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RUSSIAN COURSES MAJOR IN RUSSIAN Dartmouth College has over a dozen professors whose teaching and research relates to Russia and the countries of Eastern Europe. Within the Russian Department you will find the professors who teach Russian language, as well as the courses on literature, linguistics and culture. Students can choose from among two types of Russian majors. The Russian Area Studies program is also supported by the courses taught in a range of other departments. Other faculty members involved in the Area Studies Program conduct research in related disciplines: Russian history, the politics of the Soviet Union, the geography of Russia and the former Soviet Republics, and the sociology of the peoples of Eastern Europe. Why Study Russian? Whether one's interest are in science, international studies, literature and culture, business, or simply language itself, the study of Russian provides both practical utility and the statisfaction of attaining skill that not many possess.
Advanced Language and Senior Seminar
Literature
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| 1, 2, 3. Introductory Russian An introduction to Russian as a spoken and written
language. None of these serves in partial satisfaction of the Distributive
or World Culture Requirements. |
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This course examines the popular culture of Russia in the 19th and 20th centuries: songs, jokes, box-office movie hits, detective and science fiction, posters, sports, and television. We will investigate the production, consumption, and interpretation of popular culture and what entertainment and leisure activities--and the manipulation of popular forms by political elites--reveals about Russian society.
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| 13. Slavic Folklore: Witches, Vampires,
and Firebirds In this course, we will discuss a variety of genres from Russian folklore. As we move from the familiar genre of the riddle to the often mystifying beliefs and rituals of the ancient Slavs and then to the fairy tale, comfortingly familiar from childhood, we will learn to not only recognize the richness and density of texts that may initially seem uncomplicated but also to discern the patterns and meanings behind the apparently exotic narratives and behaviors. Through this process, we will gain knowledge of the theoretical highlights of folkloristics, an academic discipline that strives to understand the remarkable similarity of stories told by people around the world yet, at the same time, to account for the no less fascinating ethnic, cultural, and historical particulars of the tales, songs, jokes, and customs of different people. By thoroughly studying one of the world’s richest oral traditions, Slavic folk life and folk lore, we will acquire the tools and techniques necessary for collecting, documenting, and interpreting folklore -- which is perhaps the most truly international of all arts. Click here to see the course syllabus Taught in English. Open to all classes. |
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| 14. Faces of Totalitarianism: A History of a Nation through a History of a Medium (Identical to Film Studies 42) Over the centuries, literature and the arts have served as a focal piont for many of the political and social issues that have affected Russians. Each offering of this course will deal with the manner in which the creative arts shed light on a matter of great political and social significance in Russian history. Students may elect the course more than once providing that the topic is not the same as in a previous election. Taught in English.* Open to all classes. Dist:ART; WCult: EU. Satisfies the Interdisciplinary requirement. Scherr |
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| 15. Introduction to Russian Civilization Examination of Russia as a cultural, national and
historical entity part of and yet apart from both Europe and Asia. Russia
is a continental power of vast proportions, whose traditions, character,
national myths, and forms of political organization often seem a mirror-image
to those of the United States. After a brief survey of Russian history,
the course will examine certain determinants of Russian culture, including
Christianity, multinationalism, and the status of Russian civilization
on the periphery of Europe. The course will then deal with the art, music
and popular literature of Russia, and conclude by examining certain contemporary
issues, including the complex coexistence of Russian and 'Soviet' culture.
Click here to see the course syllabus |
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| 19. Understanding the Russians: The
Role of Language and Culture in Communications. With the approach of the next millennium and its promise
of global communications networks, we are becoming more and more aware
of our world as a 'global village' and of the implications this has, both
linguistic and cultural, for communication across national and ethnic
boundaries. This course will examine those areas in the study of culture
and of language pragmatics with relevance to such communication between
Americans and Russians. Readings and class discussions will focus on such
phenomena as 'culture' and 'language' shock; the linguistics and cultural
evidence for differences in the two countries' views of such phenomena
as time and space, as well as for such concepts as public and private
'spheres,' friendship, or of what constitutes a conversation. A variety
of sources from literary works, TV documentaries and film, to travel handbooks
and the conduct of negotiations will be examined for the cultural and
language script they subsume in the two countries. |
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| 21. Russian Civilization: Study Abroad This course includes activities associated with the
rich cultural life of St. Petersburg: lectures on Russian art, architecture,
music, ballet, cinema, theater and literature. Also included are visits
to the city's many museums, such as the Hermitage and the Russian Museum,
and attendance at live performances at such places as the Mariinsky Theater
in Petersburg, or the Bolshoi in Moscow. Credit for this course is awarded
to students who have successfully completed the Dartmouth LSA+
in Russia. |
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| 22. The Russian Language: Study Abroad This course represents the course in grammar and other
written work done by the students at the University of St. Petersburg.
Credit for this course is awarded to students who have successfully completed
the LSA+ in Russia. |
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| 23. The Russian Language: Study Abroad This course represents the work done in phonetics classes
and in the conversation classes at the University of St. Petersburg. Credit
for this course is awarded to students who have successfully completed
the LSA+ in Russia. |
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27, 28, 29. Intermediate Russian This sequence of courses begins with a systematic review
of Russian grammar, where special emphasis is placed on such difficult
areas as participles, aspects and verbs of motion. As the sequence progresses,
an effort is made to build vocabulary through extensive reading and to
increase fluency through a series of oral and written reports. |
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31. Russian Literature of the Golden Age in Translation
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| 32. Modern Russian Literature in Translation This course examines the impact which the turbulent
history of twentieth-century Russia had on literature and on writers struggling
to defend their integrity. The century began with Russian Modernism, out
of which came experimental masterpeices in all the arts. This movement
was terminated in 1930 by Stalin, who imposed harsh controls under the
aegis of Socialist Realism, which dominated the arts until Stalin's death
in 1953. Since then, Russian writers have gradually liberated themselves
from the demands of the censors to produce a literature as articulate
and exciting as the great novels of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky. Readings include
such novels as Zamyatin's We, Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita,
Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago and Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the
Life of Ivan Denisovich. |
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| 35. Dostoevsky and the Problem of Evil
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| 36. Tolstoy and the Problem of Death
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38. Special Topics in Russian Literature Taught in English.* Open to all classes. Dist: LIT; WCult: EU. |
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40. Reading in Russian
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| 41. Advanced Conversation and Composition This course, aimed primarily at students returning
from foreign study in Russia, concentrates on improving conversation skills,
increasing vocabulary, and strengthening knowledge of grammatical constructs.
There will be intensive work in both oral and written Russian. |
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| 42. Advanced Grammar This course aims to increase and perfect the student's
abilities in all areas of Russian language: conversation, composition
and reading. In addition to reviewing difficult grammatical points, the
course will introduce the student to certain subtleties of language usage
accessible only to advanced students. |
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| 45. Special Topics in Russian Language The course is designed as an advanced Russian language
course and is organized around a particular topic in Russian grammar.
Typical topics include the Russian verb, Russian word formation, or word
order and information structure in Russian. Selected readings will serve
as the basis for discussions, exercises, and compositions. |
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| 62. Structure of Modern Russian This course will introduce the student to the necessary
methodology for analyzing the linguistic structure of Russian, and will
examine the theoretical foundations of such analysis. The course will
focus on a particular topic in Russian linguistics, such as morphology,
aspect or word order. A student may elect the course more than once provided
that the topic is not the same as in a previous election. |
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| 71. Topics in Russian Literature In this seminar students read works of prose and poetry
in Russian, study methods of critical analysis, and practice translation.
Each offering of the course will be based on a particular theme or period.
Students may take the course more than once provided that the topic is
not the same as in a previous election. |
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| 86. Senior Seminar The content of this seminar will vary from year to
year, with topics drawn from the areas of linguistics, language acquisition,
literature, and culture. |
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| 54. The
Russian Empire (History Department) After a brief review of Kievan and Muscovite antecedents,
the course surveys the history of Russia from the Time of Troubles to
the beginning of the twentieth century. Special emphasis will be placed
on the role of the Russian autocrat, on the institution of serfdom, and
the development of the 19th-century intelligentsia. Intended to precede,
but not prerequisite to, History 55. |
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| 55. The Russian Russian Revolutions
and the New Regime (History Department) Following an introductory survey of the social and
political problems confronting Imperial Russia, the course concentrates
on the causes and processes underlying the Revolutions of 1905 and 1917,
the development of Marxism-Leninism, and the eventual establishment and
consolidation of the new Soviet Regime. |
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| 56. Introduction to Soviet History (History Department) An examination of the major developments and problems
in Soviet history with particular attention to the consequences of the
revolution, Leninism, the civil war and its impact, politics and society
during the Stalinist period, the Khrushchev era, Brezhnev years of 'stagnation',
and Gorbachev's perestroika. |
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| 95.4 (Colloquium) The Mongols (History Department) Primarily centered on the empire of the Great Khans,
the Ilkhans in Persia and the Yua dynasty in China, this course analyzes
the phenomenon of the Mongolian conquests and state building from the
perspective of world economic, cultural, and political development in
the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Satisfies the non-Western
Requirement. |
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| 40. (Section 1) Democratic Transitions. (Government Department) This course is intended to introduce students to the
general issues that enter into discussions of democratization. What de
we mean when we say that a country "is a democracy?" What does
"democratization" involve? What values compete with democratic
values? What shapes the results of the competition? Since its inception,
political science has grappled with some version of each of these questions.
Since the 1970s, and especially since the end of the Cold War, questions
about democracy and democratization have provided a common point of focus
for students of comparative politics across different area specializations. |
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| 42. Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics
and Governments (Government Department) An introduction to politics and government among the
successor states of the U.S.S.R. Topics covered include the formation
and structure of the former Soviet Union, and the subsequent transformation
of the Soviet system. Special emphasis will be placed on the legacy of
Soviet political institutions for the Russian and other post-Soviet republics,
as well as on the structure of these emerging polities. |
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| 52. Russian Foreign Policy (Government) This course is a survey of Russia's relations with
the world, and particularly with Europe and the United States, from the
Revolution through the Soviet period to the present. Special emphasis
will be placed on the politics of the national security process in the
USSR and Russia. Although intended as an overview of Russian foreign policy,
the course gives primary attention to three areas: the origins and nature
of the Soviet-American competition; Russia's political and military relationship
with the West; and the future development of Russian-American relations. |
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| 35. Russia and the Former Soviet
Republics (Geography Department) The disintegration of the former Soviet Union and its
replacement by a new system of independent states will be the focus of
this course. Issues to be addressed include the following: Why did the
Soviet Union collapse so suddenly? What kind of political-economic systems
are likely to replace the former Union? And what role will these systems
play in the new world order? In the process of exploring these issues,
particular attention will be paid to the structure of the former Soviet
political-economic system, to Gorbachev's policies of perestroika
and glasnost, to relations between Russians and ethnic minorities,
to industrial and resource development activities, and to the state of
the environment. |
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| 37 (D.F.S.P.). The Czech Republic
in the New Europe (Geography Department) This course seeks to develop an understanding of the
physical morphology and cultural landscape of the contemporary Czech Republic.
Special attention will be given to the dialectic of transnational integration
and decentralist reaction common in Europe today. |
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