Humans 101 @ MIT by Chris Peterson SM '13
introductory SHASS classes this fall and recapping the lightning talks
Every year the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (SHASS) publishes a list of introductory subjects offered across its departments. The purpose of the list is to provide admitted students with a basic roadmap to the SHASSy side of MIT as they try to navigate the Institute and figure out where their interests lie. Many MIT students are interested in SHASS subjects, but economics at MIT is different from AP Macro, and disciplines like CMS/STS are rarely offered at high schools. So this list can help articulate/reveal the many options available as students consider their HASS requirement or disciplinary focus.
The list for fall 2017 includes:
21A.00 Introduction to Anthropology: Comparing Human Cultures; HASS-S | G. Jones
21A.500J/STS.075J Technology and Culture; HASS-S | S. Helmreich
21A.520 Magic, Science, and Religion; HASS-S | G. Jones
Comparative Media Studies (CMS)
CMS.100 Introduction to Media Studies; HASS-H, CI-H | J. Picker and S. Hong
CMS.300 Introduction to Videogame Theory; HASS-H | M. Jakobsson
CMS.309J/21W.763J Transmedia Storytelling: Modern Science Fiction; HASS-A | H. Hendershot
Economics
14.01 Principles of Microeconomics; HASS-S | J. Gruber
14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics; HASS-S | R. Caballero
14.73 The Challenge of World Poverty; HASS-S, CI-H | F. Schilbach
Global Studies and Languages (GSL)
21G.030J/WGS.236J Introduction to East Asian Cultures: From Zen to K-Pop; HASS-H | E. Teng
21G.064 Introduction to Japanese Culture; HASS-H, CI-H | P. Roquet
21G.070 Latin America and the Global Sixties: Counterculture and Revolution; HASS-H, CI-H | S. Greene
GSL offers language instruction courses at a variety of levels to suit your skills. All but ELS provide subjects for complete beginners: Chinese, English Language Studies, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.
History
21H.001 How to Stage a Revolution; HASS-H, CI-H | P. Alimagham, M. Ghachem, C. Horan
21H.130 The Ancient World: Greece; HASS-H, CI-H | S. Ostrow
21H.157 The Making of Modern South Asia; HASS-S | S. Aiyar
Linguistics
24.900 Introduction to Linguistics; HASS-S, CI-H | A. Albright
Literature
21L.015 Children’s Literature; HASS-H, CI-H | A. Bahr, M. Gubar
21L.021 Comedy; HASS-H, CI-H | P. Donaldson
21L.024 Literature and Existentialism (Proposed); HASS-H, CI-H | E. Brinkema
Music
21M.011 Introduction to Western Music; HASS-A, CI-H | E. Pollock, T. Neff, A. Boyles
21M.030 Introduction to World Music ; HASS-A, CI-H | P. Tang, L. Flood
21M.051 Fundamentals of Music; HASS-A | E. Kwon, K. Salfelder
Philosophy
24.01 Classics of Western Philosophy; HASS-H, CI-H | S. Haslanger
24.02 Moral Problems and the Good Life; HASS-H, CI-H | K. Setiya
24.08J/9.48J Philosophical Issues in Brain Science; HASS-H, CI-H | E. J. Green
Political Science
17.20 Introduction to the American Political Process; HASS-S, CI-H | D. Caughey
17.40 American Foreign Policy: Past, Present, and Future; HASS-S, CI-H | S. Van Evera
17.56 Politics of Crime and Policing (Proposed); HASS-S, CI-H | R. Bateson
Science, Technology, and Society (STS)
STS.004 Intersections: Science, Technology, and the World; HASS-H | D. Fitzgerald
STS.026 History of Manufacturing in America; HASS-H | M. Roe Smith
Theater Arts
21M.603 Introduction to Design for the Theater; HASS-A | S. Brown
21M.604J/21W.754J Playwriting I; HASS-A | L. Harrington, K. Urban
21M.605 Voice and Speech for the Actor; HASS-A | K. Eastley, O. D’Ambrosio
Women’s and Gender Studies (WGS)
WGS.101 Introduction to Women’s and Gender Studies; HASS-H, CI-H | A. Walsh
WGS.110J/21H.108J Sexual and Gender Identities; HASS-H | C. Horan
WGS.S10 Special Subject: History of Women in Science and Engineering (New) | M. Weinstock
Writing
21W.747 Rhetoric; HASS-H, CI-H | S. Strang
21W.755 Writing and Reading Short Stories; HASS-A | S. Lewitt
21W.762 Poetry Workshop; HASS-A | E. Barrett
If you’re interested in seeing the full range of courses at MIT, you can also browse the subject listings or departmental course listings.
For a visual tour-de-SHASS, you can also stare at this gorgeous, hand-illustrated poster representing this year’s SHASS Lightning Talks at CPW.
- Heather Paxson from Anthropology on the culture of cheesemaking
- Ariel White from Political Science on voting in an age of mass incarceration
- Eugenie Brinkema from Literature on the aesthetic of horror
- Joshua Angrist from Economics on ridesharing compensation
- Jack Spencer from Philosophy on religious toleration
- Sasha Costanza-Chock from CMS on design justice
- Michael Scott Cuthbert from Music and Theater Arts on computational musicology
- Will Deringer from STS on calculating the future
- Hiromu Nagahara from History on the sounds of World War II
- Ezra Haber Glenn from Urban Studies and Planning on the city in film
As an alumnus of (and occasionally lecturer in) CMS, I’ve always loved the SHASS courses at MIT, and view the particular kind of humanistic work we do as a strength of the Institute. Hopefully the courses, posters, and talks above serve as a useful map to the wonderful world of SHASS at MIT.