Advertisement

College Unveils New Courses

New offerings include classes taught by Kristol, Sandel, Summers, Ferguson

University President Lawrence H. Summers’ now-infamous remarks on women in science made their way onto front pages of America’s newspapers last spring. Now, the remarks—and the national controversies they caused—are making their mark on the syllabi for Harvard courses.

This fall, students interested in gender politics, the sociology of science—or just Larry—will be able to indulge their interests in Sociology 163, “Women and Science: Sociological Aspects,” taught by Lecturer on Sociology Gerhard Sonnert.

“This has been a long term interest of mine,” Sonnert wrote in an e-mail. “I would not consider the course a reaction to President Summers’ comments on women scientists... but [his] remarks have led to a huge surge in publicity and focused more attention on the work that we scholars in the field have been doing for a while.”

Sonnert’s course is one of a slew of new classes—including offerings from famed scholars and hot new hires—that will be joining the over-3,000 course buffet offered by Harvard in the 2005-2006 school year. This year’s catalog was uploaded to the Registrar’s website last week.

Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel, who routinely draws students to his lectures by the hundreds, is offering a course that promises to draw interest from a wide range of students, including premeds, philosophers, and current-events junkies.

Advertisement

Along with Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Douglas A. Melton, who is also the co-director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Sandel will teach Government 1093, “Ethics, Biotechnology, and the Future of Human Nature.”

Sandel said that the course, which will feature lectures by several visiting scholars, will stress the interdisciplinary nature of many contemporary issues in the sciences.

“Students will learn the science of genomics and stem cell research, and also grapple with the ethical and political implications of new developments in biotechnology,” Sandel wrote in an e-mail.

Other Government department courses may draw crowds of students as well.

Conservative writer William Kristol ’73, who is the editor of the Weekly Standard, will be co-teaching two courses with high-profile government professors this year.

In the fall, Kristol, who is a visiting lecturer on government, will offer Government 1792, “Intellectual Foundations of American Foreign Policy,” with Kaneb Professor of National Security and Military Affairs Stephen P. Rosen ’74.

And in the spring, he will co-teach the graduate seminar Government 2080, “Topics in Political Philosophy: Natural Right,” with Harvey C. Mansfield ’53.

Warren Professor of American Legal History Morton J. Horwitz, who drew 413 students to Paine Music Hall last fall for Historical Studies B-61, “The Warren Court and the Pursuit of Justice, 1953-1969,” is offering another legal history core course, Historical Studies A-84, “American Constitutional History from the Framing to the Present.”

“This is a course I took when I was a graduate student [at Harvard],” Horwitz said. “I thought it has been missing from the Harvard Curriculum and had to be added.”

Professor of Visual and Environmental Studies (VES) David N. Rodowick’s Literature & Arts B-11, “The Art of Film,” will allow students to take a Lit core that focuses solely on film.

Advertisement