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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Student-initiated research projects, such as the Eric Lund Global Reporting and Research Grant projects.
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3.00 Credits
Specialized, experimental courses offered from time to time by faculty. Prerequisites: vary depending on the course.
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3.00 Credits
Academic work sponsored and supervised by a faculty member working one-on-one with a student. Prerequisite: consent of Medill's senior director of undergraduate education and teaching excellence.
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of artistic, ethical, and historical questions about representing the Holocaust in different genres.
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3.00 Credits
Classical Latin vocabulary, grammar, and syntax with graded readings for translation.
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3.00 Credits
Grammar and vocabulary review. Readings in Cicero, Virgil, and Catullus; emphasis on literary analysis. Prerequisites: 101-1,2,3 or department placement.
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3.00 Credits
Selected topics and authors including Plautus, Cicero, Horace, Ovid, Tacitus, and Apuleius. Prerequisites: 201-1,2,3 or permission of instructor. May be repeated for credit with different topics.
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3.00 Credits
Individual program of study under the direction of a faculty member. For advanced students only. Permission of department required.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to major material and historical themes that have shaped U.S. Latina/o communities, with focus on parallels of colonization, assimilation and cultural resistance, mestizaje, and contemporary expressions of cultural innovation. The course primarily addresses Mexican American and mainland Puerto Rican communities, histories, and experiences, stressing commonalities and distinctness of latinidad in the United States, discussing Cuban Americans and Central Americans, and examining the role of race, gender, sexuality, and sexual orientation in the shaping of Latina/o histories and identities past and present.
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3.00 Credits
Topics may include Latino literature, Latino art, immigration issues, Latinos and the law, borderlands ethnography, Latinos and Latinas (gender issues), Latino drama and theater, Latino history, and sociology of Latinos and Hispanics in the United States.
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