Capstone Seminars
All minors are required to successfully complete the one-credit capstone seminar, team-taught by two faculty members from different departments, in the spring of their senior year.
Each year, graduating seniors enroll in a capstone seminar that proposes a structured investigation into an inherently interdisciplinary problematic. The capstone seminar embodies both the theoretical and interdisciplinary qualities that make interpretation theory distinctive and compelling.
Students majoring in a variety of disciplines come together with faculty members from 2 different areas to explore theories of knowledge and questions of interpretation and representation. For example, past capstone seminars have brought together professors from French literature and biology, political science and religion, anthropology and English, philosophy and art, classics and linguistics, and other interdisciplinary combinations.
Current and past capstone titles include: Cultural Dimensions of Scientific Thought; Corporality in Storytelling; Rituals and Spectacles of Violence; Hero Time Travel; Mind, Body, Machine; Interpretation and the Visual Arts; Beyond Reason: Nietzsche, Levinas and the Kabbalah; Mapping the Modern; and Visionaries of Spirit, and Masters of Suspicion.