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Table of Contents

Academic Life
A St. Olaf Education
The 4-1-4 Calendar
Academic Resources
Majors and More
Graduation Requirements
Campus Facilities

Academic Regulations
Entering St. Olaf
Transferring to St. Olaf/Transferring Courses
Registering for Courses
Special Registrations
Successful Study
Counting Courses and Credits
Academic Status
Curricular Regulations and Advice
Records/Policies
Leaving St. Olaf

The Academic Programs
How to Use This Catalog
Africa and the Americas
American Conversations
American Racial and Multicultural Studies
American Studies
Ancient Studies
Art and Art History
Asian Conversations
Asian Studies
Biology
Biomedical Studies
Chemistry
Chinese
Classics
Communication and Theater
Computer Science
Dance
Economics
Education
English
Environmental Studies
Family and Social Service
Family Studies
Fine Arts
Foreign Languages Across the Curriculum (FLAC)
French
German
Great Conversation
Hispanic Studies
Historical Perspectives
History
Integrative Studies, Center for
Interdisciplinary Fine Arts
Interdisciplinary Studies
Japanese
Linguistic Studies
Management Studies
Mathematics
Media Studies
Medieval Studies
Middle East Studies
Molecular Biology
Music
Neuroscience
Nordic Studies
Norwegian
Nursing
Philosophy
Physical Education
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Romance Languages
Russian
Russian and Central European Studies
Social Studies Education
Social Work
Sociology/Anthropology
Spanish
Theatre
Statistics
Women's Studies

International and Off-Campus Studies
Overview
Programs Led by St. Olaf Faculty
Study/Service Programs
Student Teaching Abroad
Interim Courses
Semester and Year-Long Programs

Special Programs
Education Put to Work
Pre-Professional Preparation

Admissions and Financial Aid
Admissions Procedures
Financing Your Education
Financial Aid Program

Life Outside the Classroom
Residential Life
Student Services
Co-Curricular Activities

People
Board of Regents
Emeritus Faculty and Staff Members
Faculty, 2000-01
Administrators, 2000-01

Facts and Figures
History and Heritage
Recent Statistics

College Calendar
2000-2001 College Calendar
2001-2002 College Calendar
2002-2003 College Calendar

American Conversations

http://www.stolaf.edu/depts/americon/

Director, 2000-01: Matthew Rohn, Art and Art History, American and modern art and cultural studies

Faculty, 2000-01: L. DeAne Lagerquist, Religion, American religious history; Mary Titus, English and Women's Studies, American literature and gender in literature and culture


American Conversations is a learning community that introduces students in their first two years to the liberal arts through an integrated sequence of five courses. Over that time we pursue conversations that have shaped the history and culture of the United States and seek to live Thomas Jefferson's dream that free and educated citizens should learn to understand what is going on in the world, and to keep their part of it going right.

Like the college's other Conversations programs, American Conversations is open to students of all interests who like to read, discuss, write about ideas and look at issues through the lenses of several disciplines at once. Each course combines the study of history, literature, art history, multicultural studies, and a variety of human and behavioral sciences to provide students with a starting point for gaining greater life-long inquiry into American thought and values.

One faculty member who teaches American Conversations remains with students through four courses in the sequence and teams with a second professor from a different area of study each semester. Students live in the same residence hall during their first year, enjoy some meals and special events together and do other things to create a support system and learning community prior to the time when most students select a major.

ADMISSION TO THE PROGRAM

Each year a selection committee chooses at least 50 first-year students. Selection is based on an essay describing the reasons for the student's interest in the program. American Conversations brochures and application forms are sent to all students admitted to St. Olaf.

Course Equivalents for General Education Requirements

By successfully completing the four common courses of American Conversations, a student fulfills the following General Education requirements:

  • First-year Writing (one course)

  • Historical Studies in Western Culture (one course)

  • Multicultural Studies--Domestic (one course)

  • Artistic Sudies (one course)

  • Literary Studies (one course)

  • Human and Behavioral Sciences (one course)

  • Courses with Writing (two courses)

COURSES

American Conversation 101-202 are offered only to first-year students and sophomores enrolled in the American Conversations program. American Conversations students must take these courses in sequence. They also must obtain the program director's approval for their sophomore Interim course, explaining how they see it relating to the program.

101 Declaring Independence, 1620-1865

Spanning two centuries, from the founding of the colonies to the close of the Civil War, this course begins our discussion of questions central to the entire sequence: "What is an American?"and "What does it mean to be free?" Students explore the institutions, images, and stories of Euro-Americans, African-Americans and Native Americans. Topics and texts include the Declaration of Independence and Thomas Jefferson's architecture, the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, and the coming of the Civil War.

102 Democratic Vistas, 1800-1900

In this century of institutional development, national expansion, and sectional conflict, Americans continued to define a national identity. Students probe the ways in which region, religion, race, ethnicity and gender inform individual and group contributions to the conversation. They also analyze how geographical expansion and ideas of progress influenced different visions and versions of America. Topics and texts include Transcendentalist writers, The Second Great Awakening, Black Elk Speaks, landscape painting and Western photography. GE: FYW, HWC.

201 Re-making America, 1865-1945

Burgeoning cities and industrialism, an emerging market economy, changing opportunities for women, an influx of immigrants, and the migration of African-Americans to urban centers-all opened questions of freedom of expression, distribution of resources, and American identity. Topics and texts include the Statue of Liberty, the World's Columbian Exposition, the Model T Ford, and the Harlem Renaissance. GE: ALS-A, MCS-D.

202 Pursuits of Happiness, 1920-2000

Students in this course examine technology, the mass market and consumerism, and the increasingly complex relations between identity and material goods. They will also explore the images, institutions, and stories of environmental, feminist, and Civil Rights activists in Cold War culture. Topics and texts include Yosemite National Park, Japanese internment camps, Adrienne Rich's poetry and prose, Freedom Summer, Las Vegas and the Mall of America. GE: ALS-A, HBS, ORC.