Spring 2019 Class Schedule
Course # | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Portuguese 101-3 | Elementary Portuguese | Ana Thome Williams | MWF 11am-11:50am | |
Portuguese 101-3 Elementary PortugueseIntroduction to grammar and development of listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills in Brazilian Portuguese, as well as the history and culture of Portuguese-speaking countries. Prerequisite: PORT 101-2 or sufficient score on placement examination. | ||||
Portuguese 115-2 | Portuguese for Spanish Speakers | Ana Thome Williams | MWF 1pm-1:50pm | |
Portuguese 115-2 Portuguese for Spanish SpeakersFor students proficient in Spanish. Comparative sociolinguistic and interactive approach to communicative competence emphasizing pronunciation, intonation, sentence structure, and patterns of spoken and written Portuguese. Prerequisite: PORT 115-1 or Placement | ||||
Portuguese 201-0 | Reading and Speaking Portuguese | Ana Thome Williams | MWF 2pm-2:50pm | |
Portuguese 201-0 Reading and Speaking PortugueseThis intermediate course is designed to expand mastery in reading and speaking Brazilian Portuguese through select cultural videos, readings of literary cronicas, periodicals, and the Internet. Prerequisite: PORT 115-2, PORT 121-3, or sufficient score on placement examination. | ||||
Portuguese 380-0 | Contemporary Brazil: Literature and Film
| César Braga-Pinto | TTh 11am-12:20pm | |
Portuguese 380-0 Contemporary Brazil: Literature and FilmThis course will explore selected themes and aesthetic trends in Brazilian literature and film (but mostly film) produced in the 21st century. We will be particularly interested in discussing how in the last decade both literature and film have blurred the boundaries between fiction and documentary, with an increasing emphasis on social and historical issues. We will also pay close attention to the development of realism through the 20th century and the important role attained by documentary film making in the last decades. Although we will pay some attention to film techniques, our major concern will be with narrative strategies and ideological content. Class meetings will rely heavily on class discussion in a seminar format. | ||||
Portuguese 396-0 | Bulldozed: São Paulo and Chicago
| Andrew Britt | TTh 2pm-3:20pm | |
Portuguese 396-0 Bulldozed: São Paulo and ChicagoWhat stories does rubble tell? This course examines the histories of São Paulo (Brazil) and Chicago (USA) through the demolitions that remade them over the twentieth century. Today among the most populous and ethnically-diverse global cities in the Americas, São Paulo and Chicago grew up as transportation gateways to the West and hubs of industry. The compelling shared and comparative histories of these two cities will serve as the basis for questions like: How do demolitions change places and the meanings attached to them? Why do authorities bulldoze certain structures and not others? Where do dislocated residents go? How have demolitions contributed to segregation, economic immobility, and racialized inequities across space and time? Course sections will follow the razing of singularly meaningful sites along with broad patterns of demolition related to housing and transportation projects (to take two examples). Source material will span from historical maps and city plans to samba and blues music that preserve razed spaces in popular memory. The course will include a collaborative research project. Students will use a digital mapping application to document, analyze, and visualize social and spatial change related to demolitions over time. No prior experience with mapping applications is required, and students interested in learning programming basics in a supportive and structured environment are welcome. | ||||
Spanish 101-3 | Elementary Spanish | Check CAESAR | MWF 9am-9:50am; 10am-10:50am; 11am-11:50am; 12pm-12:50pm; 1pm-1:50pm; 2pm-2:50pm; 3pm-3:50pm | |
Spanish 101-3 Elementary SpanishFor students who have never studied Spanish or studied Spanish less than two years in high school. Communicative method used for development of speaking, listening, conversation, and grammar skills in a cultural context. Three class meetings a week. Outside online video program. Prerequisite: SPANISH 101-2 or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 115-2 | Accelerated Elementary Spanish | Check CAESAR | MWF 9am-9:50am; 10am-10:50am; 11am-11:50am; 12pm-12:50pm; 1pm-1:50pm; 2pm-2:50pm; 3pm-3:50pm | |
Spanish 115-2 Accelerated Elementary SpanishFor students with some previous experience in Spanish. Communicative method used for development of speaking, listening, writing, and reading skills in a cultural con-text. Three class meetings a week. Outside online video program two or three times a week. Offered winter and spring. Prerequisite: SPANISH 115-1 or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 121-3 | Intermediate Spanish | Check CAESAR | MWF 8am-8:50am; 9am-9:50am; 10am-10:50am; 11am-11:50am; 12pm-12:50pm; 1pm-1:50pm; 2pm-2:50pm; 3pm-3:50pm | |
Spanish 121-3 Intermediate SpanishCommunicative method. Further development of grammar, vocabulary, speaking, and writing skills through emphasis on cultural content and functional use of Spanish language. Three class meetings a week. Outside online video program. Prerequisite: SPANISH 121-2, or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 199-0 | Language in Context: Contemporary Spain | Patricia Nichols | MWF 9am-9:50am; 10am-10:50am | |
Spanish 199-0 Language in Context: Contemporary SpainAn introduction to the culture and sociopolitical issues of contemporary Spain in the basis for review of some problematic grammatical patterns and for skill-building in Spanish. Prerequisite: SPANISH 121-3, SPANISH 125-0, AP score of 4 on the Spanish Language and/or Literature, or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam. Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 201-0 | Conversation on Human Rights: Latin America | Patricia Nichols | MWF 9am-9:50am; 11am-11:50am; 1pm-1:50pm | |
Spanish 201-0 Conversation on Human Rights: Latin AmericaFirst course of a sequence designed to develop speaking strategies and structures through analysis of modern (20th- and 21st-century) Latin American culture. Emphasis on accurate informal conversation. Three class meetings a week. Prerequisites: SPANISH 199-0 or departmental sufficient Spanish Language Placement Exam. Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class required | ||||
Spanish 203-0 | Individual and Society through Written Expression | Elisa Baena | MWF 9am-9:50am; 11am-11:50am; 12pm-12:50pm | |
Spanish 203-0 Individual and Society through Written ExpressionFirst course of a sequence that develops writing skills and structures through examination of the relationship between the individual and society. Emphasis on textual analysis and development of descriptive, narrative, and argumentative essays. Prerequisites: SPANISH 201-0, AP score of 5 on the Spanish Language or Literature Exam, or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam. Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class required. | ||||
Spanish 204-0 | Reading and Writing the Art of Protest | Anna Diakow | MWF 12pm-12:50pm; 3pm-3:50pm | |
Spanish 204-0 Reading and Writing the Art of ProtestSecond course of a sequence designed to develop writing skills and structures through analysis of socially-committed art. Emphasis on cultural analysis and development of longer essays. Three class meetings a week. Prerequisites: SPANISH 203-0 or SPANISH 207-0 Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class required. | ||||
Spanish 206-0 | Spanish for Professions: Business | Benay Stein | MWF 10am-10:50am | |
Spanish 206-0 Spanish for Professions: BusinessAdvanced course for developing communication skills in Spanish for business purposes. Emphasis on language skills for the global marketplace: specialized terminology; writing; comprehension of cultural nuances in the Spanish-speaking business world. Three class meetings a week. Prerequisite: SPANISH 201-0 or AP score of 5 on the Spanish Language Exam Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 207-0 | Spanish for Heritage Speakers | Maria Barros Garcia | MWF 12pm-12:50pm | |
Spanish 207-0 Spanish for Heritage SpeakersFor heritage speakers that emphasizes on writing, syntax, and formal modes of the language. Three class meetings a week. Prerequisite: SPANISH 197-0, AP score of 5 on the Spanish Language or Literature Exam, or departmental Spanish Language Placement Exam. Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 220-0 | Introduction to Literary Analysis | Jeronimo Duarte Riascos, Ana Baez | MWF 10am-10:50am; 1pm-1:50pm | |
Spanish 220-0 Introduction to Literary AnalysisIntroduction to textual analysis and to topics such as genre, narratology, prosody, and figurative language, aiming to prepare the student to read, discuss, and write analytically in Spanish about literature and culture. Prerequisite: SPANISH 204-0 | ||||
Spanish 250-0 | Literature in Spain before 1700 | Darío Fernández-Morrera | MW 12:30pm-1:50pm | |
Spanish 250-0 Literature in Spain before 1700This survey course offers an introduction to the most influential Spanish literary and cultural works of the Middle Ages and Golden Age periods. From the first manifestations of the written romance language (Glosas del monasterio de San Millan de la Cogolla, Xth c.) to the mester de juglaría and the Poema del Cid and the mester de clerecia of Gonzalo de Berceo to the poetry of Garcilaso de la Vega, this course also studies the origins of Spanish in "vulgar" latin in conjunction with religion and history. Prerequisite: SPANISH 220-0 (Can be taken concurrently), or with teacher permission if 220 hasn't been taken. | ||||
Spanish 260-0 | Literature in Spain before 1888 | Laura Leon Llerena | TTh 2pm-3:20pm | |
Spanish 260-0 Literature in Spain before 1888Survey of literature and history of colonial Latin America. Students will read indigenous, Hispanic and mestizo authors and texts. We will analyze narrative genres, going beyond their aesthetic qualities, to understand their political impact. We will balance close readings of chronicles, letters, poems and histories with discussions of larger issues, such as the problematic meanings of discovery and conquest, the textual construction of identities, and the translation process of indigenous languages into Spanish. These discussions aim to foster a critical approach to the studied materials as well as to strengthen the students' oral and written Spanish skills. Prerequisite: SPANISH 220-0 (can be taken concurrently) | ||||
Spanish 281-0 | Spanish Phonetics and Phonology | Shannon Millikin | MWF 2pm-2:50pm | |
Spanish 281-0 Spanish Phonetics and PhonologyThis course will cover the theory and practice of Spanish sounds and phonology. We will learn about articulation and production, classification and description, combination and syllabification, sonority sequencing, prosodic features, and prevalent dialectal variations. Students will also improve their orthography and pronunciation, learn to collect phonetic data, and learn to identify the origin of Spanish speakers. This course fulfills a formal studies requirement. Prerequisite: SPANISH 204-0 or equivalent. Restrictions: No P/N; Attendance at first class is required. | ||||
Spanish 321-0 | Golden Age Drama | Darío Fernández-Morrera | MW 9:30am-10:50am | |
Spanish 321-0 Golden Age DramaThis course offers a general introduction to drama during Spain's Golden Age period (sixteenth to early seventeenth century). This course will study the origins of drama, the anonymous Auto de los Reyes Magos, and the plays of such great dramatists as Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Tirso de Molina, and Calderón de la Barca. Prerequisite: 1 course taken before or concurrently from SPANISH 250-0, SPANISH 251-0, SPANISH 260-0, or SPANISH 261-0, or teacher permission if none of those have been taken. | ||||
Spanish 348-0 | Readings in Latin American Short Fiction | Ana Baez | MWF 11am-11:50am | |
Spanish 348-0 Readings in Latin American Short FictionSome critics have suggested that the Latin American short story in the twentieth century might have made an even more significant contribution to world literature than the celebrated novels of the Boom (1960s-1970s). For example, the argument goes, it is Jorge Luis Borges’ short fiction that actually initiates the “new” narrative currents with which Latin American literature has become identified since the sixties. Likewise, one might argue that it is Julio Cortázar’s short fiction--even more than his “revolutionary” novels--that will stand the test of time. Indeed, these and other well-known writers associated with the “género fantástico” (e.g., Horacio Quiroga, Luisa Valenzuela, Rosario Ferré) are among the “masters” of the Latin American short story who have taught us new ways to read and think about narrative more generally. Within the context of the Latin American tradition, we will focus on the short story as it has been written and theorized by Latin American writers, considering as well proposals from beyond the region and reading models offered by literary critics and theorists. Emphasis will be on close reading and analysis throughout the course. Prerequisite: SPANISH 250-0, SPANISH 251-0, SPANISH 260-0, or SPANISH 261-0. | ||||
Spanish 380-0 | Latin American Film: Poetics and Politics of the Third World | Nathalie Bouzaglo | TTh 9:30am-10:50am | |
Spanish 380-0 Latin American Film: Poetics and Politics of the Third WorldThis course will allow students to explore a series of critically acclaimed contemporary Latin Americanfilms from the 1980s to the present. The films, from countries that include Peru, Venezuela, Mexico, and Colombia, will be accompanied by theoretical and historical readings (by authors such as Carlos Monsivais, Deborah Shaw, Fernando Coronil, and Paul Julian Smith) that provide a framework for their analysis, as well as fictional texts that provide further context. Among other topics, our discussions of the films and texts will cover subalternity and the Third World; sexual and racial politics; urban violence; postcolonial poetics; genocide; cultural hybridism; dictatorship and populism; and technologies of power. | ||||
Spanish 395-0 | Contemporary Representations of Colonial Latin America | Laura Leon Llerena | TTh 12:30pm-1:50pm | |
Spanish 395-0 Contemporary Representations of Colonial Latin AmericaThis course explores contemporary renderings of key events and characters of Latin American colonial history in novels, comics, films, and television programs to address these key questions: What was/is colonialism? How does postcolonialism address the links between past and present? How does ‘high-brow’ and popular culture products revisit, criticize, legitimize, justify or reframe long misunderstood, vilified or simply ignored chapters in the history of colonial Latin America? How does history and stereotype interact in popular culture? | ||||
Spanish 395-0 | Beyond Frida: Approaches to Modern and Contemporary Latin American Art | Jeronimo Duarte Riascos | MWF 2pm-2:50pm | |
Spanish 395-0 Beyond Frida: Approaches to Modern and Contemporary Latin American ArtThis survey course explores some of the main visual trends, movements, and concerns that were discussed and performed in Latin America during the 20th and 21st Centuries. The class is structured around clusters of visual and literary production that had women artists at their core. We will devote each week to an in-depth study of one female artist and the ripple effects that her work and ideas produced in their spheres of influence—from visuality to politics. We will consider questions like: How did women artists inhabit the artistic space as one of emancipation and critique? How did Latin American artists incorporate and transform the artistic influences coming from Western Europe and North America? How did artistic practices influence and reflect local and regional contexts? How do these women engage with conceptualism and how does this engagement affect their work? | ||||
Spanish 397-0 | Race in Latin America Across Time | Diego Arispe-Bazan | W 2pm-4:50pm | |
Spanish 397-0 Race in Latin America Across TimeThis seminar will track both the shifts and continuities in racial ideologies operating in Latin America since the colonial period, following the work of historians and anthropologists. The course will consider their impact on subject formation by reviewing their progression over time through theoretical arguments and evidence from case studies. Because race has been central to the forms of power and authority that first undergirded the colonial system and later birthed the many Latin American nations, we can trace a continued line of transmission of racialized ideologies that structure inequality in the region. Using a cultural and linguistic anthropological framework, we will approach these racial categories as composites of markers of otherness that include skin color, clothing, kin affiliations, occupation, among others. The course moves progressively from research about the early colonial period and forward chronologically until the 20th century, with a final discussion of migrant trajectories to the US. Topics covered will include variations in how race is defined and invoked in context, identity as a performative effect, coloniality as an ongoing process, and the role of historical memory in post-colonial Latin America. | ||||
SPANPORT 425-0 | Exile and Diaspora in Contemporary Caribbean Literature and Film | Emily Maguire | T 2pm-4:50pm | |
SPANPORT 425-0 Exile and Diaspora in Contemporary Caribbean Literature and FilmThis course will explore how the experiences of exile and diaspora (both political and economic) have helped shape Caribbean literature. We will examine a diverse array of texts – poetry, novels, short stories, films and critical essays – produced in both Spanish and English both in the Caribbean and in the United States by writers of Puerto Rican, Dominican and Cuban origin. As we read, we will use exile and diaspora as lenses through which to interrogate other aspects of Latinx-Caribbean literature. How are these experiences portrayed, and what role have they played in the construction of identities, both personal and collective? How have these situations shaped the development of Caribbean communities (both physical and literary) within the continental U.S.? Should exile and diaspora be seen as patterns connected to globalization, thus serving to complicate our idea of what is Caribbean, or can they in fact be seen as fundamental to the construction of Caribbean-ness? We will look at how these movements affect the treatment of race and gender in these works, and we will analyze the role of nostalgia and humor in the navigation of different cultural and geographic spaces. |