Seminar in Writing and Rhetoric(one unit) A course in which students encounter the two central aspects of the humanistic tradition of rhetorical education, argumentation, and effective oral and written expression, and develop the intellectual habits and language capabilities to construct persuasive arguments and to write and speak effectively for academic and civic purposes. To be taken in the first year. May be taken only to fulfill the core requirement. - AFAM 110, Imaging Blackness: Black Film and Black Identity
- ART 150, Constructions of Identity in the Visual Arts
- BIOL 150, Science in the News
- CLSC 120, Persuasion and Power in the Classical World
- COMM 102, Social Scientific Argumentation
- COMM 103, Rhetoric of Adventure
- COMM 105, The Rhetoric of Race Relations: From Abolition to Civil Rights and Beyond
- COMM 106, Science and Equality
- COMM 107, Rhetoric, Film, and National Identity
- COMM 108, The Rhetoric of Contradiction in Work-Life
- COMM 110, Contemporary Controversies
- ECON 102, Controversies in Contemporary Economics
- EDUC 110, Under Construction: Race, Sexuality, and Society
- ENGL 120, Ideas and Arguments on Stage
- ENGL 122, Seeing Texts and Writing Contexts
- ENGL 123, Individual Rights and the Common Good
- ENGL 124, "See What I Mean?": The Rhetoric of Words and Images
- ENGL 125, Civic Argument and the Theatre of Democracy
- ENGL 126, Genre Studies in Literature
- ENGL 127, An Opinion about Everything
- ENGL 128, Shaping the Shadow: Argument and Insight
- ENGL 129, Power and Perception: The Mirror and the Music
- ENGL 130, Print Culture, Literacy, and Argument in American Life
- ENGL 131, Three Big Questions
- ENGL 132, Ecology of the Text
- ENGL 133, Politics of Space, Public and Private
- ENGL 134, Architectures of Power
- ENGL 135, Travel and the Other
- ENGL 136, Imagining the American West
- ENGL 137, Representing Multiculturalism
- ENGL 138, Sub/Urban America
- ENGL 201, Intermediate Writing and Rhetoric
- EXSC 123, Understanding High Risk Behavior
- HIST 115, The Crusades
- HON 101, Encountering the Other/Writing the Self
- HUM 121, Arms and Men: The Rhetoric of Warfare
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