Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Major

Department Chair: Neda Atanasoski, Ph.D.

Rooted in the liberatory traditions of Women’s Studies, the Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies B.A. challenges structural inequities based on intersecting hierarchies of colonialism, gender, caste, race, sexuality, ethnicity, nationality, and ability. The WGSS major offers students opportunities to develop community-centered knowledge and practices for collective liberation, with the aim of transforming systems of oppression and imagining freer futures. Students will take courses informed by intersectional and anti-colonial scholarship and methodologies from the arts and humanities, social sciences, and many other fields. Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies offers students a flexible program of study in which there is focused attention on building students’ analysis of varied modes of structural and interlinked oppressions and devising visions for critiquing, resisting, and dismantling such modes of systemic violence.

Our introductory courses equip students with the tools and vocabulary to both analyze and respond effectively to social problems. Upper-division courses, typically structured as small seminars, focus on cultivating students’ research and writing skills, critical analysis, and synthesis of different disciplines and ways of knowing rooted in topics of deep personal and community relevance. Advanced students will take our advanced research capstone where they will create and carry out a research project that ties together the work done throughout the major, developing methods that students will carry into a variety of careers and into communities beyond the University. The courses and experiences students undertake throughout the major are designed to support students in shaping futures in areas such as community organizing, social justice advocacy, transformative media, care work, medicine and public health, law, public policy, academia and more. The program engages students’ critical thinking and develops their analysis of society’s power structures while centering the importance of relational accountability to the communities we research alongside and serve. We seek to shape a new generation of scholars and leaders who, with us, will work to acknowledge, understand, and critically interrogate hierarchies of difference, while imagining more just futures.

Courses offered by this department may be found under the following acronyms: WGSS, LGBT. They were previously also offered under WMST.

Program Learning Outcomes

Students are expected to fully engage with the curriculum and the opportunities presented for learning and research. Having completed the program, students should have acquired the following knowledge, skills, and practices:

  1. Students will be able to critically analyze issues of power related to women, race/ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and class.
  2. Students will understand and be able to critique key developments in gender, critical race, and queer thought as strategies for social change.
  3. Students will demonstrate familiarity with major concepts and vocabulary of gender, critical race, and queer thought in the field of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.

Students will earn a total of 33 credit hours, distributed as indicated below. Drawing from more than 50 courses, including many cross-listed with other academic units, students will have the opportunity to explore broadly within the field and to create their own path  through the major relevant to their special interests. At least 24 credits must be at or above the 3xx level. No course with a grade less than "C-" may be used to satisfy the major. An overall GPA of 2.0 in the major is required for graduation. Students will design their programs in consultation with a Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies advisor.

Course Title Credits
College Requirements
Introductory Course3
Select one of the following courses:
Introduction to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Introduction to Disability Studies (Introduction to Disability Studies)
Introduction to WGSS: Gender, Power, and Society
Reproductive Justice: An Introduction
Introduction to WGSS: Art and Culture
Introduction to Black Women's Studies
Lower Level Requirements6
Lower Level Core (LLC)
Minimum 3 credits from LLC
Introduction to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Quare/Queer Contentions: Exploration of Sexualities in the Black Community
Special Topics in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Introduction to Disability Studies (Introduction to Disability Studies)
Gender, Race and Computing
Introduction to WGSS: Gender, Power, and Society
Reproductive Justice: An Introduction
Introduction to WGSS: Art and Culture
Introduction to Black Women's Studies
Constructions of Manhood and Womanhood in the Black Community
Introduction to Black Women's Cultural Studies
Monsters and Racism: Black Horror and Speculative Fiction
Gender and Science in Film and Media
Bodies in Contention
Racialized Gender and Rebel Media
Lower Level Electives (LLE)
Maximum of 3 credits of LLE
Students may also take a second course from the Intro or LLC list instead of from the LLE list
LGBTQ+ Literatures and Media
Love, Labor, and Citizenship: Women in America to 1880
Women in America Since 1880
Women in Western Europe 1750-Present
Introduction to Humanities, Health, and Medicine
Reading Women Writing
World Literature by Women
Special Topics in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Man Up! Where Are The Fathers?
Women in Western Europe to 1750
Hoop Dreams: Black Masculinity and Sport
Foundation Courses6
Introduction to Research in Gender, Race, and Queer Studies
Advanced Research Seminar in Gender, Race, and Queer Studies
Upper Level Requirements18
9 of the 18 credits are required to be ULC, 6 are required to be ULE, the remaining 3 credits can come from either the ULC or ULE lists
Upper Level Core (ULC)
Minimum of 9 credits
Transgender Studies
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Film and Video
LGBTQ+ Public Speaking and Facilitation
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Organization Internship
Special Topics in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
LGBT411
(Black Queer Studies)
Special Topics in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Seminar in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Independent Study
Feminist, Critical Race, and Queer Theories
Intro to Fat Studies: Fatness, Blackness and Their Intersections
Workshops in Gender, Race, and Queer Studies
WGSS330
(Indigenous Feminisms)
Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship
Caribbean Women
Undergraduate WGSS Internship
Black Feminist Thought
Undergraduate Research and Creative Works Assistantship
Topics in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Women of the African Diaspora
Topics in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Feminist Cultural Studies
Advanced Feminist, Critical Race, and Queer Theories
Senior Seminar
Individual Research in Gender, Race and Queer Studies
Professional Development
WGSS498Z
(Black Women's Art and Culture)
Independent Study
Upper Level Elective
Minimum of 6 credits
Special Topics in LGBTQ+ Literatures and Media
Special Topics in LGBTQ+ Literatures and Media
LGBT448C
(Sex and the City)
Sex, Gender, and Jewish Identity
LGBT448Y
(Spotlight on Major Writers Dickinson, Erotics, Poetics, Biopics: Some (Queer) Ways We Read Poetry)
or ENGL439D
Black Women in United States History
Women in Classical Antiquity
The Sociology of Gender
Biology of Reproduction
Psychology of Women
Literary Works by Women
Literary Works by Women
Literature by Women Before 1800
Literature by Women Before 1800
Asian American Women: The Social Construction of Gender
Gender Roles and Social Institutions
Feminist Critical Theory
Feminist Critical Theory
Literature by Women of Color
Literature by Women of Color
Women in the Media
Women in Medieval Culture and Society
Women and Society in the Middle East
Redefining Gender in the U.S., 1880-1935
Literature by Women After 1800
Study Abroad Special Topics IV
Women's Health
Judaism and the Construction of Gender
Sex, Gender, and Jewish Identity
Advanced Special Topics in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Feminist and Nationalist Thought in Black Communities
(Dis)ability in American Film
ANTH403
(Queer Anthropology)
Domestic Violence
Women and French Cinema
Communication and Gender
ENGL329A
(Cinema of Liberation)
ENGL329C
(Sexuality in the Cinema)
or CMLT398L
ENGL329Y
(A Cinema of Migration as Message)
Caribbean Literature in English
ENGL388D
Maternal, Child and Family Health
Family Health: Health Happens in Families
Women and Leadership
HIST338A
(Civil Rights Movement)
Women and the Civil Rights Movement
or WGSS498M
History of Women and Gender in Africa
Women and Reform Movements in the Twentieth-Century United States
Human Sexuality
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Health
Women and Japanese Literature: Japanese Literature in Translation
Sexuality in Jewish Literature and Culture
Women in Leadership
Multicultural Psychology in the U.S.
Sociology of Health and Illness
Society, Biology, and Health
Pregnancy and Parenthood in an Unequal Society
Women in the Middle Ages: Myths and Daily Life
Women and Culture in Colonial Latin America
United States Latina Fiction
Total Credits33

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