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Spring 2024 Courses

Spring 2024 Course Offerings

Language Courses


(4 credits unless otherwise noted)

 

BCS 1102: ELEMENTARY BOSNIAN-CROATIAN-SERBIAN II

TWRF 3:00PM-3:55PM, Instructor: Matthew Boyd

GE Foreign Language


BCS 2104: INTERMEDIATE BOSNIAN-CROATIAN-SERBIAN II

TWRF 3:00PM-3:55PM, Instructor: Matthew Boyd

GE Foreign Language


CZECH 1102: ELEMENTARY CZECH II

MTWR 1:50PM-2:40PM, Instructor: BTAA CourseShare

GE Foreign Language


CZECH 2104: INTERMEDIATE CZECH II

MWF 12:40PM-1:30PM, Instructor: BTAA CourseShare


POLISH 1102: ELEMENTARY POLISH II

TWR 2:20PM-3:40PM, Instructor: Diana Sacilowski

GE Foreign Language


POLISH 2104: INTERMEDIATE POLISH II

TWR 3:55PM-5:15PM, Instructor: Diana Sacilowski


ROMANIAN 2104: INTERMEDIATE ROMANIAN II

TWRF 3:00PM-3:55PM, Instructor: Adela Lechintan-Siefer


RUSSIAN 1101.01: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN I

Section 0010, TWR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Sofia Bachman

Section 0030, TWR 3:55PM-5:15PM, Instructor: Lilia Caserta

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1101.51: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN I (SELF-PACED)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1101.61: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN I (SELF-PACED) (ONLINE)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1102.01: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN II

Section 0010, TWR, 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Jay Hadfield

Section 0020, TWR, 11:10AM-12:30PM, Instructor: Lilia Caserta

Section 0030, TWR, 3:55PM-5:15PM, Instructor: Michelle Verbitskaya

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1102.51: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN II (SELF-PACED)

Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1102.61: ELEMENTARY RUSSIAN II (SELF-PACED) (ONLINE)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1103.51: INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN I (SELF-PACED)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 1103.61: INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN I (SELF-PACED) (ONLINE)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

GE Foreign Language


RUSSIAN 2104.01: INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN II

TWR, 3:55PM-5:15PM, Instructor: Irina Baskova


RUSSIAN 2104.51: INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN II (SELF-PACED)

Instructor: Andrei Cretu


RUSSIAN 2104.61: INTERMEDIATE RUSSIAN II (SELF-PACED) (ONLINE)
Instructor: Andrei Cretu


RUSSIAN 3102: THIRD-YEAR RUSSIAN II

TWR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Lilia Caserta

Prereq: 3101, or permission of instructor.


RUSSIAN 3121: ADVANCED READING RUSSIAN I (SELF-PACED) -- 3 credits
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

Developing reading skills and strategies from a variety of authentic Russian sources, with special emphasis on contemporary materials

Prereq: 2104.01or 2104.51, or permission of instructor.  Repeatable to a maximum of 3 cr hrs.


RUSSIAN 3122: ADVANCED READING RUSSIAN II (SELF-PACED) -- 3 credits
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

Further development of reading skills & strategies from authentic Russian sources, with emphasis on contemporary materials. Students register for 1-3 cr hrs during sem. Progress is sequential from one cr hr to next; 80% is required to advance.

Prereq: 3121, or permission of instructor. Repeatable to a maximum of 3 cr hrs.


RUSSIAN 4102: ADVANCED RUSSIAN II -- 3 credits

TR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Viktoriia Kim

Continuation of Russian 4101: speaking, listening, reading, and writing practice in Russian at the advanced level, with a focus on Russian culture and national identity.


Prereq: 4101, or permission of instructor.


RUSSIAN 5102: ADVANCED RUSSIAN IV-- 3 credits

WF 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Helen Myers

Prereq: 5101, or permission of instructor.


RUSSIAN 5104: ADVANCED RUSSIAN VI-- 3 credits

WF 8:00AM-9:20AM, Instructor: Helen Myers

Prereq: 5103, or permission of instructor.


RUSSIAN 6171: BASIC READING RUSSIAN FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS (SELF-PACED) -- 3 credits
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

Russian alphabet, basic vocabulary, and basic elements of grammar for graduate students who need to develop reading skills for professional research. Taught in self-paced format. Continued by Russian 6172.

Prereq: Graduate standing.


RUSSIAN 6172: READING RUSSIAN FOR RESEARCH (SELF-PACED) -- 3 credits
Instructor: Andrei Cretu

Continuation of Russian 6171: further development of reading skills, vocabulary, and grammar for graduate students who need to read Russian for professional research. Taught in self-paced format.

Prereq: 6171, and Graduate standing.

EAST EUROPEAN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES (EEURLL) 5627

TR 11:10AM-12:30, Instructors: Brian Joseph and Daniel Collins

Topics to be covered include Albanian's external and internal history, the structure of the language (phonology, morphology, and syntax), the sociolinguistics of the language, and Albanian dialectology. There will also be some practical Albanian instruction as well, involving simple conversation (greetings, basic structures for requests and questions, etc.) and readings from beginning- level materials. Also, a special feature of the class will be the opportunity for some work eliciting Albanian data from native speakers of the language.

Some familiarity with linguistics and with the principles of linguistic analysis is helpful, but not essential as long as students are willing to learn certain basic elements; no knowledge of Albanian itself is assumed.


POLISH 5194: POLAND AND THE EU

TR 12:45PM-2:05PM, Instructor: Agnieszka Poczta-Wajda

The course is aimed at presenting Polish and European politics as well as its representation in popular culture. Specific social and political problems of contemporary Poland and Europe will be presented and discussed in class along with the analysis of their coverage in selected pieces of popular culture. The course will mostly focus on contemporary social, political and cultural issues, however necessary historical context will be provided.

Taught in English.


RUSSIAN 2250.01: MASTERPIECES OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE

TR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Matthew Boyd

Reading and analysis of great works of Russian literature from the 19th century to the present by authors such as Pushkin, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Akhmatova, Bulgakov, Solzhenitsyn, and Ulitskaya. Taught in English.

Prereq: Not open to students with credit for 2250H or 2250.99

New GE - Foundation: Literary, Visual & Performing Arts course

Legacy GE - Literature/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 2250.99: MASTERPIECES OF RUSSIAN LITERATURE (100% Online)

Online Section, Instructor: Viktoriia Kim

Reading and analysis of great works of Russian literature from the 19th century to the present by authors such as Pushkin, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Akhmatova, Bulgakov, Solzhenitsyn, and Ulitskaya. Taught in English. 100% Online. 

Prereq: Not open to students with credit for 2250H or 2250.99

New GE - Foundation: Literary, Visual & Performing Arts course

Legacy GE - Literature/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 2335.99: MAGNIFICENCE, MAYHEM, AND MAFIA - RUSSIAN CULTURE (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Mykyta Tyshchenko

Russia has always been a fascinating place, with its mixture of globe-shaking politics and world-class culture. The future -- whatever it holds -- promises nothing less. Through an analysis of literature, films, and the visual arts, we will learn about Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century and its impact on the world; try to understand the present of post-Soviet Russia; and imagine Russia in the future. In an attempt to comprehend the Western puzzlement in dealing with unique Russian contradictions, we will discuss the magnificence of Russian culture as well as look into the dark side of the Russian tradition, the destructive impulses of Stalinism and most recently of the return of Soviet Style politics with Vladimir Putin and the Russian Mafia. Taught in English. Prereq: Not open to students with credit for 2335.01.

New GE - Foundation: Historical and Cultural Studies

Legacy GE - Cultures and Ideas/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 3355.99: VODKA IN RUSSIAN SOCIETY AND CULTURE: DECONSTRUCTING MYTHS (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Laura Siragusa

Vodka in Russia is important to virtually all social functions, is used as a home remedy for ailments, and is a frequent theme of jokes, folk songs, films, and literature. It also has an important political history, having long been used by the Russian (and Soviet) state as a form of social control. This course explores Russian culture and history through its most famous drink.


GE Cultures and Ideas and GE Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 3460.01: THE MODERN RUSSIAN EXPERIENCE THROUGH FILM

  • Section 0010: TR 12:45PM-2:05PM, Instructor: TBA

Exploration of some of the most revealing hopes and disappointments of Russian people presented in internationally acclaimed Russian films. Taught in English. Prereq: Not open to students with credit for 360.

New GE - Foundation: Literary, Visual & Performing Arts

Legacy GE - Visual and Performing Arts/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 3460.99: THE MODERN RUSSIAN EXPERIENCE THROUGH FILM (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Helen Myers

Exploration of some of the most revealing hopes and disappointments of Russian people presented in internationally acclaimed Russian films. Taught in English. Prereq: Not open to students with credit for 360.

New GE - Foundation: Literary, Visual & Performing Arts course

Legacy GE - Visual and Performing Arts/Diversity Global Studies course


 

RUSSIAN 3470.01: ANNA KARENINA GOES TO HOLLYWOOD

TR 12:45PM-2:05PM, Instructor: Alexander Burry

This course explores Tolstoy's Anna Karenina in relation to popular American culture. The course will consist of two parts: in the first half, we will read and discuss Anna Karenina, and we will then examine films and other popular works based on the novel.

New GE - Foundation: Literary, Visual & Performing Arts course

GE VPA and Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 3480.01: THE RUSSIAN SPY: CULTURES OF SURVEILLANCE, SECRET AGENTS, & HACKING FROM THE COLD WAR THROUGH TODAY

TR 11:10AM-12:30PM, Instructor: Dmitry Arzyutov

This course explores the concept of the spy in the cultural imaginations of both Russia and the West from the early-20th century through the present. Topics will include stereotyping in popular culture, the relationship between fiction and the political imagination, Western (especially American) and Russian views of each other, the Cold War, privacy, security, fear, and war.

GE Legacy - Visual and Performing Arts/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 3480.99: THE RUSSIAN SPY: CULTURES OF SURVEILLANCE, SECRET AGENTS, & HACKING FROM THE COLD WAR THROUGH TODAY (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Alisa Lin

This course explores the concept of the spy in the cultural imaginations of both Russia and the West from the early-20th century through the present. Topics will include stereotyping in popular culture, the relationship between fiction and the political imagination, Western (especially American) and Russian views of each other, the Cold War, privacy, security, fear, and war.

GE Legacy - Visual and Performing Arts/Diversity Global Studies course


RUSSIAN 4575: CAPSTONE COURSE FOR RUSSIAN MAJORS

WF 12:45PM-2:05PM, Instructor: Alexander Burry

Junior-senior seminar explores issues of Russian language and literature, focusing on reading in Russian and on honing Russian and English oral and writing skills. Required for Russian major.

Prereq: English 2367 or equivalent Writing and Communication: Level 2 course. Repeatable to a maximum of 9 cr hrs.


RUSSIAN 5601: STRUCTURE OF RUSSIAN I

M 9:00AM-11:45AM, Instructor: Larysa Stepanova

Systematic synchronic description of the structure of Contemporary Standard Russian, focusing on phonetics, phonology, and morphology, and associated theoretical issues. Taught in English.

Prereq: 3102, or Grad standing in Slavic; or permission of instructor. Not open to students with credit for 6601 (640).


RUSSIAN 5630: RUSSIAN TRANSLATION: THEORY, PRACTICE, AND THE PROFESSION

WF 2:20PM-3:40PM, Instructor: Andrei Cretu

Theory and practice of translating Russian literary, cultural, political, scientific, and business texts into English.

Recommended prereq: Russian 2250.
Prereq: Russian 3102 or 3122.


RUSSIAN 6253: ISSUES IN 20TH AND 21ST CENTURY RUSSIAN LITERATURE

M 2:15PM-5:00PM, Instructor: Alisa Lin

Silver Age, Soviet, emigre, or post-Soviet literature in cultural and political context. Good reading ability in Russian recommended.
Prereq: Grad standing, or permission of instructor.


SLAVIC 2230.01: VAMPIRES, MONSTROSITY, AND EVIL: FROM SLAVIC MYTH TO TWILIGHT

TR 2:20PM-3:40PM, Instructor: Daniel Collins

TR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Sunnie Rucker-Chang

Changing approaches to evil as embodied in vampires in East European folk belief & European & American pop culture; function of vampire & monster tales in cultural context, including peasant world & West from Enlightenment to now.  Taught in English.

New GE - Foundation: Historical and Cultural Studies course

Legacy GE - Cultures and Ideas/Diversity Global Studies course


SLAVIC 2230.99: VAMPIRES, MONSTROSITY, AND EVIL: FROM SLAVIC MYTH TO TWILIGHT (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Diana Sacilowski

Changing approaches to evil as embodied in vampires in East European folk belief & European & American pop culture; function of vampire & monster tales in cultural context, including peasant world & West from Enlightenment to now.  Taught in English.

New GE - Foundation: Historical and Cultural Studies course

Legacy GE - Cultures and Ideas/Diversity Global Studies course


SLAVIC 2365.99: SPORTS, SOCIALISTS, AND SOCIETY IN RUSSIA AND EASTERN EUROPE (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: TBA

This course looks at the development of sports as a substitute and arena for battle between countries, as well as the rise of sports culture more generally in Central and Eastern Europe in terms of nationhood, politics, and corporeality. In this course, students will learn about the history and culture of sports, spectatorship, fandom, the Cold War, and Central and Eastern Europe.

Legacy GE - Cultures and Ideas/Diversity Global Studies course


SLAVIC 3320: QUEER COMRADES: SEXUAL CITIZENSHIP & LGBTQ LIVES IN EASTERN EUROPE

TR 9:35AM-10:55AM, Instructor: Philip Gleissner

Through the lens of film, literature, theater, and art, this course explores what it means to be a queer citizen of Eastern Europe. Countering ideas of inherent backwardness, which tend to erase the existence of a diverse group of people, we will get to know works of art that bear witness to the wealth of queer experiences in 20th century Eastern Europe.

New GE - Theme: Citizenship for a Diverse & Just World


SLAVIC 3333.99: THE SOVIET SPACE AGE (100% ONLINE)

Online Section, Instructor: Dmitry Arzyutov

Exploration of Space Age as a technological/cultural phenomenon, focusing on the Soviet period and the Space Race, in historical context and in a comparative perspective. Taught in English. 

New GE - Foundation: Historical and Cultural Studies course

Legacy GE - Cultures & Ideas/Diversity: Global Studies course


SLAVIC 3340: THE EAST EUROPEAN IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE IN AMERICA

TR 12:45-2:05, Instructor: Philip Gleissner

This course looks at international migration with a special focus of the experience of Eastern European immigrants in the United States. We will explore the role of immigration for American culture and society and discuss the historical background and theoretical concepts related to migrant experiences between the early 1900s and today.

New GE - Theme: Migration, Mobility, and Immobility


SLAVIC 6625: OLD CHURCH SLAVONIC

TR 2:20PM-3:40PM, Instructor: Daniel Collins

Introduction to the grammar of Old Church Slavonic, with readings in authentic medieval Slavic texts. Taught in English. Prior knowledge of a Slavic language not required.


Prereq: Grad standing or permission of instructor. Not open to students with credit for 810 or 7625