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SLAV 1790: Eastern European Literature
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course will examine the selected major works of East European literature, theatre, and film in the context of West European and Russian literatures, giving special attention to the Polish writer, Witold Gombrowicz and the Czech writer, Milan Kundera. The works included in this course will be analyzed, first of all, as artistic responses to the crisis of cultural identity inflicting the whole Europe of the twentieth century. Other included authors: Schulz, Babel, Broch, Witkacy, Platonov, Ungar, Leppin, Kantor, Kiš, Milosz. In English.
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SLAV 1890: Twentieth-Century Russian Approaches to Literature: Bakhtin and the Russian Formalists
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This seminar will study the three approaches to literature developed in the 20th century in Russia: the Russian Formalism (1920s), which is credited by many for inventing "literary theory" as a distinctive "scholarly" discipline; Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975) and his circle of philosopher critics; and the Tartu School of Cultural Semiotics (1960s-1990s). The course will put a special stress on Bakhtin and study his theories of authorship, dialogue, and philosophical anthropology, as well as their engagements in the dialogue with Marxism and Existentialism. The studied approaches to literature will be "applied" to the selected works of Russian writers including Gogol, Dostoevskii, Bely, Rozanov. In English.
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SLAV 1890 - Twentieth-Century Russian Approaches to Literature: Bakhtin and the Russian Formalists
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SLAV 1950: Independent Study
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Independent research project on topics in Slavic Studies. Enrollment permitted only after the written proposal (instructions in the department office) is submitted to the Concentration Advisor and Chair of the department (deadline: the last day of Add a course without fee period during the semester when the project is undertaken). Please check Banner for the correct section number and CRN to use when registering for this course. Each section limited to 10 students; instructor permission required.
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SLAV 1950 - Independent Study
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SLAV 1970: Topics in the Cultural History of the Slavic People
1.00 Credits
Brown University
No description available.
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SLAV 1970 - Topics in the Cultural History of the Slavic People
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SLAV 1970A: Literature in the Changing Eastern Europe
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Undergraduate seminar on the role of the intellectual in cultures subjected to enormous social and political change. Considers particularly the relevance of the intellectual's private and public selves to the literary, cultural and political life of society. Readings in English.
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SLAV 1970A - Literature in the Changing Eastern Europe
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SLAV 1970B: Spirituality in Russian Literature
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Spirituality -- understood as the intimate, spiritual life of individuals as opposed to corporate expressions of religiosity -- occupies a large place in Russian national life, and its exploration has become the central issue of many famous literary texts. The course will examine selected Russian texts -- from symbolism to postmodernism -- from the perspective of the spiritual sensibility that combines atheism, Russian Orthodoxy, Gnosticism, and sectarian or unconscious religiosity. Authors to be studied include: Nabokov, Sologub, Rozanov, Erofeev, Sorokin and Pelevin. In English.
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SLAV 1970B - Spirituality in Russian Literature
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SLAV 1970C: Body and Ideology in the Czech Post-WWII Fiction
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Pending Approval. No description available.
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SLAV 1970C - Body and Ideology in the Czech Post-WWII Fiction
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SLAV 1970D: Vaclav Havel: Dissident, Playwright, and Politician
1.00 Credits
Brown University
For Havel, life under communism represented "an inflated caricature of modern life in general" and the collective experiences of those who lived under such a totalitarian regime" stand as a kind of warning to the West, revealing to it its own latent tendencies." We will explore this hypothesis by studying Havel's texts and the cultural context where they arose.
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SLAV 1970D - Vaclav Havel: Dissident, Playwright, and Politician
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SLAV 1970E: Kafka/Schulz
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The course explores the prose of Bruno Schulz and Franz Kafka, grasping a profound similarity between those two writers on many levels: cultural, religious, sexual, existential, and artistic. In English. For more information visit the Slavic Department web page.
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SLAV 1970E - Kafka/Schulz
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SLAV 1970F: Comparative Slavic Linguistics
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An overview of the phonological and morphological development of Slavic languages from Common Slavic using readings and problem sets. The course will also examine the basic structure of Old Church Slavonic. Typological comparisons between contemporary Slavic languages. Familiarity with at least one Slavic language is required. Instructor permission required.
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SLAV 1970F - Comparative Slavic Linguistics
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