzing cognitive and socio-emotional aspects of small group interactions in physics discussion sections and labs. She is particularly passionate about understanding the role of emotions in science education and scientific practices. She is currently teaching Physics 114 and Physics 118 courses at UNC-CH.

 

PHYS 118H-01F: Introductory Calculus-based Mechanics and Relativity

FY Launch | MWF, 8:00 AM – 8:50 AM | Instructor(s): Muxin Zhang | Lab/Recitation: PHYS 118H-401. Note: The PHYS 118-01F lecture will be combined with other PHYS 118 lecture sections, and it will be taught as a large survey class. PHYS 118H-401, the studio section associated with this class, is the FY Launch section. Please be sure to enroll in the lecture, PHYS 118H-01F, and the corresponding studio, PHYS 118H-401, to fulfill the FY-LAUNCH requirement.
Requisite(s): Prerequisite, MATH 231; Pre- or Co-Requisite, MATH 232; permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisites

Mechanics of particles and rigid bodies. Newton’s laws; mechanical and potential energy; mechanical conservation laws; frame-dependence of physical laws; Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. Students may not receive credit for PHYS 118 in addition to PHYS 104, 114, or 116.

Muxin Zhang

Muxin Zhang received her PhD in Physics Education Research (PER) from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign in 2023 with Dr. Eric Kuo. Her thesis focused on analyzing cognitive and socio-emotional aspects of small group interactions in physics discussion sections and labs. She is particularly passionate about understanding the role of emotions in science education and scientific practices. She is currently teaching Physics 114 and Physics 118 courses at UNC-CH.

 

PHYS 53-001: Handcrafting in the Nanoworld: Building Models and Manipulating Molecules

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): No items found

This seminar provides a general introduction to nanoscience and nanotechnology, focusing on recent advances in molecular electronics, nanomaterials, and biomedical research. Course activities include group model-building projects, presentations, and discussions of reading material.

No items found
 

PLAN 59-001: World's Fairs

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Alainna Thomas

This course introduces students to World’s Fairs in the US between 1893 and 1965 (1884 World Cotton Centennial, New Orleans; 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago; 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Saint Louis; 1939 New York World’s Fair; 1962 Seattle World’s Fair; 1964/1965 New York World’s Fair). We will look at how ideas about cities and world’s fairs changed over time. We will also look at the role World’s Fairs played in: (1) promoting a city’s place in the US and the world, (2) addressing social issues, and (3) disseminating ideas about progress. We will learn about world’s fairs through documentaries (video/audio), texts, as well as examine memorabilia from each of the Fairs. Students will be responsible for participating in weekly discussions on readings and biweekly journal responses. Students will work on a group project on a world’s fair and present at the end of the semester. This project can use traditional means of presentations–such as PowerPoint and posters, or it could be a podcast (5 minutes), video, or some other media.

Alainna Thomas

Dr. Allie Thomas looks at how technology can be used to address both environmental sustainability and social equity within the transportation sector. She relies upon qualitative methods to investigate the phenomenon of how and why technologies are accepted or rejected She sometimes embeds herself in the planning context to learn where the process succeeds or breaks down. Her work has looked bus rapid transit adaption in China, electric bikes in San Francisco, and the use of ridehailing services across Generation X and millennials in the Southeastern US. She is currently working on understanding how transit agencies adapt cashless fare technologies.

 

PLCY 55-001: Higher Education, the College Experience, and Public Policy

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Anna Krome-Lukens

Higher education is undergoing rapid transformations that may dramatically change the undergraduate college experience. In this course, you will examine urgent questions facing American colleges and universities. For example, why is the cost of college rising and what implications does this shift have for who attends and graduates from college? How well is higher education preparing students for jobs of the future? How has new technology reshaped the college experience, both academically and socially? How should universities respond to student needs and desires? What role should athletics play in higher education? We’ll explore these and other topics through class discussion, position papers, oral presentations and debates, and interactions with UNC faculty and staff. By introducing you to the history, institutions, and culture of higher education, this course also will help you transition into and make the most of your college experience.

Anna Krome-Lukens

Anna Krome-Lukens is a Teaching Assisant Professor and Director of Experiential Education in Public Policy. She completed her PhD in U.S. History at UNC-Chapel Hill, with research focused on the history of social welfare and public health policies. She developed her interest in pressing issues in higher education while she was in graduate school, through involvement in UNC’s graduate branch of student government, work in Undergraduate Retention, and service on several university-wide committees. As a member of the faculty, she continues to be involved in (and fascinated by) policy-making within the university.

 

PLCY 61H-001: Policy Entrepreneurship and Public/Private/Non-Profit Partnerships

FY Seminar | MW, 1:25 PM – 2:40 PM | Instructor(s): Daniel Gitterman

This seminar will define a policy entrepreneur and examine strategies used by policy entrepreneurs to achieve policy change or innovation in the policy making process. This course also aims to explore ways that public, private, and non-profit sectors collaborate to address problems that cannot be solved by one sector alone. There is growing recognition that sustainable solutions to some of the most complex challenges confronting our communities can benefit from these collaborative or “intersector” approaches.

Daniel Gitterman

Daniel Gitterman is Duncan MacRae ’09 and Rebecca Kyle MacRae Professor of Public Policy at UNC-Chapel Hill. He also serves as Director of the Honors Seminar in Public Policy and Global Affairs (Washington, DC).

 

PLCY 75-001: Debates in Public Policy and Racial Inequality

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Cassandra Davis

This course is designed to introduce students to debates about the impact of policies on inequalities in the United States. We will begin the class by reviewing work on inequalities more broadly. At the beginning of the semester, we will touch on topics like Black Lives Matter, historical oppression, systemic racism, and Whiteness. From there, we will move to investigate the use of education policy as a tool to maintain inequalities within the United States. We will tackle areas such as Indian boarding schools, the desegregation of schools, academic tracking, criminalization of Black and Brown students, and achievement testing.

Cassandra Davis

Dr. Cassandra Davis is a Research Assistant Professor of Public Policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Within the last four years, Dr. Davis has held the role of principal investigator on five research evaluations, with the most recent of these projects focused on the impacts of hurricanes on schools, educators, and students in low-income communities. Dr. Davis has also collaborated with school districts to assist them with improving graduation rates of underrepresented groups, supporting students with learning differences, identifying opportunity and achievement gaps amongst students, assessing the quality of professional development training for school personnel, and investigating ways to engage parents. Dr. Davis’ areas of interest include education policy, the impact of natural disaster on schools and communities, program evaluation, qualitative research methods, and the social and historical context in education. Dr. Davis holds a Ph.D. in Education from UNC Chapel Hill.

 

PLCY 76H-001: Global Health Policy

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Benjamin Meier

Global health policy impacts the health and well being of individuals and peoples throughout the world. Many determinants of health operate at a global level, and many national policies, social practices, and individual health behaviors are structured by global forces. Concern for the spread of infectious diseases, increasing rates of chronic diseases and the effectiveness of health systems to provide quality care are among the daunting challenges to health policy makers.

With profound social, political and economic changes rapidly challenging global health, the aim of this course in Global Health Policy is to provide students with a variety of opportunities to understand the epidemiologic trends in world health, the institutions of global health governance, and the effects of globalization on global and national health policy.

This course provides an introduction to the relationship between international relations, global health policy and public health outcomes. The focus of this course will be on public policy approaches to global health, employing interdisciplinary methodologies to understand selected public health policies, programs, and interventions. Providing a foundation for responding to global health harms, this course will teach students how to apply policy analysis to a wide range of critical issues in global health determinants, interventions, and impacts.

Benjamin Meier

Professor Benjamin Meier's interdisciplinary research—at the intersection of international law, public policy, and global health—examines the human rights norms that underlie global health policy. In teaching UNC courses in Justice in Public Policy, Health & Human Rights, and Global Health Policy, Professor Meier has been awarded the 2011 William C. Friday Award for Excellence in Teaching, the 2013 James M. Johnston Teaching Excellence Award, the 2015 Zachary Taylor Smith Distinguished Professorship in Undergraduate Teaching, and six straight annual awards for Best Teacher in Public Policy. He received his Ph.D. in Sociomedical Sciences from Columbia University, his J.D. and LL.M. in International and Comparative Law from Cornell Law School, and his B.A. in Biochemistry from Cornell University.

 

PLCY 79-001: Issues in Science and Technology Policy

FY Seminar | MWF, 1:25 PM – 2:15 PM | Instructor(s): Maria Carnovale

Intended for first-year students of any major, this course explores the role of public policy in shaping the innovation ecosystem where new science and technology emerge and how governments, organizations, and communities influence their development. By looking at contemporary and international case studies, we will examine key issues in the governance of emerging technologies, their ethical dimensions, and the intersection of science with issues like climate change, public health, and national security. Students will develop an understanding of policy-making processes, stakeholder engagement, and the role of public and private institutions in shaping science and technology landscapes. The course will also provide practical insights into regulatory frameworks, international collaboration, and the trade-offs involved in balancing innovation with safety, ethics, and public interest.

Maria Carnovale

Maria Carnovale studies under what conditions technology maximizes well-being without negatively impacting individuals and communities and how policies can foster this process. She has written about the social and ethical implications of digital platforms, digital contact tracing, and more recently smart sanitation, among other topics. In her classes, Maria draws from her academic work as a Technology and Human Rights Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School or as a Visiting Associate at the University of Notre Dame, with practical insights from her non-profit experience. An avid writer, her work has been published on Slate, Issues and Zocalo, among other publications.

 

PLCY 87-001: Education in a Multicultural Society

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Simona Goldin

This course focuses on education in the multicultural society of the United States. Diversity has been at the center of the American educational story, as society has continued to struggle with competing goals of assimilation and diversity, opportunity, and competition. The American dream that promises a better life through education has played out unevenly for different groups. This course aims to help students develop new understandings of the role and nature of schools and teaching, as well as to construct alternative perspectives on and approaches to examining educational issues. It will study inequality in public education in a way that is place-based, featuring extended opportunities for engaged learning in and around UNC.

Simona Goldin

Dr. Simona Goldin is a Research Associate Professor in the Department of Public Policy. Dr. Goldin has studied ways to transform the preparation of beginning teachers to teach in more racially just and equitable ways, and has elaborated the teaching practices that bridge children’s work in schools on academic content with their home and community-based experiences. Dr. Goldin holds a master’s degree in management and urban policy analysis from the New School University, and a Ph.D. in educational studies from the University of Michigan.

 

POLI 100-01F: American Democracy in Changing Times

FY Launch | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Jason Roberts

Why do Americans love democracy, but hate politics? Why are there only two political parties? Why do voters hate, yet respond to negative campaigning? This course will introduce students to politics in the United States, addressing these and many more questions about how American democracy works.

Jason Roberts

 

POLI 130-01F: Introduction to Comparative Politics

FY Launch | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Caitlin Andrews-Lee

This course examines the diversity of political arrangements in societies across the globe. Honors version available.

Caitlin Andrews-Lee

Caitlin Andrews-Lee is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She earned her Ph.D. in Government from the University of Texas at Austin. Prior to joining UNC, she was a postdoctoral fellow at Tulane University’s Center for Inter-American Policy and Research and an Assistant Professor at Toronto Metropolitan University.

Caitlin’s research and teaching interests are in comparative politics and political behavior, with an emphasis on charismatic leadership and followership in Latin America. She is the author of The Emergence and Revival of Charismatic Movements: Argentine Peronism and Venezuelan Chavismo (Cambridge University Press, 2021), which won the Leon Epstein Award (APSA) and the Social Sciences Award (LASA). Her research has also been published in journals including Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, Democratization, Political Research Quarterly, and Journal of Politics in Latin America, among others.

Caitlin’s current project investigates the gendered nature of charismatic authority and explores under what conditions women can defy expectations and establish legitimacy as charismatic leaders.

 

POLI 57-001: Democratic Governance in Contemporary Latin America

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Jonathan Hartlyn

Over the past forty years, Latin America has experienced the most prolonged and extensive period of democratic politics in its history. State power today is accessed through reasonably competitive and fair elections in many countries in the region, in contrast to past patterns of openly authoritarian rule. This democratic shift, though, has often been challenged by serious problems with political representation and the effective inclusion of citizens, and in some cases with more serious setbacks. The way power is practiced by those in power reflects historical continuities and new forms of corruption or other types of abuses of state resources, as well as various forms of populism. With important variations across the region, countries have struggled to respond effectively to the Covid-19 pandemic, and more broadly to provide citizen security, economic development and social inclusion.

Jonathan Hartlyn

Jonathan Hartlyn is the Kenneth J. Reckford Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He grew up in Latin America, in Cuba, Mexico and Peru. He received his B.A. from Clark University, and a M.Phil. and Ph.D. from Yale University. His research and teaching interests focus on the comparative politics of Latin America. He spent several months in Argentina in fall 2017 advancing on his current research on democratic governance in the region. He also has on-going research on constitutional change in Latin America and on the dynamics of executive approval. He has authored or co-authored dozens of articles and chapters on democratic transitions, gender and politics, migration and political parties, public opinion and institutional trust, and elections and electoral governance. His books include: The Politics of Coalition Rule in Colombia; The Struggle for Democratic Politics in the Dominican Republic; and the co-authored Latin America in the Twenty First Century: Toward a New Socio-Political Matrix. His publications have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese, German and Persian. He has served as an international election observer in the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Venezuela.

 

POLI 77-001: Immigrants and Refugees in World Politics

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Niklaus Steiner

The movement of people across international borders is one of the most politically controversial issues in the world today. This class focuses on two different types of global migrants, immigrants and refugees, and explores why these two groups move out of their countries and how they are treated by receiving countries. Immigrants and refugees have traditionally been thought of as politically, legally and ethically different from each other and this class explores these differences, but it also explores the many ways that they are similar. Finally, the class explores a third type of global migrant that politicians and policy makers frequently promote, guest workers, and considers to what extent guest worker policies can effectively address the challenges and opportunities posed by the two other migrant groups. This class encourages students from a wide range of backgrounds, experiences and perspectives to enroll because it benefits significantly from including such diversity.

Niklaus Steiner

Niklaus Steiner is a native of Thun, Switzerland, who moved to Chapel Hill with his family when his father became a professor at Carolina. He has had the good fortune of moving between cultures his whole life and because of this experience, his teaching and research interests are around immigration, refugees, nationalism, and citizenship. His newest book, International Migration and Citizenship Today 2nd edition (Routledge, 2023), seeks to facilitate classroom discussions on admission and membership in liberal democracies. He earned a bachelor’s degree with highest honors in international studies at UNC and a Ph.D. in political science at Northwestern University. Before joining the political science department in 2020, he enjoyed 22 deeply gratifying years working at UNC’s Center for Global Initiatives, the last 15 as the director. He is especially proud of the work he and many colleagues from across campus did to open access to global opportunities for students. In 2016, he was inducted into the Order of the Golden Fleece, UNC's oldest and highest honorary society. When not at work, Niklaus is often digging in the garden, hiking with his family or making something up in the kitchen.

 

POLI 89-057: Political Issues in Europe Today

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Niklaus Steiner

Europe is facing numerous complex issues ranging from Brexit and populism to refugees and minority rights. A common thread running through many of its issues is the movement of people across national borders. This class examines an array of issues to explore how they affect, and are affected by, the politics in Europe, which are quite different from the politics in the United States. This class has two goals: 1) to give you a solid understanding of important issues affecting Europe today and comparing them to the U.S. so that you can contribute thoughtfully to discussions about them as a reader, writer and discussant; and 2) to introduce you to the many Europe-related faculty and resources at UNC if you want to explore this world region more deeply. This class encourages students from a wide range of backgrounds, experiences and perspectives to enroll because it benefits significantly from including such diversity.

Niklaus Steiner

Niklaus Steiner is a native of Thun, Switzerland, who moved to Chapel Hill with his family when his father became a professor at Carolina. He has had the good fortune of moving between cultures his whole life and because of this experience, his teaching and research interests are around immigration, refugees, nationalism, and citizenship. His newest book, International Migration and Citizenship Today 2nd edition (Routledge, 2023), seeks to facilitate classroom discussions on admission and membership in liberal democracies. He earned a bachelor’s degree with highest honors in international studies at UNC and a Ph.D. in political science at Northwestern University. Before joining the political science department in 2020, he enjoyed 22 deeply gratifying years working at UNC’s Center for Global Initiatives, the last 15 as the director. He is especially proud of the work he and many colleagues from across campus did to open access to global opportunities for students. In 2016, he was inducted into the Order of the Golden Fleece, UNC's oldest and highest honorary society. When not at work, Niklaus is often digging in the garden, hiking with his family or making something up in the kitchen.

 

PSYC 101-01F: General Psychology

FY Launch | MWF, 12:20 PM – 1:10 PM | Instructor(s): Charlie Wiss

PSYC 101 is a prerequisite for all psychology courses. A survey of major principles of psychology and an introduction to scientific modes of thought about behavior. Students participate in ongoing psychological research in the department.

Charlie Wiss

 

PSYC 101-02F: General Psychology

FY Launch | MWF, 2:30 PM – 3:20 PM | Instructor(s): Charlie Wiss

PSYC 101 is a prerequisite for all psychology courses. A survey of major principles of psychology and an introduction to scientific modes of thought about behavior. Students participate in ongoing psychological research in the department.

Charlie Wiss

 

PSYC 54-001: Families and Children

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Shauna Cooper

The goal of this first-year seminar course is to familiarize students with a range of topics associated with contemporary families, with a specific focus on familial influences on child and adolescent development. Also, given the increasing diversity among families in contemporary society, this course will increase knowledge of the various domains of diversity (i.e., developmental stage, race, ethnicity, gender, gender identity) as well as help students be attuned to pertinent issues faced by these families. Select course topics include 1) demographic trends of families; 2) parenting and development; 3) sibling relationships; 4) cultural contexts of parenting and families; 5) media and technology; 6) neighborhood and community influences; and 7) youth civic engagement.

Shauna Cooper

Dr. Shauna M. Cooper is a developmental psychologist whose research focuses on how social contexts and experiences shape development. Much of her research examines the family, school, and community contexts of development and youth well-being as well as how culture may shape parenting and family processes. Her research lab is the Strengths, Assets, and Resilience (StAR) Lab at UNC: thestarlab.org.

 

PSYC 89-001: Talking about Numbers: Communicating Research Results to Others

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Abigail Panter

How do you persuade others with numbers? What general principles should you think about when sharing data with others? What are the common biases and fallacies that we have in understanding numbers and statistics? How do you figure out if you should trust results from research studies reported in the media? This seminar introduces students to the many ways that data are reported to the public in our everyday lives-through advertising and media as well as scientific journal articles. Students in this course will create models in the BeAM spaces on campus that will help make abstract topics about numbers more concrete. Students will learn practical skills that will be useful in subsequent classes at Carolina and after graduation (e.g., in graduate school, in work, as a consumer, as a citizen).

Abigail Panter

Dr. Panter studies evaluation methodology, measurement and testing, advanced quantitative methods, survey methodology, evaluation of HIV/AIDS service and educational programs, substance abuse, educational diversity, and professional advancement educational programs.

 

PWAD 89-015: September 11: Origins, Consequences, and Where Do We Go From Here

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Erinn Whitaker

This first-year seminar will reflect upon the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States, exploring how the terrorist attacks occurred and why the U.S. intelligence community and policymakers failed to anticipate and prevent them as well as the subsequent effects on the United States, the Middle East, and the world. The instructor, a former intelligence analyst, will lead students in discussions and in-class exercises to encourage critical analysis of the implications of terrorism, particularly on United States national security. A variety of assignments will require students to assess the causes and results of American national security decisions and alternative decisions that might have been made, supported with research and evidence.

Erinn Whitaker

Erinn Whitaker, a former senior analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency and US State Department, is a Professor of the Practice for the Peace, War and Defense Curriculum at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. With nearly 15 years of experience overseas and in Washington, teaches courses such as “Writing and Briefing for Intelligence,” “Comparative Intelligence Regimes,” and “Cases in Counter Intelligence,” helping students interested in careers ranging from intelligence to public policy to journalism strengthen their written and oral communication skills. Whitaker earned a BA from Middlebury College, where she spent a year studying Russia in Siberia, and a MA from Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service. She speaks German and Russian.

 

RELI 63-001: The Archaeology of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Jodi Magness

The Dead Sea Scrolls have been described as the most important archaeological discovery of the 20th century. The first scrolls were discovered in 1947, in a cave near the site of Qumran by the Dead Sea. Eventually the remains of over 900 scrolls were found in 11 caves around Qumran. The scrolls date to the time of Jesus and include the earliest preserved copies of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament). They were deposited in the caves by members of a Jewish sect called the Essenes who lived at Qumran. In this seminar, students explore the meaning and significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls – and learn about broader issues such as how canons of sacred scripture developed among Jews and Christians – through classroom discussions, thought papers, and creative assignments.

Jodi Magness

Jodi Magness is the Kenan Distinguished Professor for Teaching Excellence in Early Judaism. Before coming to UNC–Chapel Hill in 2002, she taught at Tufts University for ten years. Professor Magness received her B.A. in Archaeology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and her Ph.D. in Classical Archaeology from the University of Pennsylvania. She has participated on numerous excavations in Israel and Greece, and currently directs excavations at Huqoq in Israel. Professor Magness’ publications include a book entitled The Archaeology of Qumran and the Dead Sea Scrolls (2021 [second edition]).

 

RELI 64-001: Reintroducing Islam

FY Seminar | TR, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Youssef Carter

Students learn about Islam as a global, historical religious tradition and the dynamic interaction between religious ideas, practices, and debates on one hand and a variety of geographical and historical contexts on the other. The course takes as its starting point the assumption that every first year student has already been exposed to ideas about Islam and Muslims, usually in the form of religious, cultural and racialized othering, which means that the course has to respond to such preconceived notions that have shaped their worldviews. Students are challenged to consider both similar and dramatically different ways of learning, knowing, and perceiving the world by Muslims in past and present, thereby exposing them to alternative ways of knowing and nurturing at the very least an appreciation of the value of difference and understanding of a perceived other.

Youssef Carter

Youssef Carter is an Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and Kenan Rifai Fellow in Islamic Studies. His research focuses on religious empowerment Afro-descendant Muslims. His current book project illuminates how Sufi epistemologies that emerge out of Senegal shape Black religious identities in the broader Atlantic, particularly in the American South and in West Africa.

 

RELI 67-001: Nature/Culture/Self-Identity: Religion in the Construction of Social Life

FY Seminar | TR, 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM | Instructor(s): Lauren Leve

Beliefs about what a human being is—and isn’t—lie at the root of all religious traditions and also of secular ideologies. This course explores the ways that different religious and cultural communities have conceptualized human nature, and how those understandings are reflected in diverse forms of personal identity and ways of organizing public life. Readings will include historic and contemporary texts, and case studies from places including India, Nepal, and the USA. We will structure our inquiries around three thematic questions: (1) How do religious beliefs and practices shape the way that individuals and societies understand what it is to be human? (2) How do these beliefs manifest in seemingly unrelated areas of life such as personal aspirations, gender ideals, social structures, political institutions, and economic ideologies? (3) How do we know what we know about these things—i.e., what theories and methods do scholars use to understand other societies and also their own? This course also involves an experiential component that allows students to undertake original research.

Lauren Leve

Lauren Leve is an associate professor of Religious Studies. She has been living and working in Nepal since 1990; sometimes for a few weeks at a time, sometimes for a few years. Her research has also brought her to India, Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Singapore. She has published on topics including Buddhism, globalization, women’s empowerment, human rights, cultural heritage, and suffering. She is currently working on projects focused on Buddhist meditation and on gender, health, politics and the rise of Christianity in Nepal, and another that presents Himalayan Buddhism using virtual models and VR. Professor Leve is grateful to friends and strangers and around the world who have opened their lives to her and taught her to (try to) see things through their eyes. She reports that it can be disorienting at first, but that once you learn to learn from others’ perspectives, it’s both a super power and a source of joy!

 

RELI 73H-001: From Dragons to Pokemon: Animals in Japanese Myth, Folklore, and Religion

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Barbara Ambros

This seminar examines the cultural construction of animals in Japanese myth, folklore, and religion. We will discuss various kinds of animals: those that occur in the natural world, those that are found in myths and folklore, and those that have appeared in popular media such as animation. We will explore how images of various animals were culturally constructed as tricksters, gods, monsters, or anthropomorphic companions; how animals were ritualized as divine, demonic, or sentient beings in Buddhism, Shinto, and folk religion; and how animals could serve as metaphors that embodied collective ideals or anxieties. Most of our readings will focus on primary and secondary texts from the Japanese tradition (in English), but we will also read theoretical texts on human-animal relationships and historical studies on animals in the larger Asian context. We will also view and analyze Japanese films, both anime and documentaries, that deal with animals and environmental issues.

Barbara Ambros

Field of specialization: Religions of Asia. Research interests: Religions in early modern through contemporary Japan; gender studies; animal studies; place and space; and pilgrimage. Fun fact: she holds a fourth-degree black belt in Shotokan karate and serves as the faculty advisor for the UNC Shotokan Club.

 

ROML 70-001: Jewish Spain: History and Culture Across the Hispanic World

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Adam Cohn | Same as: JWST 70-001

Jewish life and civilization in Spain have been compared to a drama in which moments of cultural flourishing are mixed with tragedy and exile. This seminar explores the history and culture of the Golden Age of medieval Spanish Jewry, as well as how modern Hispanic cultures have interpreted and reimagined this historical past. We will interrogate how this fascination with Sephardic Jews overlaps with a variety of topics: national identity, anti-Semitism, liberal democracy, colonialism, exile, Holocaust memory, among others. Throughout this journey across time and space, we will think about the relevance of Sepharad, or Jewish Spain, to our present by working with a diverse group of cultural products that includes poetry, paintings, film, memoirs, and novels. The texts we will study come from numerous Hispanic cultures: Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Cuba.

Adam Cohn

Adam Cohn specializes in modern Spanish literature, with a focus on the nexus of race, diaspora, and Judaism in early twentieth-century Spain. His current research project analyzes the relationship between liberal philosephardic thought and (anti-)colonialism in the Spanish novel. He is also interested in contemporary Jewish culture in Spain, Federico García Lorca, and Spanish Civil War literature. Adam holds a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from the University of Virginia, and joined Carolina in fall 2023.

 

ROML 89-001: From AFROFUTURISM to AFROTOURISM - The African Diaspora in Latin America and Europe

FY Seminar | MWF, 11:15 AM – 12:05 PM | Instructor(s): Nilzimar Vieira Hauskrecht

What is Afrofuturism? Afrofuturism is a movement that revisits discussions on Black identity through music, art, literature, cinema, and political resistance, analyzing and celebrating Black people’s culture and future. What is Afrotourism? Afrotourism is a movement in Africa and Africa Diaspora countries that transforms arts and questions traditional tourism. In this course, students will study Afrofuturism and Afrotourism and the importance of Black identity in the modern African Diaspora, emphasizing Latin America and Europe through music, readings, film, artifacts, and tourism. We will learn how people from the African Diaspora communicate culture through literature, cuisine, dance, music, religion, and tourism as way to legitimize and celebrate their culture and future.

We will also explore how people of African descent develop new tourist activities, foster economic growth, and celebrate Afro-futuristic societies. Students will discuss how these individuals and places are highly significant to the legacy of Black modernism in Brazil and the history of the African Diaspora.

Nilzimar Vieira Hauskrecht

Nilzimar Vieira has a master's degree in German Language Teaching from Indiana University (2009) and a master’s in Portuguese Literature from the same university (2012). She received her doctorate in Portuguese Literature and Latin and Caribbean Studies equally from Indiana University (2023). Her thesis is titled "Rewriting Black Experiences: Afro-Brazilian and Afro-Portuguese Female Voices in Contemporary Literature and Cinema." She is a Teaching Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. One of her recent courses is titled "Brazil and Beyond: Resistance through Art, Music, and Virtual Activism." Her research projects include literary and cinematographic studies of the African diaspora in Brazil, Portugal, and Germany and research interest in German Literature in Brazil. She has translated the "Anthology Afrofuturism - The Future is Ours" from Portuguese into English. She has received several awards for her teaching and recently received the Schwab Academic Excellence Award from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, for her research development. She is currently working on translating poems in films from English to Portuguese from African diasporic authors.

 

ROML 89-002: Wonder and Energy in Science Fiction

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Sean Singh Matharoo

This course is dedicated to the following, twinning questions: 1) How do we define energy in the literary humanities and 2) What is the ecological value of science fiction (SF)? We will answer these questions by turning to the history of French and francophone SF literature and media, calling on French philosophy and contemporary theory from a diversity of fields—including art history, anthropology, and cosmology—for supplement. Beginning with Cyrano de Bergerac’s proto SF, we will move through Jules Vernes’s scientific romance, Auguste Villiers de l’Isle-Adam’s symbolism, Maurice Renard’s SF about invisible aerial aliens, Raymond Queneau’s surrealist anticipation of the new novel, Monique Wittig’s queer apocalypticism, countercultural comics, Ahmed Bouanani’s biohorror, and Marie NDiaye’s postcolonial fantastic, before concluding with Marie Darrieussecq’s SF about cloning. Along the way, we will watch SF from the history of French cinema, from Georges Méliès’s famous trip to the moon to Palme d’Or-winner Julia Ducournau’s recent Titane. Throughout the semester, we will remain attentive to questions of poetics, asking if, and if so, how and why SF generates a sense of wonder. Finally, then, what can this sense of wonder teach us about the energy crisis facing our planet today?

Sean Singh Matharoo

Sean Singh Matharoo is a transdisciplinary scholar of French- and English-language speculative literature, media, and philosophy, which he studies in the contexts of postcolonial studies, the energy humanities, and performance studies. As an alumnus of the Carolina Postdoctoral Program for Faculty Diversity, he is updating his doctoral thesis into a book, which is provisionally titled Solar Energology: Reading the Damned Poetics of a Dying Earth. Matharoo’s research responds to the Anthropocenic energy crisis and the need to transition to alternative energy sources by studying how literature, media, and philosophy contribute to the decolonization of petroculture by impelling us to find, in language, the gift of solar-powered futures. Important to this project is a theoretical framework whose possibility conditions include: 1) Alexandre Kojève's later concept of “energology,” or the study of the mediation between the dialectic of ontology and phenomenology; 2) Georges Bataille's solar economy; 3) Claude Lévi-Strauss's structural anthropology; and, 4) the vitalist-structuralist pluralism of francophone Belgian science-fiction author J.-H. Rosny aîné’s Les sciences et le pluralisme (1922), which he is translating into English.

Matharoo is also a noise musician whose collaborative pieces about the environment may be understood to problematize the presupposition of colonial-racial divisions in thinking and being.

He is Book Review Assistant Editor for Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment, a lab affiliate with Energy Lab Today at Georgia Tech, and is a partner/collaborator with Vision Inclusive.

 

SCLL 85-001: What Does it Mean to be a Good Citizen?

FY Seminar | TR, 12:30 PM – 1:45 PM | Instructor(s): Nora Hanagan

What, if any, responsibilities accompany democratic citizenship? Voting? Active participation in politics? Obeying laws? Volunteering in one’s community? Preserving natural resources for future generations? Adhering to certain values? Protesting unjust laws? This course offers an overview of the different ways in which Americans have answered these questions.

Nora Hanagan

Professor Nora Hanagan studies political ideas. She is particularly interested in the ideas that have animated American politics and history. She also researches different approaches to environmental and food politics. Her book, Democratic Responsibility: The Politics of Many Hands in America, examines whether individuals bear responsibility for harms that are caused by social institutions and processes. When she isn’t chasing her young children around, she likes gardening and hiking.

 

SOCI 71-001: The Pursuit of Happiness

FY Seminar | TR, 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM | Instructor(s): Arne Kalleberg

Happiness is a fundamental goal in many societies, despite being elusive for many people. In recent years, social scientists have become increasingly interested in the subject of happiness and its causes and consequences. Sociologists, economists, political scientists, geographers, and psychologists have joined with philosophers in studying the nature of happiness and subjective well-being and its relationship to social life. This course will provide an overview of how these different disciplines study happiness. We will examine the interplay between individual and social happiness by considering the nature and meaning of happiness in the contemporary United States and in other countries. We will seek to answer questions such as: What is happiness? Can we measure happiness, and if so, how? Does happiness vary among diverse groups (racial, ethnic, religious, gender, age, and social class groups)? How does happiness differ among cultures and nations? What is the relationship between biology and happiness? Between psychology and happiness? Does money buy happiness? What is (and should be) the role of happiness in formulating public policies? We will address these and other questions by reading books and articles; by class discussions and debates; by viewing films; by interviewing people; and by collecting information using the Internet and other sources.

Arne Kalleberg

Dr. Arne Kalleberg is a Kenan Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and has Adjunct Professorships in the Kenan-Flagler Business School, the Department of Public Policy, and the Curriculum in Global Studies. He received his BA from Brooklyn College and his MA and PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He has published extensively on topics related to the sociology of work, organizations, occupations and industries, labor markets, and social stratification. He served as Secretary of the American Sociological Association from 2001-2004 and as its President in 2007-2008. He is currently the editor-in-chief of Social Forces, an International Journal of Social Research.

 

SOCI 89-001: Gender Equity in STEM

FY Seminar | TTH, 11:00 AM – 12:15 PM | Instructor(s): Lauren Valentino

Although women now attend and graduate from college at a higher rate than men, they remain underrepresented in STEM majors and careers in the US. This course explores the causes and consequences of why women – and other gender minority individuals – are less likely to pursue education and careers in the STEM fields. To do so, we will draw on sociological insights from the study of gender, education, work and occupations, and science and technology studies. Throughout the course, students will engage with social science research as well as contemporary news articles, films, and podcasts on these topics. They will also have the opportunity to meet experts who actively work on promoting diversity in STEM as well as established women and other gender minority individuals who have pursued STEM careers. This course is open to students of all backgrounds, majors, and genders.

Lauren Valentino

Dr. Lauren Valentino is an Assistant Professor in the Sociology Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Previously, she was an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the Ohio State University, and a postdoctoral associate at the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University. She earned her PhD in Sociology from Duke University, a Masters degree in Sociology from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and a Bachelors degree in Sociology and French Studies from Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. Her National Science Foundation-funded research has examined reasons for the gender gap in STEM at the undergraduate level, using longitudinal data from public school students in North Carolina. Based on this research, Dr. Valentino has co-founded an intervention program for local public school students in the Triangle that aims to connect undergraduate mentors to STEM-interested middle schoolers. She has earned a Certificate in College Teaching and is the recipient of a teaching award for excellence in undergraduate instruction. You can read more about Dr. Valentino, her latest research, and her teaching accolades at her website: www.laurenvalentino.org.

 

SOCI 89H-001: Poverty, Inequality, and the American Dream

FY Seminar | TR, 2:00 PM – 3:15 PM | Instructor(s): Regina Baker

What does it mean to live in poverty in the “land of plenty” and experience inequality in the “land of opportunity?” Why is the “American Dream” more attainable for some people than it is others? This FY-S will use a sociological perspective to explore these questions and more. We will cover a wide range of topics as they relate to poverty and inequality, including perceptions, measurement, causes, and consequences as well as different domains (e.g., housing, education, the labor market, the criminal legal system, etc.) and how they serve as inequality mechanisms. We will also discuss the significance of history and place as well as highlight different axes of inequality (e.g., gender, race/ethnicity, age, disability). Ultimately, this course aims to advance understanding of poverty and inequality in America, and in doing so, highlight why the American Dream is difficult (and becoming increasingly so) for some individuals and families to attain.

Regina Baker

Regina S. Baker is an Associate Professor of Sociology. Prior to joining UNC-CH in 2023, she was previously an Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Her research seeks to understand the factors that shape socioeconomic conditions and disparities across people, places, and time. Her current research areas include poverty and poverty risks across children and families, historical and institutional mechanisms of inequality, and racial and place-based disparities in socioeconomic and health outcomes. She received her Ph.D. in sociology from Duke University, Masters in Social Work from the University of Georgia, and Bachelors in Sociology from Mercer University.

 

WGST 89-001: Reproductive Justice

FY Seminar | MW, 3:35 PM – 4:50 PM | Instructor(s): Karen Booth

This first year seminar introduces students to the collection of concepts, research, and activist strategies now known as “reproductive justice” – the stigma-free right and ability of everyone to have and raise the children they want and not to have the children they do not want. We will also study the difficulties of and past and current opposition to this perspective. We will discuss and evaluate debates about reproduction-related laws, technologies, and health as we consider the language, assumptions, evidence, and consequences of stances taken in different sites, at different historical moments, and by different stakeholders – including ourselves — in both biological and social reproduction. We will consider the U.S. case in relation to debates within and policies from international organizations and transnational social movements. Students will do research and give presentations on a topic or debate not studied in class. There is no pre-requisite for this course other than an interest in the social meanings and contexts of reproduction, an openness to different perspectives, and a willingness to be an active and respectful participant in your own and your peers’ education.

Karen Booth

Reproductive health and justice are my passion! I have been teaching and writing about reproductive health in the U.S. and internationally for 28 years but never has the topic been more urgent and relevant than it is now. My award-winning teaching is multi-disciplinary, intersectional, policy-relevant, and practical. My research has focused on HIV/AIDS in relation to reproductive. health and politics in Kenya, the U.S., and at the World Health Organization. I also write about medical ethics, news media, and pedagogy.

 

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