Undergraduate

REES 29012 /39012 Returning the Gaze: The Balkans and Western Europe

(CMLT 23201,CMLT 33201,NEHC 20885,NEHC 30885)

This course provides insight into identity dynamics between the “West,” as the center of economic power and self-proclaimed normative humanity, and the “Rest,” as the poor, backward, volatile periphery.  We investigate the relationship between South East European self-representations and the imagined Western gaze. Inherent in the act of looking at oneself through the eyes of another is the privileging of that other’s standard.  We will contemplate the responses to this existential position of identifying symbolically with a normative site outside of oneself -- self-consciousness, defiance, arrogance, self-exoticization -- and consider how these responses have been incorporated in the texture of the national, gender, and social identities in the region. 

Orhan Pamuk, Ivo Andrić, Nikos Kazantzakis, Aleko Konstantinov, Emir Kusturica, Milcho Manchevski

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Literature and Linguistics

REES 26047 /36047 Pushkin and Gogol

(FNDL 26047)

Alexander Pushkin (1799-1837) is widely considered the founding genius of modern Russian literature, especially in his lyric and epic poetry; Nikolai Gogol (1809-1852) injected a manic strain of magic realism to create the modern Russian novel. Apollon Grigor’ev later called Pushkin “our everything”; Dostoevsky claimed “We all emerged out of Gogol’s ‘Overcoat.’” During the quarter we will read a representative selection of both writers’ major works, including Pushkin’s verse novel Evgenii Onegin, verse epic The Bronze Horseman, and novel The Captain’s Daughter, and Gogol’s novel Dead Souls in addition to his fantastic stories “The Nose” and “The Overcoat.” We will focus on close readings of the texts, paying particular attention to their experiments with literary form, as well as attending to their broader historical contextualization. We will focus particularly on the conceptions of realism projected by the texts and imposed by later readers. All readings will be in English translation.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Literature and Linguistics

RUSS 29910 Special Topics in Advanced Russian

Must complete Advanced Russian through Media or equivalent, or obtain consent of instructor. Class meets for 2 hours each week.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS 21600 Russian for Heritage Learners

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS 21302 - 21402 - 21502 /30102 - 30202 - 30302 Advanced Russian Through Media I, II, III

PQ: RUSS 21202 or Consent of Instructor.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS 21002 - 21102 - 21202 Fourth-Year Russian: Short Story I, II, III

PQ: RUSS 20902 or Consent of Instructor.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS 20702 - 20802 - 20902 Third-Year Russian: Culture I, II, III

PQ: RUSS 20300 or Consent of Instructor

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS Second-Year Russian I, II, III

PQ: Russ 10300 or Consent of Instructor, Drill Sessions to be arranged.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

RUSS 10103 - 10203 - 10303 First-Year Russian I, II, III

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language

POLI 20503 - 20603 - 20703/40103 - 40203 - 40303 Polish Through Literary Readings I, II, III

PQ: POLI 303 or equivalent. An advanced language course emphasizing spoken and written Polish. Readings include original Polish prose and poetry as well as nonfiction. Intensive grammar review and vocabulary building. For students who have taken Third Year Polish and for native or heritage speakers who want to read Polish literature in the original. Readings and discussions in Polish. Autumn, Winter, Spring.

2015-2016 Autumn
Category
Language
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