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  • /406: French and Francophone Feminisms (Rebecca Wilkin) HGST 387: Sex, Gender and Holocaust Literature (Lisa Marcus) HIST 289: Gender and Women in World History (Gina Hames) IHON 253: Gender, Sexuality and Culture (Jen Smith)   Critical Race Studies Electives COMA 304: Intercultural Communication (Marnie Ritchie) ENG 380: Global Refugee Literatures (Jenny James) GLST 431: Advanced International Relations (Ami Shah) IHON 112: Liberty, Power and Imagination (Christian Gerzso, Arthur Strum) NAIS 363

  • Student ResourcesGender, Sexuality, and Race Studies students pursue careers in law, advocacy, counseling, education, international policy, health, politics, psychology, social work, sociology, public administration, and history–among many others. Click on the links below to read what graduates from our program have to say about how their degrees prepared them for their careers! (Note that the GSRS Program was the Women’s and Gender Studies (WMGS) Program through the end of Spring 2020.) By

  • A Parkland Tour - A Guided Tour Through Parkland, WA.About the ProjectCCES history forthcoming! These place profiles were written during the January 2019 iteration of the course ENGL 323: Writing in Professional and Public Contexts. Students were asked to select important locations featured in the “Parkland Tour” offered by PLU’s Center for Community Engagement and Service. Each student would write a profile of the place based on observational, interview, and online research. These profiles

    Adela Ramos
  • Tongue Dry,” and co-editor of Closer to Liberation: A Pina/xy Activist Anthology. She received a BA in History and Science from Harvard and an MFA in fiction and nonfiction from the Rainier Writing Workshop. Jen is also a co-founder of the cultural democracy  institutions, MediaJustice and ReFrame. Originally from a landlocked part of the Chicago area, Jen now lives with her family in Seattle, near the Duwamish River and the Salish Sea. Her debut book, Nervous: Essays on Heritage and Healing, is now

  • Rebekah M. K. Mergenthal Associate Professor of History Full Profile 253-535-7395 mergenrm@plu.edu

  • their Works October 5, 2022 On Exhibit: Graphic Novels January 6, 2022 Black History Month: Seeking (a Supreme Court) Justice February 2, 2022 Mortvedt Library materials for HEALING: PATHWAYS FOR RESTORATION AND RENEWAL symposium February 16, 2022

  • Brenda Llewellyn Ihssen Professor of Early and Medieval Christian History Full Profile 253-535-7237 bll@plu.edu

  • Saxifrage: Emily Fisher, Eleora Hughes, and Abbie Hughes. We discuss the journal’s history, a brief history of literary journals at universities, the importance of a writing community at the university level, and the types of submissions that Saxifrage accepts. Elijah Noel W. PaezEnvironmental StudiesBird Watching Goes Both Ways: Developing Critical Animal Pedagogy and Multispecies Worlding in Birding Practice Faculty Mentor: Nicole Juliano, Center for Diversity, Justice & Sustainability "Flourishing

  • State History Museum Community Engagement Specialist, Molina Healthcare DEI and Community Planning Coordinator, Kitsap County Events and Stewardship Manager, The Mockingbird Society AANAPISI Grant Manager, North Seattle College Case Manager, Indiana Youth Group Graduates from the last last 5 years: Their graduate programs Master of Public Health - MPH, LGBTQ+ Health, Rutgers School of Public Health MA in Counseling Psychology, University of San Francisco PhD in Rhetoric and Political Culture

  • Explore our beautiful campus and learn about the history and community of PLU. 12:00pm: Lunch and Summer Berry Festival Enjoy a free lunch in the Commons, the main dining facility on campus, and our Summer Berry Festival, with local fruit and live music. Location: The first session at 9:30am will be held at the Center of Graduate and Continuing Education, 12166 Pacific Ave S, Tacoma, 98444. (See map) All participants are encouraged to arrive 10 minutes on earlier to find your parking and checking in