HNRS 130: Identity, Community, and Difference (Topics Vary)
HNRS 130-007: Lcatng Idntity:Body, Subj, Slf
(Spring 2019)
10:30 AM to 11:45 AM TR
Enterprise Hall 173
Section Information for Spring 2019
What make us who we are? Is identity grounded in the psyche? Is identity “natural”? Does it have a biological basis? Is it manifested on the body? Do our memories shape us? Or is identity externally imposed by the social world we inhabit? How free are we to invent ourselves? To what extent can one change one’s identity or self? To answer these questions, this course will explore various philosophical, psychological, sociological, and historical conceptions of self. We will consider aspects of identity such as race, gender, sexuality, nationality, and class. It will also assess the impact of the internet on conceptions of the self. Analyzing a broad range of fictional, theoretical/philosophical and autobiographical texts, we will consider how the self is constructed, and both the potential for, and limits on, personal transformation.
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Course Information from the University Catalog
Credits: 3
Enrollment limited to students with the Honors College (Business)., Honors College (STEM). or Honors College. attributes.
This course is graded on the Undergraduate Regular scale.
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