Social Justice & Diversity
Requirement Structure
Butler University was founded on the principles of diversity, equality, and inclusivity. The Social Justice and Diversity requirement reaffirms these founding principles. Students must take one course in any part of the University that exposes them to critical scholarship on the root causes of marginalization and inequity and how to counter it.
Learning Objectives
- To recognize multiple and intersecting dimensions of identity and inequity through the study of critical scholarship on the historical, cultural, political, and/or social experiences of marginalized communities.
- To identify and explain the causes and impact of privilege, power, and oppression and cultivate tools for overcoming conflict and promoting equality.
- To recognize and critique local, national, or global conditions that enable, perpetuate and/or challenge social injustice and inequity.
Learning Outcome used for Assessment
Students will become more aware of the presence and sources of injustices and will produce graduates better prepared to actively counter them.
Exemptions
No exemption.
SJD Policies and Procedures
For more information about the mission of the SJD requirement, SJD policies, and how to propose SJD courses, see this document.
SJD Courses
The following list of courses is not meant to be exhaustive. Further, not all classes are offered every semester. Students should discuss options with their academic advisor.
- AN 302 The Body and Society
- AN 333 Folklore, Culture, and Society
- AN 364 Native American Cultures
- ART 317 American Art & Visual Culture
- ART 319 World History of Photography
- ART 320 Race, Gender, & Sexuality in Contemporary Art (1960-present)
- BSHS 110 Introduction to Healthcare
- CCM 354, 254 Gender and Communication
- CCM 420 Queering Film
- CCM 468 Women in Rock
- CCM 470 Sports, Media & Culture
- CCM 482 Voices of Dissent
- CLA 323 Women in Antiquity
- DA 166, 266 Masterworks of Dance
- ED 398 Multilingual Learners and Their Cultural Contexts
- EI 325 Social Entrepreneurship
- ENV 390 Injustice of Food Systems
- SO 349 Social Movements
- TH 323 Revising Early American History
- TH 423 Revising American Theatre History 1919-present
- PO 351 Politics of Gender/Sexuality in Africa
- PO 354 Environmental Justice
- PO 387 Agriculture and Food Justice
- PO 330 Humanitarianism: Politics, Policy & Practice
- RL 359 Race and Religion in the US
- SLHS 338 Language and Culture
- FYS 101, 102 The Bible and Justice
- GWS 201/SW 332 Intersections of Identity
- PCA 259 Theatre Experienced Through the Human Voice
- SW 223-GWS202 Radical America
- SW 260-RL Religion, “Cults,” and (In)tolerance in America
- TI 242-PL Marginalized in America
- TI 255-PO The Politics of Alice Walker
- TH 351, 352 American Theatre History (Lopez)
- EN 321, 322 Comparative Literature (Spyra)
- EN 223 Disability Studies and American Lit (Campbell)
- PS 350 Social Psychology (O’Dea, Alceste)
- JR 325 (JR 418) Gender & News: Global Views (Geertsema-Sligh, Winfrey)
- MT 382 Why Music (Perkins)
- CCM 254 Gender and Communication (Swenson (K))
- PL 345 Contemporary Social & Political Thought (McKittrick-Sweitzer)
- GR 390 Topics in Literature & Culture (Painitz)
- CCM 330 Representations of Race & Difference (Savage, Swenson (K))
- RX 321 Diversity and Inclusivity in Health Care (Schmelz, Knoderer)
- CH 418 Chemical Issues in the Global Modern World Section 05, Chemistry & Environment (only this section)
- PO 230 Activism (McEvoy-Levy, Luthe)
- MH 308 Music in Global Contexts (Benn)
- EN 301 Topics in Advanced Composition: The Writers Studio (Romack)
- RGSS 201 Intersections of Identity (VanHester)
- SP 490 Chicas Raras in Spanish Lit & Film (Carney)
- HST 212/TI 235 American Visions (Deno)
- HST 353, 354 American In/Justice: The Prison as a Social History of the US (Deno)
- FL 390 Seminar: Writing Women in Modern China (Liu)
- SW 232-RGSS Intersections of Identity (Savage, VanHester)
- TI 223-EN Disability in American Literature (Campbell)
- GHS 207 Resistance and Rights: Global Women’s Human Rights (Carney, Savage, Shahrokhi, Geertsema-Sligh, Sluis, Deno, Harthcock, Swenson (K), Jorgensen, Romack)
- GHS 210 Freedom and Movement (Fletcher, Turner, Garver, Guha-Majumdar)
- GHS 205 East Asian Interactions (Edwards, Scarlett, Krautkraemer, Chiang, Liu)
- FYS 101 Perspectives on Global Health (Searcy)
- GHS 206 Colonialism and Postcolonialism in Africa (Searcy, Turner, Cornell, Townsley)
- PCA 262-CL Greek Art & Myth (Kvapil)
- FYS 101, 102 Women Writing the World (Carter)
- HN 110, 111 Honors First Year Seminar: Women Writing the World (Carter)
- TI 235-HST American Visions (Deno)
- GHS 212 Asian Americas – Empire, Diaspora (Ooi, Scarlett)
- GHS 204 Contact Zones: Latin America (Sluis, Gabiola)
Faculty Director, Social Justice & Diversity
Department of History, Anthropology and Classics
Lynne A. Kvapil, known by her students as Dr. K, is an archaeologist specializing in ancient Greece and Aegean Prehistory. Her research focuses on the Mycenaean Greeks, particularly farming, warfare, the manufacture of ceramics, and labor organization and management. As an active field archaeologist, Dr. K travels to Greece every summer, where she is the Assistant Director of the Nemea Center of Archaeology Excavations at the Mycenaean cemetery at Aidonia and the Petsas House Excavations at Mycenae. Dr. K has been awarded research funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Mediterranean Archaeological Trust to support her ongoing research on the Mycenaean Greeks, and she has been a part of a successful grant-writing team that has been awarded funding from the Archaeological Institute of America and the Loeb Foundation to support the excavations at Aidonia.
At Butler University, Dr. K teaches in all aspects of the ancient Mediterranean world, but most often she teaches about Ancient Greece, including Ancient Greek language courses, Ancient Greek Art and Myth, Ancient Greek Perspectives. She also teaches upper level courses in Ancient Greek and Roman Art and Architecture and Women in Antiquity. Dr. K is also a co-director of the Ancient Mediterranean Archaeology and Classics (AMCA) lab, which won a 2015 Butler University Innovation Grant and which aims to help put the material culture of the ancient world into the modern classroom.