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CHIN 302: Advanced Chinese II
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
A continuation of CHIN 301.
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CHIN 302 - Advanced Chinese II
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CHIN 303: Conversation and Composition
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Students will engage in communicative tasks to improve oral production, fluency and accuracy, and in order to develop communicative strategies. This class will also require students to increase the accuracy, fluency and complexity of their written Chinese.
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CHIN 303 - Conversation and Composition
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CHIN 350: Intro to Chinese Culture
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course is designed thematically and aims to acquaint students with important aspects of Chinese culture. The course will help students better understand modern China, which is shaped by five thousand years of tradition and interaction with the world. Topics include: contemporary China, brief history, religion and philosophy, and art and literature. The course assumes no previous knowledge of China or the Chinese language and will be taught in English.
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CHIN 350 - Intro to Chinese Culture
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CHIN 380: Special Topics
1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Selected topics in Chinese language, literature, or civilization.
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CHIN 380 - Special Topics
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CHIN 390: Directed Study
1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Topic to be decided by faculty.
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CHIN 390 - Directed Study
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CLAS 220: Intro to Classical Literature
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course is a survey of the literature of the ancient Greeks and Romans. It introduces students to the important authors of Classical Antiquity, the important issues surrounding their work, and their lasting influence. It stresses the role that ancient authors had in shaping our understanding of literature: its genres, methods, and subject matter.
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CLAS 310: Greek Gods & Heroes
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
A study of Greek Mythology that uses texts (in translation), architecture and archaeology to explore the most important characters and stories of Greek mythology that have become part of the art, literature and imagination of western civilization. This course gives students insight into approaches toward the understanding of myth, especially classical myth that are helpful for their own studies and interests. Offered annually.
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CLAS 310 - Greek Gods & Heroes
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CLAS 320: The Iliad & the Odyssey
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course explores (in translation) Homers Iliad and Odyssey, two poems that are among the foundations of the literature of Western Civilization. Students will demonstrate an ability to read and analyze these two great epics of ancient Greece in a way that appreciates and unlocks their timeless beauty, depth and significance especially in a way that is helpful for their own studies and interests. Offered annually.
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CLAS 330: Women in Antiquity
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
Women in Antiquity will examine the representation of women Greece and Rome through image and text, using a variety of literary, art historical, and archaeological sources. It will examine womens strengths and limitations in the context of the patriarchal societies in which they lived, exploring their social and legal status as well as their beauty, dignity, intellect and wisdom.
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CLAS 340: Roman Epic
3.00 Credits
Gonzaga University
This course explores (in translation) two of Romes great contributions to world literature: Vergils Aeneid and one other epic. The choice of second epic will alternate between Ovids Metamorphoses and Lucans Civil War. All three of these works are at the core of the western tradition. They have been read and reinterpreted for millennia and continue to find resonance today. Students will demonstrate an ability to read and analyze these poems closely, to appreciate them, and to unlock their timeless beauty, depth and significance. Special attention will be paid to applying the themes of these works to students own lives and studies.
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