WGS Undergraduate Courses
Not all courses are offered every year. For up-to-date offerings, please see Fall 2025 Courses and Spring 2025 Courses.
*Indicates course provides BU Hub units
*CAS WS 101 - Gender and Sexuality: An Interdisciplinary Introduction
This course is the introduction to women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, that considers the origins, diversity, and expression of sex and gender. Topics include the evolutionary origin of sexes; evolution, development, and social construction of sex, gender, and sexuality; sexual difference, similarities and diversity in gendered bodies, brains, and behavior. This interdisciplinary introduction is the foundation for the minor in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Philosophical Inquiry and Life’s Meanings, Scientific Inquiry I, Critical Thinking.
CAS WS 105 - Topics in Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies
CAS WS 179 - Introduction to Trans Literature (also offered as CAS EN 179)
*CAS WS 200 - Thinking Queerly
*CAS WS 201 - Introduction to Trans Studies
*CAS WS 213 - Resistance, Protest, and Empowerment: Global Women's Movements
Explores how global expressions of sexism shape all of our lives, experiences, and life chances, with particular attention to how race, class, and sexuality intersect with gender to shape social inequalities. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry I, Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy.
*CAS WS 233 - The Evolutionary Biology of Human Variation (also offered as CAS AN 233)
Addresses human biological variation. An introduction to the fundamentals of comparative biology, evolutionary theory, and genetics and considers how research in these fields informs some of our most culturally-engaged identities: race, sex, gender, sexuality, and body type. Carries natural sciences divisional credit (without lab) in CAS. Also offered as CAS AN 233. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Scientific Inquiry I, Ethical Reasoning, Critical Thinking.
*CAS WS 240 - Sexuality and Social Life (also offered as CAS SO 240)
Introduction to sociological perspectives on sexuality. Historical and comparative analysis of sexuality, with a focus on the social and cultural institutions that shape sexuality in the contemporary U.S. Also offered as SO 240. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry I, Critical Thinking. Effective Fall 2021, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry I, Critical Thinking, Digital/Multimedia Expression.
*CAS WS 241 - Sociology of Gender (also offered as CAS SO 241)
An introduction to the social construction of sex and gender with a focus on the economic, political, social, and cultural forces that shape gender relations. Examines gender as a social structure that patterns institutional inequalities and everyday interactions on society. Also offered as SO 241. Effective Fall 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry II, The Individual in Community, Teamwork/Collaboration.
*CAS WS 263 - The Behavioral Biology of Women (also offered as CAS AN 263)
An exploration of female behavioral biology focusing on evolutionary, physiological, and biosocial aspects of women’s lives from puberty through pregnancy, birth, lactation, menopause, and aging. Examples are drawn from traditional and industrialized societies, and data from nonhuman primates are considered. Also offered as CAS AN 263. Effective Spring 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Scientific Inquiry I, Social Inquiry I, Critical Thinking.
*CAS WS 270 - Race, Sex, and Science Fiction (also offered as CAS AA 270)
Science Fiction has always been engaged in complex conversations about culture and the fate of the human species. This course takes seriously the presence of issues such as race, sex and gender, which have become increasingly foregrounded in the genre. Also offered as AA 270. Effective Spring 2022, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy, Social Inquiry II, Critical Thinking.
CAS WS 297 - African American Women's History (also offered as CAS HI 297 and CAS AA 297)
CAS WS 300 - WGS Topics in Literature and the Humanities
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies relevant to literature and the humanities. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
CAS WS 301 - WGS Topics in the Natural Sciences
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies relevant to the natural sciences. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
CAS WS 302 - WGS Topics in the Social Sciences
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies relevant to literature and the social sciences. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
CAS WS 303 - WGS Topics in Film and Media
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies relevant to film and media. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
CAS WS 304 - WGS Topics in Global and Transnational Studies
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies relevant to global and transnational studies. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
CAS WS 305 - Topics in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Topics in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies. May be repeated for credit as topics change.
*CAS WS 317 - Gender and Crime (also offered as CAS SO 317)
Examines social forces shaping gender discrepancies in crime. Using a feminist lens, students explore how cultural ideologies about masculinity and femininity shape criminalization, victimization, and offending. Topics include the gendered contexts of crime and punishment, gender-based violence, and intimate labor. Also offered as SO 317, SO 617, and WS 617. Effective Spring 20223 this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Oral and/or Signed Communication, The Individual in Community, Teamwork/Collaboration.
*CAS WS 319 - Disability and Queerness in Speculative Fiction (also offered as CAS CI 319)
*CAS WS 325 - Bombs and Bombshells: Gender, Armed Conflict, and Political Violence (also offered as CAS PO 346)
*CAS WS 326 - Arts of Gender (also offered as CAS EN 326)
Prereq: at least one prior literature course, or CAS WS 101, or junior or senior standing. Examines representations of gender and sexuality in diverse art forms, including drama, dance, film, and literature, and how art reflects historical constructions of gender. Also offered as EN 326. Effective Fall 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Aesthetic Exploration, The Individual in Community.
*CAS WS 327 - Immigrant Women in Literature: Found in Translation? (also offered as CAS LR 327 and CAS XL 327)
This course explores literature about migration created by women primarily from Eastern Europe. We read autobiographical narratives that focus on the shaping of transcultural identity with an eye to the problem of translation as a linguistic, cultural, and personal phenomenon. Also offered as LR 327 and XL 327. Effective Spring 2021, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy, Historical Consciousness, Critical Thinking.
*CAS WS 328 - Madonnas, Martyrs, and MILFs: Gender and Motherhood (also offered as CGS IN 300)
Examines the ways that motherhood–the roles, expectations, and assumptions that shape what counts as both “good” and “bad” mothering–is currently understood. Three key questions drive our exploration: How does culture shape mothering practices? How do mothering practices shape culture? How do race, economic class, educational attainment, and sexual orientation impact how motherhood is constructed? Discussions of related topics such as fathering, maternal body image, celebrity profiles, mother blame, parenting roles, and the economic costs of motherhood are explored. Also offered as CGS IN 300. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry I, The Individual in Community, Critical Thinking.
CAS WS 329 - LGBTQI+ Representation in Film
Queer films challenge norms and undermine categories of gender and sex. Drawing on scholarship from a variety of disciplines the course explores sexual identity and representation in relation to history and other constituting experiences of race, class, gender, and nationality.
*CAS WS 330 - Transforming Life: Anthropology of New Medical Technologies (also offered as CAS AN 302)
Seminar anthropologically compares the role of science and medicine in society and troubles what is natural and moral, e.g., about gender, person hood, kinship, and community, using case studies of new reproductive technologies in Asia, the Middle East, and North America. Also offered as AN 302. Effective Fall 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Ethical Reasoning, Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy, Writing- Intensive Course.
*CAS WS 333 - Queering Health (also offered as SAR HS 333
*CAS WS 335 - Sociology of Race, Class, and Gender (also offered as CAS AA 335 and CAS SO 335)
Prereq: At least one prior 100- or 200-level sociology course, or CAS WS 101. No one of us is one thing, one identity, nor motivated by one singular interest, nor privileged or subjugated by one singular form of power, but how do those multiple forms of ourselves affect how we are advantaged, disadvantaged, viewed, and understood by the social world? Our social world, is, by default, a vast web of social intersections between and across groups with shared, overlapping, and conflicting identities. Race, class and gender affect nearly all of our lived experiences and greatly complicate and nuance concepts of diversity and difference. Also offered as AA 335 and SO 335. Effective Fall 2020, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Digital/Multimedia Expression, The Individual in Community, Historical Consciousness.
*CAS WS 341 - The Quran (also offered as CAS RN 340)
*CAS WS 345 - Shariah Law (also offered as CAS RN 345)
*CAS WS 347 - Feminist Inquiry
Prereq: sophomore, junior, or senior standing. A survey of feminist theories and development of strands of feminist inquiry in the academy, movements, and politics. Considers the commonalities and contrast in gender relations across cultures and tensions between major feminist schools of thought. Effective Fall 2024, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Social Inquiry I, Oral and/or Signed Communication, Creativity/Innovation.
CAS WS 348 - Gender and International Development
CAS WS 350 - Women and Politics (also offered as CAS PO 309
CAS WS 351 - Constructing Gender in North Africa: Women, Islam, and Politics
*CAS WS 352 - American Masculinities (also offered as CAS SO 352)
*CAS WS 375 - Growing Up in Korea (also offered as CAS LK 375)
*CAS WS 377 - Gender and Sexuality in Judaism (also offered as CAS RN 337)
*CAS WS 380 - Gender and Identity in Contemporary Middle Eastern Film (also offered as CAS XL 380)
An exploration of representations of gender and identity in contemporary Middle Eastern films by male and female directors reflecting on the impact of modernization, globalization, war and trauma through different visual genres. Also offered as XL 380. Effective Fall 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Aesthetic Exploration, Digital/Multimedia Expression.
*CAS WS 382 - Women's Literary Cultures (also offered as CAS EN 328)
*CAS WS 393 - Technoculture and Horizons of Gender and Race (also offered as CAS EN 393)
*CAS WS 395 - Inhuman Films: Gender, Animals, Machines (also offered as CAS CI 395)
Prereq: First-Year Writing Seminar (e.g., WR 120). This course explores what happens to the “human” at the intersection of feminist theory and cinematic representation. How and why do films assign humanity to some figures and withhold it from others on the basis of race, gender, “ability,” etc.? Also offered as CI 395. Effective Fall 2023, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Writing-Intensive Course, Digital/Multimedia Expression, Aesthetic Exploration.
*CAS WS 396 - Philosophy of Gender and Sexuality (also offered as CAS PH 256 and CAS PO 396
This course analyzes gender and sexuality from an intersectional perspective. We focus on metaphysics, epistemology, and semantics to understand gender and sexuality as they exist within interlocking systems of oppression including racism, sexism, transphobia, homophobia, and fatphobia. Also offered as CAS PH 256 and CAS PO 396. Effective Fall 2018, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Philosophical Inquiry and Life’s Meanings, The Individual in Community, Critical Thinking.
CAS WS 398 - Feminist Political Theory (also offered as CAS PO 398)
*CAS WS 400 - Gender and Healthcare (also offered as SAR HS 400
Prereq: CAS WR 120; or equivalent. This course focuses on strengthening students’ knowledge, skills, and ability to construct a critical appraisal of all the determinants, distribution, causes, mechanisms, systems, and consequences of health inequities related to gender including how gender influences and is influenced by healthcare systems. Also offered as SAR HS 400 A1. Effective Summer 2020, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: The Individual in Community, Research and Information Literacy.
CAS WS 403 - Gender Stratification (also offered as CAS SO 403)
CAS WS 405 - Topics in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
*CAS WS 420 - Queer Theory (also offered as CAS XL 420
*CAS WS 425 - Sex and the City (also offered as CAS SO 425)
CAS WS 430 - Global Maternal and Child Health (also offered as SAR HS 430)
Prereq: senior standing. Provides a global perspective on maternal and child health. Major topics include early life influences on later life health, maternity care practices worldwide, and the role of both human evolutionary history and sociopolitical structures in shaping health outcomes for women and children. Also offered as SAR HS 430.
*CAS WS 431 - Genders, Sexualities, and Youth Cultures (also offered as CAS SO 431)
*CAS WS 432 - S24: Gender, Sexuality, and Buddhism (also offered as CAS RN 432
*CAS WS 434 - Monarchy in Modern Britain (also offered as CAS HI 434
CAS WS 435 - Histories of Human Rights (also offered as CAS HI 435
CAS WS 442 - Philosophies and Feminism (also offered as CAS PH 442
*CAS WS 445 - Women, Gender, and Islam (also offered as CAS RN 435
CAS WS 450 - Internships
*CAS WS 451 - Fashion as History (also offered as CAS HI 451
This seminar treats clothing and other products of material culture as historical documents. Explores what clothing can tell us about key developments in the modern period relating to trade and commerce, empire, gender, class, industry, revolution, nation-building, identity politics, and globalization. Also offered as HI 451. Effective Fall 2019, this course fulfills a single unit in the following BU Hub area: Historical Consciousness, Global Citizenship and Intercultural Literacy, Critical Thinking.
*CAS WS 452 - Contemporary Debates in Sexualities Research (also offered as CAS SO 452
*CAS WS 453 - Topics in Religion and Sexuality (also offered as CAS RN 453)
*CAS WS 456 - Neurobiology of Sex and Aggression (also offered as CAS NE 456)
Examines neurobiological and genetic factors that influence sex and violence. Students review primary literature from the past century that highlights major scientific discoveries that have reconceptualized our understanding of the origins of sexual-determination, -attraction and – aggression. Also offered as NE 456. Effective Spring 2021, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Oral and/or Signed Communication, Historical Consciousness, Scientific Inquiry II.
CAS WS 458 - The Nonbinary Nineteenth Century (also offered as CAS LF 458)
*CAS WS 460 - Topics in LGBTQ History
*CAS WS 465 - Interesctionalities: Theories, Methods, Praxis (also offered as CAS SO 465)
Examines neurobiological and genetic factors that influence sex and violence. Students review primary literature from the past century that highlights major scientific discoveries that have reconceptualized our understanding of the origins of sexual-determination, -attraction and – aggression. Also offered as SO 465, SO 865, and WS 665. Effective Spring 2021, this course fulfills a single unit in each of the following BU Hub areas: Oral and/or Signed Communication, Historical Consciousness, Scientific Inquiry II.
CAS WS 479 - Fatal Women and Dangerous Bodies (also offered as CAS LF 479)
*CAS WS 480 - Japanese Women Writers (also offered as CAS LJ 480)
CAS WS 505 - Topics in Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
*CAS WS 507 - Diversity of Sex (also offered as CAS BI 507)
CAS WS 512 - Sexual Violence (also offered as MET CJ 512 and MET PS 512)
This course engages the topics of sexual deviance and sexual trauma through multiple lens. These lenses include psychological, sociological, criminal justice, public health, and social justice perspectives. The course explores multiple facets of understanding sexual deviance and sexual trauma including legal and philosophical perspectives, historical activism, understanding and treatment of sexual offending, and survivor responses. The roles of multiple systems including the media, mental health organization and the criminal justice system are taken into account. This course includes ongoing group work that engages critical inquiry, addressing relevant topics in sexual trauma in practical ways. Students utilize knowledge of theory and research methodology to pursue real world responses to issues of sexual violence and trauma. Also offered as MET CJ 512 and MET PS 512.
CAS WS 525 - Judith Butler (also offered as CAS PH 525 and CAS XL 525)
CAS WS 530 - Global Intimacies: Sex, Gender, and Contemporary Sex (also offered as CAS AN 530)
*CAS WS 542 - Language, Race, and Gender (also offered as CAS XL 542)
*CAS WS 559 - Feminist Killjoys & Cynical Queers (also offered as CAS EN 558)
*CAS WS 562 - Studies in Asexualities (also offered as CAS EN 562)
*CAS WS 594 - Advanced Feminist Theory (also offered as CAS PO 594)