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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Intellectual history of Russia. A study of the origins and development of cultural identity and national ideology in Russia: from "Moscow the third Rome" to the intenselyambivalent view of the West; from Caesarism of the Czars to the Caesarism of the Commisars; from great art to annihilating politics. This is the same course as History 246. Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors without prerequisite. M. Despalatovic
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4.00 Credits
An introductory linguistics course particularly relevant to English speakers learning Czech, drawing upon the contrastive study of grammar, the issue of language origin and relatedness of Czech and English, and selected sociolinguistic topics such as language and identity, languages in contact and borrowing, the standard and vernacular, and bilingualism. Offered during the SATA semester in Prague, Fall 2007. E. Eckert
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4.00 Credits
A study of the origins and development of Chekhov's dramaturgy and of the theater of his time. Theoretical postulates of Stanislavsky, Vakhtangov and Meyerhold will also be examined. This is the same course as Theater 263. Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors and by permission of the instructor. M. Despalatovic
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4.00 Credits
Prose in the age of anxiety: melancholy contemplations of the limits of reason in the era of brutal ideologies. Works by T. Mann, J. Roth, F. Kafka, M. Krleza, W. Gombrowicz, M. Kundera, and M. Bulgakov. Prerequisite: Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Enrollment limited to 30 students. M. Despalatovic
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4.00 Credits
This is the same course as German Studies/Linguistics 273. Refer to the Linguistics listing for a course description.
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4.00 Credits
A study in the films of Eisenstein ( Potemkin), Renoir ( Grand Illusion), Wertmuller ( Seven Beauties), Bunuel ( The Discrete Charm of the Bourgeoisie), Wajda ( Man of Iron), Tarkovsky ( Rublyov) and of selected problems in the aesthetics of film: narration, montage, the illusion of space and time. This is the same course as Film Studies 288. Open to sophomores, juniors and seniors without prerequisite. M. Despalatovic
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4.00 Credits
Individual Study
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4.00 Credits
This is a survey of the radically innovative cinema of Russia and the former Soviet Union. The theory and practice of Eisenstein, Pudovkin, and Tarkovsky receive special emphasis, as do the genres of science fiction, documentary, melodrama, autobiography, action, and war films. Films are in Russian with English subtitles. Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors by permission of the instructor. C. Colbath
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4.00 Credits
Students develop translation skills and study translation practices for poetry and prose. Workshop format with regular translation practice from a foreign language into English. Open to juniors and seniors with advanced knowledge of a foreign language, or permission of the instructor. Enrollment limited to 16 students. M. Despalatovic
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4.00 Credits
This is the same course as German Studies/Linguistics 371. Refer to the Linguistics listing for a course description.
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