Social Sciences

  • CGS SS 101: Social Sciences I: Introduction to Historical Sociology and the Social Sciences
    Introduces the student to the basic tools of anthropology, sociology, social psychology, economics, and history. Students examine and apply the methods and principal concepts of these disciplines to the problems of contemporary society. The course introduces the structures and processes involved in a analysis of culture, society, the socialization process, social stratification, and social institutions. Cross-cultural inquiry demonstrates the universal social needs of people and illustrates how these can be met in a variety of social configurations.
  • CGS SS 102: Social Sciences II: Social Change and Modernization of the Western World
    Draws on the conceptual and cross-cultural materials of the first-semester course and turns to an examination of social change in the West. The focus of this semester's work is a case study of social and cultural transformation from the Middle Ages to the twentieth century. The historical phenomena of industrialism, nationalism, imperialism, socialism, communism, and fascism - all of which are elements of the process of modernization - are examined both in their historical contexts and within the framework of theories of social change. The historical case study offers the student a vehicle for analyzing in depth the impact of these phenomena on the life, institutions, and ways of thinking of a given society. The concepts of this course are of special relevance to the work of the sophomore year, when the process of modernization in the non-Western world is examined.
  • CGS SS 201: Social Sciences III: Social Change and Modernization in the Non-Western World: China and Russia.
    builds on the conceptual and historical materials of the freshman experience. The course centers on two case studies in rapid modernization: Russia and China. Russia, the Soviet Union, and its successor, the Confederation of Independent States, are considered as recent examples of rapid social change and serve as the basis for a comparison of the problems of modernization in contemporary China. The historical roots of Western industrialism, the culture of the non-Western peoples as it affects their responses to Western experiences, and the dramatic complexities of social change combine to challenge the students' grasp of the problems facing the modern world.
  • CGS SS 202: Social Sciences IV: America's Response to Aggression and Revolution: U.S. Foreign Policy Since the 1930s
    focuses on the reaction of the United States to the revolutionary changes that have taken place abroad in the post-World War II era. After considering the events that destroyed the wartime relationship between the United States and the Soviet Union, the course examines how fear of communism operated as a prism through which our government viewed both foreign and domestic affairs. The factors that led to America's involvement in Vietnam, to the American-Soviet detente in the 1970s, to the nuclear arms race, and, ultimately, to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end the cold war are examined. All of these developments are studied with a view toward answering how our national interests should be defined and pursued in the post-cold war world. The remainder of the course is devoted to an inter-divisional Capstone Project, a group writing assignment in which the students apply the ideas, concepts, and analytical skills they have developed over the four semesters in all the College's courses.

Back to full list of Courses