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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
An analysis of representative German film with special emphasis on its sociocultural and historical context. Discussion will include pertinent theories of cinematography and cinematic narration. Taught in English.
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3.00 Credits
Examination of themes, forms, and sociocultural issues shaping the work of German-Jewish women writers from the Enlightenment to the present. Readings and discussions in English.
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3.00 Credits
Nazi manipulation of mass culture through film (propaganda, musicals, westerns). Some comparison with American film of the era, additional examination of "fascist" aesthetic legacy in American culture today. No knowledge of German required.
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3.00 Credits
Canonical and noncanonical texts from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries constructing cultural, religious, and gender identities. Taught in English.
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3.00 Credits
German literature under the conditions of protest and rebellion. Experiments in poetry, prose, and theatre; new directions in art and media theory; historical influences. Taught in English.
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3.00 Credits
The difference between sleeping and being awake. Literary and philosophical texts. Novels, short stories, diaries, poems, and drama written within the last two hundred years. Taught in English.
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3.00 Credits
Sturm und Drang literary and social movement (1767-1782). Literary genres and themes (e.g., infanticide, suicide, fratricide; primitivism, educational reform, utopian visions). Drawn from French (Diderot, Rousseau, Mercier) and English (Young, MacPherson, Shakespeare) impulses. The young Goethe and Schiller, Herder, Hamann, Lenz, L. Wagner. Taught in English.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Designed for majors and qualified undergraduates. Projects are carried out under the supervision of a member of the department. All projects must be approved by the department. May be repeated for a total of 6 credits over a four-semester period in 289a and 289b combined if there is no duplication in topic, but students may earn only up to 3 credits per semester of enrollment.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Designed for majors and qualified undergraduates. Projects are carried out under the supervision of a member of the department. All projects must be approved by the department. May be repeated for a total of 6 credits over a four-semester period in 289a and 289b combined if there is no duplication in topic, but students may earn only up to 3 credits per semester of enrollment.
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1.00 - 9.00 Credits
Under faculty supervision, students gain experience working in a variety of settings, such as civic, corporate, business, cultural, government, health, media, political, research, and social welfare organizations usually in the German-speaking countries. Background reading and research will be completed in German or German Studies 293a concurrently with the completion of internship training, German or German Studies 293b. A minimum of 3 hours of 293a must be completed, independent of hours taken in 293b. Students may earn up to 6 hours of 293a credit. A research paper and report must be submitted at the end of the semester during which the internship training is completed. A 2.90 grade point average, completion of 6 hours beyond German 103, and prior approval of the director of undergraduate studies of the student’s plans are required. May be taken on a Pass/Fail basis only and must be taken concurrently with 293b or 293c. These hours may not be included in the minimum hours required in the German or German studies major. Corequisite: 293a and/or 293c.
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