Continuation of HEBREW 230. Further work in Hebrew conversation, listening, reading, and writing. Introduction to Hebrew word-formation. Adapted short stories, videotapes. Language lab.
This course examines social policies and attitudes toward crime and criminals in German culture in the 19th and 20th century through a variety of cultural and historical documents. Conducted in English.
An introduction to German cinema, treating Weimar Expressionism, Nazi film and anti-Nazi exile cinema, film in post-WWII East and West Germany, and German film since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Conducted in English. (Gen.Ed. AT)
This course explores the causes and consequences of what was arguably the most horrific event in all of history. Topics include both the long-term origins of the Holocaust in European racism and anti-Semitism and the more immediate origins in the dynamics of the Nazi state and the war against the Soviet Union.
This course explores the causes and consequences of what was arguably the most horrific event in all of history. Topics include both the long-term origins of the Holocaust in European racism and anti-Semitism and the more immediate origins in the dynamics of the Nazi state and the war against the Soviet Union.
This course explores the causes and consequences of what was arguably the most horrific event in all of history. Topics include both the long-term origins of the Holocaust in European racism and anti-Semitism and the more immediate origins in the dynamics of the Nazi state and the war against the Soviet Union.
Conducted in English This course presents a linguistic history of the German language from its Indo-European roots through the contemporary language of the reunited Germany. In German 584 students will analyze the significant developments in the phonology, morphology, and vocabulary of German as it evolved from its beginnings in the 2nd millennium BCE to the present.
This course explores the causes and consequences of what was arguably the most horrific event in all of history. Topics include both the long-term origins of the Holocaust in European racism and anti-Semitism and the more immediate origins in the dynamics of the Nazi state and the war against the Soviet Union.