In this cluster, students will explore world cultures and history through literature, archaeology, and film spanning from Ancient Egypt to Paris to the present-day United States. While fulfilling L&S breadth requirements—including Arts & Literature and Historical Studies—students will develop their college-level writing and analytical skills with a focus on ancient and modern cultures. Students particularly interested in extending their learning off-campus through field trips to Bay Area museums will find this cluster appealing.
Course Descriptions
MELC10: Middle Eastern Worlds: Ancient Egypt & Mesopotamia (4 Units)
This course introduces students to the Ancient Middle Eastern world through its languages, texts, art, and material culture. Emphasis is placed on Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia as well as their neighbors in Iran, Turkey, Arabia, and Africa. Students are introduced to techniques scholars use to study this evidence, including philology, archaeology, visual analysis, and digital humanities. Topics include urbanism, kingship, science, religion, and death. Students interact with original materials in campus and Bay Area museums. No prior coursework is required.
COMLIT 20C: Arts of the Cure: Film, Literature & History (4 Units)
From cutting-edge medical research to the promises of social media influencers, the cure is everywhere. The desire to be relieved of suffering seems as endless as there are remedies. What is it about the potential of the cure that captures our attention? What is it about the possibility of perfect health that captivates us? What are we seeking when we ask to be cured? This class invites students who are ready to think critically about an idea that seems so ordinary that we rarely pause to consider it deeply, and who are willing to think imaginatively about the cure beyond the absence of symptoms. We will delve deeply into various case studies of the cure, including ancient Greek tragedy and ritual practices, ethnographic accounts of shamanistic cures, the “talking cure” of psychoanalysis, experimental cinema and dreams, and the striving for immortality in literature and beyond. To disentangle frameworks of the cure, we must understand how they emerge. Turning to philosophical, psychological, and theological theories, we will grapple with what the cure consists of. If the cure has been defined as a treatment of a disease and the restoration of health, what does healing look like when there is no proven remedy? When mental pain and physical symptoms resist medical intervention, can aesthetic experiences and artistic practice offer relief? In this class we will try to understand what the search for a cure reveals about the struggle to live life fully.
FRENCH 80 (Paris: A Historical Anatomy of the World’s Most Romantic City)
This course introduces the archaeology of the Greek world from the Neolithic to the Hellenistic period (approximately 7000 to 150 BCE) and includes both art historical and anthropological approaches. We will explore the artifacts that ancient people used in their daily lives, as well as the buildings, landscapes, and tombs where they lived, worked, worshipped, and died. We will also examine famous artworks, monuments, and sites, from the gold-filled Shaft Graves of Mycenae to the Parthenon in Athens, tracking key technical and stylistic developments. Above all, we will learn how to situate archaeological sites and artifacts within their larger social, economic, and political contexts, using new methods and theories to interpret the past. Discussions of cultural heritage, repatriation, the antiquities trade, and archaeological ethics will illuminate the many ways in which Greek archaeology is relevant to the concerns of today.
Meeting Schedule
- MELC 10: TR 3:30-5:00 PM; Discussion R 2-3 PM
- COMLIT 20C: MWF 10-11 AM; Discussion F 11-12 PM
- French 80: MWF 3:00 – 4:00 PM; Discussion R 1-2 PM
Major Prerequisites and L&S Breadth/General Requirements
Course | Major Prereq to Declare | Major Lower Division | L&S Breadth/General Requirements |
---|---|---|---|
MELC 10 | N/A | MELC | Arts & Literature, Historical Studies |
COMLIT 20C | N/A | N/A | Arts & Literature, Historical Studies |
FRENCH 80 | N/A | N/A | Arts & Literature, Historical Studies |
* = one of several classes that can satisfy requirement
+ = recommended, not required
^ = lower division requirement, not required for declaration