| Credits: 5 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 14 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Foreign Language | |
| Time/Location: Monday/Wednesday/Friday | 9:25 AM - 10:40 AM / Hatfield 107 | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
The four-skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing) introduction to the Russian language with the focus on communicative skills development. Major structural topics include pronunciation and intonation, all six cases, all tenses and verbal aspect. By the end of the course, students are able to sustain conversation on basic topics, write short compositions, read short authentic texts, as well as develop an understanding of Russian culture through watching, discussing and writing on movies, short stories, folk tales and poems. This is a full-year course. Yearlong courses cannot be divided at midyear with credit for the first semester. |
|
You may search for courses meeting the criteria offered below. If a search results in too many courses, add criteria or select a more narrow category. If you searched only by department and term, cross-listed courses will be displayed at the bottom of the list.
COURSE SCHEDULE SEARCH RESULTS
7 courses found for the selected term. Click on a course title for more information. Click on a department code to view complete departmental listings. If you searched only by department and term, cross-listed courses will be displayed at the bottom of the list.| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 8 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Foreign Language | |
| Time/Location: Monday/Wednesday/Friday | 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM / Hatfield 107 | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
The second half of a two-semester sequence. Students continue to practice all four language modalities: reading, listening, writing and speaking. The course incorporates a variety of activities that are based on a range of topics, text types and different socio-cultural situations. Authentic texts (poems, short stories, TV programs, films, songs and articles) are used to create the context for reviewing and expanding on grammar, syntax and vocabulary. Prerequisite: RES 221 or equivalent. |
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 40 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 39 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 4 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as RES 273 and WLT 273. How did the "final frontier" of space become a "front" in the Cold War? As the US and USSR competed in the Space Race, science fiction reflected political discourses in literature, film, visual art and popular culture. This course explores Russian and Western science fiction in the contexts of twentieth-century geopolitics and artistic modernism (and postmodernism), examining works by Bogdanov, Kubrick, Tarkovsky, Butler, Haraway, Pelevin and others. The survey considers science fiction’s utopian content and political function, as well as critical and dystopian modes of the genre. No prerequisites or knowledge of Russian required; first-year students are welcome to enroll. Enrollment limited to 40. Crosslist(s): FMS, RES, WLT
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 19 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Social Science | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 2:45 PM - 4:00 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Explores the avant-garde film traditions of Eastern and Central Europe, including works from the Soviet Union, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. The course focuses on how avant-garde filmmakers engaged with the socialist project in the USSR and Eastern Bloc, and its call for new forms, sites and life practices. The course investigates how avant-garde cinema represents everyday life amidst the public and private spaces of socialism. In approaching the relationship between cinema and space, students consider examples of architecture (Constructivist, Functionalist, Brutalist), as well as theoretical writings by and about the avant-garde. Conducted in English, no prerequisites. Crosslist(s): FMS, WLT
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 12 |
| Course Type: Seminar | Section Enrollment: 10 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 7 |
| Reserved Seats: Yes | |
| Enforced Requirements: JR/SR only | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday | 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as REL 302 and RES 302. Previously REL 305ec. From Putin’s Russia to Assad’s Syria, Eastern Christianity has seen increasing media attention over the past two decades. But what is Christianity like outside “the West?” This course explores: the beliefs, spirituality and practices that link these “other” Christians—who have historically lived in such diverse regions as Armenia, Bulgaria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Greece, Romania, Russia, Syria, and Ukraine; the historical memories and political power struggles that have divided them; the geopolitical implications of Eastern Orthodoxy’s unexpected comeback in post-Soviet Russia; and the complex relationship between Eastern Christianity and its western Roman Catholic and Protestant counterparts. The course considers mystical, philosophical, theological, and political sources, both ancient and contemporary, as well as art, literature, and film. Restrictions: Juniors and seniors only. Enrollment limited to 12. Instructor permission required. Permission Required/Registration by Waitlist. During Add/Drop, Waiver Required. Crosslist(s): MED, REL, RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 1 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Foreign Language | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 9:25 AM - 10:40 AM / Hatfield 107 | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
A continuation of RES 331. Prerequisite: RES 331 or equivalent. |
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 0 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 2 |
| Reserved Seats: Yes | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Foreign Language | |
| Time/Location: Monday | 1:40 PM - 2:55 PM; Wednesday | 1:20 PM - 2:35 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Continued work on the improvement of language proficiency for advanced students of Russian and heritage speakers. This course prioritizes the development of communicative skills in speech, writing, reading, and general cultural competency. The examination of cultural, social, and historical issues, as well as study of advanced syntax, grammar, register, and style, is based on authentic texts from a variety of sources, including fiction, journalism, memoirs, historical documents, and cinema. The overarching focus and materials may change from semester to semester, depending on enrollment and student interests. Taught in Russian. Prerequisite: RES 332 or equivalent. Instructor permission required. (E) Permission Required/Registration by Waitlist. During Add/Drop, Waiver Required. |
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 10 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Social Science | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 1:20 PM - 2:35 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
This course focuses on the development of European democratic institutions in the context of military and economic conflict and cooperation. Includes an introduction to the process of European integration. Designation: Comparative. Crosslist(s): GFX,RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 40 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 7 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Historical Studies | |
| Time/Location: Monday | 3:05 PM - 4:20 PM; Wednesday | 2:45 PM - 4:00 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
An introduction to major developments and interactions among people in Europe and Asia before modernity. The Silk Roads, long distance networks that allowed people, goods, technology, religious beliefs, and other ideas to travel between China, India, and Rome/Mediterranean, and the many points in between, developed against the backdrop of the rise and fall of steppe nomadic empires in Inner Asia. The course examines these as interrelated phenomena that shaped Eurasian encounters to the rise of the world-conquering Mongols and the journey of Marco Polo. Topics include: horses; Silk and Steppe routes; Scythians and Huns; Han China and Rome; Byzantium, Buddhism, Christianity, and other universal religions; Arabs and the rise of Islam; Turks, Mongol Empire, and medieval European trade; geography; and travel. Enrollment limited to 40. Crosslist(s): ANS,ARC,RES,SAS
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 40 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 17 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Historical Studies | |
| Time/Location: Monday | 3:05 PM - 4:20 PM; Wednesday | 2:45 PM - 4:00 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
The emergence, expansion and maintenance of the Russian Empire to 1929. The dynamics of pan-imperial institutions and processes (imperial dynasty, peasantry, nobility, intelligentsia, revolutionary movement), as well as the development of the multitude of nations and ethnic groups conquered by or included into the empire. Focus on how the multinational Russian empire dealt with pressures of modernization (nationalist challenges in particular), internal instability and external threats. Enrollment limited to 40. Crosslist(s): RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 18 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 5 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Historical Studies | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 2:45 PM - 4:00 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
The modern history of the largest Jewish community in the world, from life under the Russian tsars until its extermination in World War II. Topics include Jewish political autonomy under the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth; the shifting effects on Jews in Russian, Soviet and Polish society of Partition, tsarist legislation, Revolution, Sovietization and the emergence of the modern nation-state; the folkways and domestic culture of Ashkenaz; competition between new forms of ecstatic religious expression and Jewish Enlightenment thought; the rise of mass politics (Zionism, Socialism, Diaspora Nationalism, Yiddishism) and the role of language (Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, Polish) in the creation of secular Jewish identity; and the tension between memory and nostalgia in the aftermath of the Holocaust. Concludes with an analysis of the recently opened Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw. Enrollment limited to 18. Crosslist(s): HST,REL,RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 12 |
| Course Type: Seminar | Section Enrollment: 10 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 7 |
| Reserved Seats: Yes | |
| Enforced Requirements: JR/SR only | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday | 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as REL 302 and RES 302. Previously REL 305ec. From Putin’s Russia to Assad’s Syria, Eastern Christianity has seen increasing media attention over the past two decades. But what is Christianity like outside “the West?” This course explores: the beliefs, spirituality and practices that link these “other” Christians—who have historically lived in such diverse regions as Armenia, Bulgaria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Greece, Romania, Russia, Syria, and Ukraine; the historical memories and political power struggles that have divided them; the geopolitical implications of Eastern Orthodoxy’s unexpected comeback in post-Soviet Russia; and the complex relationship between Eastern Christianity and its western Roman Catholic and Protestant counterparts. The course considers mystical, philosophical, theological, and political sources, both ancient and contemporary, as well as art, literature, and film. Restrictions: Juniors and seniors only. Enrollment limited to 12. Instructor permission required. Permission Required/Registration by Waitlist. During Add/Drop, Waiver Required. Crosslist(s): MED,REL,RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 40 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 39 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 4 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as RES 273 and WLT 273. How did the "final frontier" of space become a "front" in the Cold War? As the US and USSR competed in the Space Race, science fiction reflected political discourses in literature, film, visual art and popular culture. This course explores Russian and Western science fiction in the contexts of twentieth-century geopolitics and artistic modernism (and postmodernism), examining works by Bogdanov, Kubrick, Tarkovsky, Butler, Haraway, Pelevin and others. The survey considers science fiction’s utopian content and political function, as well as critical and dystopian modes of the genre. No prerequisites or knowledge of Russian required; first-year students are welcome to enroll. Enrollment limited to 40. Crosslist(s): FMS,RES,WLT
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 12 |
| Course Type: Seminar | Section Enrollment: 10 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 7 |
| Reserved Seats: Yes | |
| Enforced Requirements: JR/SR only | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday | 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as REL 302 and RES 302. Previously REL 305ec. From Putin’s Russia to Assad’s Syria, Eastern Christianity has seen increasing media attention over the past two decades. But what is Christianity like outside “the West?” This course explores: the beliefs, spirituality and practices that link these “other” Christians—who have historically lived in such diverse regions as Armenia, Bulgaria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Greece, Romania, Russia, Syria, and Ukraine; the historical memories and political power struggles that have divided them; the geopolitical implications of Eastern Orthodoxy’s unexpected comeback in post-Soviet Russia; and the complex relationship between Eastern Christianity and its western Roman Catholic and Protestant counterparts. The course considers mystical, philosophical, theological, and political sources, both ancient and contemporary, as well as art, literature, and film. Restrictions: Juniors and seniors only. Enrollment limited to 12. Instructor permission required. Permission Required/Registration by Waitlist. During Add/Drop, Waiver Required. Crosslist(s): MED,REL,RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 999 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 2 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 0 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Wednesday | 1:20 PM - 2:35 PM; Monday | 1:40 PM - 2:55 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
What is a Holocaust story? How does literature written in extremis in ghettos, death camps or in hiding differ from the vast post-war literature about the Holocaust? How to balance competing claims of individual and collective experience, the rights of the imagination and the pressures for historical accuracy? Selections from a variety of genres (diary, reportage, poetry, novel, graphic novel, memoir, film, monuments, museums) and critical theories of representation. All readings in translation. No prerequisites. Crosslist(s): GIT,JUD,RES
|
|
| Credits: 4 | Max Enrollment: 40 |
| Course Type: Lecture | Section Enrollment: 39 |
| Grade Mode: Graded | Waitlist Count: 4 |
| Reserved Seats: No | |
| Curriculum Distribution: Arts, Historical Studies, Literature | |
| Time/Location: Tuesday/Thursday | 10:50 AM - 12:05 PM | Instructional Method: In-Person |
|
Offered as RES 273 and WLT 273. How did the "final frontier" of space become a "front" in the Cold War? As the US and USSR competed in the Space Race, science fiction reflected political discourses in literature, film, visual art and popular culture. This course explores Russian and Western science fiction in the contexts of twentieth-century geopolitics and artistic modernism (and postmodernism), examining works by Bogdanov, Kubrick, Tarkovsky, Butler, Haraway, Pelevin and others. The survey considers science fiction’s utopian content and political function, as well as critical and dystopian modes of the genre. No prerequisites or knowledge of Russian required; first-year students are welcome to enroll. Enrollment limited to 40. Crosslist(s): FMS,RES,WLT
|
|