Disability Studies

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2014-15 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu/.

About the Program

Minor

The Disability Studies Minor provides a space to explore questions such as these: How has disability been defined in various historical moments, in various cultures and eras? While impairment has unquestionably been a frequent experience throughout human history, has disability—the construction of impairment as a generic social category—been a historical constant, or is it a modern invention? What social ideologies, cultural systems, and societal arrangements have shaped the meaning and experience of disability? How has disability been defined or represented in cultural and artistic productions, public laws and policies, modern professional practices, and everyday life?

Declaring the Minor

After taking all the required courses, students declare the minor in the semester they intend to graduate by taking the following documents to the Disability Studies Minor Coordinator (Patrick Civello, 263 Evans Hall) in person. Material not delivered directly to Patrick runs the risk of not being processed. This material must be submitted no later than the last day of classes of the semester in which the student intends to graduate. Please include the following:

  • Transcripts (Transcripts printed through the Bear Facts system are acceptable. Please choose the printing option that includes your name). If you are taking courses for the minor in the semester you plan to graduate, print a copy of your current registration as well.
  • A completed Petition for Confirmation of Minor Program form
  • A list of five courses (two core and three electives) you wish to use to satisfy the Disability Studies Minor, as well as the semester and year the courses were taken. You must identify any course that overlaps with any of your majors or other minors. Only one course can overlap.

Please be sure that your name, local phone number, and e-mail address is up to date, as Patrick may need to contact you if questions arise. The minor petition will then be reviewed for approval. Upon approval, the petition will be sent to the Registrar's office. The registrar will include the completion of the minor on your transcript. It will appear only in the "memorandum" section of your transcript, not on your diploma.

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Minor Requirements

Students who have a strong interest in an area of study outside their major often decide to complete a minor program. These programs have set requirements and are noted officially on the transcript in the memoranda section, but are not noted on diplomas.

General Guidelines

  1. All courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements below must be taken for graded credit.
  2. A minimum of three of the upper-division courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements must be completed at UC Berkeley.
  3. A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 is required for courses used to fulfill the minor requirements.
  4. Courses used to fulfill the minor requirements may be applied toward the Seven Course Breadth Requirement, for Letters and Science students.
  5. No more than one upper-division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student's major and minor programs.
  6. All minor requirements must be completed prior to the last day of finals during the semester in which you plan to graduate. If you cannot finish all courses required for the minor by that time, please see a College of Letters and Science advisor.
  7. All minor requirements must be completed within the unit ceiling.

Requirements

UGIS 110Introduction to Disability Studies3
ENGLISH 175Literature and Disability4
or CY PLAN 120 Community Planning and Public Policy for Disability
Select three electives from the following:12
Introduction to Medical Anthropology
Special Topics in Medical Anthropology
ARCH 129X
Course Not Available
Art, Medicine, and Disabilities
Chicanos and Health Care
User Interface Design and Development
Health Economics
Autobiography (when taught by Prof. Georgina Klege)
Bioethics and Society
Special Topics (Women and Disability in Film and Literature)
Social and Psychological Factors in Open Space Design
Seminar on Social, Political, and Ethical Issues in Health and Medicine
PB HLTH 130AC
Course Not Available
PB HLTH 150C
Course Not Available
Introduction to Health Policy and Management
Introduction to Community Health and Human Development
Health Issues Seminars
PUB POL 172
Course Not Available
Developmental Psychopathology
SOCIOL 155
Course Not Available
Aging Processes
Direct Practice in Health Settings
Direct Practice in Aging Settings
Diversity-Sensitive and Competent Social Work
Women and Disability
Disability Studies in Practice
UGIS 116
Course Not Available

Courses

Disability Studies

ISF 98 Directed Group Study 1 - 3 Units

Seminars for the group study of selected topics not covered by regularly scheduled courses. Topics will vary from semester to semester.

ISF 100A Introduction to Social Theory and Cultural Analysis 4 Units

This course, required of all ISF majors but open to all students, provides an introduction to the works of foundational social theorists of the nineteenth century, including Karl Marx and Max Weber. Writing in what might be called the “pre disciplinary” period of the modern social sciences, their works cross the boundaries of anthropology, economics, history, political science, sociology, and are today claimed by these and other disciplines as essential texts. We will read intensively and critically from their respective works, situating their intellectual contributions in the history of social transformations wrought by industrialization and urbanization, political revolution, and the development of modern consumer society.

ISF 100B Introduction to Social Theory and Cultural Analysis 4 Units

This is a course exploring how we understand the idea of the self in contemporary social worlds. The course shares the presumption that the modern self is a created endeavor. It charts traditional and contemporary understandings of individual identity, the maturation process and the notion of an inner life, the concepts of freedom and individual agency, the force of evolution and heredity, and the influence of social causation. The course stresses the complex interplay between the development of a sense of self, and the socialization pressures at work in the family, society, and global cultures.

ISF 100C Word and Image 4 Units

This course is designed to sharpen our skills in understanding what happens when the world of images and words meet. We will investigate how word/image constellations have been examined in the context of a variety of disciplines, such as cognitive linguistics, psychology, neuroscience, or philosophy and/or we will examine how the word/image constellations operate in a variety of media, including poetry, painting, photography, and advertising.

ISF 100D Introduction to Technology, Society, and Culture 4 Units

This course surveys the technological revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries, it then focuses on the development of the computer and the Internet. The final part examines the impact of the Internet on social movements.

ISF 100E The Globalization of Rights, Values, and Laws in the 21st Century 4 Units

This interdisciplinary course is an introduction to the complex interplay of transnational values, international rights and legal institutions that increasingly govern social, cultural and geopolitical interactions in our contemporary world. Theoretical and methodological tools from the social sciences, jurisprudence, and philosophy will be applied im the analyses of these interplays. A study of rights and norms presupposes not only an understanding of the empirical evolution of rights traditions (including constitutional traditions) in a variety of global regions, but also an understanding of the theories of rights and laws that support such traditions as they are embedded in them (just war theories, peace theories, etc.) The study of rights and norms also requires an exploration of the transformations of crucial international norms and rights due to the formation of supranational institutions and organizations in the 20th century (UN, UNESCO, GO's, etc.). The course will provide the students with an opportunity to place emerging transnational rights institutions into a historical and geopolitical framework.

ISF 100F Theorizing Modern Capitalism: Controversies and Interpretations 4 Units

The focus of this course will be on the various ways the nature and trajectory of modern capitalism has been interpreted. Our stress will be on post-Marxist works of analysis. The initial focal point will be on the work of Max Weber and Joseph Schumpeter, as well as important current debates in economic history and social theory generated by their work. Both Weber and Schumpeter display a strong fascination and elaboration with the work of Marx. The way they analyze Marx is very revealing about the way contemporary analysts seek to understand the capitalist system. We will also consider a number of current efforts that look at the systemic nature of capitalism. In particular, we are interested in how economic historians now see the development of capitalism. We also want to examine the Weberian tradition in terms of the role of culture in shaping economic behavior. Debates about the nature of globalization will also be considered as well as analysis of the changing nature of work.

ISF 100G Introduction to Science, Society, and Ethics 4 Units

This interdisciplinary course will explore whether it has proven possible and desirable to understand society through value-free and positivistic scientific methods as predominantly developed in the transatlantic worlds of the 19th centuries. We shall explore questions that may be applied to the realms of public health and human biology, or to the social sciences generally, including anthropology, sociology, economics, and political science.

ISF 100H Introduction to Media and International Relations 4 Units

How have international actors used media to construct public opinion about salient issues, such as war, terrorism and intervention, international trade and finance, and global warming and resource depletion? The purpose of this course is to introduce students to key concepts, methods, and theories in the analysis of media effects, particularly in the areas of public opinion formation and international relations.

ISF C100C Word and Image 4 Units

This course is designed to sharpen our skills in understanding what happens when the world of images and words meet. Starting with the work from the Western "classical" tradition we will proceed to investigate how word/image constellations operate in a variety of media, including sculpture and poetry, painting and prose, death masks, tableaux vivants, photography, and advertising.

ISF C100G Introduction to Science, Technology, and Society 4 Units

This course provides an overview of the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS) as a way to study how our knowledge and technology shape and are shaped by social, political, historical, economic, and other factors. We will learn key concepts of the field (e.g., how technologies are understood and used differently in different communities) and apply them to a wide range of topics, including geography, history, environmental and information science, and others. Questions this course will address include: how are scientific facts constructed? How are values embedded in technical systems?

ISF N100A Introduction to Social Theory and Cultural Analysis 4 Units

Introduction to central theoretical investigations concerning the construction and organization of social life. Using some works from the "classical" traditions of social theory as well as some examples of contemporary analysis, this course will explore such topics as the nature of power and social/historical change, the nature of economic production and consumption, the meaning of difference--racial, sexual, class--the development of institutions, etc.

ISF N100D Introduction to Technology, Society, and Culture 4 Units

This course surveys the technological revolutions of the 19th and 20th centuries, then focuses on the development of the computer and the Internet. The final part examines the impact of the Internet on social movements.

ISF 110 Special Topics in Interdisciplinary Studies 4 Units

This course is designed primarily to allow faculty to develop courses which address specific issues, themes, or problems of interdisciplinary interest. Topics vary semester to semester. Students should consult the department's webpage for current offerings before the start of the semester.

ISF C145 Multicultural Europe 4 Units

In this course, we will trace some of the substantive changes and transformations taking place in contemporary Europe in the areas of culture, society, and politics. In particular, we will look at the effects of massive migration flows--due to globalization processes--on the national culture of the core countries and examine the ways in which particular national cultures react to the increasing multiculturization of Europe. The goal of the course is, first of all, to familiarize students with a variety of cultural, social, and political innovations that accompany the formation of multicultural Europe. This involves (1) an examination of the traditional concepts of nationhood and citizenship, and (2)a study of the Europeanization of culture.

ISF 189 Introduction to Interdisciplinary Research Methods 3 Units

This class is an introduction to research methods, leading students through different units built around specific learning goals and practical exercises. The course is designed to teach a range of research skills, including the ability to formulate research questions and to engage in scholarly conversations and arguments; the identification, evaluation, mobilization, and interpretation of sources; methods and instruments of field research (interviews, questionnaires, and sampling) and statistical thinking; and the construction of viable arguments and explanation in the human sciences. At the same time, the course is designed to help students identify their own thesis topic, bibliography, and methodological orientation.

ISF 190 Senior Thesis 4 Units

The ISF Senior Thesis requirement is the capstone experience and final product of the ISF major. The thesis is a sustained, original, and critical examination of a central interdisciplinary research question, developed under the guidance of the ISF 190 instructor. The thesis represents a mature synthesis of research skills, critical thinking, and competent writing. As the final product of a student's work in the major, the thesis is not the place to explore a new set of disciplines or research problems for the first time, but should develop methods of inquiry and bridge the several disciplines that students have developed in their course of study.

ISF 197 Field Studies 1 - 4 Units

Supervised experience relevant to the student's specific area of concentration in the Interdisciplinary Studies Field Major in off-campus organizations. Regular individual meetings with faculty sponsor and written reports required.

ISF 199 Supervised Independent Study and Research for Upper Division Majors 1 - 4 Units

Directed individual independent study and research of special topics by arrangement with faculty.

Faculty

Professors

Tom Goldstein, Professor. Journalism, mass communications, writer, reporter, editor.
Research Profile

Associate Professors

Mark Brilliant, Associate Professor.

Adjunct Faculty

Renate Holub, Adjunct Faculty. Feminist theory, human rights, Arendt, knowledge and morality regimes in Europe, multicultural rights, Muslim intellectuals, critical theory and globalization, intellectuals and rights and states, Gramsci, Vico, Benjamin, Polanyi, Comparative European Studies, evolution of rights and laws, global democratic consciousness, jurisprudence of conscience.
Research Profile

Greil Marcus, Adjunct Faculty.

Srinivas Narayanan, Adjunct Faculty.

Lecturers

Robert Ehrlich, Lecturer.

Lester R Ferriss, Lecturer.

Earl B. Klee, Lecturer.

Kathleen S. Moran, Lecturer.

Christine Palmer, PhD, Lecturer.

Jean P. Retzinger, Lecturer.

Marsha Saxton, Lecturer.

William B Turner, Lecturer.

Gary P. Wren, PhD, Lecturer.

Contact Information

Disability Studies Group Minor

263 Evans Hall

Phone: 510-643-7691

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Program Co-Director

Susan Schweik, PhD (Department of English)

sschweik@berkeley.edu

Program Co-Director

Georgina Kleege, PhD (Department of English)

gkleege@berkeley.edu

Student Academic Adviser

Patrick Civello

263 Evans Hall

Phone: 510-643-7691

civello@berkeley.edu

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