General Education - World Cultures Requirement
Each baccalaureate student must take at least one course of three credits or more designated to meet the world cultures requirement. These courses deal primarily with living cultures of Asia, Africa and the non-Anglo-Saxon Americas. They may include such topics as literary, artistic and other cultural achievements; religious and ethical values; social, economic and political systems; or intellectual and historical trends. At least two-thirds of the content of each course concentrates on patterns of thought and action that account for the distinctive ethos of the world culture(s) being studied. Transfer students seeking approval of a substitute course to meet this requirement should contact the Registrar’s Office and provide a course syllabus for the course they wish reviewed.
Students completing the world cultures requirement should be able to:
1. comprehend and articulate the distinctive world view (e.g., values, norms and beliefs) of at least one culture that varies significantly from Anglo-American and Western European cultures;
2. understand how culture is expressed in terms of artifacts, artistic accomplishments, technology, customs and texts;
3. understand and respect social and cultural diversity and complexity in a global context;
4. understand how factors such as racial, ethnic, gender and class differences affect how groups within a culture relate to each other; and
5. articulate the important achievements and contributions of other cultures in such areas as the arts, literature, philosophy, ethical values, religion and science.
- AD 200 - Native American Art and Architecture (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- AD 265 - Art and Architecture of Japan (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- AD 300 - Japan and the West: Crosscurrents in Art and Architecture (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- AN 100 - Introduction to Socio-Cultural Anthropology (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- AN 210 - People, Culture and Nature (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- AN 320 - Native Peoples of North America (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- BC 325 - Communication and Performance in Africa (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- BC 415 - Intercultural Communication (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 314 - Traditional Oral Literatures: Selected Native American Cultures (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 316 - Native American Novels and Poetry (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 317 - Native American Drama, Nonfiction and Short Stories (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HL 322 - International Health Issues (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- MU 325 - World Music (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- NAS 204 - Native American Experience (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 233 - Native American History (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 234 - Indigenous People of Latin America (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 251 - Latin American Civilization (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 252 - Arab-Islamic History (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 254 - Introduction to the History of Africa (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 256 - Approaching China (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- PL 270 - World Religions (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- GC 164 - Human Geography (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- GC 300 - Regional Studies: World Cultures (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 362 - History of Mexico (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- PS 321 - Politics in Islamic Nations (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- PS 404 - Politics of East and Southeast Asia (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- SN 312 - Introduction to Spanish America (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- SN 314 - Contemporary Latin American Culture (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- HS 105 - World History (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 411Z - Topics in World Literature (3 - 4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 311Z - World Literature in English (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- EN 375Z - Diverse Traditions in American Literature (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
- LG 317Z - World Studies through Literature in Translation (4 cr. ) (0 - 0 - 0)
Bulletin Year:
2007 - 2008 Undergraduate Bulletin
| View the current NMU Catalog.