2021-2022 Undergraduate Course Catalog 
    
    May 03, 2024  
2021-2022 Undergraduate Course Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

College of Arts and Sciences Courses


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College of Arts and Sciences

Courses

Geography

  • GEO 318 - Tropical Environments

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Tropical ecosystems and their human dimensions, with an emphasis on the Neotropics. Distribution, structure, and function of natural systems; human-environment interactions; management and significance.
  • GEO 319 - Cold Environments

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    An exploration of environmental processes, interactions, and environmental problems in the cold regions of the world, emphasizing the Arctic.
    PREREQ: GEO 155  AND (GEO 103  OR GEO 171  OR GEO 272 )
  • GEO 321 - Latin American Development: Spatial Aspects

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Crosslisted with: LAS 321 
    Spatial dimensions of development process in Latin America since the 1930s in a variety of contexts and at several scales. Variety of spatial models that may be applied.
  • GEO 325 - Colonialism in Latin America

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Every semester
    Processes of geographical change in Latin America from the sixteenth to the early twentieth century. Reconstruction of geographies of Latin America at critical periods.
  • GEO 326 - The Geography of Climate and Weather

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Atmospheric dynamics emphasizing spatial distributions of energy and moisture at several scales. Weather phenomena, regional climates, and human-induced perturbations and modifications of climate systems. Land-use change, climate change and urban climatologies.
    PREREQ: GEO 155  OR EAR 101
  • GEO 327 - Geography of Coastal Environments

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Natural environmental processes in the coastal zone. Emphasis on coastal transformation due to climate variability and change, estuarine pollution and habitat destruction, human modification; and subsequent associated societal hazards and implications.
    PREREQ: GEO 155
  • GEO 331 - The European Union

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Geo- political foundations, economic and political developments, European community institutions, integration and external relations.
  • GEO 336 - Climate Justice

    Climate Justice
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
     Critical geographical inquiry into climate change’s uneven and inequitable impacts globally, investigating various climate injustices and their interconnections across social, political, economic, ecological, and ethical dimensions. Engages with interdisciplinary approaches and concepts of climate justice.
  • GEO 340 - Geography of Oil

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    The topic of oil used to explore the concerns of human geography with society, space, and the natural environment. By learning about oil we will cover themes and concepts important to environmental, political, cultural, economic and urban geography.
  • GEO 347 - Art and Environment in American Culture Since 1800

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Crosslisted with: HOA 482
    Visual arts and environmental concern in the U.S. from the early national period to the present. Emphasizing diversity of artists and forms, the changing cultural constructions of nature, and tracing an ecological tradition in art.
  • GEO 353 - Geographies of Environmental Justice

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    The relationship between environmental quality and social justice. Spatial aspects of unequal distribution of environmental risks and benefits. Case studies drawn from urban rural examples in both the United States and the Third World.
  • GEO 354 - American Environmental History and Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: HST 384
    Relationship between Americans and the natural environment from the colonial period to the present. Ecological imperialism, technology and nature, resource-management conflicts, urban environments, development of conservation and environmentalism.
  • GEO 356 - Environmental Ideas and Policy

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Fundamental ideas relating to underlying evolution and implementation of environmental policy in the USA.
  • GEO 358 - Animals and Society

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Relations between people and animals employing approaches from the social sciences and humanities. Topics include history and geography of animals in America, managing wildlife, zoos, animals in popular culture, pets and companion animals.
  • GEO 360 - Sustainability Science and Policy

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: PSC 360
    Examines sustainability science, communications, and public policy through the lens of climate-what is known about climate change and impacts, what motivates public understanding, and what actions through mitigation and adaptation make progress toward sustainability.
  • GEO 361 - Global Economic Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    World patterns of production and consumption in the context of regional resources and population problems. Impact of technological change on geographic organization of economic systems. Concepts in economic geography and their policy implications.
  • GEO 362 - The European City

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Historical development of Europe through its cities. Growth and form of European cities; how they are governed and planned.
  • GEO 363 - Cities of North America

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Urban images and sense of place. Urbanization and urban growth. Urban functions and form. Social patterns, change, and transformations of urban landscapes. Housing, neighborhood, and land-use change.
  • GEO 367 - Gender in a Globalizing World

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: ANT 367 , WGS 367 
    Economic and cultural processes of globalization as they affect different groups of men, women, and households; including gender and work, development and environmental change, and redefinitions of masculinity and femininity across the globe.
  • GEO 372 - Political Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Geographic analysis of the political process at a variety of spatial scales - international, intra-national, and urban. Origins of territorial organization and conflicts over access to and use of space.
  • GEO 374 - Environment and Development in the Global South

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Critical analyses of international development in theory and practice, especially as it relates to environmental change in complex ways in the Global South. Topics include modernization, participation, community, gender, sustainability, agriculture, trade, water, climate change.
  • GEO 381 - Cartographic Design

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    An introduction to map design, which includes clarifying communication goals, finding solutions, using graphics to promote an understanding of landscapes and spatial patterns, and exploring aesthetics, conceptual thinking, geometries, and ethics of cartographic representation.
  • GEO 383 - Geographic Information Systems

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3-4 credit(s) Every semester
    Double Numbered with: GEO 683
    Basic concepts in spatial data handling. Algorithms and data structures for Geographic Information Systems (GIS). Demonstration of power, potential, and limitations of GIS. Graduate students register for three credits. Undergraduate students register for four credits with required laboratory work.
  • GEO 386 - Quantitative Geographic Analysis

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 686
    Descriptive and inferential statistics for use geo-referenced data, spatial autocorrelation, and geostatistics. Geographic examples. Weekly labs. Individualized advanced work and term project.
    PREREQ: MAT 121  OR MAT 183  OR MAT 221  OR STT 101 
  • GEO 388 - Geographic Information and Society

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 688
    Effects of geographic information technologies on governments, communities, and individuals. Mapping as an information industry, a political process, a surveillance technology, and a communication medium. Copyright, access, hazard management, national defense, public participation, and privacy.
  • GEO 396 - European Integration

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: PSC 396
    Focuses on the origins, nature, and likely future course of the European Union. More generally, examines five long-range challenges facing contemporary Europe: Demographic decline; globalization; Civic Integration; Great Power Rivalry; and Sustainable Development. Please note that PSC 396 and PSC 405 cannot both be taken for credit.
  • GEO 400 - Selected Topics

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-6 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Exploration of a topic (to be determined) not covered by the standard curriculum but of interest to faculty and students in a particular semester.
    Repeatable
  • GEO 405 - Conservation and Management Protected Areas: South Africa-OTS

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s)
    Crosslisted with: ANT 405 
    Taught in South Africa through the Organization for Tropical Studies program. Analyze management of wildlife and natural resources within ecological, political, social, historical, and economic context of South Africa.
  • GEO 415 - Food: A Critical Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Critical examination of the social, political and environmental aspects of contemporary agri-food systems. Topics include industrial and alternative agriculture, fisheries, food policy, hunger, health issues and food justice. Involves field-based and mapping assignments.
  • GEO 420 - Labor Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    This course reviews the development of labor geography and the restructuring of work and employment in both advanced and developing capitalist nations, focusing on workers and their collective agency to improve conditions through organizing, within the workplace and in broader community struggles.
  • GEO 422 - Water: Environment, Society and Politics

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: GEO 622
    Critical geographical analyses of inter-connected and cross-scalar role of water in environment, society, politics and economy globally. Investigates various water-society relationships, water governance, policies, crises, struggles, controversies, conflicts, and water justice, in theory and practice. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 423 - Urban Environmental History and Political Ecology

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    History of how residents and policy makers have transformed the urban environment over the past two centuries. Topics include coping with disease, drinking water, air and water pollution, urban parks, and cities and climate change.
  • GEO 425 - South Africa

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    The geography, history, and societal complexity of South Africa. Its current place in the world, its parallels and lessons for the USA.
  • GEO 426 - Environmental Change in the Anthropocene

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: GEO 626
    Investigation of the roots of the Anthropocene as a concept and a geologic epoch; examination of human drivers of and interactions with global environmental change. Additional work required of graduate students.
    PREREQ: GEO 103 OR GEO 155 OR GEO 215
  • GEO 428 - Auld Reekie: Scotland and the Road to London

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Field studies seminar examining popular and elite cultural forms that organize life in Britain. Emphasizes interaction with local culture environments to explore contemporary identities and how and why identity and attitude are formed. Offered in London only.
  • GEO 430 - Energy, History and Society

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Explores the role of energy resources in shaping historical, social, and political change.
  • GEO 433 - Negotiating Identities Across Europe’s Borders

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: ANT 303 HST 433 IRP 333 PSC 433 WRT 433  
    Through comparative study in six countries and their urban centers, students will explore some of the most rapidly changing regions in Europe with attention paid to issues of identity, memory and history of Central Europe. Offered only through Syracuse Abroad.
  • GEO 434 - Pursuing Sustainability Policy

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Crosslisted with: PSC 434  
    An introduction to sustainability policy-examining the complex systems approach to sustainable development, comparing conventional approaches and analytical tools for environmental policy, and drawing from case studies and theoretical materials.
  • GEO 435 - The Global Middle East

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Survey of political, cultural, and nature-society geographies of the Middle East; focus on the region’s global connections through geopolitics, culture, urban life, and environmental themes.
  • GEO 440 - Race and Space

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Critical geographic study of race and racism as formative aspects of sociocultural, economic and political processes. Focus on race/racism’s operations across scales, with particular attention to gender, class, culture, colonialism, citizenship, power, and resistance.
  • GEO 450 - Geographies of Migration and Mobility

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    This course examines human migration and its sociocultural and political impacts on sending and receiving communities. Focused on the mobility of people, ideas, and commodities, it investigates migration’s role in producing and transforming human geographies.
  • GEO 455 - Biogeography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 655
    Exploration of the environmental factors that influence the distribution of organisms. Emphasis is on plant distributions and dynamics, and consideration includes both natural and human factors. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 459 - Pyrogeography: Wildfire in a Changing World

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Comprehensive treatment of the geography of wildfire. Topics include fire behavior, approaches to firefighting, ecological and human impacts of wildfire, geographic and historical variation in fire regimes, and the impacts of climate change on wildfire. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 463 - Geography of Homelessness

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Examines the roots and consequences of homelessness in contemporary cities. Focus on United States and globalization of American-style homelessness. Explores role of space and spatial relationships in shaping homeless people’s lives and homeless policy.
  • GEO 470 - Experience Credit

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-6 credit(s) Irregularly
    Participation in a discipline- or subject-related experience. Students must be evaluated by written or oral reports or an examination. Limited to those in good academic standing.
    Repeatable
  • GEO 476 - Advanced GIS Analysis and Applications

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Double Numbered with: GEO 676
    This course introduces students to (i) concepts and methodologies of 3D GIS (Geographic Information System) analysis; (ii) typical applications of 3D analysis in urban design and planning; and (iii) basic interface and operations in ArcGIS pro. Additional work required for graduate students. 
    PREREQ: GEO 383 or equivalent
  • GEO 478 - Spatial Storytelling

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: GEO 678
    Techniques and impacts of spatial storytelling from a geohumanities perspective. Ways of conceptualizing space, time, and realities. Study and practice with maps, texts, images, video, and other visualization techniques. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 479 - Introduction to Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Research & Applications

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Crosslisted with: EAR 479
    Double Numbered with: GEO 679
    Introduction to UAV operations, including FAA airspace, platforms and sensors; flight planning, data collection, image processing, and data analysis for geospatial mapping. Applications and societal impacts, including legal, safety, privacy, ethical issues.  Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 482 - Environmental Remote Sensing

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Double Numbered with: GEO 682
    Principles and environmental applications of remote sensing. Uses and limitations of remotely-sensed data; typical image processing operations and analyses; laboratory work and individual term project using remotely-sensed imagery.
  • GEO 484 - GIS for Urban Environments

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Double Numbered with: GEO 684
    Advanced GIS methods for the study of urban environments and systems. Emphasis on practical and applied uses of GIS, project management and spatial analysis. Laboratory exercises, case studies, and course projects use real world data. Additional work required of graduate students.
    PREREQ: GEO 383
  • GEO 485 - Community Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Double Numbered with: GEO 685
    Introduces community-based and participatory research methods and participatory GIS, including origins, ethics and challenges. Examines how and why grassroots organizations use GIS and geospatial technologies. Students conduct local research projects. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 489 - Practicum in Community Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-3 credit(s) Every semester
    Double Numbered with: GEO 689
    Supervised 135 hour internship in community-based participatory action research. Students work across disciplines and collaborate with community-based organizations to conduct geographic research on contemporary community issues. Additional work required of graduate students. Permission to enroll required.
    Repeatable 3 time(s), 12 credits maximum
  • GEO 490 - Independent Study

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-6 credit(s) Irregularly
    In-depth exploration of a problem or problems. Individual independent study upon a plan submitted by the student. Admission by consent of supervising instructor or instructors and the department.
    Repeatable
  • GEO 491 - Senior Seminar in Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Research and presentations in a selected field of geography. Topic announced each time offered. Primarily for advanced geography majors and minors.
    PREREQ: GEO 103  AND GEO 155  AND GEO 171 
    Repeatable
  • GEO 492 - Senior Thesis Seminar

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Seminar for senior geography majors graduating with distinction. Individualized and small-group mentoring and directed research.
  • GEO 499 - Honors Capstone Project

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Completion of an Honors Capstone Project under the supervision of a faculty member.
    Repeatable 2 time(s), 3 credits maximum
  • GEO 500 - Topics in Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-6 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    In-depth studies of selected topics.
    Repeatable
  • GEO 537 - Environmental Policy in a Development Context

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Every semester
    Crosslisted with: LAS 537 
    Offered only in Santiago. Examines historical/intellectual/ material processes that transformed nature into natural resources to be exploited; ways global political process has guided global responses to environmental problems; Chilean environmental policy over the last 20 years.
  • GEO 561 - Global Economic Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Globalization, world economic processes, international development, and policy issues; emphasizing geographical perspectives.
  • GEO 563 - The Urban Condition

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Contemporary cities. Economic growth and decline. Social polarization. Construction of the built environment. Case studies from around the world.
  • GEO 564 - Urban Historical Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Even Academic Yr e.g. 2004-5
    Cities in western civilization through classical, medieval, mercantile, and industrial eras to 1945. Historical geographic meanings of urbanism; social construction of the built environment; and relationships between power, social justice, and urban spatial form.
  • GEO 572 - Landscape Interpretation in Cultural Geography

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Contemporary theories and methods. Traditional, historical-materialist, postmodernism, and post-structuralist approaches to landscape. Additional work required of graduate students.
  • GEO 573 - The Geography of Capital

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    In-depth reading of Marx’s Capital to understand: (a) the relationship between political economy and the geographical landscape; (b) the formative role of “Capital” in contemporary geographic theory.
  • GEO 576 - Gender, Place, and Space

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Crosslisted with: WGS 576 
    Contemporary debates in feminist geography on the gendered construction of space and the spatial construction of gender.
  • GEO 580 - Research on Cartographic Techniques

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-12 credit(s) Irregularly
    Reading and special work.
    Repeatable
  • GEO 583 - Environmental Geographical Information Science

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Data types, collection techniques, and processing strategies in natural resource survey. Monitoring and environmental sciences. Basic concepts of GIS data structures and algorithms. Data quality issues. User requirements, management aspects, and implementation experience.
    PREREQ: GEO 383  OR 683
  • GEO 595 - Geography and the Internet

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    An introduction to the structure and functions of the Internet and its impact on spatial relations from the global to the local. A detailed examination of the World Wide Web and practical training in web page design.

German

  • GER 101 - German I

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Introductory proficiency-based course which prepares students to understand, speak, read, and write in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in German. No prior experience or admission by placement testing. Students cannot enroll in GER 101 after earning credit for GER 102, GER 201, GER 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • GER 102 - German II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which develops communicative abilities in speaking, listening, reading, and writing in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in German. Students cannot enroll in GER 102 after earning credit for GER 201, GER 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: GER 101  OR REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • GER 201 - German III

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which refines and expands previously acquired linguistic skills in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in German. Students cannot enroll in GER 201 after earning credit for GER 202 or higher.
    PREREQ: GER 102  OR REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • GER 202 - German IV

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which focuses on reading, discussing, and analyzing authentic texts as a basis for the expression and interpretation of meaning. Conducted in German. Students cannot enroll in GER 202 after earning credit for a course higher than GER 202.
    PREREQ: GER 201  OR REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • GER 306 - German Composition and Conversation

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Provides increasing facility in idiomatic use of spoken and written language.
  • GER 340 - German Fairy Tales: Past and Present

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    The course explores fairy tales from the Brothers Grimm to contemporary forms of the genre in the original language. Focus on definition, stylistics, origins, development and politics of German fairy tales.
    Repeatable 1 time(s), 6 credits maximum
  • GER 351 - German Short Stories

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Analyzes a variety of German short stories of the 20th century by major German writers such as Wolfgang Borchert, Heinrich Böll, Bertolt Brecht, Thomas Mann, Anna Seghers and others.
    PREREQ: GER 202
  • GER 356 - German Culture and Civilization

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Area survey of social and cultural phenomena: literature, philosophy, music, and art. Practice in speaking, composition, and aural comprehension.
  • GER 357 - Contemporary German Culture and Civilization

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Survey and analysis of developments in the arts and literatures and in the political, educational, and social systems in the G.D.R. and the F.R.G. since 1945.
  • GER 361 - Berlin: City - Literature - History

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    The course explores the representation of Berlin in German literary texts from the early 20th century to the present. Focus on major historical shifts: Weimar Republic, Third Reich, Divided Berlin, Fall of the Berlin Wall.
  • GER 365 - Nineteenth-Century Prose

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    The rise of realism as manifested particularly in the years 1830-1880. Lectures, discussion, short papers. Offered alternate years.
  • GER 366 - Nineteenth-Century Drama

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Drama and dramatic theory between 1830 and 1880. Leading works by Büchner, Hebbel, Wagner, Grillparzer. Lectures, discussion, short papers. Offered alternate years.
  • GER 367 - German Lyrics and Ballads

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Offered alternate years.
  • GER 376 - Classicism and Romanticism

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Literary works and criticism of later Goethe and Schiller. The writings of such Romantic authors as the Schlegels, Tieck, Novalis, E.T.A. Hoffmann. Lectures, discussion, short papers. Offered alternate years.
  • GER 377 - Literature from 1880 to the Close of World War II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Important writers of prose, drama, and lyric between 1880 and 1945. Schnitzler, Hofmannsthal, Kafka, Hesse, Mann, Brecht. Lectures, discussion, short papers. Offered alternate years.
  • GER 378 - German Literature Since World War II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Important poets, dramatists, and prose writers after 1945. Includes Böll, Grass, Frisch, Durrenmatt. Lectures, discussion, short papers. Offered alternate years.
  • GER 379 - German and Austrian Cinema

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Irregularly
    Explores and analyzes early and modern German and Austrian films. Conducted in German. The content of the course varies from semester to semester. Lecture, discussion for each film
    Repeatable 1 time(s), 6 credits maximum
  • GER 580 - International Course

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-12 credit(s) Irregularly
    Offered through SUAbroad by educational institution outside the United States. Student registers for the course at the foreign institution and is graded according to that institution’s practice. SUAbroad works with the S.U. academic department to assign the appropriate course level, title, and grade for the student’s transcript.
    Repeatable

Greek

  • GRE 101 - Ancient Greek I

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Introductory course which prepares students to acquire a reading knowledge of Classical Attic Greek, focusing on morphology and syntax, and its role in the culture and literature of ancient Greek society. No prior experience or admission by placement testing. Students cannot enroll in GRE 101 after earning credit for GRE 102, GRE 201, GRE 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • GRE 102 - Ancient Greek II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing course with emphasis on morphology and syntax. Introduction to examples of unsimplified Ancient Greek prose of the classical period, read and interpreted within the cultural context of ancient Greek society. Students cannot enroll in GRE 102 after earning credit for GRE 201, GRE 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: GRE 101 
  • GRE 201 - Ancient Greek III

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing course with review of morphology and syntax and further study of idioms, rhetorical figures, and syntactic peculiarities. Reading and study of representative prose authors. Students cannot enroll in GRE 201 after earning credit for a course higher than GRE 201.
  • GRE 310 - Greek Prose Authors

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Readings from selected ancient Greek prose authors. Review of grammar and syntax.
    PREREQ: GRE 102 
    Repeatable 2 time(s), 9 credits maximum
  • GRE 320 - Readings from Greek Poets

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s)
    Readings from selected ancient Greek poets. Review of grammar and syntax. Greek metrics and prosody.
    Repeatable 2 time(s), 9 credits maximum
  • GRE 410 - Advanced Greek Prose

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Readings from selected Greek prose authors.
    PREREQ: GRE 310  OR GRE 320 
  • GRE 420 - Advanced Greek Poetry

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Readings from selected Greek poets.
    PREREQ: GRE 310  OR GRE 320 
  • GRE 500 - Greek Prose Authors

    College of Arts and Sciences
    1-3 credit(s) Upon sufficient interest
    Readings from selected Greek prose authors.
    Repeatable

Hebrew

  • HEB 101 - Hebrew I

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Introductory proficiency-based course which prepares students to understand, speak, read, and write in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in Hebrew. No prior experience or admission by placement testing. Students cannot enroll in HEB 101 after earning credit for HEB 102, HEB 201, HEB 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: REQUIRED PLACEMENT EXAM SCORE
  • HEB 102 - Hebrew II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which develops communicative abilities in speaking, listening, reading, and writing in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in Hebrew. Students cannot enroll in HEB 102 after earning credit for HEB 201, HEB 202, or higher.
    PREREQ: HEB 101 
  • HEB 201 - Hebrew III

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which refines and expands previously acquired linguistic skills in culturally authentic contexts. Activities are conducted in Hebrew. Students cannot enroll in HEB 201 after earning credit for HEB 202 or higher.
    PREREQ: HEB 102 
  • HEB 202 - Hebrew IV

    College of Arts and Sciences
    4 credit(s) At least 1x fall or spring
    Continuing proficiency-based course which further refines and expands linguistic skills in culturally authentic contexts. Incorporates reading, discussing, and analyzing texts as a basis for the expression and interpretation of meaning. Conducted in Hebrew. Students cannot enroll in HEB 202 after earning credit for a course higher than HEB 202.
    PREREQ: HEB 201 
  • HEB 301 - Advanced Hebrew I

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Crosslisted with: JSP 301 
    Hebrew literature in the original, ranging from the Bible to contemporary fiction, including 19th-century works such as Hasidic tales and Enlightenment satires.
    PREREQ: HEB 202 
    Repeatable 1 time(s), 6 credits maximum
  • HEB 303 - Advanced Hebrew II

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Crosslisted with: JSP 303 
    Continuation of HEB/JSP 301, using more advanced texts
  • HEB 401 - Hebrew Literature in the Original

    College of Arts and Sciences
    3 credit(s) Odd academic yr e.g. 2007-8
    Crosslisted with: JSP 401 
    The course retraces the history of Hebrew writing in Europe and Palestine before 1948
    PREREQ: HEB 301 
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