Courses that Count, Non-America Master List 2015-2016.



Courses that Count, Non-America Master List 2015-2016.PLEASE NOTE: These lists are provisional and in transition while the new Student Information System is implemented. Courses not listed here may fulfill certain requirements or may be eligible to be counted for Hist and Lit credit. Please consult with your tutor or the Director, Associate Director, or Assistant Directors of Studies if you have any questions or wish to ask about a course that is not listed below. We welcome your questions.Humanities CoursesAll History & Literature concentrators, regardless of field, may count one Arts & Humanities course (including Humanities Frameworks, Colloquia: Essential Texts, Essential Questions, and Studio) OR one HL90 Seminar not in the student’s field for concentration credit as an elective.HUMAN 10A. Alison Simmons, Kathleen Coleman, Jay Harris, Jonathan Bolton, Racha Kirakosian. Essential Works in the Western Tradition: The Humanities Colloquium 1. Fall 2015.HUMAN 10B. Amanda Claybaugh, Richard Moran, Stephen Osadetz, Leah Whittington. Essential Works in the Western Tradition: The Humanities Colloquium 2. Spring 2016.HUMAN 11A. Robin Kelsey. Frameworks: The Art of Looking. Spring 2016.HUMAN 11B. Alexander Rehding. Frameworks: The Art of Listening. Fall 2015.HUMAN 11C. Julie A. Buckler. Frameworks: The Art of Reading. Spring 2016.HUMAN 12. David Damrosch. Essential Works In World Literature. Spring 2016.HUMAN 51. [Major Themes in the Humanities: Love and Freedom]. Spring 2017.HUMAN 52. Maya Jasanoff, Niall Ferguson. Human History. Spring 2016.HUMAN 53. William Simpson. Revolution, Reform and Conservatism in Western Culture. Fall 2015.HUMAN 54. Julie A. Buckler. The Urban Imagination. Fall 2015.HUMSTUDI 3. [Architectures of the Book: Book Making - Past, Present, Future]. Fall 2016.Modern Europe (for class of 2016)Students in the Modern Europe field concentrating on a national focus that is not specified below please consult with your tutor and the Assistant Director of Studies (non-America) in order to develop your course of study. The courses listed below may not represent all that count for your focus. Courses in European literature that consider materials from a comparative and specifically European perspective. Please note this list is not comprehensive. Other courses may fulfill this requirement.AESTHINT 45. [Art and Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe]. Fall 2016COMPLIT 119. Poetry in Flux – Dance Afoot. Cecile Guedon. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 50. The European Postwar: Literature, Film, Politics. Fall 2015ENGLISH 144M. Stephen Osadetz. The Moral Foundations of Modern Literature. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 160M. Birmingham. James Joyce and the Modern Novel. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 160W. Consciousness in Fiction (formerly English 90lv). Fall 2015ENGLISH 168D. James Wood. Postwar American and British Fiction. Spring 2016.FOLKMYTH 128. Maria Tatar. Fairy Tale, Myth, and Fantasy Literature. Fall 2015.GERMAN 63. Hueckmann. Germany and Europe: Heimat, Exile, Return. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.ElectivesAESTHINT 24. Thomas Kelly. First Nights: Five Performance Premieres. Fall 2015.AESTHINT 60. Literature and Art in an Era of Crisis and Oppression: Modernism in Eastern Europe. George Grabowicz. Spring 2016.AFRAMER 103X. Justin Leroy. The Black Radical tradition. Fall 2015.AFRAMER 198X. Alejandro de la Fuente. Scientific Racism: A History. Fall 2015.ARMENST 110B. James Russell. Armenian Literature in Translation: Modern. Spring 2016.CELTIC 103. Catherine McKenna. The Celts. Fall 2015.CELTIC 119. [The Gaelic World: 17th Century to the Present]. Natasha Sumner. Likely Spring 2017.CELTIC 188. Natasha Sumner. Scottish Gaelic Poetry. Spring PLIT 103. Grounds for Comparison. David Damrosch. Fall PLIT 119. Poetry in Flux – Dance Afoot. Cecile Guedon. Fall PLIT 133. Christine Lee. Shakespeare Shakes the Globe. Fall PLIT 151. Delia Ungureanu. The Poetics of Dreams. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 11. Medicine and the Body in East Asia and in Europe. Shigehisa Kuriyama. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 47. Janet Browne. The Darwinian Revolution. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 50. The European Postwar: Literature, Film, Politics. Fall 2015ENGLISH 50. Stephen Burt. Poets: Ode, Elegy, Epigram, Fragment, Song. Fall 2015ENGLISH 61A. The Literature of Empire. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 90QO. Peter Sacks. T.S. Eliot. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 144M. Stephen Osadetz. The Moral Foundations of Modern Literature. Fall 2015.[ENGLISH 151. The 19th-Century Novel. Likely Spring 2017.]ENGLISH 160M. Birmingham. James Joyce and the Modern Novel. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 160W. Consciousness in Fiction (formerly English 90lv). Fall 2015ENGLISH 168D. James Wood. Postwar American and British Fiction. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 190E. Bilbija. “Rotten English” Literature: Writing in English from Across the Globe. Spring 2016.ETHRSON 12. Charles Maier. Political Justice and Political Trials. Spring 2016.ETHRSON 28. Justin Weir. Moral Inquiry in the Novels of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Fall 2015.FOLKMYTH 128. Maria Tatar. Fairy Tale, Myth, and Fantasy Literature. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61B. From Comic Books to Graphic Novels: Representations of Francophone Identities. Aurelie Chevant. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61C. The New Wave: Reinventing French Cinema. Ericka Knudson. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61M. Modern Stories about Paris. Ericka Knudson. Spring 2016.FRENCH 70B. Janet Beizer. Introduction to French Literature II: 19th and 20th Centuries: Tales of Identity. Fall 2015.FRENCH 167. Verena Conley. Parisian Cityscapes: 1960-Present. Spring 2016.FRENCH 176. World Literature, Postcolonial Studies, Francophonie and Creolization: Reading in Context. Francois Lionnet. Fall 2015.FRENCH 189. Emmanuel Bouju "Re: History" Memory and Imagination from Camus to Annie Ernaux. Fall 2015.GERMAN 63. Hueckmann. Germany and Europe: Heimat, Exile, Return. Spring 2016.GERMAN 101. German Literature, Culture, and Society. Fall 2015.GERMAN 120. [The Age of Goethe]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 141. Judith Ryan. Social Dynamics in Twentieth-Century Modernism. Spring 2016.GERMAN 146. Peter Burgard. The Ethics of Atheism: Marx, Nietzsche, Freud. Spring 2016.GERMAN 147. Peter Burgard. Nietzsche. Fall 2015.GERMAN 170. Nicole Suetterlin. Biopolitics and Vampire Aesthetics, 1716–2016. Spring 2016GERMAN 171. Hueckmann. Case Studies - Law and Literature. Spring 2016.GERMAN 182. Lisa Parkes. Music and German National Identity. Fall 1052. History and Freedom in German Idealism. Michael Rosen. Fall 1061. The History of Modern Political Philosophy. Harvey Mansfield. Spring 1171. The Making of Modern Politics: The Development of Democracy in Europe from the Middle Ages to the European Union. Peter Hall. Fall 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HAA 174S. Ewa Lajer-Burcharth. Body Image in French Visual Culture: 18th and 19th Century. Spring 2016.HIST 1270. Serge Plokhii. Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500. Fall 2015 HIST 1878B. Cemal Kafadar. Ottoman State and Society II (1550-1920). Fall 2015.HIST 1974. Timothy Nunan. Eurasia in the Twentieth Century. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.HAA 175K. Benjamin Buchloh. American and European Art, 1945-1975. Fall 2015.HISTSCI 100. Knowing the World: An Introduction to the History of Science. Alex Csiszar. Fall 2015.[HISTSCI 122V. Melinda Fulford. Science and the Cold War. Likely 2017 Spring.]HISTSCI 166. Soha Bayoumi. What is Enlightenment?: Science, Religion, and the Making of Modernity. Fall 2015.HISTSCI 192. Ahmed Ragab, Hannah Roosth. The Empire Strikes Back: Science Fiction, Religion, and Society. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 170. Ousmane Oumar Kane. Islam, Modernity and Politics. Fall 2015.ITAL 110. [Italian Mysteries]. Fall 2016.ITAL 112. Maria Grazia Lolla. Italian Best-Sellers: Marco Polo to Calvino. Fall 2015.ITAL 117. Cinema of Migration. Fall 2015.ITAL 134. Situated Minds: Total Toxicity and Other Modernist Embodiment. Federica Pedrialia. Fall 2015.RELIGION 1543. 19th-Century Religious Thought: Theology and the Critique of Religion. David Lamberth. Fall 2015.RELIGION 1844: Religion, Gender, and Identity in 21st Century Diasporic Muslim Fiction.? Leila Ahmed.? Fall 2015.ROM-STD 111. Tom Conley. [The World of Romance Language Cinemas: A Classical Age]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 142. Daria Khitrova. Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde Theater. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 147. Justin Weir. Soviet Film After Stalin. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 155. William Todd. Dostoevsky. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 157. William Todd. Some Versions of Russian Pastoral. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 161. Tomislav Longinovic. Conflict and Culture: The Case of Yugoslavia. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 162. Tomislav Longinovic. Slavic Myth and Fantastic Literature. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 166. George Grabowicz. Russian-Ukrainian Literary Relations in the 19th Century: Conference Course. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 167. George Grabowicz. Revolutionary Ukraine: Between the Russian Revolution and the Euromaidan of 2014. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 180. John Malmstad. Russian Symbolist Poetry. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 187. Global Voices: Russian Literature Today. Oleh Kotsyuba. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 188. Eugene Onegin. Daria Khitrova. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 42. Charles Maier. The World Wars and Global Transformation, 1900-1950. Fall 2015.SPANSH 70C. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Tales of Two Spains: A Survey of Spanish Modern Literature and Culture (18th to 21st centuries). Fall 2015.SPANSH 80GR. How To Do Things With Grammar: The Poet in Love and War. Mary Gaylord. Spring 2016.SPANSH 80T. Words of Which History is Made: Translation Workshop on 20th-Century Spain. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Fall 2015.SPANSH 171. [Barcelona and the Catalan Culture]. Fall 2016.WOMGEN 1237. Linda Schlossberg. LGBT Literature. Fall 2015.European Studies History surveysCULTBLF 47. Janet Browne. The Darwinian Revolution. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 55. [The Enlightenment]. Spring 1171. The Making of Modern Politics: The Development of Democracy in Europe from the Middle Ages to the European Union. Peter Hall. Fall 2015.HIST 13A. James Hankins. [The European Enlightenment]HIST 79E. Alison Frank Johnson. Commodities in International History. Fall 2015.HIST 82M. Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 1526. Tamar Herzog. [European Legal History]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 166. Soha Bayoumi. What is Enlightenment?: Science, Religion, and the Making of Modernity. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 42. Charles Maier. The World Wars and Global Transformation, 1900-1950. Fall 2015.ElectivesAESTHINT 11. [Poetry Without Borders]. Stephanie Sandler. Likely Fall 2016.AESTHINT 21. [Virgil’s Poetry and its Reception]. Richard Thomas. Likely Spring 2017.AESTHINT 24. Thomas Kelly. First Nights: Five Performance Premieres. AESTHINT 45. [Art and Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe]. Fall 2016AESTHINT 52. [Repression and Expression: Sexuality, Gender, and Language in Fin-de-siècle Literature and Art]. Peter Burgard. Spring 2017.AESTHINT 58. [Modern Art and Modernity]. Fall 2016.AESTHINT 59. [Nazi Cinema: The Art and Politics of Illusion]. Fall 2016.AESTHINT 60. Literature and Art in an Era of Crisis and Oppression: Modernism in Eastern Europe. George Grabowicz. Spring 2016.AESTHINT 61. [The Romance: From Jane Austen to Chick Lit]. Spring 2017.AFRAMER 103X. Justin Leroy. The Black Radical Tradition.AFRAMER 140X. Biodun Jeyifo. [Film, Fiction and Diaspora]. Likely Spring 2017.AFRAMER 198X. Alejandro de la Fuente. Scientific Racism: A History. Fall 2015.ARMENST 105. James Russell. [Survey of 19th and 20th Century Armenian Poetry: From Romantics to Revolutionaries]. Fall 2017.ARMENST 110B. James Russell. Armenian Literature in Translation: Modern. Spring 2016.CELTIC 103. Catherine McKenna. The Celts. Fall 2015.[CELTIC 119. The Gaelic World: 17th Century to the Present. Natasha Sumner. Likely Spring 2017.]CELTIC 188. Natasha Sumner. Scottish Gaelic Poetry. Spring 2016.[CELTIC 195. TBA. Modern Scottish Gaelic Literature. Spring 2017].COMPLIT 103. Grounds for Comparison. David Damrosch. Fall PLIT 119. Poetry in Flux – Dance Afoot. Cecile Guedon. Fall PLIT 133. Christine Lee. Shakespeare Shakes the Globe. Fall PLIT 151. The Poetics of Dreams. Delia Ungureanu. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 11. Medicine and the Body in East Asia and in Europe. Shigehisa Kuriyama. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 42. [Communism and the Politics of Culture: Czechoslovakia from World War II to the Velvet Revolution] Spring 2017.CULTBLF 47. Janet Browne. The Darwinian Revolution. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 50. The European Postwar: Literature, Film, Politics. Fall 2015CULTBLF 55. [The Enlightenment]. Spring 2017.CULTBLF 56. [The Culture of Capitalism]. Hans Puchner. Likely Spring 2017.ENGLISH 50. Stephen Burt. Poets: Ode, Elegy, Epigram, Fragment, Song. Fall 2015ENGLISH 61A. Bilbija. The Literature of Empire. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 90QO. Peter Sacks. T.S. Eliot. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 144M. Stephen Osadetz. The Moral Foundations of Modern Literature. Fall 2015.[ENGLISH 151. The 19th-Century Novel. Likely Spring 2017.]ENGLISH 160M. Birmingham. James Joyce and the Modern Novel. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 160W. Consciousness in Fiction (formerly English 90lv). Fall 2015ENGLISH 168D. James Wood. Postwar American and British Fiction. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 190E. Bilbija. “Rotten English” Literature: Writing in English from Across the Globe. Spring 2016ETHRSON 12. Charles Maier. Political Justice and Political Trials. Spring 2016.ETHRSON 28. Justin Weir. Moral Inquiry in the Novels of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Fall 2015.FOLKMYTH 128. Maria Tatar. Fairy Tale, Myth, and Fantasy Literature. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61B. From Comic Books to Graphic Novels: Representations of Francophone Identities. Aurelie Chevant. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61C. The New Wave: Reinventing French Cinema. Ericka Knudson. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61M. Ericka Knudson. Modern Stories about Paris. Spring 2016.FRENCH 70B. Janet Beizer. Introduction to French Literature II: 19th and 20th Centuries: Tales of Identity. Fall 2015.FRENCH 90W. ["Bad" Women in French Literature] Fall 2016.FRENCH 167. Verena Conley. Parisian Cityscapes: 1960-Present. Spring 2016.FRENCH 176. World Literature, Postcolonial Studies, Francophonie and Creolization: Reading in Context. Francois Lionnet. Fall 2015.FRENCH 180. ["The Words to Say It": Women Writing in French from Colette to Satrapi] Fall 2016.FRENCH 189. Emmanuel Bouju "Re: History" Memory and Imagination from Camus to Annie Ernaux. Fall 2015.GERMAN 63.Hueckmann. Germany and Europe: Heimat, Exile, Return. Spring 2016.GERMAN 67. German in Revue: Kabarett through the 20th Century. Likely Spring 2017.GERMAN 101. German Literature, Culture, and Society. Fall 2015.GERMAN 102. Nicole Suetterlin [German Literature, Art, and Thought]. Spring 2017GERMAN 120. [The Age of Goethe]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 141. Judith Ryan. Social Dynamics in Twentieth-Century Modernism. Spring 2016.GERMAN 146. Peter Burgard. The Ethics of Atheism: Marx, Nietzsche, Freud. Spring 2016.GERMAN 147. Peter Burgard. Nietzsche. Fall 2015.GERMAN 149. Peter Burgard. [Thomas Mann: Stories of Six Decades]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 156. [From Postwar to Postwall German Cinema]. Likely Fall 2016.GERMAN 170. Nicole Suetterlin. Biopolitics and Vampire Aesthetics, 1716–2016. Spring 2016GERMAN 171. Hueckmann. Case Studies - Law and Literature. Spring 2016.GERMAN 182. Lisa Parkes. Music and German National Identity. Fall 2015.GERMAN 185. [German Lyric Poetry: Tradition and Innovation]. Fall 1052. History and Freedom in German Idealism. Michael Rosen. Fall 1061. Harvey Mansfield. The History of Modern Political Philosophy. Spring 1171. The Making of Modern Politics: The Development of Democracy in Europe from the Middle Ages to the European Union. Peter Hall. Fall 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HAA 174S. Ewa Lajer-Burcharth. Body Image in French Visual Culture: 18th and 19th Century. Spring 2016.HAA 175K. Benjamin Buchloh. American and European Art, 1945-1975. Fall 2015.HIST 13A. James Hankins. [The European Enlightenment]HIST 82B. Alison Johnson. [Fin-de-Siècle Vienna]. Spring 2017. HIST 82F. Serge Plokhii. [The Origins of the Cold War: The Yalta Conference (1945)]. Spring 2017.HIST 82M. Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 83A. Markets and States: The History of Economic Thought Since 1750. Emma Rotchschild. Likely Fall 2016.HIST 84E. Jill Lepore. [How to Read a Book]. Spring 2018.HIST 84X. Andrew Jewett. [The US and Europe in Twentieth-Century Thought and Culture]. Spring 2017.HIST 89A. Caroline Elkins. [British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century]. Fall 2016.HIST 1020. [A Global History of Modern Times]. Charles Maier. Likely Spring 2017.HIST 1067. [An Introduction to the History of Economic Thought]. Emma Rothschild. Likely Fall 2016.HIST 1206. Mary Lewis. [Empire, Nation, and Immigration in France since 1870]. Fall 2016.HIST 1265. Alison Johnson. [German Empires,1848-1948]. Fall 2016.HIST 1266. Alison Johnson. [Central Europe, 1789-1918: Empires, Nations, States]. Fall 2017.HIST 1270. Serge Plokhii. Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500. Fall 2015 HIST 1280. Terry Martin. [History of the Soviet Union, 1917-1991]. Fall 2016.HIST 1281. Terry Martin. [The End of Communism]. Fall 2016.HIST 1290. Kelly O'Neill. [The History of the Russian Empire]. Spring 2017.HIST 1322. [Heidegger and Arendt]. Peter Gordon. Likely Spring 2017.HIST 1323. Peter Gordon. [German Social Thought, Nietzsche to Habermas] Fall 2016.HIST 1324. Peter Gordon. [French Social Thought, Durkheim to Foucault]HIST 1462. [History of Sexuality in the Modern West]. Nancy Cott. Likely Fall 2016.HIST 1526. Tamar Herzog. [European Legal History]. Fall 2016.HIST 1878B. Cemal Kafadar. Ottoman State and Society II (1550-1920). Fall 2015.HIST 1916. Jill Lepore. [The History of Evidence]. Spring 2018.HIST 1922. Peter Gordon. [Habermas: Social Theory in Postwar Germany]. Fall 2016.HIST 1974. Timothy Nunan. Eurasia in the Twentieth Century. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.HISTSCI 100. Knowing the World: An Introduction to the History of Science. Alex Csiszar. Fall 2015.[HISTSCI 122V. Melinda Fulford. Science and the Cold War. Spring 2017]HISTSCI 166. Soha Bayoumi. What is Enlightenment?: Science, Religion, and the Making of Modernity. Fall 2015.HISTSCI 192. Ahmed Ragab, Hannah Roosth. The Empire Strikes Back: Science Fiction, Religion, and Society. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 170. Ousmane Oumar Kane. Islam, Modernity and Politics. Fall 2015.ITAL 110. [Italian Mysteries]. Fall 2016.ITAL 112. Maria Grazia Lolla. Italian Best-Sellers: Marco Polo to Calvino. Fall 2015.ITAL 117. Cinema of Migration. Fall 2015.ITAL 132. Federica Pedriali. Deconstructing Rome. Fall 2015.ITAL 134. Situated Minds: Total Toxicity and Other Modernist Embodiment. Federica Pedrialia. Fall 2015.ITAL 180. [Making Italians: Poetry and Novel in the 19th Century]. Fall 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.RELIGION 1844: Religion, Gender, and Identity in 21st Century Diasporic Muslim Fiction.? Leila Ahmed.? Fall 2015.ROM-STD 111. Tom Conley. [The World of Romance Language Cinemas: A Classical Age]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 141. Julie A. Buckler [Russian Drama and Performance]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 147. Justin Weir. Soviet Film After Stalin. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 148. Stephanie Sandler. [Strange Russian Writers]. Spring 2017.SLAVIC 150. Julie A. Buckler. [Moscow and St. Petersburg]. Spring 2017.SLAVIC 155. William Todd. Dostoevsky. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 156. [Nabokov: A Cross-Cultural Perspective after the Cold War]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 157. William Todd. Some Versions of Russian Pastoral. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 161. Tomislav Longinovic. Conflict and Culture: The Case of Yugoslavia. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 162. Tomislav Longinovic. Slavic Myth and Fantastic Literature. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 166. George Grabowicz. Russian-Ukrainian Literary Relations in the 19th Century: Conference Course. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 167. George Grabowicz. Revolutionary Ukraine: Between the Russian Revolution and the Euromaidan of 2014. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 180. John Malmstad. Russian Symbolist Poetry. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 187. Global Voices: Russian Literature Today. Oleh Kotsyuba. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 188. Eugene Onegin. Daria Khitrova. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 192. [Literature as Institutions: Conference Course]. William Todd. Likely Fall 2016.SLAVIC 195. [Myths of Central Europe after World War II]. Jonathan Bolton. Likely Spring 2017.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 14. Maya Jasanoff. The British Empire. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 18. Mary Lewis. [Europe on Trial: Retribution, Renewal and Reconciliation Since 1945]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 19. Niall Ferguson. [Western Ascendancy: The Mainsprings of Global Power from 1400 to the Present]. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 28. Kelly O'Neill. [Exploration and Empire Building]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 35. Jay Harris. [Conditional Equality: The Case of the Jews of Europe in Modern Times]. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 42. Charles Maier. The World Wars and Global Transformation, 1900-1950. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 52. Julie A. Buckler, kelly A. O'Neill. [The Phoenix and the Firebird: Russia in Global Perspective]. Spring 2017.SPANSH 70C. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Tales of Two Spains: A Survey of Spanish Modern Literature and Culture (18th to 21st centuries). Fall 2015.SPANSH 80GR. Mary Gaylord. How To Do Things With Grammar: The Poet in Love and War. Spring 2016.SPANSH 80T. Words of Which History is Made: Translation Workshop on 20th-Century Spain. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Fall 2015.SPANSH 109. [Displacing Spain: Workshop on 20th and 21st-Century Transatlantic Poetry]. Likely Fall 2016.SPANSH 171. [Barcelona and the Catalan Culture]. Fall 2016.VES 183. Tom Conley. [Cinema and the Auteur]. Spring 2017.VES 192. Tom Conley. [Cinema and French Culture from 1896 to the Present]. Spring 2017.WOMGEN 1237. Linda Schlossberg. LGBT Literature. Fall 2015.WOMGEN 1407. [Harlots, Dandies, Bluestockings: Sexuality, Gender, and Feminism in the 18th and 19th Centuries]. Fall 2016.US-WORLD 12. Jennifer Roberts. [American Encounters: Art, Contact, and Conflict, 1560-1860]. Spring 2017.US-WORLD 20. Daniel Carpenter. [The Theory and Practice of Republican Government]. Spring 2017.BritainHistory surveys[CELTIC 119. The Gaelic World: 17th Century to the Present. Natasha Sumner. Likely Spring 2017.]SOCWORLD 14. Maya Jasanoff. The British Empire. Fall 2015.Courses in history that emphasize the relationship between Britain and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populations[CELTIC 119. The Gaelic World: 17th Century to the Present. Natasha Sumner. Likely Spring 2017.]HIST 82F. Serge Plokhii. [The Origins of the Cold War: The Yalta Conference (1945)]. Spring 2017.HIST 89A. Caroline Elkins. [British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century]. Fall 2016.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 14. Maya Jasanoff. The British Empire. Fall 2015.Courses in literature that emphasize the relationship between Britain and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsCELTIC 188. Natasha Sumner. Scottish Gaelic Poetry. Spring 2016.CELTIC 195. TBA. [Modern Scottish Gaelic Literature]. Spring PLIT 133. Christine Lee. Shakespeare Shakes the Globe. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 61A. Bilbija. The Literature of Empire. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 160M. Birmingham. James Joyce and the Modern Novel. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 168D. James Wood. Postwar American and British Fiction. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 190E. Bilbija. “Rotten English” Literature: Writing in English from Across the Globe. Spring 2016HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.WOMGEN 1237. Linda Schlossberg. LGBT Literature. Fall 2015.ElectivesAESTHINT 20. [Poems, Poets, Poetry]. Helen Vendler. Likely Fall 2016.AESTHINT 61. [The Romance: From Jane Austen to Chick Lit]. Spring 2017.CELTIC 188. Natasha Sumner. Scottish Gaelic Poetry. Spring 2016.CELTIC 195. TBA. [Modern Scottish Gaelic Literature]. Spring PLIT 133. Christine Lee. Shakespeare Shakes the Globe. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 47. Janet Browne. The Darwinian Revolution. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 50A. Stephen Osadetz. Poetry of the Long 18th Century. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 54. James Engell. Poets: English Romantic Poets. Fall 2015.[ENGLISH 90JK. Helen Vendler. The Poetry of John Keats: Seminar. Likely Spring 2017.]ENGLISH 90QO. Peter Sacks. T.S. Eliot. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 145A. Deidre Lynch. Jane Austen's Fiction and Fans. Fall 2015.[ENGLISH 151. The 19th-Century Novel. Likely Spring 2017.]ENGLISH 160M. Birmingham. James Joyce and the Modern Novel. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 168D. James Wood. Postwar American and British Fiction. Spring 2016.HIST 82F. Serge Plokhii. [The Origins of the Cold War: The Yalta Conference (1945)]. Spring 2017.HIST 89A. Caroline Elkins. [British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century]. Fall 2016.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 14. Maya Jasanoff. The British Empire. Fall 2015.WOMGEN 1407. [Harlots, Dandies, Bluestockings: Sexuality, Gender, and Feminism in the 18th and 19th Centuries]. Fall 2016.FranceHistory surveysHIST 1206. Mary Lewis. [Empire, Nation, and Immigration in France since 1870]. Fall 2016.Courses in history that emphasize the relationship between France and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsHIST 82M Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 1206 Mary Lewis. [Empire, Nation, and Immigration in France since 1870]. Fall 2016.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.Courses in literature that emphasize the relationship between France and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsFRENCH 61B. From Comic Books to Graphic Novels: Representations of Francophone Identities. Aurelie Chevant. Fall 2015.FRENCH 70C. [Introduction to French Literature III: The Francophone World]. Fall 2016.FRENCH 176. World Literature, Postcolonial Studies, Francophonie and Creolization: Reading in Context. Francois Lionnet. Fall 2015.FRENCH 182. French, Francophone, and Postcolonial Studies. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.VES 183 Tom Conley. [Cinema and the Auteur]. Spring 2017.VES 192 Tom Conley. [Cinema and French Culture from 1896 to the Present]. Spring 2017.ElectivesAESTHINT 58. [Modern Art and Modernity]. Fall 2016.FRENCH 61B. From Comic Books to Graphic Novels: Representations of Francophone Identities. Aurelie Chevant. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61C. The New Wave: Reinventing French Cinema. Ericka Knudson. Fall 2015.FRENCH 61M. Ericka Knudson. Modern Stories about Paris. Spring 2016.FRENCH 70B. Janet Beizer. Introduction to French Literature II: 19th and 20th Centuries: Tales of Identity. Fall 2015.FRENCH 70C. [Introduction to French Literature III: The Francophone World]. Fall 2016.FRENCH 90W. ["Bad" Women in French Literature] Fall 2016.FRENCH 136. [Feminist Literary Criticisms] Fall 2016.FRENCH 139B. McDonald. The 18th Century: Ethical Dilemmas Spring 2016.FRENCH 167. Verena Conley. Parisian Cityscapes: 1960-Present. Spring 2016.FRENCH 176. World Literature, Postcolonial Studies, Francophonie and Creolization: Reading in Context. Francois Lionnet. Fall 2015.FRENCH 180. ["The Words to Say It": Women Writing in French from Colette to Satrapi] Fall 2016.FRENCH 182. French, Francophone, and Postcolonial Studies. Fall 2015.FRENCH 189. Emmanuel Bouju "Re: History" Memory and Imagination from Camus to Annie Ernaux. Fall 2015.HIST 82M Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 1206 Mary Lewis. [Empire, Nation, and Immigration in France since 1870]. Fall 2016.HIST 1324. Peter Gordon. [French Social Thought, Durkheim to Foucault]HAA 174S. Ewa Lajer-Burcharth. Body Image in French Visual Culture: 18th and 19th Century. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90AV. Revolution and Reform in Britain and France, 1820-1880. Mo Moulton. Fall 2015.VES 192. Tom Conley. [Cinema and French Culture from 1896 to the Present]. Spring 2017.Southern Europe (Italy, Portugal, Spain)History surveysSPANSH 70C. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Tales of Two Spains: A Survey of Spanish Modern Literature and Culture (18th to 21st centuries). Fall 2015.Courses in history that emphasize the relationship between Italy/Spain/Portugal and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsHIST 82M. Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.Courses in literature that emphasize the relationship between Italy/Spain/Portugal and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsITAL 117. Cinema of Migration. Fall 2015.PORTUG 61. [Performing Arts in The Portuguese-Speaking World]. Likely Fall 2016.SPANSH 109. [Displacing Spain: Workshop on 20th and 21st-Century Transatlantic Poetry]. Likely Fall 2016.ElectivesITAL 110. [Italian Mysteries]. Fall 2016.ITAL 112. Maria Grazia Lolla. Italian Best-Sellers: Marco Polo to Calvino. Fall 2015.ITAL 117. Cinema of Migration. Fall 2015.ITAL 132. Federica Pedriali. Deconstructing Rome. Fall 2015.ITAL 134. Situated Minds: Total Toxicity and Other Modernist Embodiment. Federica Pedrialia. Fall 2015.ITAL 180. [Making Italians: Poetry and Novel in the 19th Century]. Fall 2016.PORTUG 61. [Performing Arts in The Portuguese-Speaking World]. Likely Fall 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SPANSH 70C. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Tales of Two Spains: A Survey of Spanish Modern Literature and Culture (18th to 21st centuries). Fall 2015.SPANSH 80GR. How To Do Things With Grammar: The Poet in Love and War. Mary Gaylord. Spring 2016.SPANSH 80T. Words of Which History is Made: Translation Workshop on 20th-Century Spain. Daniel Aguirre-Oteiza. Fall 2015.SPANSH 171. [Barcelona and the Catalan Culture]. Fall 2016.Germany and Central EuropeHistory surveysGOV 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 1265. Alison Johnson. [German Empires,1848-1948]. Fall 2016.HIST 1266. Alison Johnson. [Central Europe, 1789-1918: Empires, Nations, States]. Fall 2017.Courses in History that emphasize the relationship between Germany/Central Europe and their neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsGOV 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 1265. Alison Johnson. [German Empires,1848-1948]. Fall 2016.HIST 1266. Alison Johnson. [Central Europe, 1789-1918: Empires, Nations, States]. Fall 2017.Courses in literature that emphasize the relationship between Germany/Central Europe and their neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsGERMAN 63. Hueckmann. Germany and Europe: Heimat, Exile, Return. Spring 2016.GERMAN 101. German Literature, Culture, and Society. Fall 2015.GERMAN 102. Nicole Suetterlin [German Literature, Art, and Thought]. Spring 2017.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 195. [Myths of Central Europe after World War II]. Jonathan Bolton. Likely Spring 2017.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.ElectivesAESTHINT 52. [Repression and Expression: Sexuality, Gender, and Language in Fin-de-siècle Literature and Art] Peter Burgard. Spring 2017.AESTHINT 59. [Nazi Cinema: The Art and Politics of Illusion]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 63. Hueckmann. Germany and Europe: Heimat, Exile, Return. Spring 2016.GERMAN 67. German in Revue: Kabarett through the 20th Century. Likely Spring 2017.GERMAN 101. German Literature, Culture, and Society. Fall 2015.GERMAN 102. Nicole Suetterlin [German Literature, Art, and Thought]. Spring 2017GERMAN 120. [The Age of Goethe]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 141. Judith Ryan. Social Dynamics in Twentieth-Century Modernism. Spring 2016.GERMAN 146. Peter Burgard. The Ethics of Atheism: Marx, Nietzsche, Freud. Spring 2016.GERMAN 147. Peter Burgard. Nietzsche. Fall 2015.GERMAN 149. Peter Burgard. [Thomas Mann: Stories of Six Decades]. Fall 2016.GERMAN 156. [From Postwar to Postwall German Cinema]. Likely Fall 2016.GERMAN 170. Nicole Suetterlin. Biopolitics and Vampire Aesthetics, 1716–2016. Spring 2016GERMAN 171. Hueckmann. Case Studies - Law and Literature. Spring 2016.GERMAN 182. Lisa Parkes. Music and German National Identity. Fall 2015.GERMAN 185. [German Lyric Poetry: Tradition and Innovation]. Fall 1052. History and Freedom in German Idealism. Michael Rosen. Fall 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 82B. Alison Johnson. [Fin-de-Siècle Vienna]. Spring 2017.HIST 1265. Alison Johnson. [German Empires,1848-1948]. Fall 2016.HIST 1266. Alison Johnson. [Central Europe, 1789-1918: Empires, Nations, States]. Fall 2017.HIST 1322. [Heidegger and Arendt]. Peter Gordon. Likely Spring 2017.HIST 1323. Peter Gordon. [German Social Thought, Nietzsche to Habermas] Fall 2016.HIST 1922. Peter Gordon. [Habermas: Social Theory in Postwar Germany]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 195. [Myths of Central Europe after World War II]. Jonathan Bolton. Likely Spring 2017.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.Russia and Eastern EuropeHistory surveysGOV 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 1270. Serge Plokhii. Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500. Fall 2015 HIST 1280. Terry Martin. [History of the Soviet Union, 1917-1991]. Fall 2016.HIST 1290. Kelly O'Neill. [The History of the Russian Empire]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 28. Kelly O'Neill. [Exploration and Empire Building]. Spring 2017.Courses in history that emphasize the relationship between Russia and its neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsAESTHINT 45. [Art and Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe]. Fall 2016AESTHINT 60. George Grabowicz. Literature and Art in an Era of Crisis and Oppression: Modernism in Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 42. [Communism and the Politics of Culture: Czechoslovakia from World War II to the Velvet Revolution] Spring 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 82F. Serge Plokhii. [The Origins of the Cold War: The Yalta Conference (1945)]. Spring 2017.HIST 1270. Serge Plokhii. Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500. Fall 2015 HIST 1280. Terry Martin. [History of the Soviet Union, 1917-1991]. Fall 2016.HIST 1281. Terry Martin. [The End of Communism]. Fall 2016.HIST 1290. Kelly O'Neill. [The History of the Russian Empire]. Spring 2017.HIST 1974. Timothy Nunan. Eurasia in the Twentieth Century. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 161. Tomislav Longinovic. Conflict and Culture: The Case of Yugoslavia. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 167. George Grabowicz. Revolutionary Ukraine: Between the Russian Revolution and the Euromaidan of 2014. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 28. Kelly O'Neill. [Exploration and Empire Building]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 52. Julie A. Buckler, kelly A. O'Neill. [The Phoenix and the Firebird: Russia in Global Perspective]. Spring 2017.Courses in literature that emphasize the relationship between Russia/Eastern Europe and their neighbors, colonies, or multi-lingual/multi-cultural national populationsAESTHINT 11. [Poetry Without Borders]. Stephanie Sandler. Likely Fall 2016.AESTHINT 45. [Art and Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe]. Fall 2016AESTHINT 60. Literature and Art in an Era of Crisis and Oppression: Modernism in Eastern Europe. George Grabowicz. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 42. [Communism and the Politics of Culture: Czechoslovakia from World War II to the Velvet Revolution] Spring 2017.HIST-LIT 90BX. World War I in Fiction, Film, Poetry, and Memoir. Lauren Kaminsky, Steven Biel. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 141. Julie A. Buckler [Russian Drama and Performance]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 142. Daria Khitrova. Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde Theater. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 156. [Nabokov: A Cross-Cultural Perspective after the Cold War]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 161. Tomislav Longinovic. Conflict and Culture: The Case of Yugoslavia. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 162. Tomislav Longinovic. Slavic Myth and Fantastic Literature. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 166. George Grabowicz. Russian-Ukrainian Literary Relations in the 19th Century: Conference Course. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 167. George Grabowicz. Revolutionary Ukraine: Between the Russian Revolution and the Euromaidan of 2014. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 186. Stephanie Sandler. [Poetry after Brodsky: How Russian Is It?]. Fall 2017.SLAVIC 187. Global Voices: Russian Literature Today. Oleh Kotsyuba. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 195. [Myths of Central Europe after World War II]. Jonathan Bolton. Likely Spring 2017.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.ElectivesAESTHINT 11. [Poetry Without Borders]. Stephanie Sandler. Likely Fall 2016.AESTHINT 41. [How and What Russia Learned to Read: The Rise of Russian Literary Culture]. Spring 2017.AESTHINT 45. [Art and Politics in Russia and Eastern Europe]. Fall 2016AESTHINT 60. Literature and Art in an Era of Crisis and Oppression: Modernism in Eastern Europe. George Grabowicz. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 42. [Communism and the Politics of Culture: Czechoslovakia from World War II to the Velvet Revolution] Spring 2017.ETHRSON 28. Justin Weir. Moral Inquiry in the Novels of Tolstoy and DostoevskyGOV 1203. Ekiert. Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Spring 2016.HIST 82F. Serge Plokhii. [The Origins of the Cold War: The Yalta Conference (1945)]. Spring 2017.HIST 1270. Serge Plokhii. Frontiers of Europe: Ukraine since 1500. Fall 2015 HIST 1280. Terry Martin. [History of the Soviet Union, 1917-1991]. Fall 2016.HIST 1281. Terry Martin. [The End of Communism]. Fall 2016.HIST 1290. Kelly O'Neill. [The History of the Russian Empire]. Spring 2017.HIST 1974. Timothy Nunan. Eurasia in the Twentieth Century. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90AY. Rachel Gillett. Youth Protest in Europe. Spring 2016.[HISTSCI 122V. Melinda Fulford. Science and the Cold War. Spring 2016.]SLAVIC 141. Julie A. Buckler [Russian Drama and Performance]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 147. Justin Weir. Soviet Film After Stalin. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 142. Daria Khitrova. Russian and Soviet Avant-Garde Theater. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 148. Stephanie Sandler. [Strange Russian Writers]. Spring 2017.SLAVIC 150. Julie A. Buckler. [Moscow and St. Petersburg]. Spring 2017.SLAVIC 155. William Todd. Dostoevsky. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 156. [Nabokov: A Cross-Cultural Perspective after the Cold War]. Fall 2016.SLAVIC 157. William Todd. Some Versions of Russian Pastoral. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 161. Tomislav Longinovic. Conflict and Culture: The Case of Yugoslavia. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 162. Tomislav Longinovic. Slavic Myth and Fantastic Literature. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 166. George Grabowicz. Russian-Ukrainian Literary Relations in the 19th Century: Conference Course. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 167. George Grabowicz. Revolutionary Ukraine: Between the Russian Revolution and the Euromaidan of 2014. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 180. John Malmstad. Russian Symbolist Poetry. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 186. Stephanie Sandler. [Poetry after Brodsky: How Russian Is It?]. Fall 2017.SLAVIC 187. Oleh Kotsyuba. Global Voices: Russian Literature Today. Fall 2015.SLAVIC 188. Daria Khitrova. Eugene Onegin. Spring 2016.SLAVIC 192. [Literature as Institutions: Conference Course]. William Todd. Likely Fall 2016.SLAVIC 198. Czech Literary Culture after World War II. Jonathan Bolton. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 52. Julie A. Buckler, Kelly A. O'Neill. [The Phoenix and the Firebird: Russia in Global Perspective]. Spring 2017.Latin America (classes of 2015 and 2016)Courses in Latin American history before 1800HAA 197. Thomas Cummins. The Imperial Arts of the Inca and the Aztec. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 30. David L. Carrasco, William Fash. Moctezuma's Mexico: Then and Now. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 40. Gary Urton. The Incas: The Last Great Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. Spring 2016.Courses in Latin American literature before 1800HAA 197. Thomas Cummins. The Imperial Arts of the Inca and the Aztec. Spring 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SPANSH 71A. Nicole Legnani. Continuity and Discontinuity in Colonial Latin America. Fall 2015.Courses in Latin American history 1800-1900HIST 13E. Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Mexico. Spring 2016.HIST 1513 Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Latin America. Fall 2015.HIST 1930. Literature and Social History: A View from Brazil. Sidney Chalhoub. Fall 2015.HIST 1931. Sidney Chalhoub. Slavery, Disease and Race: A View from Brazil. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BR Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.Course in Latin American literature 1800-1900HIST 1930. Literature and Social History: A View from Brazil. Sidney Chalhoub. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.ElectivesAFRAMER 124Y. Alejandro de la Fuente, Doris Sommer. Afro-Latin America: History and Culture. Spring 1292. Politics in Brazil. Frances Hagopian. Fall 2015.HIST 13E Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Mexico. Spring 2016.HIST 1513 Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Latin America. Fall 2015.HIST 1930. Literature and Social History: A View from Brazil. Sidney Chalhoub. Fall 2015.HIST 1931. Sidney Chalhoub. Slavery, Disease and Race: A View from Brazil. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90CA. Cocaine: Customs and War in the Americas. Ezer Vierba. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.PORTUG 61. [Performing Arts in The Portuguese-Speaking World]. Likely Fall 2016.PORTUG 90ML. [Brazilian Popular Music and Literature]. Fall 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 30. David L. Carrasco, William Fash. Moctezuma's Mexico: Then and Now. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 34. Orlando Patterson. The Caribbean: Globalization, Socio-Economic Development & Cultural Adaptation. Fall 2015. SOCWORLD 40. Gary Urton. The Incas: The Last Great Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. Spring 2016.SPANSH 71A. Nicole Legnani. Continuity and Discontinuity in Colonial Latin America. Fall 2015.SPANSH 71B. Introduction to Modern Latin American Literature. Spring 2016.SPANSH 80GR. How To Do Things With Grammar: The Poet in Love and War. Mary Gaylord. Spring 2016.SPANSH 90N. Sergio Delgado. Border Flux and Border Subjects: Cultural Practices of the US-Mexico Border. Fall 2015.SPANSH 160. Sergio Delgado. Aesthetics of Sensationalism: Crime and Violence in Latin American Culture. Fall 2015.SPANSH 179. [Regarding the Pain of Spain]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 194. Mariano Siskind. The Borges Machine. Spring 2016.US-WORLD 28. Walter Johnson. [Slavery/Capitalism/Imperialism: The US in the Nineteenth Century]. Spring 2017.VES 196D. Pena. The Documentary in Latin America. Spring 2016.VES 196H. A History of Latin American Cinema. Fall 2015.Latin America (class of 2017)History surveysCULTBLF 21. [Pathways through the Andes - Culture, History, and Beliefs in Andean South America]. Spring 2017.HAA 197. Thomas Cummins. The Imperial Arts of the Inca and the Aztec. Spring 2016.HIST 13E. Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Mexico. Spring 2016.HIST 1511. Kirsten Weld. [Latin America and the United States] Fall 2016.HIST 1513. Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Latin America. Fall 2015.HIST 1520. Tamar Herzog. [Colonial Latin America]. Fall 2016.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90CA. Cocaine: Customs and War in the Americas. Ezer Vierba. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 30. David L. Carrasco, William Fash. Moctezuma's Mexico: Then and Now. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 34. Orlando Patterson. The Caribbean: Globalization, Socio-Economic Development & Cultural Adaptation. Fall 2015. SOCWORLD 40. Gary Urton. The Incas: The Last Great Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. Spring 2016.Literature surveysHIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.SPANSH 71A. Nicole Legnani. Continuity and Discontinuity in Colonial Latin America. Fall 2015.SPANSH 71B. Delgado. Introduction to Modern Latin American Literature. Spring 2016.Courses covering colonial periodCULTBLF 21. [Pathways through the Andes - Culture, History, and Beliefs in Andean South America]. Spring 2017.HAA 197. Thomas Cummins. The Imperial Arts of the Inca and the Aztec. Spring 2016.HAA 199N. Thomas Cummins. Between Europe and Asia: Colonial Latin America and the Art of Fusion. Fall 2015HIST 1520. Tamar Herzog. [Colonial Latin America]. Fall 2016.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 30. David L. Carrasco, William Fash. Moctezuma's Mexico: Then and Now. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 40. Gary Urton. The Incas: The Last Great Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. Spring 2016.SPANSH 71A. Nicole Legnani. Continuity and Discontinuity in Colonial Latin America. Fall 2015.SPANSH 90NP. [Invaders as Ancestors, Gods and Vampires]. Fall 2016.Courses covering republican/independent periodsHIST 13E Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Mexico. Spring 2016.HIST 1511 Kirsten Weld. [Latin America and the United States] Fall 2016.HIST 1513 Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Latin America. Fall 2015.HIST 1913 Kirsten Weld. [Dirty Wars, Peace Processes, and the Politics of History in Latin America]. Fall 2016.HIST 1930. Literature and Social History: A View from Brazil. Sidney Chalhoub. Fall 2015.HIST 1931. Sidney Chalhoub. Slavery, Disease and Race: A View from Brazil. Spring 2016.HIST 1937 Alejandro de la Fuente. [Social Revolutions in Latin America]. Spring 2017.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SPANSH 194. Mariano Siskind. The Borges Machine. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 15. Jorge Dominguez. [The Cuban Revolution, 1956-1971: A Self-Debate]. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 34. Orlando Patterson. The Caribbean: Globalization, Socio-Economic Development & Cultural Adaptation. Fall 2015. ElectivesAFRAMER 124Y. Alejandro de la Fuente, Doris Sommer. Afro-Latin America: History and CultureGOV 1292. Politics in Brazil. Frances Hagopian. Fall 2015.HAA 199N. Thomas Cummins. Between Europe and Asia: Colonial Latin America and the Art of Fusion. Fall 2015HIST 13E. Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Mexico. Spring 2016.HIST 1513 Kirsten Weld. History of Modern Latin America. Fall 2015.HIST 1520. Tamar Herzog. [Colonial Latin America]. Fall 2016.HIST 1913 Kirsten Weld. [Dirty Wars, Peace Processes, and the Politics of History in Latin America]. Fall 2016.HIST 1926. Tamar Herzog. [How Historians Imagine Latin American Pasts]. Fall 2017.HIST 1930. Literature and Social History: A View from Brazil. Sidney Chalhoub. Fall 2015.HIST 1931. Sidney Chalhoub. Slavery, Disease and Race: A View from Brazil. Spring 2016.HIST 1937 Alejandro de la Fuente. [Social Revolutions in Latin America]. Spring 2017.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90CA. Cocaine: Customs and War in the Americas. Ezer Vierba. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.PORTUG 61. [Performing Arts in The Portuguese-Speaking World]. Likely Fall 2016.PORTUG 90ML. [Brazilian Popular Music and Literature]. Fall 2016.PORTUG 145. Josiah Blackmore. Transatlantic Africa and Brazil. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 15. Jorge Dominguez. [The Cuban Revolution, 1956-1971: A Self-Debate]. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 30. David L. Carrasco, William Fash. Moctezuma's Mexico: Then and Now. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 34. Orlando Patterson. The Caribbean: Globalization, Socio-Economic Development & Cultural Adaptation. Fall 2015. SOCWORLD 40. Gary Urton. The Incas: The Last Great Empire of Pre-Columbian South America. Spring 2016.SPANSH 71A. Nicole Legnani. Continuity and Discontinuity in Colonial Latin America. Fall 2015.SPANSH 71B. Delgado. Introduction to Modern Latin American Literature. Spring 2016.SPANSH 80GR. How To Do Things With Grammar: The Poet in Love and War. Mary Gaylord. Spring 2016.SPANSH 90N. Sergio Delgado. Border Flux and Border Subjects: Cultural Practices of the US-Mexico Border. Fall 2015.SPANSH 90NP. [Invaders as Ancestors, Gods and Vampires]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 109. [Displacing Spain: Workshop on 20th and 21st-Century Transatlantic Poetry]. Likely Fall 2016.SPANSH 160. Sergio Delgado. Aesthetics of Sensationalism: Crime and Violence in Latin American Culture. Fall 2015.SPANSH 179. [Regarding the Pain of Spain]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 194. Mariano Siskind. The Borges Machine. Spring 2016.US-WORLD 28. Walter Johnson. [Slavery/Capitalism/Imperialism: The US in the Nineteenth Century]. Spring 2017.VES 196D. Pena. The Documentary in Latin America. Spring 2016.VES 196H. Pena. A History of Latin American Cinema. Fall 2015.PostcolonialLiterature?courses that consider materials from a comparative and specifically postcolonial perspective. Please note that this list is not comprehensive. Other courses may also work for this requirement.AFRAMER 107X. George Paul Meiu. [Race, Ethnicity, and the Empire] Likely Fall 2017.AFRAMER 116X. Jamaica Kincaid. [The Child in the Empire] Likely Fall 2016.AFRAMER 137. Biodun Jeyifo. [Literature, Oratory, Popular Music and the Politics of Liberation]. Likely Fall 2016COMPLIT 103. Grounds for Comparison. David Damrosch. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 61A. Bilbija. The Literature of Empire. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 90AU. Australian Indigenous Literature: Seminar. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 180C Ju Kim. World Theater. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 190E. Bilbija. “Rotten English” Literature: Writing in English from Across the Globe. Spring 2016ENGLISH 195A. Australian Literature and the World. Spring 2016.FRENCH 70C. [Introduction to French Literature III: The Francophone World]. Fall 2016.FRENCH 176. World Literature, Postcolonial Studies, Francophonie and Creolization: Reading in Context. Francois Lionnet. Fall 2015.FRENCH 182 French, Francophone, and Postcolonial Studies. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BO Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.PORTUG 61. [Performing Arts in The Portuguese-Speaking World]. Likely Fall 2016.RELIGION 1844: Religion, Gender, and Identity in 21st Century Diasporic Muslim Fiction.? Leila Ahmed.? Fall 2015.History?courses on the colonial and postcolonial world that consider materials from a comparative or transregional perspective. Please note that this list is not comprehensive. Other courses may also work for this requirement.AFRAMER 11. Caroline Elkins. Introduction to African StudiesAFRAMER 107X. George Paul Meiu. [Race, Ethnicity, and the Empire]AFRAMER 198X. Alejandro de la Fuente. Scientific Racism: A History. Fall 2015.HIST 82M. Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 86H. Sugata Bose. [Asia after Europe]. Spring 2017.HIST 89A. Caroline Elkins. [British Colonial Violence in the 20th Century]. Fall 2016.HIST 1013. Genevieve Clutario. Pacific Crossroads: Histories of Asian America. Fall 2015.HIST 1014. Genevieve Clutario. Gender & Empire. Spring 2016HIST 1020. [A Global History of Modern Times]. Charles Maier. Likely Spring 2017.HIST 1042. History of U.S. Imperialism, 1600-1900. Fall 2015.HIST 1043. Droessler. History of U.S. Imperialism, 1900-present. Spring 2016.HIST 1060. [Europe and Its Borders, 950-1550]. Spring 2017.SAS 180HIST 1933. Genevieve Clutario. [Beauty and Power]. Spring 2017.HIST-LIT 90BQ. Early Modern Encounters. Michael Tworek. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BO. Daniel Loss. Sports and Empire. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90L. Stories of Slavery and Freedom. Timothy McCarthy. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 170. Ousmane Oumar Kane. Islam, Modernity and Politics. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 172. [Knowledge and Authority in Muslim Societies]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 14. Maya Jasanoff. The British Empire. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 28. Kelly O'Neill. [Exploration and Empire Building]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 34. Orlando Patterson. The Caribbean: Globalization, Socio-Economic Development & Cultural Adaptation. Fall 2015. Regional courses that may be taken by students in the Postcolonial field:Sub-Saharan AfricaAFRAMER 11. Caroline Elkins. Introduction to African StudiesAFRAMER 20. John Mugane. Introduction to African Languages and CulturesAFRAMER 111. Biodun Jeyifo. Spectral Fictions, Savage Phantasms: Race and Gender in Anti-Racist South African & African AmericaAFRAMER 116X. Jamaica Kincaid. [The Child in the Empire] Likely Fall 2016.AFRAMER 135X. Tommie Shelby, Walter Johnson. Reading Du Bois. Spring 2016.AFRAMER 160. Jacob Olupona. [Christianity, Identity, and Civil Society in Africa] Likely Spring 2017.AFRAMER 187. Jacob Olupona. [African Religions] Likely Fall 2016.AFRAMER 192X. Jacob Olupona. [Religion and Society in Nigeria] Likely Spring 2018.HAA 192M. Suzanne Blier. Early African Art (to 1750). Fall 2015.HIST 1412. [African Diaspora in the Americas]. Vincent Brown. Likely Fall 2016.HIST 1700. Emmanuel Akyeampong. [The History of Sub-Saharan Africa to 1860]. Fall 2017.HIST 1701. Emmanuel Akyeampong. [West Africa from 1800 to the Present]. Spring 2018.HIST 1704. Emmanuel Akyeampong. [Slavery and Slave Trade in Africa and the Americas]. Fall 2016.ISLAMCIV 175. [Islam in African History]. Spring 2017.ISLAMCIV 176. Ousmane Oumar Kane. Islam in Modern West Africa. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 26. Caroline Elkins. [Africa and Africans: The Making of a Continent in the Modern World]. Spring 2017.Near/Middle East and North AfricaAESTHINT 43. [Visual Culture of the Ottoman Empire Between East and West (15th-17th Centuries)]. Spring 2017AESTHINT 54. Ali Asani. For the Love of God and His Prophet: Religion, Literature, and the Arts in Muslim Cultures. Spring 2016.ARMENST 110B. James Russell. Armenian Literature in Translation: Modern. Spring PLIT 255. Dysfunctional Family as National Allegory in the Middle Eastern Novel. Likely Spring 2017.CULTBLF 41. [Gender, Islam, and Nation in the Middle East and North Africa]. Spring 1207. Melani Cammett. Comparative Politics of the Middle East. Spring 2016.HIST 13D. Afsaneh Najmabadi. Iran’s Revolutions. Fall 2015.HIST 82M. Mary Lewis. [The Modern Mediterranean: Connections and Conflicts between Europe and North Africa]. Fall 2016.HIST 1878B. Cemal Kafadar. Ottoman State and Society II (1550-1920). Fall 2015.HIST 1880. Khaled Fahmy. The Middle East from 1750 to 1914. Fall 2015.HIST 1881. Khaled Fahmy. The Middle East from 1914 to the present. Spring 2016.HIST 1928. Cemal Kafadar. Istanbul: Eventful City & Quotidian Modernity since the Invention of Coffeehouses in the 16th c. Fall 2015.HIST 1974. Timothy Nunan. Eurasia in the Twentieth Century. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90CC. Boundaries, Borders, Bodies. Maryam Monalisa Gharavi. Spring 2016.HISTSCI 101. Ahmed Ragab. [Communities of Knowledge: Science, Religion, and Culture in Medieval Europe and the Lands of Islam]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 108. Ahmed Ragab. [Bodies, Sexualities, and Medicine in the Medieval Middle East]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 109. [Science and Islam: Agents, Places, and Controversies]. Ahmed Ragab. Likely Fall 2016.[HISTSCI 113. Ahmed Ragab. [Crusades, Plagues and Hospitals: Medicine and Society in the Islamic Middle Ages. TBA.]HISTSCI 146V. Soha Bayoumi. Bodies in Flux: Medicine, Gender, and Sexuality in the Modern Middle East. Fall 2015.MODMDEST 100. Malika Zeghal. Introduction to the Modern Middle East. Spring 2016.MODMDEST 111. [Culture and Society in Contemporary Iran]. Spring 2018.MODMDEST 158B. William Granara. [Modern Arabic Literature Seminar: Lebanese Civil War: Histories and Fictions]. Spring 2018.MODMDEST 160R. Himmet Taskomur. [History of Modern Turkey through Literature]. Spring 2017. MODMDEST 175R. William Granara. [Understanding Modern North Africa]. Spring 2017.PERSIAN 152. [Literary and Visual Narrative in the Persian Epic Tradition] Fall 2017.PERSIAN 158. Amr Ahmed. Modern Persian Poetry and Prose. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 54. Malika Zeghal. Islam and Politics in the Modern Middle East. Fall 2015.TURKISH 150B. Himmet Taskomur. Advanced Ottoman Turkish II. Spring 2016.South AsiaAESTHINT 30. [Love In A Dead Language: Classical Indian Literature and Its Theorists]. Spring 2017.AESTHINT 54. Ali Asani. For the Love of God and His Prophet: Religion, Literature, and the Arts in Muslim Cultures. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 60. [Religion in India: Texts and Traditions in a Complex Society]. Fall 2016.FOLKMYTH 153. Leah Lowthorp. South Asian Folklore. Fall 2015.HAA 18S. Jinah Kim. Arts of South and Southeast Asia. Fall 2015.HAA 183K. Jinah Kim. Himalayan Art. Spring 2016.HIST 60U. Mou Banerjee. Religion and Politics: India, 1800-2015. Fall 2015.HIST 86H. Sugata Bose. [Asia after Europe]. Spring 2017SAS 123. Bollywood and Beyond: Commercial Cinema, Language and Culture in South Asia. Fall 2015.SAS 130. Economic History of India. Sunil Amrith. Fall 2015.SAS 131. South Asia: A Global History. Sunil Amrith. Spring 2016.SAS 179. South Asia: Connected Histories, Interdisciplinary Frames. Fall 2015.SAS 193.Ramaswami. Class and the City in Indian Cinema. Spring 2016.SAS 194. A Clash of Civilizations? Hindus and Muslims in South Asia. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 22. Ian J. Miller, Parimal G. Patil, Shigehisa Kuriyama. [Asia in the Making of the Modern World]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 36. Sugata Bose. [Modern India and South Asia]. Fall 2016.East and South East Asia and the PacificAESTHINT 36. Buddhism and Japanese Culture. Ryuichi Abe. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 11. Shigehisa Kuriyama. Medicine and the Body in East Asia and in Europe. Spring 2016.EAFM 110. Alexander Zahlten. [Film and Popular Culture Flows Across East Asia]. Fall 2016.EASTD 140. Ryuichi Abe. Major Religious Texts of East Asia. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 90AU. Australian Indigenous Literature: Seminar. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 195A. Mead. Australian Literature and the World. Spring 2016.HAA 18S. Jinah Kim. Arts of South and Southeast Asia. Fall 2015.HAA 199N. Thomas Cummins. Between Europe and Asia: Colonial Latin America and the Art of Fusion. Fall 2015HIST 60Q. Andrew Levidis. Modern Japan at War. Fall 2015.HIST 86H. Sugata Bose. [Asia after Europe]. Spring 2017.HIST 1013. Genevieve Clutario. Pacific Crossroads: Histories of Asian America. Fall 2015.HIST 1042. History of U.S. Imperialism, 1600-1900. Fall 2015.HIST 1043. History of U.S. Imperialism, 1900-present. Spring 2016.HIST 1911. David Armitage. Pacific History. Fall 2015.HIST 1918. Telling Lives in Asia. Hue-Tam Tai. Fall 2015.HIST 1934. The Vietnam War: A Legal History. Samuel Moyn. Fall 2015.HIST 1978. Diana Kim, Kirsty Walker. The Politics of Vice in Colonial Southeast Asia. Spring 2016.HISTSCI 180. Dong Won Kim. Science, Technology, and Society in Modern East Asia. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 178. Muslim Societies in South Asia: Religion, Culture, and Identity. Fall 2015.JAPNHIST 115. Helen Hardacre. Religion and Society in Edo and Meiji Japan. Spring 2016.JAPNHIST 120. Helen Hardacre. [Religion and Society in Twentieth-Century Japan]. Fall 2016.KORLIT 110. Si Nae Park. Korean Literature: Texts and Contexts, 9th Century through the Early 20th Century. Spring 2016SOCWORLD 13. Andrew Gordon, David Howell. Japan in Asia and the World. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 22. Ian J. Miller, Parimal G. Patil, Shigehisa Kuriyama. [Asia in the Making of the Modern World]. Spring 2017.SOCWORLD 27. Carter Eckert. The Two Koreas. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 37. [The Chinese Overseas]. Michael Szonyi. Likely Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 43. Ian J. Miller, David Howell. [Japan's Samurai Revolution]. Fall 2016.TIBET 150. Bod, Bod chen po, and the historical geography of the Tibetan cultural area. Fall 2015.TIBET 190. Understanding Histories of Tibet. Spring 2016.US-WORLD 38. Andrew Gordon, Erez Manela. Forced to be Free: Americans as Occupiers and Nation-Builders Fall 2015.Other Courses that may be taken by students in the postcolonial fieldAESTHINT 54. Ali Asani. For the Love of God and His Prophet: Religion, Literature, and the Arts in Muslim Cultures.AFRAMER 103X. Justin Leroy. The Black Radical TraditionAFRAMER 107X. George Paul Meiu. [Race, Ethnicity, and the Empire]. Likely Fall 2017.AFRAMER 124Y. Alejandro de la Fuente, Doris Sommer. Afro-Latin America. Spring 2016.AFRAMER 135X. Tommie Shelby, Walter Johnson. Reading Du Bois. Spring 2016.AFRAMER 140X. Biodun Jeyifo. [Film, Fiction and Diaspora]. Likely Spring 2017.AFRAMER 154. [Language and Discourse: Race, Class and Gender]. Marcyliena Morgan. Likely Fall PLIT 133. Christine Lee. Shakespeare Shakes the Globe. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 90AU. Australian Indigenous Literature: Seminar. Fall 2015.FRENCH 70C. [Introduction to French Literature III: The Francophone World]. Fall 2016.HIST 1013. Genevieve Clutario. Pacific Crossroads: Histories of Asian America. Fall 2015.HIST 1014. Genevieve Clutario. Gender and Empire.HIST 1206. Mary Lewis. [Empire, Nation, and Immigration in France since 1870]. Fall 2016.HIST 1926. Tamar Herzog. [How Historians Imagine Latin American Pasts]. Fall 2017.HIST 1933. Genevieve Clutario. [Beauty and Power]. Spring 2017.HIST 1935. Dimiter Angelov. [Byzantine Imperialism]. Spring 2018.HIST-LIT 90BR. Frances Sullivan. Cultures of Commodity Production Across the Americas. Spring 2016.HISTSCI 159. Rebecca Lemov. History of Anthropology. Spring 2016.HISTSCI 192. Ahmed Ragab, Hannah Roosth. The Empire Strikes Back: Science Fiction, Religion, and Society. Fall 2015.ISLAMCIV 145B. Khaled El-Rouayheb [Introduction to Islamic Philosophy and Theology: The Modern Period (19th and 20th centuries)]. Spring 2017.RELIGION 1834. Leila Ahmed. Contemporary Voices in Islam in the West. Spring 2016.RELIGION 1836. Leila Ahmed. Islam Gender, Sexualities and Empire. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 42. Charles Maier. The World Wars and Global Transformation, 1900-1950. Fall 2015.WOMGEN 91R. Body Capital: Sex Work and the Global Economy. Fall 2015.WOMGEN 1210FT Katherine Stanton. Postcolonial Feminist Theory. Spring 2016.WOMGEN 1271. Women and War: Gender, Race, and the Politics of Militarism. Elizabeth Mesok. Fall 2015.US-WORLD 12. Jennifer Roberts. [American Encounters: Art, Contact, and Conflict, 1560-1860]. Spring 2017.US-WORLD 28. Walter Johnson. [Slavery/Capitalism/Imperialism: The US in the Nineteenth Century]. Spring 2017.US-WORLD 38. Andrew Gordon, Erez Manela. Forced to be Free: Americans as Occupiers and Nation-Builders Fall 2015.Medieval WorldHistory of the Medieval WorldCELTIC 107. TBA. [History of Ireland: Saint Patrick to the Flight of the Earls]. Spring 2017.CELTIC 118. Natasha Sumner. [The Gaelic World: 1100 - 1700]. Fall 2015CULTBLF 27. [Among the Nations: Jewish History in Pagan, Christian and Muslim Context] Spring 2017.CULTBLF 38. Michael Flier. Apocalypse Then! Forging the Culture of Medieval Rus'. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 51. Nicholas Watson. Making the Middle Ages. Spring 2016.HIST 70J. Dimiter Angelov. [Byzantium between the Crusades and the Islamic World, c.1100-c.1450] Fall 2016.HIST 80G. Dimiter Angelov. [Travelers to Byzantium]. Fall 2017.HIST 1035. Dimiter Angelov. [Byzantine Civilization.]HIST 1047. Anglo-Saxon and Viking-Age England, AD 400-1100: An Archaeology. Christopher Loveluck. Fall 2015.HIST 1048. Christopher Loveluck. Medieval Britain and Ireland, c. AD 800-1600. Spring 2016.HIST 1060. [Europe and Its Borders, 950-1550]. Spring 2017.HIST 1878A. Cemal Kafadar. [Ottoman State and Society I (1300-1550)] Fall 2017.HIST 1925. Tamar Herzog. [Europe and its Other(s)]. Fall 2016.HIST 1935. Dimiter Angelov. [Byzantine Imperialism]. Spring 2018.HIST 1947. Christopher Loveluck. Material Cultures: A Comparative Archaeology of Northwest Europe, c. AD 600-1200. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BT. Sean Gilsdorf. [The Medieval World]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 101. Ahmed Ragab. [Communities of Knowledge: Science, Religion, and Culture in Medieval Europe and the Lands of Islam]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 108. Ahmed Ragab. [Bodies, Sexualities, and Medicine in the Medieval Middle East]. Fall 2016.MEDLATIN 107. Julian Yolles. William of Tyre's Crusader History of Jerusalem. Fall 2015.MEDVLSTD 117. Elizabeth Kamali. English Legal History, 600-1600. Spring 2016.MEDVLSTD 119. Charles Donahue. Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval Continental Europe. Spring 2016.SOCWORLD 41. Michael McCormick. Medieval Europe. Fall 2015.SOCWORLD 53. [The Fall of the Roman Empire]. Michael McCormick. Likely Spring 2017.SPANSH 110. Luis Giron Negron. Hispanic Literature: The Middle Ages. Fall 2015.Text, Image, and/or SoundAESTHINT 16. [Openings: The Illuminated Manuscript]. Jeffrey Hamburger. Fall 2016AESTHINT 40. Monuments of Islamic Architecture. Gulru Necipoglu, David J. Roxburgh. Fall 2015.AESTHINT 43. [Visual Culture of the Ottoman Empire Between East and West (15th-17th Centuries)]. Spring 2017AESTHINT 51. [The Cosmos of the Comedy]. Jeffrey Shnapp. Fall 2016.AESTHINT 64. Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales. Nicholas Watson. Fall 2015.ARABIC 130A. Dalia Abo Haggar. Upper-Level Classical Arabic I. Fall 2015.ARABIC 130B. Dalia Abo Haggar. Upper-Level Classical Arabic II. Spring 2016.ARMENST 110A. James Russell. Armenian Literature in Translation: Ancient and Medieval. Fall 2015.CELTIC 101. TBA. [The Hero of Irish Myth and Saga] Likely Spring 2017.CELTIC 109. Finn: The Great Gaelic Hero. Natasha Sumner. Fall 2015CELTIC 114. [Early Irish Historical Tales]. Likely Fall 2016.CELTIC 137. [Celtic Mythology]. Likely Fall 2016.CELTIC 138. Catherine McKenna. The Mabinogion: Stories from Medieval Wales. Spring 2016.CELTIC 184. Tomas O cathasaigh. The Táin. Spring 2016CELTIC 194. Catherine McKenna. [The World of the Celtic Bard]. Fall 2016.CULTBLF 38. Michael Flier. Apocalypse Then! Forging the Culture of Medieval Rus'. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 51. Nicholas Watson. Making the Middle Ages. Spring PLIT 157. Luis Giron Negron. From Type to Self in the Middle Ages. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 41. William Simpson. Arrivals: British Literature 700-1700. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 44. Arrivals: The Invention of English Literature, 700-1700. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 90CL. Daniel Donoghue. Comic Literature through the Middle Ages: Seminar. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 102H. Introduction to Old English: The Literature of Spiritual Warfare. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 103G. Daniel Donoghue. Old English: Working with Manuscripts. Spring 2016.FRENCH 70A. Sylvaine Guyot. Introduction to French Literature I: From the Middle Ages to Eighteenth Century. Spring 2016HAA 122X. Architecture in Early Modern Mediterranean. Gulru Necipoglu. Spring 2016.HAA 143R. The Art of the Court of Constantinople. Ioli Kalavrezou. Fall 2015.HAA 192M. Suzanne Blier. Early African Art (to 1750). Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BT. Sean Gilsdorf. [The Medieval World]. Fall 2016.ITAL 141. Erspamer. Renaissance Epic: War, Identity, Desire. Spring 2016.LATIN BAM. Jan Ziolkowski, Michael Konieczny. Latin Prose Selections (Late Antique and Medieval). Fall 2015.MEDVLSTD 107. Christine Smith. Authority and Invention: Medieval Art and Architecture. Fall 2015.MEDGREEK 115. Sarah Insley. Introduction to Byzantine Greek. Spring 2016.MUSIC 191R. Topics in Medieval and Renaissance Music. Suzannah Clark. Fall 2015.PERSIAN 152. [Literary and Visual Narrative in the Persian Epic Tradition] Fall 2017.PERSIAN 155. “Beginnings”: Prefaces and Exordiums in Classical Persian Literature. Justine Landau. Fall 2015.SCAND 160A. Stephen Mitchell. Old Norse Language, Literature, and Culture: The Viking Legacy. Fall 2015.SCAND 160BR. Stephen Mitchell. Old Norse Language, Literature, and Culture: Mythology. Spring 2016.SPANSH 70A. [Heroes, Rogues, Lovers, Rebels, Saints: Voices from Medieval and Early Modern Spain]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 110. Luis Giron Negron. Hispanic Literature: The Middle Ages. Fall 2015.SPANSH 120. [Medieval Spain in the Poem of the Cid]. Fall 2016.WELSH 225A. [Medieval Welsh Language and Literature]. Catherine McKenna. Likely Fall 2016.WELSH 225B. [Medieval Welsh Poetry]. Catherine McKenna. Likely Spring 2017.Science, Philosophy, and/or ReligionAESTHINT 49. [The Medieval Imagination: Visions, Dreams, and Prophecies]. Fall 2016.CELTIC 151. Catherine McKenna. [Saints of the Celtic World]. Spring 2017.CLS-STDY 131. Sarah Insley. Education and Learning from Antiquity to the Middle Ages. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 27. [Among the Nations: Jewish History in Pagan, Christian and Muslim Context] Spring 2017.CULTBLF 31. [Saints, Heretics, and Atheists: An Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion]. Spring 2017.CULTBLF 38. Michael Flier. Apocalypse Then! Forging the Culture of Medieval Rus'. Spring 2016.FOLKMYTH 106. Stephen Mitchell. [History of Witchcraft and Charm Magic]. Spring 1060. Richard Tuck. Ancient and Medieval Political Philosophy. Fall 2015.HIST 1301. James Hankins. Western Intellectual History II: The Prehistory of Modern Thought. Spring 2016.HIST-LIT 90BT. Sean Gilsdorf. [The Medieval World]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 101. Ahmed Ragab. [Communities of Knowledge: Science, Religion, and Culture in Medieval Europe and the Lands of Islam]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 108. Ahmed Ragab. [Bodies, Sexualities, and Medicine in the Medieval Middle East]. Fall 2016.HISTSCI 113. Ahmed Ragab. [Crusades, Plagues and Hospitals: Medicine and Society in the Islamic Middle Ages] ISLAMCIV 145A. Khaled El-Rouayheb. [Introduction to Islamic Philosophy and Theology: Formative and Classical Periods (8th to 17th C.)] Fall 2016.PHIL 117. [Medieval Philosophy]. Fall 2016.RELIGION 44. Augustine’s Confessions. Charles Stang. Spring 2016.RELIGION 49. Mark Jordan. From Gospel to Allegory: Christian Narratives for Living. Fall 2015.RELIGION 1401. Charles Stang. Early Christian Thought 1: The Greek Tradition. Fall 2015.RELIGION 1402. Charles Stang. Early Christian Thought 2: The Latin Tradition. Spring 2016.RELIGION 1447. [From Saint to Witch: Female Spirituality in the European Middle Ages]. Spring 2017.RELIGION 1471. Christian, Ethics, Persuasion, and Power I. Mark Jordan. Fall 2015.HL90 courses on pre-modern topicsHIST-LIT 90BQ. Early Modern Encounters. Fall 2015.HIST-LIT 90BT. Sean Gilsdorf. [The Medieval World]. Fall 2016.Courses exploring the role or reception of the medieval in the modern worldCELTIC 103. Catherine McKenna. The Celts. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 38. Michael Flier. Apocalypse Then! Forging the Culture of Medieval Rus'. Spring 2016.HIST 88B. Cemal Kafadar. [Medieval History and Cinema]. Spring 2017.Early Modern WorldAESTHINT 21. [Virgil’s Poetry and its Reception]. Richard Thomas. Likely Spring 2017.AESTHINT 37. Gordon Teskey. Introduction to the Bible in the Humanities and the Arts. Fall 2015.AESTHINT 42. Revolution, Reform and Conservatism in Western Culture. James Simpson. Fall 2015.AESTHINT 43. [Visual Culture of the Ottoman Empire Between East and West (15th-17th Centuries)]. Spring 2017AESTHINT 51. [The Cosmos of the Comedy]. Jeffrey Shnapp. Fall 2016.AESTHINT 55. [Shakespeare, The Early Plays]. Fall 2016.AESTHINT 56. [Shakespeare, The Later Plays]. Spring 2017.AESTHINT 64. Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales. Nicholas Watson. Fall 2015.CELTIC 118. [The Gaelic World: 1100 - 1700]. Natasha Sumner. Likely Fall 2016.CELTIC 119. [The Gaelic World: 17th Century to the Present]. Natasha Sumner.CELTIC 188. Natasha Sumner. Scottish Gaelic Poetry. Spring 2016.CELTIC 194. Catherine McKenna. [The World of the Celtic Bard]. Fall PLIT 157. Luis Giron Negron. From Type to Self in the Middle Ages. Fall 2015.CULTBLF 20. [Reason and Faith in the West]. Spring 2017 CULTBLF 27. [Among the Nations: Jewish History in Pagan, Christian and Muslim Context] Spring 2017.CULTBLF 31. [Saints, Heretics, and Atheists: An Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion]. Spring 2017.CULTBLF 38. Michael Flier. Apocalypse Then! Forging the Culture of Medieval Rus'. Spring 2016.CULTBLF 55. [The Enlightenment]. Spring 2017.ENGLISH 41. William Simpson. Arrivals: British Literature 700-1700. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 44. TBA. Arrivals: The Invention of English Literature, 700-1700. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 50A. Stephen Osadetz. Poetry of the Long 18th Century. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 90CL. Daniel Donoghue. Comic Literature through the Middle Ages: Seminar. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 90HB. Marc Shell. Five Shakespeare Plays: Seminar. Spring 2016.ENGLISH 90SR. Leah Whittington. Shakespeare’s Rome: Seminar. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 121CG. Gordon Teskey. Shakespeare After Hamlet. Spring 2016ENGLISH 131. Leah Whittington. John Milton: An Introduction to his Life and to Paradise Lost. Fall 2015.ENGLISH 144M. Stephen Osadetz. The Moral Foundations of Modern Literature. Fall 2015.ETHRSON 37. [Adam & Eve]. Joseph Koerner, Stephen Greenblatt. Likely Spring 2017.FOLKMYTH 106. Stephen Mitchell. [History of Witchcraft and Charm Magic]. Spring 2017.FRENCH 70A. Sylvaine Guyot. Introduction to French Literature I: From the Middle Ages to Eighteenth Century. Spring 2016FRENCH 90W. ["Bad" Women in French Literature] Fall 2016.FRENCH 139B. McDonald. The 18th Century: Ethical Dilemmas Spring 2016.FRENCH 140. Gods and Giants in the French Renaissance Fall 2015.FRENCH 143. Sylvaine Guyot Vision and Violence in 17th Century France Fall 1061. The History of Modern Political Philosophy. Harvey Mansfield. Spring 2016.HAA 15D. Art of the Italian Renaissance. Fall 2015.HAA 122X. Architecture in Early Modern Mediterranean. Gulru Necipoglu. Spring 2016.HAA 150V. Michelangelo: Monuments and Mythmaking. Fall 2015.HAA 151V. Venice. Joseph Connors. Spring 2016.HAA 157K. Joseph Koerner. The Age of Albrecht Durer: Prints and Drawings at Harvard. Fall 2015.HAA 174S. Ewa Lajer-Burcharth. Body Image in French Visual Culture: 18th and 19th Century. Spring 2016.HAA 199N. Thomas Cummins. Between Europe and Asia: Colonial Latin America and the Art of Fusion. Fall 2015HIST 13A. James Hankins. [The European Enlightenment]HIST 1060. [Europe and Its Borders, 950-1550]. Spring 2017.HIST 1155. Michael Tworek. Early Modern Europe, 1450-1789. Spring 2016.HIST 1301. James Hankins. Western Intellectual History II: The Prehistory of Modern Thought. Spring 2016.HIST 1318. Ann Blair. [History of the Book and of Reading]. Spring 2017.HIST 1878A. Cemal Kafadar. [Ottoman State and Society I (1300-1550)] Fall 2017.HIST 1878B. Cemal Kafadar. Ottoman State and Society II (1550-1920). Fall 2015.HIST 1925. Tamar Herzog. [Europe and its Other(s)]. Fall 2016.HIST 1928. Cemal Kafadar. Istanbul: Eventful City & Quotidian Modernity since the Invention of Coffeehouses in the 16th c. Fall 2015.HIST 1935. Dimiter Angelov. [Byzantine Imperialism]. Spring 2018.HIST-LIT 90BQ. Early Modern Encounters. Fall 2015.HISTSCI 118. Jean-Francois Gauvin. [Instruments and the Material Culture of Science in Early Modern Europe, 1500-1800]. Fall 2016HISTSCI 141V. Public Health and Welfare in America and Europe. Alexander More. Fall 2015.HISTSCI 166. Soha Bayoumi. What is Enlightenment?: Science, Religion, and the Making of Modernity. Fall 2015.ITAL 141. Erspamer. Renaissance Epic: War, Identity, Desire. Spring 2016.ITAL 142. Erspamer. The Italian Renaissance: Beauty, Power, Innovation. Fall 2015.MUSIC 191R. Topics in Medieval and Renaissance Music. Suzannah Clark. Fall 2015.PORTUG 123A. [Portuguese Literary Studies I]. Likely Fall 2016.SPANSH 70A. [Heroes, Rogues, Lovers, Rebels, Saints: Voices from Medieval and Early Modern Spain]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 125. [The New Art of Telling Stories in Spanish: Cervantes's Novelas Ejemplares and Other Short Fiction]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 171. [Barcelona and the Catalan Culture]. Fall 2016.SPANSH 179. [Regarding the Pain of Spain]. Fall 2016.SOCWORLD 19. Niall Ferguson. [Western Ascendancy: The Mainsprings of Global Power from 1400 to the Present]. Fall 2016.US-WORLD 12. Jennifer Roberts. [American Encounters: Art, Contact, and Conflict, 1560-1860]. Spring 2017. ................
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