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Note: This is the 2012–2013 edition of the eCalendar. Update the year in your browser's URL bar for the most recent version of this page, or click here to jump to the newest eCalendar.
Note: This is the 2012–2013 edition of the eCalendar. Update the year in your browser's URL bar for the most recent version of this page, or click here to jump to the newest eCalendar.
Enrolment in courses above the 200 level is by permission of the Department only.
By arrangement with the Department and subject to University approval, transfer credits will be accepted from Department-approved exchange/immersion programs.
The required courses are designed to give students a basic working knowledge of Russian. Students who can demonstrate to the Department that they have acquired the equivalent competence elsewhere will replace these credits with courses chosen from the complementary course lists.
Russian (Arts) : Reading, grammar, translation, oral practice.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Kadyrbekova, Zaure (Fall)
Fall
Russian (Arts) : Russian Language; continuation of RUSS 210.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Zdun, Izabela (Winter)
Winter
Prerequisite: RUSS 210 or equivalent
Russian (Arts) : Advanced practical Russian grammar and composition. May include reading a variety of texts and media from classical to contemporary (literature, newspapers, TV, film, etc.).
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Kadyrbekova, Zaure (Fall)
Russian (Arts) : Advanced practical Russian grammar and composition. May include reading a variety of texts and media from classical to contemporary (literature, newspapers, TV, film, etc.).
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Kadyrbekova, Zaure (Winter)
Winter
Prerequisite: RUSS 400 or equivalent
Given in Russian
18 credits selected from two lists.
12 credits from:
Russian (Arts) : Exploration of cultural archetypes defining continuity and change from Peter the Great to the present; the Russian national identity, double-faith, Western and Slovophile influences, Mother Russia, superfluous men and the Eternal Feminine, anarchism, the avant-garde, Stalinism. Recurring themes traced in literature, art, film, music, pop culture and the applied arts.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Beraha, Laura A (Fall)
Fall
Given in English
Restriction: Permission of the instructor
Russian (Arts) : The Russian twentieth-century literary dynamic up to the watershed of Stalin's death (1953). Carving out cultural territory against ideological polemics, revolutionary versus traditional values, the explosion of avant-garde experimentation under mounting critical conformism as reflected in major works and authors (Mayakovsky, Babel, Bulgakov, Platonov and others).
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Fall or Winter
Prerequisite: None, but some background in Russian 20C history is helpful
Given in English
Russian (Arts) : Rediscovering the Russian literary heritage, both traditional and avant-garde, after Stalin's death (1953). The Thaw, Soviet beatniks, Solzhenitsyn-style dissidents against cultural iconoclasts, the challenge and decline of perestroika, raising the literary Iron Curtain to include women writers, émigrés, Western influence and the angst of pluralism.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Winter
Prerequisite: None, but some background in Russian 20C history is helpful
Given in English
Russian (Arts) : Russian literature from Pushkin and Gogol to early Dostoevsky. More than a sequence of representative works featuring superfluous men, fallen women and other literary types, it is a coherent tradition developing in a dialogue with itself and its historical and cultural context.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Berman, Anna (Fall)
Fall
Given in English
Russian (Arts) : Russian literature in transition between the Age of the Novel and Symbolism. From Turgenev's and Tolstoy's psychological realism to Dostoevsky's fantastic realism; from Chekhov's breaking genre rules of the short story and the drama to Bely's experimental prose.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Parts, Lyudmila (Winter)
Winter
Given in English
Russian (Arts) : For native speakers of Russian who have not had full academic instruction in the language. Focus on grammatical structure and syntax, the formalities of written Russian and appreciation of the language's stylistic diversity. Multi- media approach including excerpts from literary works, current newspapers, television news broadcasts, films and cartoons.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Russian (Arts) : For native speakers of Russian who have not had full academic instruction in the language. Focus on complex grammatical structures, syntax, and stylistically differentiated uses of vocabulary in written and spoken Russian. Multi-media approach including excerpts from literary works, current newspapers, Internet sources, and films.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Winter
Given in Russian
Prerequisites: RUSS 300 or permission of the instructor
Restrictions: Not open to students who have taken Russ 210,211,215,310,311 and 316
Russian (Arts) : Texts of the 19th and 20th Century Russian literature and culture will be read and discussed in Russian.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Berman, Anna (Winter)
Winter
Prerequisite: RUSS 215 or equivalent, or permission of the department
The course will be conducted in Russian.
Russian (Arts) : A general introduction to Russian prose, poetry and drama in the 19th Century. Selected texts will be read in the original and discussed.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Berman, Anna (Winter)
Winter
Prerequisite: RUSS 327 or permission of the Department.
The course will be conducted to some extent in Russian
Russian (Arts) : Selected texts of the 20th Century will be discussed.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Parts, Lyudmila (Fall)
Fall
Course will be given in English.
Russian (Arts) : Selected texts will be read in the original and discussed.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Fall
Prerequisite: RUSS 330 or equivalent.
The course will be given mainly in Russian
6 credits from:
Russian (Arts) : Masterpieces of the Russian stage in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; the emergence of a uniquely Russian dramatic sensitivity against prevailing European trends; the literary word in a public, political and/or avant-garde forum.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Fall
Prerequisite: Permission of the Department
Restriction: Not open to students who have taken RUSS 410,411.
Russian (Arts) : Exploration of a significant author, trend, theme or theory in modern Russian culture, including but not limited to the interface between literary works, the graphic and performing arts, ideology and national identity.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Beraha, Laura A (Winter)
Fall
Russian (Arts) : Novels, films, art, architecture, pageantry, rhetoric and routine of the Stalinist 1930s-40s, including socialist realism as an aesthetic doctrine, utopian blueprint, target of parody, amalgam of a submerged avant-garde and state-controlled pop culture, precursor of the postmodernist simulacrum, self-proclaimed international style and/or uniquely Russian 20th-century project.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Beraha, Laura A (Fall)
Winter
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Restriction: Not open to students who have taken RUSS 510
Given in English
Russian (Arts) : A century of upheaval; the tug of war between iconoclasts (the avant-garde, the dissidents, the postmodernists) and the traditionalists (neo-realism, socialist realism). Major trends, polemics, authors and milestones; literature as the fulcrum of change and the conscience of the age.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Fall
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Restriction: Not open to students who have taken RUSS 451
Given in Russian
Russian (Arts) : The development of the Russian novel before Turgenev. Reading texts will be chosen from the prose works of Karamzin, Bestuzhev, Pushkin, Lermontov, and Gogol.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Russian (Arts) : Examination of the major trends and concerns of the first third of the nineteenth century; the flowering of poetry and prose inspired by Pushkin and his contemporaries.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Russian (Arts) : Supervised reading under the direction of a member of staff.
Terms: Fall 2012
Instructors: Beraha, Laura A (Fall)
Fall
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Russian (Arts) : Supervised research under the direction of a member of staff.
Terms: Fall 2012, Winter 2013
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Fall or Winter
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Russian (Arts) : Examination of a significant author, trend, theme or theory in modern Russian culture, including but not limited to the interface between literary works, the graphic and performing arts, ideology and national identity.
Terms: Winter 2013
Instructors: Parts, Lyudmila (Winter)
Winter
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Russian (Arts) : Focus on a critical theme, author or work, as determined by the current research interests of faculty and visiting faculty.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Given in English
Prerequisite: Permission of Department
Russian (Arts) : Representation of and the discourse on woman by women in Russian literature and cultural thought from medieval times to the present. Topics include the age of Empresses, the salon, Decembrist wives; the Eternal Feminine, fallen woman, new woman, the rise of women's prose in post-Soviet Russia.
Terms: This course is not scheduled for the 2012-2013 academic year.
Instructors: There are no professors associated with this course for the 2012-2013 academic year.
* Note: Students must submit project proposals to their departmental adviser by March 15th or November 15th of the preceding term for individual reading and independent research courses.