Office of The RegistrarWilliams College

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Winter Study Courses 1998

 

WINTER STUDY PROGRAM

REMINDERS ABOUT WSP REGISTRATION

All students who will be on campus during the 1997-98 academic year must register for WSP. Registration will take place in the early part of fall semester. If you are registered for a senior thesis in the fall which must be continued through Winter Study by departmental rules, you will be registered for your Winter Study Project automatically. In every other case, you must complete registration. First-year students are required to participate in a Winter Study that will take place on campus; they are not allowed to do 99's.

Even if you plan to take a 99, or the instructor of your first choice accepts you during the registration period, there are many things that can happen between registration and the beginning of Winter Study to upset your first choice, so you must list five choices. You should try to make one of your choices a project with a larger enrollment, not that it will guarantee you a project, but it will increase your chances.

If you think your time may be restricted in any way (ski meets, interviews, etc.), clear these restrictions with the instructor before signing up for his/her project.

Remember, for cross-listed projects, you should sign up for the subject you want to appear on your record.

For many beginning language courses, you are required to take the WSP Sustaining Program in addition to your regular project. You will be automatically enrolled in this Sustaining Program, so no one should list this as a choice.

The grade of honors is reserved for outstanding or exceptional work. Individual instructors may specify minimum standards for the grade, but normally, fewer than one out of ten students will qualify. A grade of pass means the student has performed satisfactorily. A grade of perfunctory pass signifies that a student's work has been significantly lacking but is just adequate to deserve a pass.

If you have any questions about a project, see the instructor before you register.

Finally, all work for WSP must be completed and submitted to the instructor no later than Thursday, January 29th. Only the Dean can grant an extension beyond this date.

WINTER STUDY 99'S

Sophomores, juniors and seniors are eligible to propose "99's," independent projects arranged with faculty sponsors, conducted in lieu of regular Winter Study courses. Perhaps you have encountered an interesting idea in one of your courses which you would like to study in more depth, or you may have an interest not covered in the regular curriculum. In recent years students have undertaken in-depth studies of particular literary works, interned in government offices, assisted in foreign and domestic medical clinics, conducted field work in economics in developing countries, and given performances illustrating the history of American dance. Although some 99's involve travel away from campus, there are many opportunities to pursue intellectual or artistic goals here in Williamstown.

99 forms are available in the Registrar's Office. The deadline for submitting the proposals to faculty sponsors is Thursday, 25 September.

AFRICAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES

AMES 025 From the Classical to the Islamic Worlds in Jordan and Syria (Same as Religion 025)

(See under Religion for full description.)

AMES 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by candidates for honors by the thesis route in African and Middle Eastern Studies.

AFRO-AMERICAN STUDIES

AAS 030 Senior Project

To be taken by students registered for Afro-American Studies 491 who are candidates for honors.

AMERICAN STUDIES

AMST 010 American Catholicism in the Novels of Andrew Greeley (Same as History 010)

(See under History for full description.)

AMST 015 "Look! Up in the Sky!": The Comic Book Superhero in American Popular Culture, 1938-1988 (Same as History 015)

(See under History for full description.)

AMST 016 "Once Upon a Time:" American History through Historical Fiction (Same as History 016)

(See under History for full description.)

AMST 017 Singing School: Popular Protestant American Religious Music (Same as Music 017 and Special 017)

(See under Special for full description.)

AMST 030 Senior Honors Project

To be taken by students registered for American Studies 491 or 492.

ANTHROPOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY

ANTHROPOLOGY

ANTH 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Anthropology 493-494.

SOCIOLOGY

SOC 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Sociology 493-494.

ART

ARTH 010 Chinese Calligraphy: Theory and Practice

This course will offer students an opportunity to acquire an understanding of the theoretical and aesthetic principles of Chinese calligraphy as one of the highest art forms in China practiced by the literati. We will also look into the relationship between Chinese painting and calligraphy from various perspectives: artistic theories, techniques, and the practice of inscribing painting in China. Technical instruction will be included in this class.
Evaluation is based on class participation and a project of choice (scholarly or artistic). The class will meet two times per week for three hours.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 15.
Meeting time: mornings.

JANG

ARTH 011 Exhibitionism: The Naked Truth About Art Exhibitions

What exactly is put on public display in an art exhibition? Is it cultural spectacle or personal polemic? Who is the auteur: the artist or the curator? These and other issues of exhibition theory and practice will be discussed in regard to real and hypothetical examples. In addition to dissecting exhibitions at WCMA and the Clark (and consulting with their curators), the class will study historically significant events such as the Impressionist exhibitions and the Armory Show. Two trips to New York will allow critiques of shows currently on view there and discussions with New York curators. Projects will include writing reviews and inventing various types of exhibitions. In addition, the group will propose an actual exhibition for a small gallery in WCMA. The class will meet two hours, two or three times a week, plus two day-trips to New York.
Students will be evaluated on class participation, two reviews of exhibitions, and two exhibition proposals.
No prerequisite. Enrollment limited to 10.
Cost to student: $50 for book, photocopies, and field trips.
Meeting time: afternoons.

NANCY MOWLL MATHEWS (Instructor)
E. J. JOHNSON (Sponsor)

Nancy Mowll Mathews has organized over fifty art exhibitions and published eight books investigating various aspects of European and American modernism. She has her Ph.D. in art history from NYU's Institute of Fine Arts and was formerly Associate Professor at Randolph-Macon Women's College. She is Eugenie Prendergast Curator in the Williams College Museum of Art and teaches in the Williams College Graduate Program in the History of Art.

ARTH 012 Arts in Pharonic Egypt

The course is a study of the origins and developments in Egyptian major arts and architecture from the start of the Pharonic era until the time of the Romans. Considerable attention will also be paid to the "minor arts" such as small sculpture, jewelry, and other important crafts, as independent works and their relationship in style and intent to the major sculpture and painting of their day. However, unlike many Egyptian art courses, it will not limit itself to a study of the arts per sé but will attempt to see them in the larger context of the culture, country, personages, and beliefs that created and modified them. This will include some attention to geology, geography, climatology, politics, historical events, and religion, all necessary to present the arts in their proper context as highly integrated parts of the civilization and not standing alone.
Art is a window into a historical period and way of life, and in many cases is our only source of information. Sometimes the information is inaccurate and the intent then becomes to study actual objects versus their representations in the major arts and see how close to or far from reality the representations are. Certain aspects of the study can be illuminated by the crafts and living methods of modern rural Egypt, in some ways a time-capsule, nearly unchanged from the Pharonic era. The goal is to appreciate and understand the masterly and often delightful creations of this talented and occasionally innovative people.
There are no prerequisites beyond interest, a questioning mind, and a schedule which permits attending the classes. The course will be a slide-illustrated lecture with time for questions and discussion. The slides were taken by the lecturer in Egypt and from the great museum collections. It is hoped there will be opportunity to see or utilize the Williams College Museum of Art's Egyptian collection. The text, which supplements the lectures, is The Art and Architecture of Ancient Egypt by W. Stevenson Smith, and there will be an accompanying packet on history, as well as handouts on other appropriate topics as they come up.
An acceptable 10-page research paper, to be approved by the instructor and handed in the last Wednesday of lecture, is required.
Meeting time: mornings.

LENORE CONGDON (Instructor)
OCKMAN (Sponsor)

Lenore Congdon, Ph.D. in Art History from Harvard, has lectured on Egyptian art and culture at Williams as well as other colleges and museums in New England. A member of the International Association of Egyptologists and The American Research Center in Egypt, Dr. Congdon has traveled and photographed extensively in Egypt.

ARTH 014 Nearby Campuses

Arguably the most complex site designs hereabouts, often involving many buildings and even hundreds of acres, are those "institutional" complexes involving education, although in Albany there are, as well, at least two office campuses (one of the public and the other of the private sector), and, near Troy, an industrial park campus. The purpose of this course is to study, during each week, these multi-building sites, both through one day of classroom discussions on readings and through two days of site visits, should the weather cooperate. That means, during the three-and-half week Winter Study Period, we may visit some eight (or so) campuses which should represent the spectrum of regional examples, among which could be: a 1960s and a 1980s office as well as industrial campus; a large public university; boarding schools on a "green field" site and on a converted estate; a community (commuters') college; a private residential college; a campus in an older downtown setting; and a campus founded two centuries ago. The site visits will be directed to how such problems as circulation, utilities (and new technologies), building interrelationships and functions, fund-raising campaigns, historic preservation, open space, and interactions with adjacent environments have been historically solved. We should encounter engineers, architects, maintenance staff, faculty and students, administrators such as treasures, and others creating or using these spaces. A final paper should compare a (distant?) campus of one's own choosing with the panoply of reading and regional examples proffered in this course.
Cost to student: $50 estimated for (van) travel and readings.
Meeting time: afternoons.

SATTERTHWAITE

ART HISTORY

ARTH 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for ArtH 493, 494.

ARTH 033 Honors Independent Study

To be taken by candidates for honors by the independent study route.

ART STUDIO

ARTS 010 Icon Painting (Same as Russian 010)

(See under Russian for full description.)

ARTS 011 Non-Traditional Drawing

The definition of what constitutes drawing and how drawing is made has broadened tremendously in recent history. Many artists today, such as Donald Sultan, and Nancy Spero use a wide variety of previously unrecognized methods and materials to create their work.
This course will have students explore non-traditional methods of creating drawing. Students will experiment with unexpected and unusual materials, as well as use traditional media in an untraditional fashion. For example: methods might include pouncing, stenciling and staining; media might include soot, tar, and plant extract. There will be slide presentations of artists whose work incorporates non traditional methods and materials. There will also be class critiques following each assignment.
Grading takes into account attendance, effort, creativity, and participation. It is expected that student spend at least 12 hours per week on independent work outside of class.
Prerequisite: ArtS 100. Enrollment limited to 15.
Cost to student: $40
Meeting time: afternoons.

JANE MASTERS (Instructor)
PODMORE (Sponsor)

Jane Masters is an artist who makes drawings and sculptures. She lives and works between Bennington, VT and New York City. She received her MFA from San Diego, CA, and has exhibited throughout the country.

ARTS 013 Site-Specific Art

This course will introduce the student to environmental art and site-specific installations. Topics covered will include the history and development of environmental work from the Constructivists through present day artists, performance art in relation to environmental work including Happenings, basic art making concepts (Including repetition, direction, biomorphism), and the use of traditional and non-traditional materials. Discussions will include the place of installation art in the contemporary art world and in art history. A brief and basic introduction to methods and materials will lead quickly into a first assignment of a small classroom installation (1'x1'x1'). Students will spend the remainder of the time developing a larger scale site-specific project of a personal nature.
Students will be evaluated on the basis of regular attendance and class participation. Students will be expected to keep a daily journal/sketchbook, complete several small lab assignment, participate in discussions and critiques, and create one completed installation for a final open studio/exhibition. Class will meet twice a week for three hour sessions. In addition, students will be expected to work during open lab hours in the studio. Student will be expected to resolve outside time conflicts in favor of the course. Interested students should consult with the Department Chair prior to registration.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 15.
Cost to student: $75 for supplies.
Meeting time: afternoon lectures and lab time.

RAY NEUFELD '91 (Instructor)
TAKANAGA (Sponsor)

Ray Neufeld '91 has exhibited his sculptural installations and drawings at galleries and museums from New York to Oregon. In addition he has worked on scenic and lighting design for theater and television.

ARTS 015 The Photo Essay

This course is designed to be a "hands on" exploration of this uniquely photographic narrative form. By way of introduction, the class will cover the evolution and history of the photo essay in this century, citing some of the profound social and cultural impacts it has had. The work of notable photographers such as W. Eugene Smith, Dorothea Lange, and other will be reviewed for inspiration and technique.
The emphasis of the class, however, will be on the student's producing photo essays of his or her own, and on group discussion and critiquing of the results. Since authenticity is a hallmark of the photo essay form, class discussion will include methods for how best to approach sensitive subjects, to be the "unobserved observer," and how to modify photographic technique accordingly. The month's study will culminate in a collaborative class project documenting "A Day in the Life of Williams College."
Students will be evaluated based on class and project participation, and the successful completion of photographic assignments. Since student photographic work will be in black and white photography, including film processing, printing and mounting, are prerequisites.
Lecture/discussion sessions will meet three days a week. Students will also be expected to spend extensive periods of time both shooting their photo essays and producing contact sheets and finished photographs in regularly scheduled darkroom labs.
Students who have completed ARTS 257 are eligible, as are those who demonstrate the required skills by submitting a portfolio of their work. Ownership of a 35mm SLR camera and a wide angle, normal and telephoto lens are recommended. Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: $125 for film, paper, and chemicals.
Meeting time: morning classes; afternoon darkroom labs.

JOHN S. SEAKWOOD '71 (Instructor)
LALEIAN (Sponsor)

John Seakwood '71 is a widely published professional photographer with twenty years experience.

ARTS 033 Honors Independent Project

Independent study to be taken by candidates for honors in Art Studio.

ASIAN STUDIES

ASST 010 The Path to Bliss (Same as Religion 010)

This course introduces students to Buddhist thought both by comparing various Tibetan works such as The Path to Bliss, a meditation manual written by His Holiness the Fourteenth Dalai Lama, and by daily early morning meditation sessions. Our aim will be to provide a survey of Buddhist methods that are used to develop detachment, love, compassion and insight into the nature of reality.
Requirements: the reading of selected meditation manuals, weekly exams, and attendance at daily weekday early-morning (8:00 a.m.) meditation and discussion sessions.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 20.
Meeting time: mornings.

JOSHUA and DIANE CUTLER (Instructors)
FROST (Sponsor)

Joshua and Diane Cutler are the Executive Director and the Associate Director of the Tibetan Buddhist Learning Center in Washington, New Jersey.

ASST 012 Chinese Popular Culture

How do the Chinese celebrate? Through readings, discussions and practical "hands on" experience we will explore how Chinese have traditionally celebrated popular holidays and religious festivals. Topics will include the religious and cultural meanings of the various festivals, regional differences in how holidays are celebrated, the roles of different members of the traditional Chinese family, the preparation (and eating!) of festival foods, calligraphy and taiji exercises.
Requirements: active participation in class sessions and a 10-page final paper.
No prerequisites.
Meeting time: afternoons.

CHEN

ASST 026 Poly-Japan: Cultural Diversity in Contemporary Japan (Same as Religion 026)

The travel course aims to introduce the students to the complexity of contemporary Japanese culture beyond stereotypes and simplification. Complexity will be experienced in four main different arenas: (i) locality, (ii) cultural production, (iii) lifestyles, and (iv) intercultural communication. We will sojourn in three well distinct cultural/geographical areas of Japan: the Tokyo region in western Japan (11 days), the Kansai region in central Japan (5 days), and Okinawa in the south (5 days). We will be able to familiarize ourselves with several aspects of culture and lifestyle in those areas. Particular attention will be devoted to museums, performing arts, temples and other historical sites, cuisine, dialectal differences (for the students of Japanese), political and economic issues. Meetings will be organized with Japanese university students to exchange ideas and impressions and promote intercultural understanding. Students will be required to observe carefully the Japanese cultural reality, formulate questions, and express their impressions in a journal that will be used for final grading.
Evaluation of the students will be based on their observations and comments both during the trip and in their journal. Interested students must consult with the instructor before registering for the course. Prior to departure, a two-day seminar for a total of six hours will be organized to give participants a basic orientation on Japan and the basic goals of the course.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: approximately $3500.

RAMBELLI

ASST 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by all students who are candidates for honors in Asian Studies.

CHINESE

CHIN S.P. Sustaining Program for Chinese 101-102

Students registered for Chinese 101-102 are required to attend and pass the Chinese Sustaining Program. Classes meet Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 9:00-9:50 a.m.
Requirements: regular attendance and active class participation.
Prerequisite: Chinese 101.
Cost to student: one Xerox packet.

TENG, YANG

JAPANESE

JAPN S.P. Sustaining Program for Japanese 101-102

Students registered for Japanese 101-102 are required to attend and pass the Japanese Sustaining Program. Classes meet Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays from 9:00-9:50 a.m.
Requirements: regular attendance and active class participation.
Prerequisite: Japanese 101.
Cost to student: one Xerox packet.

KUWAI

ASTRONOMY

ASTR 016 Observational Astronomy

This course, meant for non-majors, will focus on the most basic aspects of astronomy and will be observing-intensive, taking full advantage of various telescopes housed on the Williams College observing deck. Topics to be covered will include the constellations and night sky in general, planets, the moon, the sun, stars, and galaxies. Study of these topics will require a mix of both day and night class sessions during which students will be required to make observations using binoculars, telescopes, and the naked eye. Student observations will be recorded in drawings, notes, and computer printouts and/or photographs.
Observing will take place on all class dates during which the sky is clear. On those days when the sky is cloudy, we will do in-class exercises or discuss current topics in astronomy such as results from the Hubble Space Telescope.
Enrollment limited to 15.
Meeting time: afternoons, with evening observing sessions.

S. Martin (Instructor)
Jay M. Pasachoff (Sponsor)

Stephan Martin, the Department's Observatory Supervisor/Instructor, received his B.A. in Physics and Astronomy from Colgate in 1989, and his M.A. in Physics from the University of Wyoming in 1993. Prior to coming to Williams, he worked as a Data Analyst at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

ASPH 031 Senior Research

To be taken by students registered for Astrophysics 493, 494.

ASTR 031 Senior Research

To be taken by students registered for Astronomy 493, 494.

BIOLOGY

BIOL 010 Polish Cultural Heritage

We will examine the identity of the Polish people through study of their history, cooking, folkart, and literature. Class will begin with reading and discussion of major events in Polish history. Participants in the course will then prepare and consume four traditional Polish meals. We will try our hands at making intricately decorated Easter eggs, straw ornaments, and paper cutouts. We will also read and discuss a translation of one of the pivotal pieces of Polish literature, Pan Tadeusz. Students are expected to provide their own transportation to my kitchen which is about 1.5 miles from campus.
Evaluation will be based on participation and completion of a 10-page paper or, for students with special talents, a 5-page paper and completion of a work of folkart.
Enrollment limited to 8.
Cost to student: approximately $40 for books.
Meeting time: mornings.

LASKOWSKI

BIOL 011 Organisms with a B.A. Attitude

Lions, tigers, and bears, oh my! Or maybe ravens, slugs, and orchids. Whatever organism you think is the neatest, this is your chance to sing its praises! This course will celebrate various organisms featured in a variety of liberal arts disciplines--in literature, film, history, economics, etc. During the first few weeks as a class we'll look at a representative or two from each of the following groups: viruses and bacteria, insects, and plants. Each will be explored from the perspective of natural science, social science, and the humanities. For example, a presentation on cockroaches might combine readings from the book The cockroaches of Stay More by Donald Harington with a discussion of the evolutionary and social history of cockroaches. We might examine the genetic basis for kernel color in Indian corn, explore the plant's domestication in the New World, and cuisines that feature Zea mays. Each student will choose his/her favorite organism to research, incorporating and integrating all three liberal arts perspectives into his/her study. The results of that exploration will be submitted as a 10-page paper. In addition, each student will produce a piece of original work (for ex., a scientific experiment, a video project, or a piece of creative writing) centered around their chosen organism. During the last week of classes each student will share the major accomplishments of his/her multifaceted organism with the rest of the class in a brief class presentation.
Evaluation will be based on class attendance and on the final paper/creative project. Class will meet three times per week.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: approximately $30 for books.
Meeting time: afternoons.

ALTSCHULER

BIOL 012 Medical Ethics (Same as Special 012)

This course will examine contemporary issues in medical ethics. The first type of issue that we will discuss regards decisions that are made in the practice of medicine. For example, a current topic of great interest in this area is whether physicians should help a terminally ill patients end their own lives. Another example of this type of issue is whether a genetic counselor should perform a test to allow parents to learn the sex of their fetus, knowing that the parents will abort if the fetus is of a particular sex. A second type of ethical issue that we will investigate includes larger social issues related to health care. For example, should we ration the use of expensive medical technologies so that we can provide some minimal level of basic medical services for all of our citizens? Also, global problems such as AIDS will be examined; if expensive protease inhibitors prove to be effective treatment for HIV infection and AIDS, what are our obligations to the 90% of AIDS patients who live in developing countries? Finally, future problems such as what to do about the potential for cloning humans will be examined. In discussing these and other issues, we will attempt to understand the moral reasons underlying opposing positions. A major goal of the course is to help participants not only understand these difficult issues but also to develop their own reflections whenever possible.
Short reading will be assigned for each class, and active, thoughtful participation is expected. Students will have a choice of writing a 10-page paper regarding an issue of particular interest, or 3 short case commentaries. Students of all backgrounds, majors, and career goals are encouraged to enroll, including "nonscience persons."
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 15.
Cost to student: approximately $50 for books and articles.
Meeting time: afternoons.

MATTHEW ISSAC FOGG (Instructor)
THEILING (Sponsor)

Matt Fogg is a third year medical student at New York University where he recently completed the Arthur Zitrin Fellowship in Medical Ethics.

BIOL 013 Exercise Physiology, Diet, and Metabolism

This course will consider some of the complex interactions between diet, exercise, and the body's metabolism. A partial list of topics include: how different types of food are used in the body; how training influence metabolism; how metabolism influences performance; muscle metabolism during exercise; and long-term considerations of diet and health. The student can evaluate his/her exercise performance in the laboratory.
Method of evaluation and required activities: 2 short papers (2 pages) relating to assigned readings and a 3rd paper on a topic of the students' choosing will be required. Also, student will be required to maintain a personal log of food consumption and amount of exercise to calculate personal energy balance. The course will meet three times per week with occasional extra meetings for performance analysis and demonstrations.
No prerequisites. This course is intended for non-science majors. Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: approximately $5 for reading packets.
Meeting time: mornings.

S. SWOAP

BIOL 014 Evolutionary Medicine

While the practice of medicine in the 50s and 60s was characterized by great optimism, that of the 80s and 90s is becoming increasingly pessimistic. Many diseases which should have been conquered are on the rise and frightening new ones keep appearing. Is there a fundamental failure in our approach to medicine? We will take an evolutionary and ecological perspective on this problem, considering the origins and potential treatments for various diseases in this light. The list of diseases we will consider includes various viral and bacterial infections (e.g. AIDS, Lyme disease, tuberculosis), skin and breast cancer, autoimmunity, diabetes, malaria, asthma, and prion based diseases. Class will meet three times per week and will be a combination of lecture and discussion. This course should be of interest to both the committed pre-med and the medically curious, so there is no prerequisite. Basics in evolution, ecology, and biology will be covered, at the same time that the potential for very sophisticated analysis of each disease.
Evaluation will be based on class participation and a final 10-page paper.
Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: approximately $45 for books and a reading packet.
Meeting time: afternoons.

LEE VENOLIA (Instructor)
W. DEWITT (Sponsor)

The instructor is a former Assistant Professor in the Biology Department and is trained in genetics.

BIOL 015 Natural History of the Berkshires (Same as Environmental Studies 015)

We are fortunate in Williamstown to be surrounded by a variety of natural areas. In this course we will explore some of these natural areas, and study the natural history of the plants and animals that inhabit them. We will take field trips to a variety of sites to gain an appreciation for the diversity of natural communities that occur near Williamstown. Students will become familiar with common plants and will learn to identify them in winter. We will not neglect animals, although they are harder to observe. Students will learn to identify animal tracks and will look for overwintering insects. In addition, some field trips will be devoted to learning about birds. We will also consider how the climate, topography, and human uses of each site have shaped the ecological community, and discuss the adaptations that allow local animals and plants to survive New England's winters. The course will consist primarily of field trips, so students should be prepared to spend time outside. Snowshoes will be used if necessary.
Requirements: a 10-page paper and class participation.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: less than $40 for materials and snowshoe rental.
Meeting time: mornings and some all day field trips.

MEYER

BIOL 016 Moon Farm Video (Same as Environmental Studies 016)

The New England landscape is an ever-changing tapestry that is the product of physical, biological, and historical factors. One representative bit of this mosaic is the 60-acre Moon Lot nestled in the center of the Hopkins Memorial Forest. A subsistence farm from the Eighteenth Century until the mid-1950s, the Moon Farm was the subject of a 12-minute 16mm black-and-white film made by a WSP course in January, 1973. Since that time, the Moon Barn has been relocated to the entrance of the Hopkins Forest, woodlands have reclaimed much of the site, and media technology has undergone important changes. The objective of this course is to analyze and document the changes that have occurred on the site over the past quarter-century. The original film will be transferred to sVHS video format and new video footage will be taken and edited to produce a half-hour video interpreting the continued changes in the land as exemplified by the Moon Lot.
Requirements: participation in the research, writing, taping, and editing the project.
Enrollment limited to 15.
Cost to student: none.
Meeting time: mornings.

ART

BIOL 017 Outbreak: Viruses and Culture

The popular press would have us believe that the AIDS pandemic is a unique example of a viral pathogen causing cultural, political, and behavioral changes in society. In fact, infectious diseases and viral epidemics have impacted society throughout recorded history. This course will examine the intersection of infectious disease and society. The basic biology of viruses will be covered in context of examining the impact of viruses on human history and politics. The current interest in emerging viruses will also be examined with a focus on the social, economic, ecological, and cultural factors which induce episodes of novels to see how the representation of infectious diseases has evolved. How viruses have been portrayed by the entertainment industry, in both the print and film media, will be considered for their accuracy and intent.
Evaluation will be based on class participation, two short papers (2-3 pages) relating to assigned readings and films, and a presentation.
Enrollment limited to 30.
Meeting time: mornings.

Roseman

BIOL 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Biology 493, 494.

CHEMISTRY

CHEM 010 Structure Determination with Advanced Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Techniques

This course will introduce intermediate-level students of chemistry to advanced techniques in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectrometer operation that are employed in modern molecular structure analysis. Topics covered in the course will include basic spectrometer architecture, the fundamentals of NMR theory, spin-spin coupling interactions, simple decoupling experiments, simple multinuclear applications, and multipulse sequence experiments. Special emphasis will be placed on powerful "one-dimensional" and "two-dimensional" analysis techniques, including (1D): Distortionless Enhancement by Polarization Transfer (DEPT) and Nuclear Overhauser (NOE) difference spectra and (2D): H,H Correlation Spectroscopy ("H,H, COSY") and H,C COSY and C,C COSY ("2D INADEQUATE"). Class members will be trained in the operation of the Chemistry Department's new NMR console and data station and problem sets and the final class project will be carried out on this instrumentation. A command of introductory organic chemistry will be required.
The course will consist of three lectures and completion of one "spectrometer-based problem set" per week. Students will be expected to plan for and schedule spectrometer use in view of other Chemistry Department NMR spectrometer needs and regular due dates for problem sets. Student evaluation will be based upon attendance and participation in class, problem sets, and one ten page paper detailing a structural analysis using advanced NMR techniques.
Prerequisite: Chemistry 201-202. Enrollment limited to 8.
Cost to student: textbook and a packet of photocopied materials.
Meeting time: mornings.

RICHARDSON

CHEM 011 Science for Kids (Same as Environmental Studies 011 and Special 011)

(See under Special for full description.)

CHEM 012 Applying the Scientific Method to Archaeology and Paleoanthropology

Archaeological studies, which consider the human impact on the environment, can include materials as recent as nineteenth-century glass, or as old as stone tools from hundreds of thousands of years ago. And paleoanthropology, the study of early human remains, covers materials that are millions of years old. Natural science can answer a wide variety of questions for researchers in the field, not just how old an object is, but also where, how, and sometimes why an object was made. These answers in turn tell us about patterns of human development and settlement, and also help us distinguish forgeries from genuine artifacts.
The course will consist of approximately two weeks of class meetings and readings, after which students will select a project either in the lab or based on the readings. At the end of Winter Study, students will present their results to the class and submit a 5-7 page written report.
Evaluation will be based on class participation, completion of the project, and submission of a satisfactory report.
Prerequisite: a high school chemistry course; college-level chemistry is not required.
Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: approximately $5 for reading packet.
Meeting time: mornings.

ANNE SKINNER (Instructor)
THOMAN (Sponsor)

Anne Skinner is a Senior Lecturer in Chemistry at Williams.

CHEM 013 Genetics and Disease: the Biology, Psychology, and Ethics of Genetic Testing (Same as Psychology 013 and Special 013)

How much of a role do your genes play in disease? What is genetic testing? What are the social and public policy issues surrounding genetic testing? This course will provide current information on how disease-related genes are identified, the availability and reliability of genetic tests, and the actual testing methods in current use. We will consider the contribution of genetic predisposition toward illness compared with other known risk factors, including behavior, personality, and stress. We will also discuss the myriad ethical, moral and economic issues that surround genetic testing and counseling. With the completion of the Human Genome Project in 2005, decisions regarding who will be tested and who will have access to this information will be addressed by both judicial and legislative bodies. Our goal for this course is to supply you with sufficient scientific information and theoretical perspective that you will be able to make significant contributions to the coming public discussion of these complex issues.
The class will meet three times per week for two hours. Approximately 50% of class time will be spent in group discussion of selected readings. Students will prepare three written evaluations of case studies, and will critique each others' writing in class. The final meeting will be devoted to an in-class debate.
Evaluation will be based on participation in class discussions and debate, and by the written assignments.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 24.
Cost to student: none.
Meeting time: mornings.

FRIEDMAN and WEISS

CHEM 014 EMT Training Course

A course designed to prepare students for the Massachusetts EMT exam and to provide training to become MA-certified Emergency Medical Technicians. This is a time-intensive course involving 100 hours of class plus 10 hours of emergency room and ambulance work. Students will learn, among other skills, basic life support techniques, patient assessment techniques, safe transportation and mobilization skills, as well as the treatment of various medical emergencies, including shock, bleeding, soft-tissue injuries, and child birth.
Students will most likely take the EMT exam in February, following completion of the course. In addition, the class may meet a few times at the end of the fall semester in order to reduce the
number of class hours during Winter Study Period.
Enrollment limited to 24 students.
Cost to student: $200/student plus approximately $70 for textbook, stethoscope, and BP cuff.
Meeting time: mornings and afternoons.

KEVIN GARVEY (Instructor)
RICHARDSON (Sponsor)

Kevin Garvey is a Massachusetts state and nationally approved EMT-I (Intermediate) and an EMT-IC (Instructor-coordinator). He has been involved with Emergency Medical Service for 15-20 years. Mr. Garvey currently works as an EMT-I at Village Ambulance, Williamstown, and is also an EMT training instructor at Greenfield Community College.

CHEM 018 How to Brew Beer (Same as Special 018)

An introduction to the basics of brewing beer, this course is designed to increase your appreciation of the art of brewing. Equipment, ingredients, and methodology will be discussed in detail and used in practice. Students will learn clean brewing techniques and brew one small batch of beer. Other topics covered in the course will include the history, chemistry, and politics of brewing beer. In addition to brewing, we will spend time learning to evaluate critically some of the major varieties of beer.
We will hold three 2- to 3-hour sessions per week, depending on the activities of the day. Students are expected to attend all sessions and participate in the class field trips. Students are expected to keep and hand in for evaluation, a notebook recording their experiments in brewing, tasting, and information from field trips. In addition, participants are required to research and produce an 8- to 10-page paper on some topic related to the course with the topic approved by the instructor. Students will present their findings to the rest of the class in short presentations at the end of the course. As a creative task, each student shall design and present to the class their very own beer label.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 12 students who are at least 21 years in age.
Cost to student: $30 covering xeroxing, notebook, field trip, consumables and equipment.
Required text: The New Complete Joy of Home Brewing, Charlie Papazian.
Meeting time: afternoons.

MARK NUTCHER and DAVID BACKUS (Instructors)
THOMAN (Sponsor)

Mark Nutcher has a B.S. from the University of Oregon and an M.A. from the University of Colorado. David Backus has a B.A. from Haverford College and expects his Ph.D. in Summer 1997 from the University of Washington, Seattle.

CHEM 022 Introduction to Scientific Research

An experimental project will be carried out under the supervision of a member of the Department in fields such as biochemistry, inorganic chemistry, organic chemistry, or physical chemistry.
A 10-page written report is required. Nonscience majors are invited to participate.
Prerequisite: variable, depending on the project (at least Chemistry 101) and permission of the Department. Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: none.
Meeting time: mornings.

LOVETT

CHEM 031 Senior Research and Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Chemistry 493, 494.

CLASSICS

CLAS 010 Ovid's Metamorphoses

One of the most delightful and influential of all the authors of Classical Antiquity was Ovid. His vast compendium of classical mythology, the Metamorphoses, contains the versions of Greek and Roman myths that are the most familiar to us. And when we look at a painting or sculpture of a mythological scene a primary source is almost invariably Ovid. Shakespeare knew his Ovid well, and until the Romantic Era Ovid was regarded among the most important classical authors. The Metamorphoses was read for the sheer joy of its pagan wit and narrative skill, as an allegory of Christian virtues, and even as foreshadowing the New Testament.
Despite all the delight Ovid has provoked, the Metamorphoses remains an enigma in its design, narrative technique, and intent. Two thousand lines longer than the Aeneid, many critics have denied that it is an epic, while the rest cannot agree about its subject and intent. Ovid is recognized as a master storyteller, but there is little consensus about what is at the heart of his exuberant word play. And the significance of his central theme-the metamorphosis of a figure from one form into another-is still widely debated.
In this course we will read all of the Metamorphoses. After an introductory lecture we will move as the Muses beckon to discussion of certain stories as we seek to understand aspects of Ovid's narrative technique, the `purpose' of his work, and its lasting influence. A paper of moderate length and open discussion of the topics at hand will be required.
No prerequisites save an ability to read, think, and enjoy an intensely varied narrative. Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: approximately $15 for the text.
Meeting time: mornings.

FUQUA

CLAS 013 Biblical Hebrew in a Month (Same as Religion 013)

This course will enable students to read the Bible in the original Hebrew in a fast, fun, and focused way. Topics include the difference between BeGeD-KeFeT, BuMaF, K'MiNPaTS, and the Throaty Five. Meet sentences without verbs, the extra pronoun, and word pairs. Discover a word's three letter root and explore the mysteries of the Shwa and Dagesh. Learn the seven `buildings' of the Hebrew verb and find the missing letters. In addition to this intensive study of Hebrew vocabulary and grammar, attention will also be given to the polyvalence of biblical discourse. The paratactic and terse character of the TaNaKH produce narratives tantalizingly `fraught with background' that virtually cry out to the reader `interpret me'. Thus by the end of the course students will have read the Book of Ruth with an understanding of both biblical language and biblical style.
Students will be evaluated on the basis of regular attendance, preparation, and class participation. In addition, students will be required to prepare a translation and grammatical commentary of 10-15 verses selected from the Book of Genesis as a final project. In order to facilitate the learning of Hebrew in a month, the course includes frequent quizzes and homework assignments. The course will meet three days a week for three hours a day covering three chapters per session. Students are expected to spend at least four hours preparing for each class. Because of the intensive nature of this course regular attendance and preparation are essential.
No prerequisites or previous experience in Hebrew required. Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: $35.00 covering textbook and copies.
Meeting time: mornings.

KRAUS

CLAS 031 Senior Thesis

May be taken by students registered for Classics 493, 494.

COMPUTER SCIENCE

CSCI 010 Introduction to Computer Music and Sound Generation

This course is an introduction to the fundamentals of digital sound generation and manipulation, specifically techniques used in music. The lectures will provide an overview of the physics and psychophysics of sound, its digital representation, and mathematical manipulation. Following this, we will examine various techniques for processing and synthesizing sound, and see how these techniques have actually been implemented in "state of the art" synthesizers over the past 20 years.
During lab sessions, students will be able to experiment with these techniques to process and synthesize sounds and design "instruments." Additional topics covered will include non-real time synthesis techniques and algorithmic composition.
There will be a term project, though the subject and emphasis of the project will be up to the individual student. Projects may range, for example, from designing and implementing new synthesis techniques to writing and producing a fully computer-generated musical composition.
Prerequisites: a background in music or programming, and at least a user's familiarity with computers. Mathematics at least through pre-calculus is recommended. Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: texts.
Meeting time: afternoons.

Sachs

CSCI 012 How to Solve it: The Mathematics of Puzzles and Games (Same as Mathematics 012)

(See under Mathematics for full description.)

CSCI 020 Computer Animation 1998

In this course, students will learn the fundamental issues facing animators in the fast lane of today's high-end special effects field through hands-on experience under the direction of some of the most talented animators in the business, the Kleiser-Walczak Construction Co., a computer graphics firm specializing in high-end database construction and human figure animation. They developed and own a system for the creation of computer generated actors called "Synthespians" which has been demonstrated in experimental films "Nestor Sextone for President" (1988) and "Don't Touch Me" (1990). They have also worked for PBS and CBS and their feature film work includes "Honey I Blew Up the Kids," "The Pickle," "Stargate," "Clear and Present Danger" and "Judge Dredd." They have also worked on special effects attractions for the Luxor Hotel and for Disney Theme Parks.
The course will consist of lectures in which the field of computer animation will be explored from an historical context, using videotape examples, as well as studio sessions, during which students will learn to use high-end workstations to create 3-D animated sequences of their own design. In addition, students may have an opportunity to participate in the production of actual projects on an intern level.
Prerequisites: a strong interest in graphics and animation. Preference to students with background in Computer Science or Studio Art. Enrollment limited to 12.
Cost to student: approximately $50 for books and materials.
Meeting time: morning meetings, with lab work at various times.

Jeff Kleiser (Instructor)
Bruce (Sponsor)

Jeff Kleiser is co-founder of Kleiser-Walczak Construction Co., a computer graphics firm specializing in high-end database construction and human figure animation. His work has appeared in many feature films and in numerous broadcast and commercial projects. Recent examples include work on the films Judge Dredd and Stargate, animated sequences in the PBS series The Astronomers and special effects attractions for the Luxor Hotel in Las Vegas.

CSCI 030 Senior Project

To be taken by candidates for honors in Computer Science via a route other than the thesis route.

CSCI 031 Senior Honor Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Computer Science 493-494.

CONTRACT MAJOR

CMAJ 031 Senior Thesis

To be taken by students registered for Contract Major 493, 494.

ECONOMICS

ECON 010 Agriculture and Sustainable Development

This is a graduate WSP offered at the Center for Development Economics. Agriculture policy makers in many developing countries face numerous dilemmas as they seek to meet the goals of producing food, earning hard currency through exports, generating income for the rural poor, and protecting land, water, forest, and wildlife resources. This class will examine the ways in which the goals of agricultural policy can coincide and conflict. We will pay special attention to the relationship between agricultural production and environmental protection. When and why does agricultural production lead to land clearing, diversion of water resources, and overuse of chemicals? When does agricultural development lead to improved use of resources? What role can and should policy makers play in influencing the course of agricultural development? Do markets lead to the most efficient and most desirable outcomes?
We will address these questions through readings, videos, and discussions, as well as through some simulation-type exercises, in which students get hands-on practice with policy making. We may also make one or more brief field trips to meet local farmers and agricultural leaders to ask how issues of sustainability and agricultural production are played out in Berkshire County.
The class will meet daily.
Evaluation will be based on two to three short papers, other written assignments, and class participation.
Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: approximately $100 for textbook and photocopies.
Meeting time: afternoons.

GOLLIN

ECON 012 From Farm to Table: The Economics of Food

This course explores how changing economic patterns at the farm, distribution, retail, and consumer level affect food consumption patterns in the U.S. We will explore these economic relationships as we see how food moves from the farm to our tables. Initially, we will meet with local farmers to discuss the economic forces that are shaping their farming decisions. In many cases, the distinctions between production and processing are blurred, as more farmers move into contract farming, especially in the mid-west and south, and as many small farmers seek to create their own market niches and begin to market and sell their own specialty products. The food distribution system involves both local retailers, such as co-ops and large vertically integrated chains. We will meet with people involved with the distribution and retailing of food. Finally, we will look at how changing social and economic factors affect the choices that consumers make about food.
This course will meet three times per week and will involve several field trips to local farms and businesses.
Students will be evaluated on the basis of three short (approximately 5 page) papers and participation in class discussion.
Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: approximately $75 for text and reading packets and additional costs for field trips.
Meeting time: afternoons.

DOSS

ECON 013 American Business Cycles, 1929-1997

This Winter Study course is intended to provide an opportunity for students to investigate important macroeconomic episodes in the United States from the Great Depression to the present. Such episodes are frequently referred to in both introductory and intermediate macroeconomics courses, but such courses never afford the time to study them in detail. The particular episodes to be addressed are the Great Depression itself, the Kennedy-Johnson boom, the supply shocks of the seventies, the Reagonomics. Time permitting, the performance of the economy during the Bush-Clinton administrations will be evaluated against this background. The emphasis will be to try to understand the forces that triggered major swings in U.S. macroeconomic performance during this period, both in the direction of upswings as well as downswings, by relying on the direct examination of data, the application of intermediate-level macroeconomic models, and critical evaluation of alternative interpretations offered by informed observers.
The class will be conducted as a seminar, and will meet in two-hour session three times per week.
Students will be evaluated on the basis of attendance, class participation, and a 15- to 20-page paper which proposes a particular interpretation of an important macroeconomic episode.
Prerequisites: Economics 101. Enrollment limited to 15.
Meeting time: mornings.

MONTIEL

ECON 014 Accounting

The project will examine the theoretical and practical aspects of financial accounting. Although the beginning of the course will explore the mechanics of the information gathering and dissemination process, the course will be oriented mainly towards users, rather than preparers, of accounting information. The project will include discussion of the principles involved in accounting for current assets, plant assets, leases, intangible assets, current and long-term debt, stockholders' equity, the income statement and the statement of cash flows. Students will be expected to interpret and analyze actual financial statements. The nature of, and career opportunities in, the field of accounting will also be discussed.
The project is a "mini course." It will present a substantial body of material and will require a considerable commitment of time by the student, including regular attendance and participation in discussion and homework cases and problems.
Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: none.
Meeting time: mornings.

LEO McMENIMEN (Instructor)
WINSTON (Sponsor)

Leo McMenimen is returning to Williams this January from the School of Business, Montclair State College.

ECON 015 Stock Market

Elementary description and analysis of the stock market. Emphasis will be on the roles of the market in our economy, including evaluation of business firms and the success of particular capital investments, allocating savings to different types of investment, and providing liquid and marketable financial investments for individual savers.
The course will focus on the description of mechanics of trading on various exchanges and other markets, stock market indexes of "averages" (Dow-Jones, S&P, 500, etc.), how to read the financial news, historical rates of return on stocks and portfolios, role of mutual funds, beta coefficients, and "random walk" theory. The course will also involve a brief introduction to financial reports of firms and analysis of financial ratios.
Each student will participate in discussions, do some homework assignments, follow a hypothetical portfolio during January, and write a 10-page report analyzing the wisdom or folly of having chosen the portfolio.
Not intended for students who already know much about the stock market; students who have had Economics 317 not admitted. The course will involve a two-day field trip to New York City.
Prerequisite: Economics 101. Enrollment limited to 30.
Cost to student: $30 for text plus $50 for bus transportation to New York City, obligatory and paid at time of registration. Meals and lodging in New York City are not included in this price and are the responsibility of the student.
Meeting time: afternoons.

LEO MCMENIMEN (Instructor)
WINSTON (Sponsor)

Leo McMenimen is returning to Williams this January from the School of Business, Montclair State College.

ECON 018 Maps (Same as Environmental Studies 018)

A study of maps as ways to represent ideas and data. Principles of "thematic cartography," including role of projections, scale, symbols, color, and shading. Examples of maps from a wide variety of fields (journalism, historical narrative, physical sciences, economics, political science, advertising, propaganda) and subjects (e.g., politics, profitable business location, efficient public facility location, poverty, military campaigns and battles, environmental conditions, lass of forest cover, flood risk, ethnic populations, and migration). Introduction to aerial photographs and satellite images. The instructors' examples will be primarily from the U.S., Canada, and Latin America, but students may work independently on other regions. Note: This is not primarily a course in "geographical information systems" (GIS), although there will be an introduction to that subject.
Requirements: We will encourage students to work independently, but at a minimum each student must: a) collect and critique examples of maps; b) participate actively in discussion three meeting each week; c) design, produce, and exhibit publicly an original series of maps with one of the computer mapping programs that will be available.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: approximately $40 for texts and reading packet.
Meeting time: mornings.

R. BOLTON and CONNING

ECON 025 Spotted Owls and Pink Salmon

This Travel WSP will explore the complex and divisive issues confronting the Pacific Northwest, a region highly depended on resource extraction industries that have become threatened by excessive harvesting, environmental degradation, technological change, government policy, and economic growth. A central goal of the course is to see, first-hand, the nature of the problems, to talk with those who are affected and to gain an appreciation for the many points of view which have made the issues so difficult to reconcile. The course will focus on understanding the causes of these resource problems and looking at a range of policies and other potential solutions. Students will have opportunities to talk with industry representatives, community leaders, native Americans, staff from State and Federal Government, environmental groups, and academics.
Travel will begin in Seattle and will include the Olympic Peninsula, Washington coast, the Columbia River basin, Portland, and parts of the mountain interior of Washington State. A significant part of the course will focus on studying the Willapa Bay region on the southern Washington coast in cooperation with EcoTrust (headed by Spencer Beebe '68) and the Willapa Alliance, an effort to create a grass roots organization to encourage sustainable economic development in this resource-dependent region. In addition to localized issues such as those in Willapa Bay, wider regional issues will be explored including the conflicts between salmon, hydropower dams, agriculture, and forestry, development in the Cascade and Olympic mountains regions, and sustainable development around Puget Sound.
Each student will be required to write a 10-page paper.
No prerequisites, although students having taken Economics 101 and Environmental Studies 101 will be given priority. Enrollment limited to 10.
Cost to student: approximately $750, excluding transportation to and from Seattle.

W. JAEGER

ECON 026 South Africa's Transition: The Challenge of Redistribution and Growth

This 22-day travel course will investigate the complex problem of South Africa's economic transformation, examining the role of public policy in mobilizing social investment that fuels revitalized growth while bolstering higher wages and increased employment. Since South Africa's first democratic elections three years ago, the country has implemented a remarkable political transformation. Socio-economic progress, however, has been much more difficult. This project will explore the challenges posed by the objectives of redistribution and economic growth, focusing on the role of government in providing social investment like housing, health care, education, and job creation.
South Africa is a country of contrasts: international polls rank Cape Town as one of the world's three most pleasant cities, yet minutes from the central business district smolder huge pockets of abject urban poverty. This course will investigate how such a skewed distribution of resources has been perpetuated, and why redressing the problem has been so difficult. The first ten days of the course will focus on understanding the problem-visiting poor townships created as economically nonviable entities, investigating inequities in the provision of education and health care, and comprehending the predicament of the rural poor. The paucity of public resources for the majority stands in stark contrast to the abundance provided by apartheid-era policies to the privileged minority: a health care system that achieved the world's first successful heart transplant, public schools comparable to the world's best private educational institutions, and first-rate urban amenities. The second half of the course will analyze why one of the world's most unequal societies is so resistant to change, and what role public policy can serve in fostering redistribution and growth. Meetings -with policy-makers and community activists, with teachers and labor leaders, with economic researchers and social workers, with public health advocates and bankers-will provide insight into the historical and structural causes of the extreme inequality that characterizes South Africa's society, and the options available for redressing past imbalances and inequities while promoting economic growth and job creation. The itinerary will focus on Cape Town and rural areas within the Western Cape province.
The theme of social investment unifies the course: how apartheid created one of the world's most skewed distributions of human capital, whose inertial force resists substantive change, and the critical role that public investment in social infrastructure must serve in transforming the economy. First-hand experience combined with educational presentations and discussions will illuminate the challenges, opportunities, and policy options facing South Africa as the country rebuilds political, social, and economic institutions
No prerequisite. Enrollment limited to 12-14. Interested students must consult the instructor before registration (email: michael.samosn@williams.edu).
Cost to student: $2,840 (Includes round-trip airfare from New York City to Cape Town, hotel accommodations, all meals, local transportation, and miscellaneous expenses).

SAMSON

ECON 030 Honors Project

The "Specialization Route" to the degree with Honors in Economics requires that each candidate take an Honors Winter Study Project in January of the senior year. Students who wish to begin their honors work in January should submit a detailed proposal. Decisions on admission to the Honors WSP will be made in the fall. Information on the procedures will be mailed to senior majors in economics early in the fall semester.
Seniors who wish to apply for admission to the Honors WSP and thereby to the Honors Program should register for this WSP as their first choice.
Some seniors will have begun honors work in the fall and wish to complete it in the WSP. They will be admitted to the WSP if they have made satisfactory progress. They should register for this WSP as their first choice.

BRAINERD

ECON 031 Honors Thesis

To be taken by students participating in year-long thesis research (ECON 493-W031-494).

ENGLISH

ENGL 010 Films of Lubitsch and Sturges

We will study the work of two of Hollywood's most original comic minds and distinguished directors: Ernst Lubitsch and Preston Sturges. Lubitsch, arguably the most prestigious Hollywood director of the 1930s, was unmatched for the elegance and cleverness of his visual style and for the deft and urbane acting he elicited. In such charming and worldly comic masterpieces as Trouble in Paradise, The Shop Around the Corner, and Ninotchka, he analyzed American and European attitudes toward sex and money with a distinctive blend of cheerfully cynical satire and indulgent wit. His screwball comedy about the Nazi occupation of Poland, To Be or Not to Be, is one of the most remarkable political films ever made. Sturges enjoyed a meteoric rise in the early 1940s as a director of wild and off-beat comedies. Films such as The Great McGinty, The Lady Eve, The Palm Beach Story, and The Miracle of Morgan's Creek are conceived as brilliant satires of American politics, sex, motherhood, class, money, and advertizing, but are almost unhinged by the madcap energies of Sturges' penchant for farce and for weird disruptions of convention.
Requirements: Students will be asked to write short journal entries on each of the approximately ten films studied, about 15 pages of writing in all. Three two-hour meetings per week.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 18; preference to students who have taken English 204 and to English majors, but others are welcome also.
Cost to student: approximately $20 for books and an offset packet.
Meeting time: mornings.

Tifft

ENGL 011 Dream Work

This course will explore the relation between dream and representation-dreaming as a mode of representation, but also representations of dreams in a variety of cultural avatars-literature, film, advertizing. The first portion of the course will focus on The Interpretation of Dreams, Freud's seminal work on the unconscious and a fascinating narrative in its own right. We will then consider a variety of literary and film works that focus on dream life, from The Book of the Duchess to Through the Looking Glass, from Cocteau's "Beauty and the Beast" to "Videodrome." We will end with reflections on the relation between dreams and commodity culture-how does dream representation do its work in that sphere? how are we brought to dream of buying dreams, including the dream that we might, for once, "just do it"?
Requirements: ten pages of writing. Three two-hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 20, with students selected from a mix of levels and disciplines.
Cost to student: approximately $20 for readings.
Meeting time: mornings.

Pye

ENGL 012 Constructing Elizabeth I

Renowned as the Virgin Queen and one of England's greatest monarchs, Elizabeth I spent the first half of her reign wooing her subjects, negotiating marriages with the various crowded heads of Europe, and defending her right to rule the country herself, whether or not she married. This course will compare the ways in which Elizabeth I constructed herself (poetry, public speeches, proclamations, political negotiations, pageantry, print, portraiture, and gossip) with the ways in which her speech and writing have been represented by biographers and historians.
Requirements: Students are required to attend class regularly (three two-hour meetings per week), take an active part in class discussions, and complete assigned readings, while working on an individual or group project. The projects, based on Elizabeth's own writings and writings about her, will enable students to pursue their own creative or scholarly interests in literature, history, Women's Studies, art, education, politics, or technology. Possible projects include: a chapter in a history or biography of Elizabeth; a packet of materials or a mini-course for the Williamstown elementary school; a documentary, epic poem, drama, pageant, musical comedy, rock opera, or stand-up comic or court jester's routine about one or more moments in Elizabeth's reign; a slide show using images of the queen; original drawings, portraits, cartoons, comic books, or computer graphics drawn from life masks used by contemporary portrait painters; a CD-ROM or web site; an introduction and annotated bibliography for an edition of Elizabeth's writings; a feminist critique of ways in which the queen has been portrayed by biographers, historians, literary critics, or Elizabethan writers such as Shakespeare or Spenser.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 20; preference given to students, or groups of students, with a clearly defined project.
Cost to student: will vary depending on the type of project pursued.
Meeting time: mornings.

I. Bell

ENGL 013 A Century of Shakespeare on Screen (Same as Spanish 013)

(See under Romance Languages for full description.)

ENGL 014 Feminist Science Fiction

This course will focus on the development of feminist and lesbian science fiction, fantasy and utopian fiction, beginning with Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Herland (1915), a utopian novel about an all-female world, and including the science fiction of Ursula LeGuin, Margaret Atwood, Joanna Russ, and Sheri Tepper, among others. We will consider the function and value of "feminist" writing in what is often seen as an "escapist" genre, and explore the range of attitudes these novels embody toward male and female culture and identity, sexuality, the uses and dangers of technology, and the role of violence in human culture. The first part of the course will focus on the development of feminist science fiction as a distinct genre, and the second part will focus on the range of, and fault lines among, writers currently working within it. Students will have an opportunity to pursue particular authors or types of fiction that interest them, and the course will also offer some opportunity to meet with contemporary writers in the field.
Requirements: a reading journal or a ten-page essay. Three two-hour meetings per week.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 20, with preference to seniors first, then to English majors.
Cost to student: approximately $50 for books.
Meeting time: afternoons.

Case

ENGL 015 Ghost Stories

What are the particular pleasures of a good ghost story? "It should give you the creeps," Roald Dahl writes, "and disturb your thoughts." Beyond the requisite chill and shudder, how might our thoughts be disturbed? And to what end? In this course we will read a number of supernatural tales, including classics of the genre by Algernon Blackwood, Ambrose Bierce, M. R. James, and Edgar Allan Poe, and modern variations by, among others, Jorge Luis Borges, Franz Kafka, Vladimir Nabokov, Elizabeth Bowen, and John Cheever. We will also discuss two short novels-The Turn of the Screw by Henry James, and The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson-and two films adapted from these books (The Innocents and The Haunting).
Requirements: attendance at all class meetings, one in-class presentation, and a 10- to 15-page paper. Three two-hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 20.
Cost to student: books only.
Meeting time: mornings.

Raab

ENGL 016 Fantasy Novels of C.S. Lewis and Charles Williams (Same as Mathematics 016)

(See under Mathematics for full description.)

ENGL 017 Henry James

Henry James writes about what it meant for American and European societies to be mutually exposed to and by one another around the turn of this century. In so doing he raises questions about what it means to be civilized, to be smart, and to be rich. We will consider how the drama of consciousness is played out in his characters' struggles with love and conscience, and in his own preoccupation with capturing stylistically the narrative logic of the passions. We will read three novellas-"The Beast in the Jungle," "The Pupil," and "The Aspern Papers"-as well as the novels The Ambassadors and The Golden Bowl.
Requirements: three short papers or one 10-page paper. Three two-hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 18, with preference to English majors.
Cost to student: approximately $50 for books.
Meeting time: afternoons.

Sokolsky

ENGL 018 Modern Irish Drama

The first portion of this course will focus on the Irish "Revival" period (1890s to 1920s), including drama by Yeats, Shaw, Synge, and Lady Gregory, with supporting representative readings in short fiction and non-fiction prose of the period. Our readings will address, in particular, the following key issues: the recuperation and promotion of an independent Irish literary tradition during the Revival, and the uneasy relationship of this new literary tradition to the English literary mainstream; the assigned writers' negotiations with the cultural politics of their time, and in particular with the contested idea of "Irishness" itself; and the place of gender in the construction of national and literary identity. The remainder of the course will focus on the impact of Irish independence and the shadow cast by the Revival writers on subsequent Irish dramatists, including O'Casey, Behan, and Friel. We will conclude with a screening and discussion of The Crying Game, and consider how the paradigms of political action, gender, and national identity established in the Irish tradition during the first half of this century continue to resonate powerfully in contemporary literary and cultural texts.
Requirements: 12-page final paper and a short oral presentation. Three two-hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 18, with preference to English majors.
Cost to student: approximately $60.
Meeting time: mornings.

James Pethica (Instructor)
Fix (Sponsor)

James Pethica teaches Modern British and Irish Literature at the University of Richmond. He is on leave in 1997-98, completing a book on Yeats and Lady Gregory.

ENGL 019 Toni Morrison

A close reading of Toni Morrison's six published novels: The Bluest Eye, Sula, Song of Solomon, Tar Baby, Beloved, and Jazz. Our aim will be to experience, as intensely as possible, the way Morrison sees things and says things-the angle of her vision and the rhythm of her language, and the way both of those things have changed over time. In the process of developing that kind of complex familiarity with Morrison's work, we will find what a rich occasion for thought it is. By way of Morrison, we should be able to rediscover as questions such things as memory, race, nuclear families, and black women's talk.
Requirements: a 10-15 page paper. During the first half of Winter Study, the class will meet three times a week for two hours, and during the second half of Winter Study, the course will meet twice a week for three hours.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 20, with preference to seniors and English majors.
Cost to student: approximately $70.
Meeting time: afternoons.

Geoff Sanborn (Instructor)
Fix (Sponsor)

Geoff Sanborn is Assistant Professor of English at Fairfield University, where he teaches courses in American literature and culture. He is the author of The Sign of the Cannibal: Melville and the Spectacle of Savagery, and is working on a collection of essays on race, trauma, and memory.

ENGL 020 Journalism

In this introduction to journalism, students will learn reporting, writing, and editing skills through written assignments and in-class exercises. We will examine how different styles of writing serve different needs, and the practical and legal limits within which journalists work. Assignments will include writing a news story, a feature article, a review, and an editorial. Students also will practice the essential art of rewriting.
Requirements: Each student will submit articles on deadline; read and discuss current newspapers and magazines; and attend all classes. Four two-hour meetings per week.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limited to 15, with preference to first-year students.
Cost to student: less than $20.
Meeting time: mornings.

Sally White (Instructor)
Fix (Sponsor)

Sally White worked at Time Inc. magazines in New York and Washington for thirteen years. She is now a freelance writer.

ENGL 023 Parody Workshop

In this course we will be reading and analyzing (or at least discussing superficially and vaguely) famous parodies of famous authors. But the bulk of our energy will be spent writing. For each class, students will prepare a short parody of an assigned writer, some of which we'll read aloud. Class time will be spent trying to figure our what works and what doesn't, what's funny and what's lame. In addition, students will have the entire Winter Study period to prepare a longer parody of a writer of their choice (due in the last class).
The list of writers we will be making fun of is changeable, as it depends partly on students' suggestions. Here are some possibilities: T. S. Eliot, Courtney Love, William Shakespeare, Malcolm X, Marcel Proust, Ernest Hemingway, Jacques Derrida, Mary Daly, Robert "Bob" Dylan, Camille Paglia, James Merrill, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Jack Kerouac, Alan Ginsberg, W. B. Yeats, Gertrude Stein, Sigmund Freud, Bertolt Brecht, Tupac Shakur, Lao Tzu, Alfred Tennyson, Virginia Woolf, William Wordsworth, William Faulkner . . . (you get the idea).
Requirements: class participation, completion of assignments, and above all personal whim. Two three-hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101. Enrollment limited to 15. In selecting students, preference will be given to seniors, and attention will be paid to diversity and to the balance between men and women.
Cost to student: minimal (mostly for xeroxing).
Meeting time: afternoons.

Paul Park (Instructor)
Fix (Sponsor)

Paul Park is the author of five novels and a small but meager body of short fiction.

ENGL 024 Kipling and India: Encountering the Other

While Disney cannibalizes and vulgarizes Kipling's Jungle Books, N. C. Chaudhuri calls Kim "one of the greatest of English novels." Edward Said, writing on culture and imperialism, admits Kim to "the world's greatest literature." Salman Rushdie reads Kipling's Indian stories with the incompatible emotions of "anger and delight." Why, after a near century of invisibility on college syllabuses, is this Nobel Prize-winning and internationally popular author now being read, studied, and admired by exactly those whom we might expect to be too angered to be delighted? Shall we join them? We shall read as much as we can of Kipling's Indian fiction, and consider whether it is time to open the academic canon to what Said calls Kipling's "extraordinary genius."
Requirements: two journals and a final 8- to 10-page paper. Three two-and-a-half hour meetings per week.
Prerequisites: English 101 or permission of instructor. Enrollment limited to 20, with preference to seniors, and to actual or potential English majors.
Cost to student: approximately $45.
Meeting time: afternoons.

C. Park (Instructor)
Fix (Sponsor)

Clara Park is Senior Lecturer in English emerita at Williams.

ENGL 030 Honors Project: Specialization Route

Required during Winter Study of all seniors admitted to candidacy for honors via the specialization route.

ENGL 031 Honors Project: Thesis

Required during Winter Study of all seniors admitted to candidacy for honors via the thesis route.

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

ENVI 010 Writing and Drawing-The Naturalist's Journal

This course will explore the tools for studying the natural world through various uses of writing, literature, and drawing. Students will spend time outdoors learning the ecosystem of the Williamstown area and time indoors