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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
A study of the French novel from Naturalism to the present. Background lectures and critical analyses of selected works of major authors including Zola, Proust, Gide, Malraux, Mauriac, Sartre, Camus and Robbe-Grillet. Course conducted in French. Prerequisite: FRE 305 or equivalent. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
A study of the theater in France from the time of Scribe with ?a piece bien faite and Dumas with "Ia piece these" through the Theater of the Absurd. Background lectures and critical analyses of selected plays of major authors including Becque, Rostand, Maeterlinck, Claudel, Giraudoux, Anouilh, Sartre, Beckett and lonesco. Course conducted in French. Prerequisite: FRE 305 or equivalent. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
A study of the principal poets and short story writers of France from Romanticism to the present. Background lectures and critical analyses of selected major works by representative authors including Hugo, Lamartine, the Parnassians, the Symbolists, Peguy, Valery, the Surrealists, Daudet, Maupassant, Anatole France and Ayme. Course conducted in French. Prerequisite: FRE 305 or equivalent. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
Lectures and discussions on the geography, history, economy, and current problems, French architecture, literature, music, painting and sculpture. Extensive use of audio-visual aids. Course conducted in French. Prerequisite: FRE 305 or equivalent. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
A review of the great ideas and ideals learned in the liberal arts core curriculum in light of what has been taught in major courses, with a view to integrating the two branches of their programs of studies. Readings, research and discussion of selected authors, works or genres of French literature. Capstone course. Prerequisite: Approval of department chair. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the regions of the world through study of the role of environmental factors and resources-topography, climates, soils, vegetation, minerals-and their impact upon human environment population, chief cultural features and economic activities. 3 credits. N
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the role of landscape, natural resources, and environment in key historical events. Students will be introduced to classical and contemporary theories of the discipline and will examine case studies from both Western and non- Western centers of civilization. Same course as HST 360. 3 credits. AYF
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3.00 Credits
A geographic analysis of world resources: agricultural, mineral, technological and human. A study of resource patterns, world interdependence in primary commodities, problems of "cartelization"and their implications for industrialization and economic development and well-being of nations. Same course as BEC 415 and ECO 415. 3 credits. S
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the geography, and the social and economic problems of Africa and of the Middle East. Geographic, economic and strategic importance of the Middle East; study of African resources and problems of under-development; internal and external frictions of the African states. 3 credits. AY
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3.00 Credits
A regional analysis of East, Southeast, and South Asia, considering the physical environment and the resource base, population distributions and their social and economic characteristics, inter-regional relationships, and strategic importance. 3 credits. AY
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