Amherst College in Massachusetts is offering a fall 2017 course to try to figure out why women are becoming more conservative.

The course, entitled “Contemporary Debates: Women and Right-Wing Populism,” will “explore the consequences of neoliberalism, cultural conservatism, Islamophobia, and anti-immigrant sentiments for women of different social and economic strata as well as women’s divergent political responses,” according to the course description.

The college says students will delve into the topic of why some women have chosen to become conservative leaders while others have allied with liberal, anti-racist and progressive causes.

Campus Reform also noticed the hilarity of the course’s description and wrote about it on Thursday.

The course will look at whether transnational influences have affected women’s activism and will also examine what impact the surge of “far right” women has had and will have on both gender and sexuality.

Required texts include Susna Faludi’s “In The Dark Room” about a transgender individual who underwent sex reassignment surgery at the age of 76, Arlie Russell Hochschild’s “Strangers in Their Own Land: Anger and Mourning on the American Right” about investigating the political choices of the conservative right, and Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” about a dystopian society that treats women as property of the state.

The class is offered through the Sexuality, Women’s and Gender Studies Department, and taught by Amrita Basu.

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