Art History-Russian
CLRS W4032x. Emancipation of Self in (Early 20th Century) Russia and
the European Modern. 3 pts.
A survey of the conceptual commonalities in 20th century Russia and Western
European literature, art, architecture, theater, and music. Emphasis will be
on the views of the Self, the relationship between matter and psyche, and
reality and appearance, discussed in the context of Russian Symbolism,
analytical psychology, and the Modern.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLRS W4032
|
|
CLRS
4032
|
55031
001
|
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
703 Hamilton Hall
|
J. Wermuth-Atkinson
|
6
|
|
RUSS W4661. Avant-Gardes and Postmodernisms in 20th-Century Russian
Art [In English]. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
RUSS G8671. The Russian Avant-Garde. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Comparative Literature-Russian
CLRS W4015x. Dostoevsky and Nabokov: Narratives of Transgression and
Madness. 3 pts.
A close reading of works by Dostoevsky (the Double, Notes from Underground,
Crime and Punishment. "The Meek One," The Brothers Karamazov) and Nabokov
(Despair, Lolita). Paying particular attention to narrative strategies, the
course will prepare students to apply their knowledge of Dostoevskian plot,
thematics, and literary technique to two novels by the great
Dostoevsky-denier Nabokov.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLRS W4015
|
|
CLRS
4015
|
85534
001
|
TuTh 2:40p - 3:55p
607 Hamilton Hall
|
D. Martinsen
|
27
|
|
RUSS W4347y. Chteniia PO RUSSKOI KUL'TURE: Contemporary Social
Sciences. 3 pts. Prerequisites: Five semesters of college
level Russian, or four semesters of college level Russian and participation
in a study abroad program in a Russian speaking country and instructor's
permission.
This course is designed to meet the needs of advanced undergraduate and
graduate students across several fields--the natural sciences, social
sciences, humanities, fine arts, business, law and others-- who wish to focus
on acquisition of high proficiency reading skills that will allow them to
conduct research using written Russian-language academic sources.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
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Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS W4347
|
|
RUSS
4347
|
82283
001
|
TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
318 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Smyslova
|
3
|
|
CLRS G6127. Marxist Cultural Theory. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The mechanisms of mediation between political economy and art or literature.
Marxist theory, positivism, 19th-century Russian radicalism, modernism, and
postmodernism.
CLRS G6201. Bakhtin. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
An examination of the literary and cultural theory of Mikhail Bakhtin.
CLRS G6290x. The Lolita Phenomenon. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
An advanced graduate seminar on Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita and its multiple
reincarnations, transformations, and distortions. The course offers a
comprehensive panorama of Nabokov's literary practices through the lens of a
single novel by bringing together varied aspects of his cultural legacy under
the unified theoretical concern with reproduction and authencity.
CLRS G6330. Between 1812 and 1848: Russian Romanticism and Its
European Contexts. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
The age of Russian Romanticism (1810s-40s) viewed in its contemporary
European context. Literary works by Zhukovsky, Batiushkov, Pushkin, Iazykov,
Baratynsky, Lermontov, Odoevsky, Gogol; popular literature of the time
(Tumansky, Benediktov, and others); major events in romantic literary
criticism and philosophy (Kireevsky, Belinsky, Chaadaev); and the development
of romantic cultural and personal mythology.
CLRS G6401. Russian Futurism and its Influence. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: reading knowledge of Russian. Exploration of the
poetics and philosophy of language of the Russian Futurists in comparison
with Italian Futurism and other trends in the Russian and Western
avant-garde. Examination of the impact of the Russian avant-garde rebellion
on literature and aesthetic ideas of the pre-revolutionary and early Soviet
period.
Comparative Literature-Slavic
CLSL W4001x. Climbing the Tower of Babel: Multilingual Literature
from Five Centuries in its Political and Semiotic Context. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
What do the medieval Czech comedy The Ointment Seller,
nineteenth-century War and Peace, modernist Finnegan's Wake and postcolonial Return to the Native Land have in common? They are
all written in more than one language. This course examines the theoretical
and philosophical implications of mixing and juxtaposing languages in a
literary text in different historical and cultural settings from medieval
Europe through colonial Brazil and postcolonial Haiti back to postsocialist
Europe. The reading list includes works by Rabelais, Tolstoy, Jesuit
missionaries, Joyce, Aimée Cesaire, Primo Levi and Jachym Topol as
well as excursions into the blogosphere and other contemporary forms of
writing. Knowledge of foreign languages is not required but students who want
to get credit for comparative literature have to read in the original in at
least one language other than English.
CLSL W4003x. Central European Drama in the Twentieth Century. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Focus will be on the often deceptive modernity of modern Central and East
European theater and its reflection of the forces that shaped modern European
society. It will be argued that the abstract, experimental drama of the
twentieth-century avant-garde tradition seems less vital at the century's end
than the mixed forms of Central and East European dramatists.
CLSL W4003. Contemporary East European Literature: When the Wall Came
Down. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
The changes in the literary situation in East European countries that have
accompanied and followed the end of communist rule. Works by representative
authors from Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, the former
Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, and Ukraine.
CLSL W4005. Constructions of Gender and Sexuality in Russian and East
European Writing. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
An exploration of the ways gender and sexual identities have been articulated
and constructed in a number of Russian and East European literary texts (from
the late 19th century to the present). Representative works from Russia,
Ukraine, Poland, Hungary, and the former Yugoslavia.
CLRS W4011x. Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and the English Novel [in English].
3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A close reading of works by Dostoevsky (Netochka Nezvanova; The Idiot; "A
Gentle Creature") and Tolstoy (Childhood, Boyhood, Youth; "Family Happiness";
Anna Karenina; "The Kreutzer Sonata") in conjunction with related English
novels (Bronte's Jane Eyre, Eliot's Middlemarch, Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway). No
knowledge of Russian is required.
CLRS W4012y. Russian, French, and American Novels of Adultery [In
English]. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Adultery is a driving concern of the works read. Authors include Pushkin,
Turgenev, Tolstoy, Chekhov; Lafayette, Flaubert; Hawthorne, Chopin. As we
study the nineteenth-century novels that define the novel of adultery as a
literary category, as well as some precursors and later offshoots, we
articulate a morphology of the novel of adultery. We also focus on the
narrative technqiues used to represent the consciousness of the protagonists,
in an effort to determine how the subject matter and the poetics of the novel
of adultery interact. No knowledge of Russian is required; all works read in
English.
CLSL G4015y. The Discovery of Language: Kant, von Humboldt, and the
Consequences of the Birth of Linguistics. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The course combines the history of literature and the philosophy of language,
examining the profound effect of the emergence of language as an object of
study in its own right across the whole spectrum of European culture. In
education, it was implicated in the rise of nationalism; in Romanticism it
contributed to the preoccupation with alienation; a new sense of language's
otherness created challenges for all sectors claiming special intimacy with
the Truth (natural sciences, theology, law) - a development that has
consequences for the rise of modernism is predilection for the abstract.
Readings in linguistics, neuroscience, the philosophy of language, and
literary texts (Bacon, Wilkins, Swift, Rousseau, Kant, Herder, von Humboldt,
Kleist, de Saussure, Kartsevskii, Jakobson, Trubetzkoy, Prague Circle, Tartu
School, Bakhtin, Gogol, Dostoevsky, Khlebnikov, Kharms, Benjamin, Cassirer,
Benveniste, Derrida, de Man, Mallarmé, Kafka, Sartre, Robbe-Grillet).
SLLT W4015. Ideology, History, Identity: South Slavic Writers From
Modernism to Postmodernism and Beyond.. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The course explores eight major South Slavic writers, modernists MIlos
Crnjanski (1893 - 1977), Ivo Andric (1892 -1975) and Miroslav Krleza (1893 -
1981), and postmodernists Danilo Kis (1935-1989), Milorad Pavic (b.1948),
Dubravka Ugresic (b.1949) and David Albahari (b.1948). The outstanding writer
Borislav Pekic (1930 - 1992) extends beyond these two literary movements.
CLRS W4017. Chekhov [English]. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A close reading of Chekhov's best work in the genres on which he left an
indelible mark (the short story and the drama) on the subjects that left an
indelible imprint on him (medical science, the human body, identity,
topography, the nature of news, the problem of knowledge, the access to pain,
the necessity of dying, the structure of time, the self and the world, the
part and the whole) via the modes of inquiry (diagnosis and deposition,
expedition and exegesis, library and laboratory, microscopy and materialism,
intimacy and invasion) and forms of documentation (the itinerary, the map,
the calendar, the photograph, the icon, the Gospel, the Koan, the lie, the
love letter, the case history, the obituary, the pseudonym, the script) that
marked his era (and ours). No knowledge of Russian required.
CLCZ W4020. Czech Culture Before Czechoslovakia. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Sophomore standing or instructor's permission.
An interpretive cultural history of the Czechs from earliest times to the
founding of the first Czechoslovak republic in 1918. Emphasis on the origins,
decline, and resurgence of Czech national identity as reflected in the visual
arts, architecture, music, historiography, and especially the literature of
the Czechs.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLCZ W4020
|
|
CLCZ
4020
|
81147
001
|
TuTh 2:40p - 3:55p
408 Hamilton Hall
Th 1:10p - 4:00p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
3
|
|
CLPL W4020y. North America in the Mirror of Polish Literature. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
The course will consider the reflection of American culture in Polish
literature. All aspects of American life will be viewed through the lenses of
the Polish writers, bringing into focus their perception of a different
political, historical, and esthetic experience.
CLSL W4020. Slavic Literary Theory. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The contributions to modern critical thought of Russian Formalism, Prague
Structuralism, East European structural poetics, and the semiotics of
culture. The characteristic features of those movements are examined in
comparison with kindred critical developments in the West. Readings in
English.
CLSS W4025y. Literature and Ideology: Balkan Modernism [In English].
3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of the 20th-century literature of Greece, Bulgaria, Macedonia,
Serbia and Montenegro, Bosnia, Albania, and Romania (in translation), with a
focus on the role of literature in modern Balkan politics. Explores "the
Balkans"--the cultural entity, the political phenomenon, the ideological
construct--from the vantage point of the best modernist and postmodernist
texts created in the region. Readings include poetry by Constantine Cavafy,
novels by Ivo Andric and Ismail Kadare, short stories by Danilo Kis, read in
conjunction with his fathers by choice, Jorge Luis Borges and Bruno Schultz,
and films by two of Europe's most acclaimed directors of 1990s, Emir
Kusturica and Theo Angelopolus.
CLSS G4027y. Within Empires: Literatures of the South Slavs from the
Beginning to Realism [in English]. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission
Readings and discussion of the most important literary texts from Serbia,
Bulgaria, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia, and Macedonia from the
beginning of South Slavic literacy to the 19th century. Topics include
religion, literature, art, architechture, and music; empires and wars, issues
of history and identity. Major figures include: Vuk
Stefanović-Karadžić, Petar Petrović Njegoš, Ivan
Mažuranić, Hristo Botev and others. The course is intended for both
non-native speakers and native speakers of South Slavic Languages; no
knowledge of South Slavic languages required.
CLSS G4028x. In the Shadow of Empires: Literatures of the South Slavs
from Realism to Today [in English]. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission
Readings and discussion of the most important literary works of South Slavic
writers from the second half of the 19th century to the present. Major
writers include: Ivan Cankar, Miroslav Krleza, Ivo Andric, Milos Crnjanski,
Mesa Selimovic, Danilo Kis, Dubravaka Ugresic, David Albahari, and others.
Knowledge of South Slavic languages not required.
CLRS W4029x. Women Novelists of the Nineteenth Century in Russia and
Elsewhere [In English]. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
An examination of nineteenth-century novels and novellas by women: the focus
will be on Russian writers (Gan, Zhukova, Pavlova, Tur, Vovchok,
Khvoshchinskaia, Kovalevskaia), but we will include relevant works by
novelists from other traditions (Germaine de Staël, George Sand; Jane
Austen, Charlotte Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell, George Eliot; Harriet
Beecher Stowe; Olive Shreiner). We will discuss broader issues relating to
the theory, form, and poetics of the novel, as well as ask questions about
the nature of realism, about the politics of literary history and
canonization, about the feminine imagination. All works may be read in
English. (No knowledge of Russian or French is required.)
CLCZ W4030y. Postwar Czech Literature [in English]. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of postwar Czech fiction and drama. Knowledge of Czech not
necessary. Parallel reading lists available in translation and in the
original.
CLSL W4030. Orthodoxy, Text, Ritual. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A general introduction to the medieval literature of Slavia Orthodoxa,
focusing on the relation between medieval text and ritual context. Close
readings of selected works agaisnt a broad cultural background. Attention to
ritual time and space and ritual performance, Eastern Orthodox monasticism
and the cult of saints, manuscript vs. printed culture, orthodoxy vs.
heteropraxis. Readings are in English (with a parallel list in the OCS for
the most daring).
CLSL W4030. How to Do Things with Literature: Constructing and
Construing Russian and Yiddish Prose Fiction. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
This course explores the multiple tasks assumed by-or thrust upon- Russian
and Yiddish literatures as each strove to establish a distinctive prose
tradition in a shared cultural space. Authors read include Pushkin,
Lermontov, Gogol, Belinsky, Turgenev, Goncharov, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy,
Chekhov, Babel, Zoshchenko, Ilf and Petrov, Olesha, V. Kataev, Bulgakov,
Solzhenitsyn, Mendele Moykher Seforim, Sholem Aleichem, Sholem Asch, David
Bergelson, I.L.Peretz, Nachman of Bratslav, I.M. Weissenberg, Lamed Shapiro,
Moyshe Kulbak, Der Nister, Chaim Grade, and Isaac Bashevis Singer. Knowledge
of Russian or Yiddish not required; readings available in the original for
students with requisite language proficiency.
CLRS G4035. Word and Image in Russian Culture 1720-1920. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Reading knowledge of Russian and some reading ability in French are
desirable. Examination of the possible relationships of the verbal and the
visual in 18th- and 19th-century Russian literature and culture. Considers
the Byzantine heritage, the "symbols and emblems" of the Petrine baroque, the
allegories of court culture, the notion of the picturesque, the "visibility"
of "classical" Russian literature and turn-of-the-century culture, and the
very possibility of illustrating words with images. The course is
comparative, placing Russian examples against a European background to
explore what is universal and what is specific about the interplay of word
and image in Russia.
CLCZ W4038y. Prague Spring of '68 in Film and Literature [In
English]. 3 pts.
The course explores the unique period in Czech film and literature during the
1960s that emerged as a reaction to the imposed socialist realism. The new
generation of writers (Kundera, Skvorecky, Havel, Hrabal) in turn had an
influence on young emerging film makers, all of whom were part of the Czech
new wave.
CLSL W4040. Linguistic and Ethnic Conflicts in the Former Yugoslavia.
3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
The course surveys the history of literacy in the area of the former
Yugoslavia, the codification of Serbo-Croatian, and the problems of the
implementation of the standard. Linguistic conflicts in the area foreshadowed
ethnic conflicts and the dissolution of the country. The course material is
presented within the context of sociolinguistics and sociology of language.
CLSS W4041x. Cinemas of the Former Yugoslavia. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
This course explores how cinematic narratives and visual styles constructed,
questioned, and contested notions of the nation and national identity in the
cinemas of the former Yugoslavia (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Montenegro,
Serbia, and Macedonia. The course first provides an historical perspective on
the rich heritage of cinemas of the former Yugoslavia after World War Two,
examining in particular the trope of "liberated cinema," and questions of
film censorship and ideology. Second,the course explores the influence of
modernist movements in Yugoslavian film, including "novi film," "crni film,"
and the role of the Prague School film makers as well as of black humor and
political satire in film. Finally, the course critically reevaluates the
trope of a "cinema of flames" in the narratives of warfare, looking at the
relationships among historical narratives, memory discourses, cinematic
spaces, and political and personal (ethnic,class, and gendered) identities.
Films (and/or selected clips from films) directed by Kusturica, Manchevski,
Makavejev, Tanovic, Paskaljevic, Bresan, Dragojevic, Sijan, Petrovic,
Zafranovic, Grlic, Stiglic, Berkovic, Hladnik, Zilnik, Stojanovic, Cengic,
Markovic, and others will be screened and discussed.
CLSL W4075x. Soviet and Post-Soviet, Colonial and Post Colonial Film.
3 pts.
The course will discuss how film making has been used as a vehicle of power
and control in the Soviet Union and in post-Soviet space since 1991. A body
of selected films by Soviet and post-Soviet directors that exemplify the
function of film making as a tool of appropriation of the colonized, their
cultural and political subordination by the Soviet center will be examined in
terms of post-colonial theories. The course will also focus on the often over
looked work of Ukrainian, Georgian, Belarusian, Armenian, etc. national film
schools and how they participated in the communist project of fostering a as
well as resisted it by generating, in hidden and, since 1991, overt and
increasingly assertive ways, their own counter-narratives.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLSL W4075
|
|
CLSL
4075
|
53696
001
|
Tu 6:10p - 10:00p
703 Hamilton Hall
Tu 7:10p - 10:00p
703 Hamilton Hall
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
12
|
|
CLSS W4100x. Central Europe and the Orient in the Works of Yugoslav
Writers [In English]. 3 pts.
The course addresses the confrontation between East and West in the works of
Vla Desnica, Miroslav Krleza, Mesa Semilovic, and Ivo Andric. Discussion will
target problems inherent in shaping national and individual identity, as well
as the trauma caused by occupation and colonization among the South Slavs.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLSS W4100
|
|
CLSS
4100
|
52648
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
411 Kent Hall
M 9:00a - 12:00p
411 Kent Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
11
|
|
CLSL W4110. Fiction in Film in East Central Europe. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
The course will examine some of the most significant achievements of Polish,
Czech, and Hungarian cinema in the communist era and, in most cases, their
literary antecedents.
CLPL W4120. The Polish Short Story in a Comparative Context. 3
pts.
The course examines the beginnings of the Polish short story in the 19th
century and its development through the late 20th century, including
exemplary works of major Polish writers of each period. It is also a
consideration of the short story form--its generic features, its theoretical
premises, and the way these respond to the stylistic and philosophical
imperatives of successive periods.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CLPL W4120
|
|
CLPL
4120
|
11147
001
|
M 4:10p - 6:00p
402 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
5
|
|
CLRS W4431x. Theatricality and Spectacle in the History of Russian
Culture [In English]. 3 pts.
The course explores the notion of theatricality, its contradictory
definitions, and its possible applications to Cultural Studies. It considers
the place of both public spectacle and theatrical Event in
Russian culture, traditionally considered theatrical as such. The
study of public spectacles from 18th-century Court festivities, through 1920s
Revolutionary festivals to the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games and the recent
celebration of 300 years of Saint-Petersburg. In our exploration of Russian
theater a special emphasis will be put on those figures that have
been most influential for 20th-century theater and film in the West
(Stanislavski, Meyerhold, Diaghilev, Evreinov, etc.). All the readings will
be in English.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CLRS W4431
|
|
CLRS
4431
|
71401
001
|
TuTh 4:10p - 5:25p
1219 International Affairs Bldg
|
T. Smoliarova
|
13
|
|
CLSL W4900. Seminar In Theory: the Ineffable. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
A consideration of the ways that critics might attempt to address the
untranslatable, the indescribable, and the unspeakable. Possible solutions
range from the theories of the sublime to critical performance or process, to
psychoanalysis and phenomenologies of reading. Works by Adorno, Longinus,
Philostratus the Elder, Kant, Walter Pater, Roman Jakobson, Bakhtin, Maurice
Blanchot, and others.
CLSL W4975x. Soviet and Post-Soviet, Colonial and Post Colonial Film.
3 pts.
The course will discuss how film making has been used as a vehicle of power
and control in the Soviet Union and in post-Soviet space since 1991. A body
of selected films by Soviet and post-Soviet directors that exemplify the
function of film making as a tool of appropriation of the colonized, their
cultural and political subordination by the Soviet center will be examined in
terms of post-colonial theories. The course will also focus on the often over
looked work of Ukrainian, Georgian, Belarusian, Armenian, etc. national film
schools and how they participated in the communist project of fostering a as
well as resisted it by generating, in hidden and, since 1991, overt and
increasingly assertive ways, their own counter-narratives.
CLSL W4995y. Central European Jewish Writers. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Examines prose and poetry by writers generally less accessible to the
American student written in the major Central European languages: German,
Hungarian, Czech, and Polish. The problematics of assimilation, the search
for identity, political commitment and disillusionment are major themes,
along with the defining experience of the century: the Holocaust; but because
these writers are often more removed from their Jewishness, their perspective
on these events and issues may be different. The influence of Franz Kafka on
Central European writers, the post-Communist Jewish revival, defining the
Jewish voice in an otherwise disparate body of works.
CLSL G6112. The Tale of Prince Igor's Campaign in the Context of
European Medieval Poetry. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisites: Ability to read one of the five texts in the
original.
Study of the tale of Prince Igor's Campaign's symbolic language, imagery, and
narrative technique in relation to European medieval epic poetry,
particularly in comparison with Beowulf, Snorri Struluson's Edda, The Song of
Roland, and the poem of My Cid.
CLSL G6200. The Balkan and the Christian in Balkan Narratives. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
A graduate seminar on major literary and cinematic narratives from
Southeastern Europe that thematize Muslim-Christian encounters in the context
of the complex political and and cultural history of the Balkans. The reading
list includes works by Ivo Andrić, Ismail Kadare, Nikos Kazandzakis, Emir
Kusturica, Milcho Mancheveski, Orhan Pamuk, Milorad Pavić, Meša
Selimović, and Yordan Yovkov.
CLPL W6210. Polish Avant-Gardism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
An investigation of avant-gardism in literature and the arts in Poland from
the end of the 19th century to WW II. Texts as they originally appeared in
journals and first editions, with the goal of developing a feel for the
vibrant interdisciplinary modernist culture of pre-Communist Poland.
Comparative Literature-Polish
CLPL G6240. Bruno Schulz. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Knowledge of Polish and/or
substantial background in Jewish literature required.
A seminar dedicated to the close analysis of all Schulz's extant fiction,
criticism, and visual works with attention to his letters and critical
writing on Schulz from Polish, Jewish, and other perspectives.
Czech
CZCH W1101x-W1102y. Elementary Czech, I and II. 4 pts.
Essentials of the spoken and written language. Prepare students to read texts
of moderate difficulty by the end of the first year.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CZCH W1101
|
|
CZCH
1101
|
73050
001
|
TuThF 10:35a - 11:50a
408 Hamilton Hall
Tu 9:00a - 12:00p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
10 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CZCH W1102
|
|
CZCH
1102
|
93496
001
|
TuThF 10:35a - 11:50a
315 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
1 / 20
|
|
CZCH W1201x-W1202y. Intermediate Czech, I and II. 4 pts.
Prerequisites:CZCH W1102 or the equivalent.
Rapid review of grammar. Readings in contemporary fiction and nonfiction,
depending upon the interests of individual students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CZCH W1201
|
|
CZCH
1201
|
80796
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
408 Hamilton Hall
F 1:10p - 2:25p
714 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
4 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CZCH W1202
|
|
CZCH
1202
|
97048
001
|
TuThF 1:10p - 2:25p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
0 / 20
|
|
CLCZ W4035x. Writers of Prague [in English]. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
No knowledge of Czech required. A survey of the Czech, German, and
German-Jewish literary cultures of Prague from 1910 to 1930. Emphasis on
Hasek, Capek, Kafka, Werfel, and Rilke.
CZCH W4333x. Readings in Czech Literature, I. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Two years of college Czech or the equivalent
A close study in the original of representative works of Czech literature.
Discussion and writing assignments in Czech aimed at developing advanced
language proficiency.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: CZCH W4333
|
|
CZCH
4333
|
76250
001
|
TuTh 9:10a - 10:25a
408 Hamilton Hall
Th 9:00a - 12:00p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
C. Harwood
|
1
|
|
CZCH W4334y. Readings in Czech Literature, II. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Two years of college Czech or the equivalent.
A close study in the original of representative works of Czech literature.
Discussion and writing assignments in Czech aimed at developing advanced
language proficiency.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: CZCH W4334
|
|
CZCH
4334
|
92198
001
|
TBA
|
A. Timberlake
|
0
|
|
CZCH G8001x-G8002y. Directed Research In Czech Literature. 3-4
pts.
Departmental permission.
History
HSSL W3224y. Cities and Civilizations: an Introduction To Eurasian
Studies. 3 pts.
An introduction to the study of the region formerly occupied by the Russian
and Soviet Empires focusing on cities as the space of self-definition,
encounter, and tension among constituent peoples. Focus on incorporating and
placing in dialogue diverse disciplinary approaches to the study of the city
through reading and analysis of historical, literary, and theoretical texts
as well as film, music, painting, and architecture.
CPLT G4339. History of Modern Poland.. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
CPLT W4343. Imperial Russia, 1801-1917. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
CPLT G8327. An Introduction To the Literature of East Central
European History. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
CPLT G8364. Colloquium On Soviet Social History.. 4 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
CPLT G8445x. Legacies of Empire and the Soviet Union. 4 pts.
Required of all Harriman Institute Certificate candidates. For
registration purposes the actual course number is
HSPS G8445.
Hungarian
HNGR W4050. The Hungarian New Wave: Cinema in Kadarist Hungary [In
English]. 3 pts.
Hungarian cinema, like filmmaking in Czechoslovakia, underwent a renaissance
in the 1960's, but the Hungarian new wave continued to flourish in the 70's
and film remained one of the most important art forms well into the 80's.
This course examines the cultural, social and political context of
representative Hungarian films of the Kádárist period, with
special emphasis on the work of such internationally known filmmakers as
Miklós Jancsó, Károly Makk, Márta
Mészáros, and István Szabó. In addition to a
close analysis of individual films, discussion topics will include the
"newness" of the new wave in both form and content (innovations in film
language, cinematic impressionism, allegorical-parabolic forms, auteurism,
etc.), the influence of Italian, French, German and American cinema, the
relationship between film and literature, the role of film in the cultures of
Communist Eastern Europe, the state of contemporary Hungarian cinema. The
viewing of the films will be augmented by readings on Hungarian cinema, as
well as of relevant Hungarian literary works.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: HNGR W4050
|
|
HNGR
4050
|
18749
001
|
TuTh 6:10p - 7:25p
407 Hamilton Hall
Tu 7:10p - 10:00p
407 Hamilton Hall
|
I. Sanders
|
5
|
|
International Affairs
CPLT U4525. Postwar Politics of East Central Europe.
Polish
POLI W1101x-W1102y. Elementary Polish, I and II. 4 pts.
Essentials of the spoken and written language. Prepares students to read
texts of moderate difficulty by the end of the first year.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: POLI W1101
|
|
POLI
1101
|
81798
001
|
MWF 9:10a - 10:25a
405 Kent Hall
F 9:00a - 12:00p
405 Kent Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
13 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: POLI W1102
|
|
POLI
1102
|
97948
001
|
MWF 9:10a - 10:25a
406 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
7 / 15
|
|
POLI W1201x-W1202y. Intermediate Polish, I and II. 4 pts.
Prerequisites:POLI W1102 or the equivalent.
Rapid review of grammar; readings in contemporary nonfiction or fiction,
depending on the interests of individual students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: POLI W1201
|
|
POLI
1201
|
82498
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
408 Hamilton Hall
F 1:10p - 2:25p
402 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
2 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: POLI W1202
|
|
POLI
1202
|
76029
001
|
MWF 1:10p - 2:25p
716A Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
0 / 20
|
|
POLI W4003. History of Polish Literature. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A knowledge of Polish is not required, but students knowing the language are
expected to read in the original and are given special assignments. A general
survey of Polish literature from the Renaissance to WW I and the
establishment of an independent Polish state.
POLI W4030. Post-WW II Polish Literature. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Readings in English translation. Students with a knowledge of Polish are
expected to do some work in the original. An introduction to major
developments in Polish prose, fiction, poetry, and drama since the end of WW
II and the establishment of the present government.
POLI W4031x. Professional Polish for Heritage Speakers. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Instructor's permission.
Addresses the need for heritage speakers to speak, read, understand, and
write in Polish at the highest level of functional proficiency. It serves
students from all departments across the humanities, social sciences, and
natural sciences.
POLI G4040y. Mickiewicz. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The Polish literary scene that in this particular period stretched from
Moscow, Petersburg, and Odessa, to Vilna, Paris, Rome. The concept of exile,
so central to Polish literature of the 19th-century and world literature of
the 20th will be introduced and discussed.
The course will offer the opportunity to see the new Romantic trend initially
evolving from classicism, which it vigorously opposed and conquered. We will
examine how the particular literary form - sonnet, ballad, epic poem and the
romantic drama developed on the turf of the Polish language. Also we will see
how such significant themes as madness, Romantic suicide, Romantic irony, and
elements of Islam and Judaism manifested themselves in the masterpieces of
Polish poetry. The perception of Polish Romanticism in other, especially
Slavic, literatures will be discussed and a comparative approach encouraged.
Most of the texts to be discussed were translated into the major European
languages. Mickiewicz was enthusiastically translated into Russian by the
major Russian poets of all times; students of Russian may read his works in
its entirety in that language.
The class will engage in a thorough analysis of the indicated texts; the
students' contribution to the course based on general knowledge of the
period, of genres, and/or other related phenomena is expected.
POLI G4042y. Bestsellers of Polish Literature. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
A study of the 20th-century Polish novel during its most invigorated,
innovative inter-war period. A close study of the major works of
Kuncewiczowa, Choromanski, Wittlin, Unilowski, Kurek, Iwaszkiewicz,
Gombrowicz, and Schulz. The development of the Polish novel will be examined
against the background of new trends in European literature, with emphasis on
the usage of various narrative devices. Reading knowledge of Polish desirable
but not required. Parallel reading lists are available in the original and in
translation.
POLI W4044. 20th-Century Polish Drama and Theatre. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
A reading knowledge of Polish is desirable but not required. Primarily the
plays of such avant-garde dramatists as Witkiewicz, Gombrowicz, Mrozek, and
Rózewicz, and the theatre work of Grotowski.
POLI W4048. Masterpieces of 19th-Century Polish Poetry. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Analysis of the major works of the 19th-century poets, including Mickiewicz,
Slowacki, Krasinski, Fredro, and Norwid. Parallel reading lists for readers
and non-readers of Polish. Students with sufficient knowledge of the language
are required to read in the original.
POLI W4050. Contemporary Polish Poetry. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Reading knowledge of Polish.
Survey of the major contemporary Polish poets, schools, and genres. Lectures,
assigned readings, and class discussion of poems. Additional reading list and
anthology selections in English for supplemental reading and for comparison.
POLI W4101x-W4102y. Advanced Polish, I and II. 4 pts.
Prerequisites: Two years of college Polish or the instructor's
permission.
Extensive readings from 19th- and 20th-century texts in the original. Both
fiction and nonfiction, with emphasis depending on the interests and needs of
individual students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: POLI W4101
|
|
POLI
4101
|
42747
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
716A Hamilton Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
716A Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
5 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: POLI W4102
|
|
POLI
4102
|
12530
001
|
MW 11:00a - 12:15p
716A Hamilton Hall
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
1 / 20
|
|
POLI W4110. The Polish Novel. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Evolution of the novel form in Polish literature from the Baroque memoir
through the Enlightenment, Positivism, modernism, and the avant-gardists of
the 20th century. Reading knowledge of Polish desirable but not required.
POLI G4111. Polish Drama. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A survey of Polish drama from the Renaissance through the radical experiments
of the recent period. Current performances in New York will be incorporated
into the course. Knowledge of Polish is desirable but not required.
POLI G6020. Renaissance Poetry In Poland: From Latin To Polish. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Working knowledge of Latin or Polish.
Focuses specifically on poetry and the development of modern Polish literary
language, style, and culture from its Latin and neo-Latin influences. Authors
may include Ioannes Visliciensis (Jan z Wislicy), Hussovianus (Hussowczyk),
Dantiscus (Dantyszek), Andrzej Krzycki (Cricius), Sarbevius (Sarbiewski),
Biernat of Lublin, Jan Kochanowski (Cochanovius), Mikolaj Rej,
Sep-Szarzynski, and others.
POLI G8001x-G8002y. Directed Research In Polish Literature, I &
II. 3-4 pts. Prerequisites: Departmental permission.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: POLI G8001
|
|
POLI
8001
|
42201
001
|
TBA
|
A. Frajlich-Zajac
|
2
|
|
Political Science
CPLT W4531. The Politics of East Central Europe. 3 pts.
Russian
RUSS V3101x-V3102y. Third-year Russian, I and II. 4 pts.
Prerequisites:RUSS V3331:RUSS 1202 or the equivalent and the instructor's
permission.
Prerequisite for V3332: Russian V3331 or the equivalent.
Enrollment limited. Recommended for students who wish to improve their active
command of Russian. Emphasis on conversation and composition. Reading and
discussion of selected texts and videotapes. Lectures. Papers and oral
reports required. Conducted entirely in Russian.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS V3101
|
|
RUSS
3101
|
97048
001
|
MWF 1:10p - 2:25p
707 Hamilton Hall
|
F. Miller
|
17 / 24
|
|
|
RUSS
3101
|
12855
002
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
F 1:10p - 2:25p
716A Hamilton Hall
|
N. Kazakova
|
5 / 24
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS V3102
|
|
RUSS
3102
|
92751
001
|
MWF 1:10p - 2:25p
315 Hamilton Hall
|
F. Miller
|
14 / 15
|
|
RUSS W4001x. Conversations about Russian Cinema. 2 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Two years of
college Russian or the instructor's permission.
The course will focus on conversational, stylistic and cultural aspects of
the language. Script writing, promotional trailers, film reviews. The course
is conducted entirely in Russian.
RUSS W4006y. Modern Russian Religious Thought [In English]. 3 pts.
Knowledge of Russian not required Not offered in 2009-2010.
Explores Russian religious thought of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,
with special attention to its close ties to the Russian literary tradition.
We start with Chaadaev's questions about Russia's otherness, move on to
Slavophile solutions, then to folk piety and religious practice, and the
religious thought of Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. We will then study the
renaissance of Russian religious thought that took root in the work of
Soloviev and Fedorov and inspired Russian modernists. The course will end
with the development of these ideas in the first half of the twentieth
century in Russia (Florensky) and the Paris emigration (Berdiaev, Shestov,
Bulgakov, Skobtsova [Mother Maria]). Readings in religious thought will be
supplemented by relevant literary texts.
RUSS W4014x. Introduction to Russian Poetry and Poetics. 3
pts.
An introduction to Russian poetry, through the study of selected texts of
major poets of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, primarily: Pushkin,
Lermontov, Pavlova, Tiutchev, Blok, Mandel'shtam, Akhmatova, Mayakovsky,
Prigov and Brodsky. Classes devoted to the output of a single poet will be
interspersed with classes that draw together the poems of different poets in
order to show the reflexivity of the Russian poetic canon. These classes will
be organized according either to types of poems or to shared themes. The
course will teach the basics of verisification, poetic languages (sounds,
tropes), and poetic forms. Classes in English; poetry read in Russian.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS W4014
|
|
RUSS
4014
|
92797
001
|
MW 6:00p - 7:50p
TBA
|
K. Lodge
|
2
|
|
RUSS W4015. Highlights of Russian Drama from the 18th Century to
Chekhov [In English]. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Parallel reading lists in English and Russian. Graduate students in Russian
must read in the original. Emphasis on drama as literature, with some
attention to Western drama and to Russian theatrical production.
RUSS W4016. Russian Drama from Chekhov to the Present [In English]. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Parallel reading lists in English and Russian. Graduate students in Russian
must read in the original. Emphasis on literary texts, the history of
literary movements, and on competing theatrical and dramatic theories.
RUSS W4017y. Chekhov [In English]. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Close reading of Chekhov's best work in the genres on which he left an
indelible mark (the short story and the drama) on the subjects that left an
indelible imprint on him (medical science, the human body, identity,
topography, the nature of news, the problem of knowledge, the access to pain,
the necessity of dying, the structure of time, the self and the world, the
part and the whole) via the modes of inquiry (diagnosis and deposition,
expedition and exegesis, library and laboratory, microscopy and materialism,
intimacy and invasion) and forms of documentation (the itinerary, the map,
the calendar, the photograph, the icon, the Gospel, the Koan, the lie, the
love letter, the case history, the obituary, the pseudonym, the script) that
marked his era (and ours). No knowledge of Russian required. Please register
for this course under CLRS W4017, with call number 10850.
RUSS W4027. Poetry and Prose of the 1860s. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Readings, lectures, and discussion on the fiction, lyric, drama, and
journalism of a crucial decade.
RUSS W4036. Russian Women in Literature and Culture [In English]. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A knowledge of Russian is not required. A comparative study of Western and
Russian feminist thought and practice. Literary and historical documents are
studied, with emphasis on women's social position, their literary image, and
their contributions to culture.
RUSS W4075. Survival and Renewal: Russian Poetry of the Soviet
Period. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Examines how Russian poetry continued to evolve in the Soviet period even as
the government attempted to control all means of literary expression and
exploit the popularity of verse as a vehicle for party propaganda. Russian
poets of 1930-90.
RUSS W4200y. Theater Workshop: Gogol's Revizor. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Instructor's permission.
The study and staging, in the original of a Russian play (Gogol's
Revizor). Concentration on exploration of character and style
through language, phonetics, detailed textual analysis, and oral
presentation.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS W4200
|
|
RUSS
4200
|
02740
001
|
MW 4:10p - 5:25p
TBA
|
M. Kashper
|
5
|
|
RUSS W4331y. Chteniia po russkoi literature: Gogol. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Three years of
college Russian and the instructor's permission.
Conducted in Russian.
RUSS W4332y. Chteniia po russkoi literature: Turgenev. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Three years of
college Russian and the instructor's permission
Conducted in Russian.
RUSS W4333x-W4334y. Fourth-year Russian, I and II. 4 pts.
Prerequisites: Three years of college Russian and the instructor's
permission.
Either term may be taken separately. W4333: Systematic study of problems in Russian syntax;
written exercises, translations into Russian, and compositions. W4334: Discussion of different styles and levels of
language, including word usage and idiomatic expression; written exercises,
analysis of texts, and compositions. Conducted entirely in Russian.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS W4333
|
|
RUSS
4333
|
08900
001
|
MWF 10:35a - 11:50a
227 Milbank Hall
M 9:00a - 12:00p
227 Milbank Hall
|
M. Kashper
|
10
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS W4334
|
|
RUSS
4334
|
05533
001
|
MWF 10:35a - 11:50a
TBA
|
M. Kashper
|
5
|
|
RUSS W4346x. Chteniia po russkoi kul'ture: Russian Folklore and the
Folkloric Tradition. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisites: Three years of college Russian and the instructor's
permission.
In 2007-2008: Reading and discussion of the principal genres of traditional
and contemporary Russian folklore and readings about Russian folk customs.
Conducted in Russian.
RUSS G4431x. Reading Practicum. 2 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Four years of college
Russian and the instructor's permission.
For non-native speakers of Russian. Review of phonetics and intonation and
reading of literary texts. Texts vary from semester to semester.
RUSS W4432. Contrastive Phonetics and Grammar of Russian and English.
3 pts. Prerequisites:RUSS W4334 or the equivalent and the instructor's
permission.
Comparative phonetic, intonational, and morphological structures of Russian
and English, with special attention to typical problems for American speakers
of Russian.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS W4432
|
|
RUSS
4432
|
82150
001
|
TuTh 1:10p - 2:25p
716A Hamilton Hall
|
F. Miller
|
7
|
|
RUSS W4433. Specific problems in mastering and teaching Russian.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites:RUSS W4334 or the equivalent and the instructor's
permission.
The Russian verb (basic stem system, aspect, locomotion); prefixes; temporal,
spatial, and causal relationships; word order; word formation.
RUSS W4434x. Practical Stylistics [in Russian]. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:RUSS W4334 or the equivalent or the instructor's
permission.
Focuses on theoretical matters of style and the stylistic conventions of
Russian expository prose, for advanced students of Russian who wish to
improve their writing skills.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS W4434
|
|
RUSS
4434
|
83598
001
|
MW 4:10p - 5:25p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
I. Reyfman
|
6 / 18
|
|
RUSS W4436y. Russian for Russian Instructors. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Required for the M.A. in Russian Literature. Should be taken the spring of
the first year in the graduate program, before beginning to teach the
following fall. Review of specifics of Russian grammar and pronunciation and
strategies for teaching them at the elementary and intermediate levels.
RUSS W4676y. Russian Art between East and West: The Search for
National Identity. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Aims to be more than a basic survey that starts with icons and ends with the
early modernists. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, it aims to highlight
how the various cultural transmissions interacted to produce, by the 1910s,
an original national art that made an innovative contribution to world art.
It discusses the development of art not only in terms of formal, aesthetic
analysis, but also in the matrix of changing society, patronage system,
economic life and quest for national identity. Several guest speakers will
discuss the East-West problematic in their related fields-for example, in
literature and ballet.
Some familiarity with Russian history and literature will be helpful, but not
essential. Assigned readings in English. Open to undergraduate and graduate
students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS W4676
|
|
RUSS
4676
|
17948
001
|
TuTh 10:35a - 11:50a
1219 International Affairs Bldg
|
E. Valkenier
|
0
|
|
RUSS G4910x. Literary Translation. 3 pts.
Prerequisites: Four years of college Russian or the equivalent.
Workshop in literary translation from Russian into English focusing on the
practical problems of the craft. Each student submits a translation of a
literary text for group study and criticism. The aim is to produce
translations of publishable quality.
RUSS W4911y. Introduction to Simultaneous Interpretation:
Russian-English. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisites: Three years of college Russian or the equivalent.
Enrollment limited. A hands-on introduction to the principles and techniques
of simultaneous interpretation. Students will work in the language
laboratory, primarily from Russian to English. Background reading on the
history, practice, and techniques of simultaneous interpretation will
supplement practical work from cassettes and CDs. Students must have a
portable cassette tape recorder.
RUSS G6005y. From Lermontov to Nadson: Russian Poetry in the Age of
Realism. 3 pts.
Beginning in the 1830s, the emergence of a philosophy of national identity, a
new emphasis on socio-economic problems, and the rise of a new literary genre
later dubbed the "realist novel" threatened to marginalize poetry, which had
played a pivotal role in the development of culture and language in the
course of several preceding decades. The seminar will start with the efforts
of poets as diverse as the late Pushkin, Baratynsky, and Lermontov to
respond, each in his own way, to the advent of an "iron age." It will then
proceed to the epoch of "metaphysical poetry" (Tiutchev and Fet), through the
age of heightened social consciousness (Nekrasov), to a variety of
"metapoetic" voices in the 1880s (Polonsky, Nadson, Myra, Lokhvitskaya) that
presage the beginnings of Symbolism.
RUSS G6009. Gogol. 3 pts.
A close study of the major works in the original.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS G6009
|
|
RUSS
6009
|
80948
001
|
Th 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
I. Reyfman
|
0
|
|
RUSS G6010. A Revolution in Literature, 1917 - 1934. 3 pts.
Graduate Seminar: discussion in English, readings available in Russian and
English
In the period 1917-1934, the world of Russian letters sustained numerous
complex, impassioned, and largely simultaneous debates about the purpose,
value, and influence of literature; the appropriate aesthetic response or
responses to the Russian Revolution; and, most importantly, the course to be
charted by the practitioners of the new, Soviet, literature. The object of
this course is to examine the ways in which Russian literature, literary
criticism, and literary theories responded (and contributed) to the abrupt
change of political context brought about by the Russian Revolution,
culminating in the formal adoption of Socialist Realism as the official method
of Soviet literature by the Union of Soviet Writers in 1934.
RUSS G6032. Modernist Russian Prose. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A close study in the original of representative modernist works.
RUSS G6039y. Literature, Politics, and Tradition after Stalin. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
The major writers and trends in Russian literature from the death of Stalin
to the present. Emphasis on the rethinking of the role of literature in
society and on formal experimentation engendered by relaxation of political
controls over literature.
RUSS G6050x. Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Reading knowledge
of Russian, graduate standing or permission of the instructor
A close study of Dostoevsky's Brothers Karamazov, in the original, in a
attempt to appreciate its unique novelistic form and to separate and
synthesize its layers of meaning. To this end, we will also read the
notebooks for the novel and, further, related works of fiction, journalism,
theory, criticism, religious thought.
RUSS G6104. Old Russian Literature, I. 3 pts.
A survey of the principal genres of original and translated literature, with
class readings and explication of assigned texts.
RUSS G6105. Old Russian Literature II. 3 pts.
The course surveys major works of the Russian literary canon, from the
mid-fifteenth through the seventeenth century. It addresses a period of
Russian history that coincides with the rise of Moscow as the center of a
growing empire and its decline at the end of the seventeenth century. This
period is truly transformative in the cultural sphere. It marks a general
shift from medieval to modern practices and celebrates bold experiments with
new forms of artistic expression. The course follows these complex processes
through close readings of literary texts that have been constructed as
"classical" in the Russian national canon. The focus is on the transformation
of representative medieval genres (the vita, the pilgrim's travel notes, the
political epistle) into modern ones (the biography, the travelogue, the
political satire). Related topics of interest include the emergence of
fictionality, literary subjectivity and literature as entertainment, the use
of parody as a form of empowerment, and the representation of religious and
political "others."
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: RUSS G6105
|
|
RUSS
6105
|
78443
001
|
Tu 4:00p - 6:00p
401 Hamilton Hall
|
V. Izmirlieva
|
0
|
|
RUSS G6107. Russian Literary Theory and Criticism, I. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
A chronological and generic approach to the major writers and movements of
the 18th and 19th centuries.
RUSS G6109y. Introduction to Russian Folklore. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Russian folk belief, customs, and traditional folklore genres.
RUSS G6110y. Don Juan and Casanova in Russia. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010.
Explores the Russian versions of the Don Juan and Casanova myths through a
range of theatrical, lyrical, musical, and critical texts. Topics include:
libertinism and decadence; desire, memory and memoirs; sexual/textual
seduction; the Russian practice of 'the Don Juan list'; appropriation,
inversion, and parody. Works by Casanova, Pushkin, A.K. Tolstoi, Bal'mont,
Briusov, Blok, Gumilev, Akhmatova, Amfiteatrov, Zaitsev, Tsvetaeva, Nabokov,
Kazakov, Korkiia.
RUSS G6117x. Between Truth and Fiction: 18th-Century Russian Prose. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of Russian prose in the original from the beginning of the
eighteenth century to its end. Emphasis on the gradual acceptance of prose
fiction as a legitimate literary genre and the corresponding development of a
fictitious narrator separate from the assumed author. The reading list
includes prose works by Feofan Prokopovich, Vasilii Tatishchev, Natalia
Dolgorukaia, Aleksandr Sumarokov, Aleksandr Radishchev, Denis Fonvizin, and
Nikolai Karamzin.
RUSS G6118. The Russian Decameron: Early Russian Prose Fiction. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of Russian prose fiction in the original from its beginnings to the
end of the 18th century. Emphasis on the emergence of a new hero/heroine:
adventurous, upwardly mobile, and preoccupied with sex. Anonymous 17th- and
18th-century tales, prose works by Mikhail Chulkov, Nikolai Karamzin,
Aleksandr Klushin, and Mikhail Sushkov, as well as 18th-century page turners
by Matvei Komarov, and Ivan Novikov.
RUSS G6119y. 18th-Century Russsian Poetry. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A survey of Russian poetry from the late 17th to the early 19th century,
considered in the wider context of 1) the history of Russian poetry, with an
eye toward the parallels between the 18th and the early 20th
centuries--comparing the baroque and the avant-garde, the 18th-century
Derzhavin with 20th-century poets like Mandelstam and Zabolotsky); and 2) the
history of 18th-century Russian culture in general (especially the interplay
of word and image, of poetry and architecture).
RUSS G6120. 19th-Century Russian Poetry. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. The major themes and modes of Russian poetry from
preromaticism up to pure art. Selections from Batiushkov, Zhukovsky,
Baratynsky, Yazykov, Lermontov, Tiutchev, Karolina Pavlova, Nekrasov, and
Fet.
RUSS G6121. Russian Symbolist Poetry. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A survey of the major poets, with readings and class discussion of
representative lyrics and selected essays.
RUSS G6140. Phonetics and Poetics. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A survey of methods of formal analysis of speech and
poetic prosody and their application to Russian phonetics and verse.
RUSS G6150. Studies in Russian Culture [In Russian]. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. The question of national identity; a
consideration of the Slavophile-Westernizer debate from the early 18th
century to the present.
RUSS G6160. Neglected Masterpieces. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A study, in the original, of works that rarely receive attention in
traditional courses of Russian literature, including works by Bogdanovich,
Pushkin, Lermontov, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Leskov, and others.
RUSS G6161. Chekhov and the Short Story. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A detailed consideration, in the original, of Chekhov's corpus of short
stories, with particular attention to how they work and how they work
together. Emphasis on the relationship of this physician/writer's work to
late 19th-century scientific discourses and epistemological dilemmas.
RUSS G6162. Chekhov and the Drama. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A close reading, in the original, of Chekhov's
plays, with particular attention to the interplay of formal innovation and
thematic preoccupation.
RUSS G6190. Early Russian Drama. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A survey of Russian drama in the original from its
beginnings to the early 19th century. The reading list includes Simeon
Polotsky, Aleksandr Sumarokov, Mikhail Kheraskov, Denis Fonvizin, Vasilii
Kapnist, Aleksandr Griboedov, and Aleksandr Pushkin.
RUSS G6200. Tsvetaeva and others. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A close reading of the poetry and prose of Marina Tsvetaeva. We will focus on
defining what is unique about Tsvetaeva's poetic voice. To this end, we will
read not only Tsvetaeva's work but also relevant texts by the poets whose
presence is most palpable in her works (Homer, Sappho, Shakespeare, Pushkin,
Briusov, Akhmatova, Mandel'shtam, Pasternak, and Rilke).
RUSS G6202x. Pushkin. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Pushkin's poetry (including narrative poemas), in roughly chronological
order, considered in the broader context of ideological, aesthetic, and
linguistic trends in Russia and Western Europe. Particular attention will be
paid to Pushkin's relationship to European Romanticism. Among the problems to
be discussed are: the features of genre and discourse, dialogism, the
personalization of poetic voice, Romantic irony, elliptical narrative,
Romantic exoticism, and imperial consciousness.
RUSS G6204. Reading Turgenev. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A close study, in the original, of a number of Turgenev's works, major and
minor, with an eye to the methodological problems inherent in characterizing
an author's oeuvre. We will consider the ways he has been read and situated
in the tradition in an effort to identify - or generate- productive modes of
reading Turgenev.
RUSS G6212y. 19th/20th Century Russian Journalism. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This course is designed as an overview of the history of Russian journalism
and literary criticism with particular attention to the interconnection
between the two. The course will focus in particular on how the evolution of
the institution of the journal has shaped and given a forum to competing
visions of the role of literature in society from early nineteenth-century
imperial Russia through the Soviet period to the present day. On the one
hand, students will be asked to read major articles, of historical and
theoretical import, by the foremost figures in the history of Russian and
Soviet literary traditions and to discuss these writings within the context
of their production and publication histories. On the other hand, students
will be expected to draw on Columbia's holdings of historically important
Russian and Soviet journals by going to the library and surveying designated
journals and reporting back to the class. (Each student will be responsible
for making several such presentations in the course of the semester.) The
goal of the course is to give the students informed appreciation of the
conceptual and practical bases of the Russian literary process during the
past two centuries.
RUSS G6213. Mandelshtam: the Poet and his Language. 3 pts.
An examination of various aspects of Mandelshtam's oeuvre, with special
attention to his development, from his early relations to post-symbolism to
his gradual incorporation of the ideas and discourses of the
post-revolutionary epoch.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS G6213
|
|
RUSS
6213
|
90942
001
|
W 4:10p - 6:00p
709 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Kahn
|
7
|
|
RUSS G6215. Tolstoy's War and Peace. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. A close reading of Tolstoy's "War and Peace," in the
original, along with related works of fiction, criticism, and philosophy. Our
aim is to penetrate the stylistic, generic, philosophical, and human
complexities of this novel.
RUSS G6216. Dostoevsky. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Readings in Russian or English translation. Survey
of Dostoevsky's major novels, selected short fiction, and journalism.
Examination of Dosteovsky's narrative strategies.
RUSS G6217. Pasternak. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
A comprehensive examination of various genres of Pasternak's writings and
their relationship to the poet's aesthetic, philosophical, and religious
views.
RUSS G6219. Sinyavsky. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010. Prerequisites: Reading knowledge of
Russian.
Examination of the literary and theoretical works of Andrei Sinyavsky, with
particular attention to those works the writer published under the pseudonym
Abram Terts.
RUSS G6240x. The rise of Socialist Realism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
Exploration of the philosophical foundations, artistic trends, and
psychological shift out of which Socialist realism aesthetics emerged on the
turn of the 1930s. Major literary and critical works of the 1930s would be
examined in a broad social and aesthetic context. Among Socialist Realism
novels and related works that are to be discussed are those by Gorky,
Gladkov, Nikolai Ostrovsky, Kataev, Sholokhov, Aleksei Tolstoy, Boris
Polevoi, Andre Platonov, Bakhtin, and Mandelshtam.
RUSS G6431. Russian Women Novelists and the Rise of the Russian
Novel. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A close reading of novels and novellas written by Russian women in the
nineteenth-century, with attention to broader questions of the theory, form
and poetics of the novel, of the politics of literary history, of the feminie
imagination. Works by Gan, Pavlova, Tur, Khvoschinskaya, Vovchok,
Kovalevskaya, and others, with some attention to the novels of their feminine
counterparts in England and France and of their masculine counterparts in
Russia.
RUSS G6501. Acmeism. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The seminar explores the poetic theory and practice associated with one of
the most significant movements of Russian Modernism. Acmeism emerged as a
neosymbolist movement in 1913 and, for a brief time, constituted not only
Russia's definitive poetic school, but also the context in which three of the
most influential 20th-century Russian poets, Nikolai Gumilev, Osip
Mandel'shtam, and Anna Akhmatova, found voice, identity, and purpose.
Designed as a workshop for reading "difficult" poetry, the course aims to
cultivate in students the analytical skills, technical knowledge, and broad
contextual competence necessary for in-depth understanding of Russia's rich
Acmeist heritage.
RUSS G6504y. Stalin Culture. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
An examination of Soviet culture during the years of Stalin's rule with
particular attention to the ways in which literary and artistic expression
intersected with politics, ideology, and everyday life. Subjects of study
will include works of literature, art, music and dance, films, memoirs, and
historical documents.
RUSS G6505. Post-Stalin Soviet and Russian Contemporary Culture. 3
pts. Not offered in 2009-2010. The interplay between
literature within contemporary Soviet and post-Soviet Russian society as
reflected in works of fiction and film of the period. The psychology of
Stalinism, the search for personal integrity in the face of a corrupt modern
society, materialism versus spirituality in the modern world, and other
related topics.
RUSS G6512. Utopian Fiction in Russia and Europe. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. The development of Utopian fiction in
Russia and Europe. Plato, More, Dostoevsky, Zamyatin, Platonov, and Marx.
RUSS G6515. Russian Literature and Culture in the Silver Age. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
RUSS G6601. Vladimir Solovyov: Poet and Philosopher. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. A study of the relationship between the
major literary and philosophical texts, with reference to the relevant
psychological, aesthetic and theological issues. Attention to the
biographical and historical context.
RUSS G6630x. Ranks and Writing. 3 pts. Not offered in
2009-2010.
The course examines how obligatory state service and the existence of the
Table of Ranks shaped Russian writers' view of themselves as professionals.
It also considers whether the prominence of the rank system prompted the
development of specifically Russian types of literary discourse. The reading
list includes letters, memoirs, criticism, poetry, and fiction from Aleksandr
Sumarokov and Nikolai Karamzin to Anton Chekhov and Osip Mandelstam.
RUSS G8036x-G8037y. Directed Research in Old Russian Literature and
Folklore. 3-4 pts. Departmental permission.
RUSS G8038x-G8039y. Directed Research in Russian Literature of the
19th Century. 3-4 pts. Departmental permission.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS G8038
|
|
RUSS
8038
|
42750
001
|
TBA
|
R. Meyer
|
1
|
|
|
RUSS
8038
|
93549
002
|
TBA
|
T. Smoliarova
|
1
|
|
RUSS G8040x-G8041y. Directed Research in Russian Literature of the
20th Century. 3-4 pts. Departmental permission.
RUSS G8042x-G8043y. Directed Research in the Modern Period. 3-4
pts. Departmental permission.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS G8042
|
|
RUSS
8042
|
42699
001
|
TBA
|
F. Miller
|
0
|
|
RUSS G8044x-G8045y. Directed Research in Russian Literature of the
18th Century. 3-4 pts. Departmental permission.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS G8044
|
|
RUSS
8044
|
52903
001
|
TBA
|
I. Reyfman
|
1
|
|
Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian Language and Literature
SCRB W1201x-W1202y. Intermediate Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian, I and II.
3 pts. Prerequisites:SRCR W1102 or the equivalent.
Readings in Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian literature in the original, with
emphasis depending upon the needs of individual students.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: SCRB W1201
|
|
SCRB
1201
|
58779
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
406 Hamilton Hall
W 1:10p - 4:00p
406 Hamilton Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
3 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: SCRB W1202
|
|
SCRB
1202
|
80030
001
|
MW 2:40p - 3:55p
406 Hamilton Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
2 / 20
|
|
CLSS W3997x-W3998y. Supervised individual instruction. 2-4
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.
SCRB W4331x-W4332y. Advanced Serbian-Croatian-Bosnian, I and II. 3
pts. Prerequisites: SCRB 1202.
Further develops skills in speaking, reading, and writing, using essays,
short stories, films, and fragments of larger works. Reinforces basic grammar
and introduces more complete structures.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: SCRB W4331
|
|
SCRB
4331
|
43646
001
|
MW 4:10p - 5:25p
718 Hamilton Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
1 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: SCRB W4332
|
|
SCRB
4332
|
29031
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
TBA
|
R. Gorup
|
1 / 20
|
|
Slavic
SLLT G8020x-G8021y. Directed Research In Slavic Cultures. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Departmental permission.
Slavic Linguistics
SLLN G4005y. Introduction to Old Church Slavonic. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
An introduction to the structure of Old Church Slavonic followed by readings
of texts, with attention to the cultural history of Church Slavonic and its
texts.
SLLN G6005y. History and Structure of the Old Church Slavonic
Language. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
Discussion of systemic structure, immanent development, and cultural context
of Old Church Slavonic.
RUSS G6021. Structure of Modern Standard Russian. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of Russian morphosyntax, with emphasis on modern approaches to the
description of Russian grammar.
CLSL G6100. Comparative Grammar of Slavic Languages. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
RUSS G6225. History of the Russian Literary Language. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010. Prerequisites:SLLN G4005 Introduction to Old Church Slavonic.
A survey of styles and genres of the Russian written language at major epochs
in their development from Kievan Rus through the early 20th century.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: RUSS G6225
|
|
RUSS
6225
|
15999
001
|
Th 12:30p - 2:30p
714 Hamilton Hall
Th 1:10p - 4:00p
714 Hamilton Hall
|
A. Timberlake
|
5
|
|
SLLN G8020x-G8021y. Directed Research In Slavic Linguistics. 3
pts. Prerequisites: Permission of instructor.
Slavic Literatures
HNGR W4020. Exposing Naked Reality: Modern Hungarian Prose is
Translation. 3 pts.
This course introduces students to representative examples of an essentially
robust, reality-bound, socially aware literature. In modern Hungarian prose
fiction, the tradition of nineteenth-century "anecdotal realism" remained
strong and was further enlivened by various forms of naturalism. Even
turn-of-the century and early twentieth-century modernist fiction is
characterized by strong narrative focus, psychological realism, and an
emphasis on social conditions and local color. During the tumultuous decades
of the century, social, political, national issues preoccupied even
aesthetics-conscious experimenters and ivory-tower dwellers. Among the topics
discussed will be "populist" and "urban" literature in the interwar years,
post-1945 reality in fiction, literary memoirs and reportage, as well as
late-century minimalist and postmodern trends.
SLLT G8001x. Proseminar in Literary Studies. 4 pts.
The theory and practice of literary criticism. Required of all candidates for
the M.A. degree in Russian, Czech, Ukrainian, South Slavic, and Polish
Literature.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: SLLT G8001
|
|
SLLT
8001
|
82299
001
|
W 11:00a - 12:50p
715 Hamilton Hall
|
V. Izmirlieva
|
7
|
|
SLLT G8020x-G8021y. Directed Research in Slavic Cultures. 3
pts.
SLLT G9000y. Master's Research Instruction. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:SLLT G8001
Required for all M.A. candidates in the Slavic Languages department.
Instruction in the preparation of the master's essay.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: SLLT G9000
|
|
SLLT
9000
|
11281
001
|
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
TBA
|
I. Reyfman
|
0
|
|
Ukrainian
SCRB W1101x-W1102y. Elementary Serbian/Croatian/Bosnian, I and II. 4
pts.
Essentials of the spoken and written language. Prepares students to read
texts of moderate difficulty by the end of the first year.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: SCRB W1101
|
|
SCRB
1101
|
54782
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
406 Hamilton Hall
F 1:10p - 2:25p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
11 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: SCRB W1102
|
|
SCRB
1102
|
76282
001
|
MWF 1:10p - 2:25p
406 Hamilton Hall
|
R. Gorup
|
4 / 15
|
|
UKRN W1101x-W1102y. Elementary Ukrainian, I and II. 3 pts.
Designed for students with little or no knowledge of Ukrainian. Basic grammar
structures are introduced and reinforced, with equal emphasis on developing
oral and written communication skills. Specific attention to acquisition of
high-frequency vocabulary and its optimal use in real-life settings.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: UKRN W1101
|
|
UKRN
1101
|
62531
001
|
MWF 9:10a - 10:25a
408 Hamilton Hall
F 9:00a - 12:00p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
1 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: UKRN W1102
|
|
UKRN
1102
|
86781
001
|
MWF 9:10a - 10:25a
716A Hamilton Hall
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
1 / 15
|
|
UKRN W1201x-W1202y. Intermediate Ukrainian, I and II. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:UKRN W1102 or the equivalent.
Reviews and reinforces the fundamentals of grammar and a core vocabulary from
daily life. Principal emphasis is placed on further development of
communicative skills (oral and written). Verbal aspect and verbs of motion
receive special attention.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: UKRN W1201
|
|
UKRN
1201
|
41147
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
408 Hamilton Hall
M 9:00a - 12:00p
408 Hamilton Hall
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
4 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: UKRN W1202
|
|
UKRN
1202
|
74691
001
|
MW 10:35a - 11:50a
TBA
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
1 / 20
|
|
UKRN W4001x-W4002y. Advanced Ukrainian, I and II. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:UKRN W1202 or the equivalent.
The course is for students who wish to develop their mastery of Ukrainian.
Further study of grammar includes patterns of word formation, participles,
gerunds, declension of numerals, and a more in-depth study of difficult
subjects, such as verbal aspect and verbs of motion. The material is drawn
from classical and contemporary Ukrainian literature, press, electronic
media, and film. Taught almost exclusively in Ukrainian.
Course
Number
|
Call Number/
Section
|
Days & Times/
Location
|
Instructor
|
Enrollment
|
|
|
Autumn 2009 :: UKRN W4001
|
|
UKRN
4001
|
41946
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
718 Hamilton Hall
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
4 / 18
|
|
|
Spring 2010 :: UKRN W4002
|
|
UKRN
4002
|
75508
001
|
MW 1:10p - 2:25p
TBA
|
Y. Shevchuk
|
0 / 20
|
|
UKRN G4033y. Early Modernism in Ukrainian Literature. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
The course focuses on the rise of modernism in Ukrainian literature in the
late 19th century and early 20th century, a period marked by a vigorous,
often biting polemic between the populist Ukrainian literary establishment
and young Ukrainian writers who were inspired by their European counterparts.
Students will read prose, poetry, and drama written by Ivan Franko, the
writers of the Moloda Musa, Olha Kobylianska, Lesia Ukrainka, and Volodymyr
Vynnychenko among others. The course will trace the introduction of urban
motifs and settings, as well as decadence, into Ukrainian literature and
analyze the conflict that ensued among Ukrainian intellectuals as they forged
the identity of the Ukrainian people. The course will be supplemented by
audio and visual materials reflecting this period in Ukrainian culture.
Entirely in English with a parallel reading list for those who read
Ukrainian.
UKRN W4040. Twentieth-Century Ukrainian Prose. 3 pts. Not offered
in 2009-2010. Prerequisites: Reading knowledge of
Ukrainian or fluency in another Slavic language.
Survey of the major works from the turn of the century through the 1990s with
a brief overview of 19th-century Ukrainian prose and its connection to later
developments.
UKRN W4058. The Ukrainian Cultural Renaissance: 1917-1934. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
A course focusing on the literary and cultural politics in Ukraine during the
period of relative liberalization and the national revival in 1917-1934.
Fiction, poetry, drama, films, manifestoes, and theoretical and polemical
writings by Mykola Khvyl'ovyi, Valerian Pidmohyl'nyi, Mykola Kulish, Mykhail'
Semenko, Pavlo Tychyna, Mykola Zerov, Maksym Ryl's'kyi, Oleksandr Dovzhenko,
Les' Kurbas, and others.
UKRN W4060. Cultural Currents and their Political Context in
Twentieth-Century Ukraine. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
A survey of the major cultural currents in twentieth-century Ukraine in the
context of contemporary political developments, with emphasis on five
separate fields: literature, film, theatre, music, and art. All readings in
English; a knowledge of Ukrainian not required.
UKRN G4069y. The Missing Link: Cinema and the Emergence of Modern
Ukraine. 3 pts. Not offered in 2009-2010.
This course discusses the influence of cinema on the formation of modern
Ukrainian identity. An overview of Ukrainian cinema history will be followed
by analyses of major Ukrainian Soviet and post-Soviet films and the tension
between their Ukrainian and Soviet aspects. Special emphasis on the most
recent Ukrainian cinema and its quest to liberate itself from the legacies of
the Soviet empire.
UKRN W4070. Twentieth-Century Ukrainian Drama.. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
Prerequisite: a reading knowledge of Ukrainian or fluency in another
Slavic language. The main developments in Ukrainian drama from the turn of
the century to the present. A discussion of the authors and their works
within the context of the various styles active in Ukrainian literature and
against the background of the stylistic movements and events in the
literature of the West.
UKRN W4100. Literatures and Identities in Post-Soviet Ukraine. 3 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
The course seeks the connection between literary production and identity
construction in present-day Ukraine. Major literary trends and the most
representative texts since 1991 are studied, with emphasis on cultural
hybridity, bilingualism, and decentralization. Readings include works by Yuri
Andrukhovych, Yuri Vynnychuk, Oksana Zabuzhko, Solomea Pavlychko, and others.
UKRN G4120x. Euphoria, Chaos, and a Community of Others in
Post-Soviet Ukrainian Literature and Culture [In English]. 3 pts. Not
offered in 2009-2010.
This course focuses on post-Soviet Ukrainian prose written by the
visimdesiatnyky(the 80s generation), which introduced the
artist-intellectual as a new protagonist in Ukrainian literature. The course
will also introduce students to post-Soviet Ukrainian poetry, drama, and
essay writing. Students will be acquainted with the leading writers in
Ukraine today and will observe the ways in which these writers adopted
aspects of postmodernism in addressing their postcolonial concerns. The
course will be complimented by audio and video presentations. Parallel
reading list provided for those who read Ukrainian.
UKRN G8001x-G8002y. Directed Research in Ukrainian Literature, I and
II.. 3-4 pts. Departmental permission.
Linguistics
CLLN W4202x. Cognitive Linguistics. 3 pts.
Prerequisites:CLLN W3101, previously or concurrently.
Reading and discussion of scholarly literature on the cognitive approach to
language, including: usage-oriented approaches to language, frame semantics,
construction grammar, theories of conceptual metaphor and mental spaces;
alongside of experimental research on language acquisition, language memory,
prototypical and analogous thinking, and the role of visual imagery in
language processing..
Pedagogy
RUSS G4331x-G4332y. Language Pedagogy Workshop, I and II. 2 pts.
Not offered in 2009-2010.
Designed to help graduate students teaching the Russian language understand
theories and practices of foreign language teaching. Introduction to the
teaching-learning process, specifics of teaching Russian as a less commonly
taught language, hands on experience of planning class time, developing class
activities, speaking and writing skills at the beginning level, grading,
composing quizzes and tests.
South Slavic
SOSL G8001x-G8002y. Directed Research In South Slavic Literatures, I
and II. 3-4 pts.
Departmental permission.
Of Related Interest
Political Science
W4865
The Russian-Central Asian Encounter
W4882
Foreign Policies of the Post-Soviet States