Courses
The PULSE Core Course: Person and Social Responsibility I and II PHIL1088/THEO1088 and PHIL1089/THEO1089
This two-semester, twelve-credit course fulfills the entire Philosophy and Theology Core requirement. Enrollment requires class work in conjunction with ongoing involvement in a PULSE Community Partner, requiring a 12-hour-per-week commitment. Community Partners put students in contact with people experiencing the consequences of some form of social injustice. Drawing on traditional and contemporary works of philosophy and theology, the class engages students in the challenge of self-discovery and growth as related to questions of what it means to assume responsibility for overcoming these injustices.
Courses 2024-2025
Section | Schedule | Disc Group | Instructor |
---|---|---|---|
1 | M W F 11 | M 2 OR W 2 | TROXELL, M. |
4 | T TH 9 | M 10 OR M 12 | FRIED, C. |
7 | M W F 9 | M 11 OR M 12 | MILESKI, J. |
10 | M W F 10 | W 12 OR F 12 | HEVELONE, S. |
13 | T TH 10:30 | TH 12 OR TH 1:30 | MCCOY, M. |
16 | T TH 12 | T 11 OR TH 11 | WEISS, J. |
19 | T TH 10:30 | F 11 OR F 12 | SWEENEY, M. |
22 | T TH 9 | T 1:30 OR TH 3 | SOTOMAYOR, M. |
28 | T TH 10:30 | T 12 OR T 3 | POPE, S. |
31 | M W F 12 | F 10 OR F 1 | TROXELL, M. |
34 | M W F 12 | M 1 OR F 2 | ANOZIE, U. |
37 | M W F 2 | M 11 OR M 1 | HEVELONE, S. |
40 | M W F 12 | W 1 OR F 1 | GILLIHAN, Y. |
43 | T TH 1:30 | W 12 OR W 1 | SNYDER, J. |
46 | M W F 10 | W 11 OR F 11 | ANOZIE, U. |
PULSE Elective Courses
All elective courses in the PULSE Program require four or eight weekly hours of service at a local community organization.
PHIL 2233聽鈥 Values in Social Service and Health Care
Instructor: David Manzo
The broadest mission of this course is to give perspective and offer reflection on your service experiences to date and then to help you discern the answer to the question, "What's next?" We will try to accomplish this through readings, lectures, discussions, and written assignments. Together we will pursue some of the questions raised by the facts, philosophies and statements contained in the readings.
PHIL 2216 鈥 Boston: An Urban Analysis
Instructor: David Manzo
This course is intended for PULSE students who are willing to investigate, analyze, and understand the history, problems, and prospects of Boston's neighborhoods. Community service at a PULSE placement is required for participation in this course. Assignments will require spending time observing, researching, and writing about the neighborhood in which the PULSE placement is located.
PHIL 2261聽鈥 Telling Truths I: Writing for the Cause of Justice
Instructor: Kathleen Hirsch; Prerequisite: Philosophy Core Fulfilled
This PULSE elective will explore writing as a tool for social change. Students will read and experiment with a variety of written forms鈥攆iction, poetry, creative non-fiction, and journalism鈥攖o tell the "truth" as they experience it in their own direct encounters with social injustice. This workshop is intended to provide a comprehensive introduction to the range of literary strategies that social prophets and witnesses have used, and are using today, to promote the cause of justice.
PHIL 2262 鈥 Telling Truths II: Depth Writing as Service
Instructor: Alexis Rizzuto; Prerequisite: Philosophy Core Fulfilled
This PULSE elective will focus on the power of story-telling to achieve justice and social liberation. We will read theoretical and narrative accounts of the role of story, examine the use of story-telling among marginal populations as a means of participating in their own "solutions." We will explore the benefits and liabilities of social media in emerging change movements. Students will engage in story gathering, telling, and analysis, through their PULSE placements and class discussion, producing a collection of original writings. (Telling Truths I is not a prerequisite.)
PHIL 2215 鈥 Telling Truths III: The Narratives that Shape Our Lives
Instructor: Kathleen Hirsch; Prerequisite: Philosophy Core Fulfilled
As we encounter injustice, conflicting visions of 鈥渢he good,鈥 and different moral scales of behavior, rights, and responsibilities, it is essential that we become aware of our own foundational narratives.
What 鈥渨isdom stories鈥 shape the way you think about yourself in relation to others? What narratives do you carry into encounters with conditions, attitudes, and beliefs that are different from yours?
In this course, students will have a rare opportunity to bring their weekly experience of service into a time of reflection, and into relation to some of the core narratives of the great spiritual traditions. We will read modern mystics, parables, and creative theologians, including: Anne Lamott, Etty Hillesum, Kendrick Lamar, and Parker Palmer. The conversation will continue as we write in and read from our journals, sharing stories and questions. Several short writing assignments will occur through the course of the term; a final, longer piece of substantive 鈥渟piritual reflection鈥 will give students the chance to synthesize the fruits of observation, reading, and reflection. The aim of the course is to expand students鈥 familiarity with the great narratives of grace and forgiveness, suffering, and hope as they engage in service, and to provide a setting in which they can become intentional about adopting narratives that will shape their lives.
THEO 3201聽鈥 The Meaning and Way of Jesus
Instructor: Meghan Sweeney; Prerequisite: Theology Core Fulfilled
This course inquires into the meaning of the person and mission of Jesus of Nazareth, the Messiah or Christ of God. The course seeks (1) to probe and to clarify those key issues that emerge in the Church鈥檚 centuries-long response to the question, "Who was/is Jesus Christ?"聽and (2) to explore what concretely is at stake in "following Jesus" or in being his disciple. The first aim of the course requires a consideration of proper theological matters鈥攄ivine and human natures, the salvific meaning of the ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus; the second explores the invitation of the gospel 鈥榯o follow鈥 the way Jesus teaches鈥攁 way of compassionate solidarity and active commitment to the poor, abused, homeless, and excluded. With its emphasis on discipleship or living the "way" Jesus taught, the course seeks to deepen students鈥 understanding of the relation between action and reflection, social practice and religious faith.
THEO 3202聽鈥 Immigration and Ethics
Instructor: Kristin Heyer
This course offers an interdisciplinary examination of contemporary immigration with a primary focus on the U.S context. Texts from social scientific, legal, and policy perspectives frame the phenomenon of contemporary migration. Theological and philosophical texts, along with PULSE service experiences, illuminate ethical assessments of immigration practices. Special attention will be given to Christian anthropology and ethics as resources for analysis as well as the role of gender in matters of migration and citizenship.
PHIL/THEO 2291 & PHIL/THEO 2292聽鈥 Philosophy of Community I & II
PHIL/THEO 2293 & PHIL/THEO 2294聽鈥 Culture and Social Structures I & II
Instructor: Meghan Sweeney (Restricted to PULSE Council)
This four-semester-long sequence of courses studies community: its structure, power, and change. The dynamics of community鈥攖he interrelatedness and interdependence of its various sectors鈥攚ill be examined by sharing impressions and insights. Specific theoretical models of analysis will be studied and critiqued. The purpose of the course is to begin developing new approaches for learning about social change and for building new visions for the direction that a PULSE student's responsibility to social change might take.
PHIL 2230 鈥 Mass Incarceration: Philosophical and Theological
Instructor: Marina McCoy; Prerequisite: Philosophy Core Fulfilled
This course will explore problems of justice in relation to incarceration in the United States with particular attention to attention to race, social class, gender, and immigration status. Students will read authors writing on the philosophy of race, gender, and class in relation to incarceration, the phenomenology of solitary confinement and the concept of "social death," church documents and theological works on incarceration, and works on restorative justice and other models of justice that serves the common good. Catholic Social Justice teachings and discussion will also be a part of the course. The course will also address interconnections between immigration and incarceration. This course will be offered as a PULSE elective, in which students undertake four hours per week of service in the City of Boston at institutions such as Suffolk Country Jail and non-profits that provide transitional services for returning residents or formerly incarcerated individuals or that advocate for prison reform. The PULSE office will vet and coordinate students' placements and serve as a liaison with community partners. Satisfies Core requirement for: Cultural Diversity.