Upper Division Electives - Outside GWS/LGBT

2025 Fall
#24593

Sexual Cultures

Jill A Bakehorn
Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Mo, We, Fr
09:00 am - 09:59 am

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

SOCIOL 135 - LEC 001 Sexual Cultures more detail
This course considers how sexual identities, communities, desires, and practices are socially, historically, and culturally constructed. We will explore the tension between our sense of self and the larger social structures, cultures, and communities in which we are embedded. We will examine how people make sense of sexual feelings, behaviors, and identities within larger sociocultural contexts, looking at structural dynamics like gender norms, heteronormativity, racial hierarchies, class cultures, scientific knowledge, institutional constraints, and cultural spheres and how these impact individuals’ understanding of their own sexuality, including how collective groups challenge, expand, and transform the boundaries of sexuality.
2025 Fall
#26867

Law & Sexuality

Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Mo
12:00 pm - 12:59 pm
Anthro/Art Practice Bldg 115

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

20 Unreserved Seats

LEGALST 159 - DIS 104 Law & Sexuality more detail
This course focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality, and the social and historical norms and frameworks that affect its intersection with sex, gender, race, disability, and class. We will critically examine how the law shapes sexuality and how sexuality shapes the law. Our subject matter is mostly constitutional, covering sexuality’s intersection with privacy, freedom of expression, gender identity and expression, equal protection, reproduction, kinship, and family formation, among other subjects. We will study case law, legal articles, and other texts (including visual works) that critically engage issues of sexuality, citizenship, nationhood, religion, and the public and private spheres domestically and internationally.
2025 Fall
#26866

Law & Sexuality

Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Th
12:00 pm - 12:59 pm
Social Sciences Building 185

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

23 Unreserved Seats

LEGALST 159 - DIS 103 Law & Sexuality more detail
This course focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality, and the social and historical norms and frameworks that affect its intersection with sex, gender, race, disability, and class. We will critically examine how the law shapes sexuality and how sexuality shapes the law. Our subject matter is mostly constitutional, covering sexuality’s intersection with privacy, freedom of expression, gender identity and expression, equal protection, reproduction, kinship, and family formation, among other subjects. We will study case law, legal articles, and other texts (including visual works) that critically engage issues of sexuality, citizenship, nationhood, religion, and the public and private spheres domestically and internationally.
2025 Fall
#25428

Law & Sexuality

Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Tu
01:00 pm - 01:59 pm
Social Sciences Building 54

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

21 Unreserved Seats

LEGALST 159 - DIS 102 Law & Sexuality more detail
This course focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality, and the social and historical norms and frameworks that affect its intersection with sex, gender, race, disability, and class. We will critically examine how the law shapes sexuality and how sexuality shapes the law. Our subject matter is mostly constitutional, covering sexuality’s intersection with privacy, freedom of expression, gender identity and expression, equal protection, reproduction, kinship, and family formation, among other subjects. We will study case law, legal articles, and other texts (including visual works) that critically engage issues of sexuality, citizenship, nationhood, religion, and the public and private spheres domestically and internationally.
2025 Fall
#25427

Law & Sexuality

Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
We
02:00 pm - 02:59 pm

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

21 Unreserved Seats

LEGALST 159 - DIS 101 Law & Sexuality more detail
This course focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality, and the social and historical norms and frameworks that affect its intersection with sex, gender, race, disability, and class. We will critically examine how the law shapes sexuality and how sexuality shapes the law. Our subject matter is mostly constitutional, covering sexuality’s intersection with privacy, freedom of expression, gender identity and expression, equal protection, reproduction, kinship, and family formation, among other subjects. We will study case law, legal articles, and other texts (including visual works) that critically engage issues of sexuality, citizenship, nationhood, religion, and the public and private spheres domestically and internationally.
2025 Fall
#25172

Law & Sexuality

Sonia Katyal
Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Fr
02:00 pm - 04:59 pm
Physics Building 3

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

LEGALST 159 - LEC 001 Law & Sexuality more detail
This course focuses on the legal regulation of sexuality, and the social and historical norms and frameworks that affect its intersection with sex, gender, race, disability, and class. We will critically examine how the law shapes sexuality and how sexuality shapes the law. Our subject matter is mostly constitutional, covering sexuality’s intersection with privacy, freedom of expression, gender identity and expression, equal protection, reproduction, kinship, and family formation, among other subjects. We will study case law, legal articles, and other texts (including visual works) that critically engage issues of sexuality, citizenship, nationhood, religion, and the public and private spheres domestically and internationally.
2025 Fall
#31635

Sex and Gender in Premodern Chinese Culture

Ling Hon Lam
Aug 27, 2025 - Dec 12, 2025
Tu, Th
02:00 pm - 03:29 pm

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

14 Unreserved Seats

EALANG 118 - LEC 001 Sex and Gender in Premodern Chinese Culture more detail
This course explores Chinese cultures of sex and gender from antiquity to the seventeenth century. We concentrate on three interconnected issues: women’s status, homoeroticism, and the human body. Our discussion will be informed by cross-cultural comparisons with ancient Greece, Renaissance England, and Contemporary America. In contrast to our modern regime of sexuality, which collapses all the three aforementioned issues into the issues of desire and identity intrinsic to the body, we will see how the early Chinese regime of sexual act evolved into the early modern regime of emotion that concerned less inherent identities than a media culture of life-style performance.
2025 Summer Session A 6 weeks, May 27 - July 3
#14109

Language and Gender

Masi Santos
May 27, 2025 - Jul 03, 2025
Mo, Tu, We, Th
02:00 pm - 03:59 pm

Instruction Mode: In-Person Instruction

Open Seats

5 Unreserved Seats

LINGUIS 151 - LEC 001 Language and Gender more detail
An overview of research over the past 30 years on the relationship between language and gender: how women's use of language differs from men's, in U.S. and other cultures; how men and women are spoken of differently; how women and men have different amounts of access to power via public discourse; gender differences in nondominant groups (e.g., lesbians and gays; African Americans); the role of stereotyping in linguistic differences between the sexes; role of gender in discourse genres.
2025 Summer Session A 6 weeks, May 27 - July 3
#12023

Human Sexuality

May 27, 2025 - Jul 03, 2025
Tu, Th
01:30 pm - 05:29 pm
Internet/Online

Instruction Mode: Online

Open Seats

PSYCH 136 - LEC 001 Human Sexuality more detail
Biological, social, and clinical issues in sexuality. Topics include psychology and physiology of sexual response, new developments in contraception, homosexuality and lesbianism, variations in sexual behavior, gender identity and role, definition and treatment of sexual dysfunction. Approved for state psychology licensing requirement.

PBHLTH 180 (2008-08-21 - 2008-08-21)

This course is built around an evolutionary perspective of the basis of human mating behavior and explores a variety of topics in human sexualtiy with the goal of helping us to understand ourselves and to understand and accept the behavior of others. The course takes examples from art, sociology, anatomy, anthropology, physiology, contemporary politics, and history to explore the richness of human sexual behavior and reproduction and the interaction between our biology and our culture.