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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Builds advanced Arabic competence, using communicative approaches to the learning of content, function, and accuracy. Guided reading, writing and research. Three contact hours weekly. Prerequisite: ARAB 0600.
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1.00 Credits
Builds advanced Arabic competence, using communicative approaches to the learning of content, function, and accuracy. Guided reading, writing and research. Three contact hours weekly. Prerequisite: ARAB 0700.
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1.00 Credits
Advanced level integrated skill course focusing on specific reading and writing topics derived from the traditions and arts of the Arabic language. Course prerequisites include advanced capacity in Arabic grammar and reading comprehension equivalent to ARAB 0600, and instructor's permission. Not open to freshmen and sophomores.
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1.00 Credits
What went into the creation of the Parthenon? Who lived in the Tower of Babel? Why do we still care? This course offers an introduction to the art, architecture, and material culture of the ancient world. Things of beauty and of power will be explored, from Egyptian pyramids and Near Eastern palaces, to the 'classical' art of Greece and Rome.
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0.00 Credits
Interested students must register for ANTH 0500 S01 (CRN 15737).
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1.00 Credits
Focuses on the aims, scope, and tools of field archaeology, and the nature of archaeological evidence. Emphasizes interdisciplinary field work techniques and the composition, function, and responsibilities of an excavation staff. Examines systematic versus ad hoc excavations and their respective problems of preservation. Students excavate model sites in a laboratory and present a team report upon completion.
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1.00 Credits
Always wanted to be Indiana Jones? This course, focusing on the Mediterranean world and its neighbors in antiquity, interprets field archaeology in its broadest sense. In addition to exploring "how to do" archaeology - the techniques of locating, retrieving, and analyzing ancient remains - we will consider how the nature of these methodologies affects our understanding of the past.
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1.00 Credits
An introductory survey of the archaeology, art and architecture of ancient Egypt, ranging in time from the prehistoric cultures of the Nile Valley through the period of Roman control. While the course will examine famous features and characters of ancient Egypt (pyramids, mummies, King Tut!), it will also provide a wide-ranging review of the archaeology of this remarkable land.
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1.00 Credits
What do Peking Man, human sacrifice, buried armies, lost cities, silk routes and treasure fleets have to do with one another? All are part of the rich and varied legacy of East Asian archaeology, which is today being re-written by spectacular new discoveries little known in the West. Beginning with Asia's earliest hominid inhabitants, this course will explore the emergence of agriculture, early cities, empires, and world trade, in a colorful palimpsest of archaeological discovery.
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0.00 Credits
Interested students must register for HIAA 0040 S01 (CRN 15556).
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