Global Arc

1
Search International Offerings

You can now simultaneously browse international opportunities and on-campus courses; the goal is to plan coursework — before and/or after your trip — that will deepen your experiences abroad.

2
Add Your Favorites

Log in and add international activities and relevant courses to your Global Arc.

3
Get Advice

Download your Arc and share with your academic adviser, who can help you refine your choices.

4
Enroll, Apply and Commit

Register for on-campus classes through TigerHub, and apply for international experiences using Princeton’s Global Programs System.

5
Revisit and Continue Building

Return to the Global Arc throughout your Princeton career as you delve deeper into your interests. 

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Subject

Displaying 31 - 34 of 34
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American Studies
Land and Story in Native America
Creation stories from Turtle Island foreground an integral connection between land and story. "Sky Woman Falling" contains key ecological and environmental knowledge. This course explores the relationship between land and story, emphasizing seeds as sources of sovereignty and repositories of knowledge across generations. We focus on Native New Jersey while understanding the history of this land in the context of global indigeneity and settler colonialism. Course literature engages seeds, land, and the environment from a perspective that crosses the disciplines of literature, American Studies, Ecology, and Environmental Studies.
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American Studies
American Agrarians: Ideas of Land, Labor, and Food
For agrarians, farms and fields are prized over boardrooms and shopping malls. Agrarianism values hard work, self-sufficiency, simplicity and connection with nature. For some today, it is a compelling antidote to globalization and consumerism. This course examines American agrarianism past and present and its central role in our national imaginary, tracing the complex and contradictory contours of a social and political philosophy that seeks freedom and yet gave way to enslaving, excluding, and ignoring many based on race, immigration status, and gender. A focus will be on new agrarianism and movements for food, land, and social justice.
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American Studies
History and Memory on the Lower East Side
For over two centuries, Lower East Side tenements have housed immigrant and migrant families. Since 1988, the Tenement Museum has researched and told the stories of Jewish, German, Irish, Italian, Puerto Rican, Black and Chinese families, connecting individual family stories to larger historical questions. This course offers the unique opportunity to dive deeply into the research and methodology. What sources can we use to tell the story of "ordinary people," and how do those sources change over time? How do contemporary questions of American identity connect to the stories that we tell?
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American Studies
American Education, Race and Equality
Massive protests in the summer of 2020 reignited discussions about the most effective path to equality. Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) have been thrust into the spotlight as a site for potential cross-racial cooperation and space for redress. This course will explore persistent inequality in American education through the lens of these colleges that were created in the shadow of emancipation. It will focus on history and impact of HBCUs on African American life and culture, their role in the political and cultural development of the nation and the possibilities they represent in efforts to create "a more perfect union."