COMM 3460 - 090 Rhetorical Criticism


This is an online course, which does not have a specific meeting time or location throughout the semester. For additional information, please visit https://online.utah.edu/about-online-learning/

COMM 3460 - 090 Rhetorical Criticism

  • Class Number: 5517
  • Instructor: STEWART, DUNCAN
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: Online
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 30

This is an online course, which does not have a specific meeting time or location throughout the semester. For additional information, please visit https://online.utah.edu/about-online-learning/

COMM 3720 - 001 Appl Comm Rsrch Methods

COMM 3720 - 001 Appl Comm Rsrch Methods

  • Class Number: 5438
  • Instructor: NEWBOLD, CURTIS
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 130

DES 4010 - 002 Capstone Studio Minor

DES 4010 - 002 Capstone Studio Minor

  • Class Number: 6195
  • Component: Studio
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 5.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Fees: $50.00
  • Seats Available: 16

Time travel narratives are one of the oldest and most popular subgenres within science fiction, dating back to the nineteenth century. This seminar will examine key works within this subgenre and chart its development over the prevailing centuries. As a science fictional conceit, time travel has been used to explore questions of historical contingency and how they have shaped our lives in the present, as a means of estranging us from contemporary societal trends and where they might take us, or simply what it would be like to live in another time period. This course will discuss all of the above. In addition, it will talk about how the tropes of the genre have evolved over time: From the simple timeslip scenarios of early time travel narratives to the more involved conceits such as time machines, alternate timelines, dystopian futures, temporal paradoxes, and questions of free will vs determinism which define the genre today. We will also discuss what it means to contemplate our relationship to the passage of time and history from different standpoints in terms of race, gender, and sexuality. And we will consider how such scenarios continue to evolve today. Authors and filmmakers to be discussed include: Washington Irving, H.G. Wells, Octavia Butler, Ray Bradbury, Robert A. Heinlein, Tim Powers, William Gibson, Connie Willis, James Tiptree Jr, Ted Chiang, Robert Zemeckis, James Cameron, and Christopher Nolan.
  • Class Number: 9130
  • Instructor: SHEPHARD, ANDREW
  • Component: Seminar
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 15

Time travel narratives are one of the oldest and most popular subgenres within science fiction, dating back to the nineteenth century. This seminar will examine key works within this subgenre and chart its development over the prevailing centuries. As a science fictional conceit, time travel has been used to explore questions of historical contingency and how they have shaped our lives in the present, as a means of estranging us from contemporary societal trends and where they might take us, or simply what it would be like to live in another time period. This course will discuss all of the above. In addition, it will talk about how the tropes of the genre have evolved over time: From the simple timeslip scenarios of early time travel narratives to the more involved conceits such as time machines, alternate timelines, dystopian futures, temporal paradoxes, and questions of free will vs determinism which define the genre today. We will also discuss what it means to contemplate our relationship to the passage of time and history from different standpoints in terms of race, gender, and sexuality. And we will consider how such scenarios continue to evolve today. Authors and filmmakers to be discussed include: Washington Irving, H.G. Wells, Octavia Butler, Ray Bradbury, Robert A. Heinlein, Tim Powers, William Gibson, Connie Willis, James Tiptree Jr, Ted Chiang, Robert Zemeckis, James Cameron, and Christopher Nolan.

ENGL 5650 - 002 Adv Sem Lit Study

ENGL 5650 - 002 Adv Sem Lit Study

  • Class Number: 9131
  • Instructor: PREISS, RICHARD
  • Component: Seminar
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 15

ENGL 5650 - 003 Adv Sem Lit Study


This class will focus on Mina Loy – one of the most interesting Anglo-American poets of the twentieth century. Enormously gifted in her own right, Loy was also part of a lively group of avant-garde artists such as Joseph Cornell, and Marcell Duchamp, as well as writers such as Gertrude Stein and Djuna Barnes. To read Loy means entering a world of vibrant possibility and boundary crossing -of all kinds.

ENGL 5650 - 003 Adv Sem Lit Study

  • Class Number: 9132
  • Instructor: SHREIBER, MAEERA
  • Component: Seminar
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 15

This class will focus on Mina Loy – one of the most interesting Anglo-American poets of the twentieth century. Enormously gifted in her own right, Loy was also part of a lively group of avant-garde artists such as Joseph Cornell, and Marcell Duchamp, as well as writers such as Gertrude Stein and Djuna Barnes. To read Loy means entering a world of vibrant possibility and boundary crossing -of all kinds.

ENGL 5650 - 004 Adv Sem Lit Study

ENGL 5650 - 004 Adv Sem Lit Study

  • Class Number: 9133
  • Instructor: CARPENTER, JUSTIN
  • Component: Seminar
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 14

GNDR 5670 - 001 Community Base Research

GNDR 5670 - 001 Community Base Research

  • Class Number: 5648
  • Instructor: ANTUNES, ANA
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 13

HIST 3100 - 001 Historian's Craft


This class is a prerequisite for HIST 4990. Students should plan on taking this class no more than two semesters before taking HIST 4990. The course fee covers digital course materials through the Instant Access program. Students may request to opt out here: https://portal.verba.io/utah/login

HIST 3100 - 001 Historian's Craft

  • Class Number: 5716
  • Instructor: COLEMAN, DWAIN
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 60

This class is a prerequisite for HIST 4990. Students should plan on taking this class no more than two semesters before taking HIST 4990. The course fee covers digital course materials through the Instant Access program. Students may request to opt out here: https://portal.verba.io/utah/login

LING 3010 - 001 Intro Phonetics&Phonolg

LING 3010 - 001 Intro Phonetics&Phonolg

  • Class Number: 10028
  • Instructor: KIM, SEUNG KYUNG
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Requisites: Yes
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 15

PHIL 3300 - 001 Theory Of Knowledge

PHIL 3300 - 001 Theory Of Knowledge

  • Class Number: 5823
  • Instructor: Nguyen, Thi
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 30

SOC 3111 - 001 Research Methods

SOC 3111 - 001 Research Methods

  • Class Number: 10961
  • Instructor: QUINN, THOMAS
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 50

SOC 3111 - 002 Research Methods

SOC 3111 - 002 Research Methods

  • Class Number: 10962
  • Instructor: QUINN, THOMAS
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: In Person
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 50

SOC 3111 - 090 Research Methods


This is an online course, which does not have a specific meeting time or location throughout the semester. For additional information, please visit https://online.utah.edu/about-online-learning/ . The course fee covers digital course materials through the Instant Access program. Students may request to opt out here: https://portal.verba.io/utah/login

SOC 3111 - 090 Research Methods

  • Class Number: 10963
  • Instructor: Adua, Lazarus
  • Component: Lecture
  • Type: Online
  • Units: 3.0
  • Wait List: Yes
  • Seats Available: 50

This is an online course, which does not have a specific meeting time or location throughout the semester. For additional information, please visit https://online.utah.edu/about-online-learning/ . The course fee covers digital course materials through the Instant Access program. Students may request to opt out here: https://portal.verba.io/utah/login