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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Conversation and composition based on autobiographical texts by German artists, writers and politicians covering the period from 1890 to 1990. Some material drawn from films. Speaking and writing are emphasized; grammar review, oral reports on significant developments and personalities, and an interview with a German speaker included. Prerequisite: Course 104 or permission of the instructor. Offered first semester. Staff
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4.00 Credits
German perspectives on current political, social and cultural issues. Advanced conversation and composition based on articles from German newspapers and magazines (Die Zeit, Der Spiegel, etc.) Prerequisite: Course 215 or permission of the instructor. Offered second semester. P. J. McFarland
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4.00 Credits
This is the same course as History 243. Refer to the History listing for a course description.
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4.00 Credits
This course introduces German culture through film. Readings and films will guide us through the crisis of patriarchal power in turn-of-the-century Germany. Readings will be in English and will include historical, literary and theoretical discussions of German society in context. No prior knowledge of German or film is required. Open to freshmen, sophomores and juniors without prerequisite and to seniors with permission of the instructor. Enrollment limited to 40 students. P. J. McFarland
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4.00 Credits
This optional section of German Studies 251 will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental readings in German. Students participating in the foreign language section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking. Students electing course 251f must concurrently register for German Studies 251. P. J. McFarland
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4.00 Credits
This course examines the key stages and concepts through which post-war German culture passed as it struggled to come to grips with the legacy of the Third Reich. It is organized around the concept of memory, both individual and collective, and examines material from literature, film, memoirs, and the press. Open to freshmen, sophomores and juniors without prerequisite, and to seniors with permission from the instructor. Enrollment limited to 40 students. G. Atherton
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the imagination of symbolic order and chaos in German literature and popular culture. We will trace stories of witches and wonders in Grimm's fairy tales, works by Kafka, Hesse, and others, and in contemporary film and media productions. Course 253 may include an optional section, German Studies 253f, that will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental readings in German. Students participating in the section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking. This course is not open to students who have received credit for German Studies 210. Enrollment limited to 40 students. G. Atherton, Staff
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4.00 Credits
This optional section of German Studies 253 will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental readings in German. Students participating in the foreign language section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking. Students electing Course 253f must concurrently register for German Studies 253. This course is not open to students who have received credit for German Studies 210f. Staff
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4.00 Credits
This interdisciplinary team-taught course will examine the history, culture, and architecture of the city of Berlin since the 18th century. Readings in history, literature, and urban studies will focus on the Berlin of old Prussia and Bismarck through the Weimar era and the Nazi dictatorship up to the divided city of the Cold War and the Berlin of Reunification. Course 272 may include an optional section that will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental readings in German. Students participating in the foreign language section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking. This is the same course as Comparative Studies in Culture/History 272. Enrollment limited to 35 students. Offered in alternate years. G. Atherton, M. Forster
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4.00 Credits
This optional section of Comparative Studies in Culture/History/German 272 will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental texts in German. Students participating in the foreign language section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking. Students electing Course 272f must concurrently register for Comparative Studies in Culture/History/German 272. This is the same course as Comparative Studies in Culture/History 272f. G. Atherton, M. Forster
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