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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Schoenherr Meets three hours a week with the individual class instructor, one hour with student drill instructor.Thorough review of grammar, exercises in composition and conversation. Enforcement of correct grammatical patterns and idiomatic use of language. Study of selected literary and cultural texts and films from German-speaking countries. Two semesters. Does not count toward the major.
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Sch nherr
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Schoenherr This course is intended for students who wish to refine their speaking, writing, and reading skills beyond the Intermediate level. Designed as a comprehensive introduction to modern German culture, we will discuss a variety of literary, political, historical and philosophical texts, including feature films and video materials. Weekly grammar reviews will complement these activities. Prerequisite: Intermediate German
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3.00 Credits
HU I. Meyer/U.Sch nherr Interdisciplinary and historical approaches to the study of German language and culture. Selected texts for study will be drawn from autobiography, anthropology, M rchen, satire, philosophical essays and fables, art and film criticism, discourses of gender, travel writing, cultural productions of minority groups, and scientific and journalistic writings. Prerequisite: Intermediate German
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Sch nherr Focusing on exemplary philosophical, political, and literary texts (including movies), the course will closely examine the multi-faceted German reception of the revolutions of 1789, 1848, and 1918, as well as the student rebellion of 1968. In addition, we will analyze the various narrative strategies employed by philosophers of history, politicians, and writers alike to conceptualize and represent the historical events.
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Sch nherr/ H. Schlipphacke A study of the major periods of German literature within a cultural and historical context, including representative texts for each period.
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3.00 Credits
HU U.Sch nherr The seminar is designed to give a broad overview of the various aesthetic trends which have shaped contemporary German-speaking literature after the Second World War. Focusing on representative works, including prose, and poetry, the course will retrace the attempts at re-establishing a modernist literary tradition that had been almost completely destroyed during fascism.
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3.00 Credits
HU (Cross-listed in Comparative Literature and Independent College Programs) H.Schlipphacke
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3.00 Credits
HU (Cross-listed in Comparative Literature) H.Schlipphacke An examination of the imagination and re-imagination of two important European capitals, Berlin and Vienna, in twentieth-century literature and film, especially in the aftermath of the world wars.We will pay special attention to the geographical, cultural, religious, and political differences between the two cities, and we will ask to what extent such differences produced different forms of artistic re-imaginings, different artistic responses to the destruction and transformation brought about by war. Prerequisite: Sophomore standing
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3.00 Credits
HU (Cross-listed in Comparative Literature) H.Schlipphacke
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