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Office of the University Registrar

2005-06 Undergraduate Catalog

Course Descriptions

College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Catalan Language

CAT 3180 Introduction to Catalan 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: completion of second year in another romance language, or permission of instructor.
Students acquire a working knowledge of the Catalan language and the aspects of Catalan culture and society. No previous experience with Catalan required, although knowledge of another Romance language (through intermediate level) is required.

CAT 3182 Introduction to Catalan 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: CAT 3180, or permission of instructor.
To expand the linguistic and cultural knowledge acquired in CAT 3180 and to further develop an understanding of Catalan art, culture and society. Emphasis on speaking, listening, reading and writing.

CAT 4956 Overseas Studies in Catalan
Credits: 3; Prereq: permission of section coordinator or undergraduate adviser.
This revolving topics course provides a mechanism by which course work taken abroad as part of an approved student program can be recorded on the transcript and counted toward graduation at UF.

Foreign Language and Literatures–Film

FOL 2905 Individual Work in Foreign Languages
Credits: 1 to 3; Prereq: permission of department.

French Language and Literature

FRE 1115 Elementary French: Review and Progress
Credits: 3.
For students who have previous experience in French but who are not yet prepared for advanced elementary work in the language. FRE 1115 confirms overall skill in the language, to prepare students for FRE 1131.

FRE 1130 Beginning French 1
Credits: 5.
This course and its sequel, FRE 1131, constitute the basic sequence in French for the development of overall skill in the language. Open only to students with little or no background in French.

FRE 1131 Beginning French 2
Credits: 5; Prereq: FRE 1115 or FRE 1130 with a grade of C or better, or S, or the equivalent, as proven by placement test score.

FRE 1116 Preparation for Intermediate French
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 1115, FRE 1130, or the equivalent.
Alternative to FRE 1131, for students who have had four years of high school French or equivalent, but whose placement scores are not high enough for FRE 2200. This course combines the material of FRE 1130 and 1131 in one semester. Course meets three times per week. FRE 2200 follows this course in the sequence.

FRE 2200 Intermediate French 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 1131, or the equivalent; Coreq: FRE 2240.
Devoted to grammar review and compositions, this course and its sequel, 2201, develop reading and writing skills in French.

FRE 2201 Intermediate French 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2200, or the equivalent; Coreq: FRE 2241.
Continued grammar review. Emphasizes practice in reading and developing vocabulary. Selected readings in French and Francophone fiction.

FRE 2240 Intermediate French Conversation 1
Credits: 2; Coreq: FRE 2200.
Develops conversational skills.

FRE 2241 Intermediate French Conversation 2
Credits: 2; Coreq: FRE 2201.
Develops conversational skills. (H, I)

FRE 2274 Intensive French Abroad
Credits: 6; Prereq: FRE 1131 with a grade of C or better, or S, or the equivalent as proven by placement test score.
An immersion language course integrating the experience, observations and impressions of students living with a French family abroad (site to be announced annually). Emphasis is placed on the development of language proficiency and cultural awareness. Class meets 12 hours a week. The primary purpose of this course is to enhance speaking, reading, writing proficiency and the ability to communicate with native speakers.

FRE 3070 Accelerated Introduction to French
Credits: 5; Prereq: ITA 2201, POR 2201 or SPN 2201, or the equivalent.
An intensive course for students who have completed intermediate level of study in another Romance language. Assumes no previous study of French and offers a complete four skill (listening, speaking, reading and writing) introduction to the language. Satisfies CLAS language requirement; not for major or minor credit.

FRE 3224 Applied French
Credits: 1 to 5; can be repeated up to 5 credits. Prereq: FRE 2240, or permission of instructor; 3 credits can count for major or minor.
French-language reading and discussion section designed to accompany and complement courses of diverse content offered in other departments. Readings and discussion in this course will be in French to allow the students to develop specific vocabulary and fluency related to the content of the companion course, as well as to provide them with an international perspective on the issues of the main course. (I)

FRE 3300 Grammar and Composition
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201 and FRE 2241, or the equivalent. First course of major sequence.
Systematic examination of French grammar. Practice of writing at several levels (summary of texts, descriptions, compositions). Textual analysis of literary and journalistic materials.

FRE 3320 Composition and Stylistics
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3300, or the equivalent.
Aims to develop advanced writing skills through the stylistic study of literary and journalistic texts. Writing assignments will focus on the development of a variety of skills, including summaries, literary analyses, argumentative essays, etc. Aspects of French grammar will be highlighted, along with analytical terms and key vocabulary from texts.

FRE 3410 Advanced French Conversation 1
Credits: 2; Prereq: FRE 2201.
This course seeks to refine and develop students' oral and comprehension skills. Students will acquire a more precise vocabulary relating to different domains. New vocabulary ranging from the colloquial to the most refined of discourses will allow students to recognize and use words and expressions in the proper register; course material allows students to move from discussions about themselves, to situations they are likely to encounter in daily life abroad, through interviewing techniques and professional interaction in the target language.

FRE 3440 Commercial French
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
An introduction to business practices in France with particular emphasis on active use of business vocabulary and salient cultural differences. Major topics covered include written business communication, financial institutions, trade and advertising. (I, S)

FRE 3442 Contemporary French Commerce
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3440, or permission of instructor.
Continues the acquisition of business language, with special attention paid to technical readings, marketing, case studies and the role of France in the European Union. Emphasis is also placed on oral communication skills and contrasting U.S. and French business culture.

FRE 3500 France Through the Ages
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
This course situates France in space and time, studies the principal historical events that have formed and transformed the nation state, its "mentality" and its cultural production. Special attention is given to the significant political, intellectual, religious, social and artistic currents that have marked France and its image from ancient times to the present. (H, I)

FRE 3502 Francophone Cultures
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
This course informs students about the cultures of countries or regions where French is used either as the (or one of the) official language(s) or, in a less official capacity, by a segment of the population. Study of some of the historical, conceptual, practical and problematic aspects of Francophonie. In the second part of the semester, the course concentrates on one specific area (for instance, the Caribbean, or West Africa, or Quebec, etc., on a rotating basis). Literary samples included. (H, I)

FRE 3564 Contemporary French Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
An overview of contemporary France. May include the study of such topics as politics, economics, education and the arts as well as ideas of national and ethnic identity and France's place in the EU. (H, I).

FRE 3780L Corrective Phonetics
Credits: 2; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
A survey of the units of speech cast in practical terms and organized by classes of sounds with particular emphasis on rhythm, vowels, nasalization, diphthongs and the complex phenomena that occur at word transitions in French. The course is taught in French, in an audio laboratory, with the instructor as monitor, and with a manual designed for individualized instruction.

FRE 4411 French for Proficiency
Credits: 2; Prereq: FRE 3410, or the equivalent.
Oral practice with emphasis on the structure of oral communication and oral presentation. Students learn to utilize organizational frames, highlight transitions and otherwise make their oral reports clear and accessible. Speech acts and alternative options in communication are given ample attention. Especially useful to persons planning to use French in a variety of professions.

FRE 4420 Writing in French
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320, or permission of instructor.
Advanced writing course that provides a systematic study (or review) of French syntax, vocabulary and style with the help of drill sessions. The course also may include some training in literary translation. A number of quizzes and written compositions.

FRE 4780 Introduction to French Phonetics and Phonology
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3780L or LIN 3010.
An introduction to French phonological processes, providing explanatory evidence for the production of speech sounds, for the classification of sounds, for their interrelationship with one another (gliding, nasalization, assimilation), for morphological and syllable structure, for specifically French phenomena such as liaison, elision, final consonant drop, schwa drop, and for the relationship of morphology to phonology, especially in the verb system.

FRE 4850 Introduction to the Structure of French
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320; LIN 3010 recommended.
Explores the French language as a system of communication and mental representation. This course analyzes the morphological, syntactic and semantic aspects of contemporary French, and emphasizes the historical, psychological and sociological dimension of linguistic investigation.

FRE 4905 Individual Work
Credits: 1 to 4; Prereq: permission of department.

FRE 4906 Honors Thesis
Credits: 3; Prereq: 3.5 minimum GPA.
Directed research leading to essay of approximately 30 to 40 pages in length. Topic must be approved by thesis director, registration for two semesters highly recommended. Not a substitute for required French major course.

FRE 4930 Revolving Topics in French Studies
Credits: 1 to 4; can be repeated up to 6 credits. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.

FRT 2460 French Texts and Contexts
Credits: 3.
Selected readings in English translation of major works of French literature. Designed for students with no knowledge of French; not for major credit. (H, I) (WR)

FRT 2930 Special Topics in French Literature and Culture
Credits: 3.
Rotating topics in French literature and culture, taught in English.

FRT 3520 French Cinema
Credits: 4.
A critical, theoretical and historical study of French cinema. Topics vary from year to year and will be announced. Past courses introduced the study of key directors, 1930s cinema, Nostalgia and Masculinity in 1980s films, World War II cinema, Colonial and Postcolonial cinema. The class is open to French majors and non-majors and is taught in English. Topics may vary. Not for major credit. May be repeated for up to 8 credits. (H, I)

FRT 3561 Women in French Literature and/or Cinema
Credits: 3 to 4.
An introduction to the rich heritage of feminist traditions in France and Francophone countries through an exploration of women writers and thinkers (filmmakers, theorists), primarily of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Selected topics include L'écriture féminine or "Writing the Feminine;" autobiographical writing by French and Francophone women; women in French cinema; representations of women in French film and literature. Students will read, discuss and analyze a broad spectrum of primary and secondary sources from a feminist viewpoint. (H, I, S)

FRT 4956 Overseas Studies in French Literature and Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: permission of section coordinator or undergraduate advisor.
A mechanism by which course work taken abroad as part of an approved program can be recorded on the transcript and counted toward graduation. Rotating topic. May be repeated for up to 18 credits.

FRW 3100 Introduction to French Literature 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
This course provides an overview of French Medieval, Renaissance, and Classical literature and culture, and acquaints students with major literary, intellectual and historical trends through the study of representative works from each period. Special emphasis is placed on close reading of texts in order to train students to read critically and to familiarize them with major authors, genres and their interpretation. (H, I)

FRW 3101 Introduction to French Literature 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or the equivalent.
Selected readings of outstanding authors of prose fiction, poetry, and theatre from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. Provides the historical context for major literary movements and authors and trains students to read and write critically. The course is generally organized thematically. (H, I)

FRW 3282 Modern French Prose of Provencal Inspiration
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2200, or permission of instructor.
Through a selection of texts by authors such as: Alphonse Daudet, Marcel Pagnol, Jean Giono and Henri Bosco, students will receive a progressive initiation to the regional literature. Site visits will allow students to better understand the literary inspiration behind Provencal literature.

FRW 3311 Theater in Avignon: An Initiation into 17th Century French Drama
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 2201, or equivalent.
This course is an in-depth study of selected plays by Corneille, Moliere and Racine. Scripts serve as points of departure to explore classical French theater and the flowering of drama in early modern France. Classroom discussion will also place theater as a discursive practice into context; troupes, rivalries, social and political issues and aesthetic conflicts under the reigns of Louis XIII and the Sun King. Plays performed during the Festival d'Avignon will also be part of the course.

FRW 3930 Rotating Topics in French and Francophone Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 or permission of instructor.
Selected Topics. May be repeated for up to 6 credits.

FRW 4212 Readings in 17th Century French Prose
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
Selected readings with an emphasis on the history of ideas, the moralistes, and culture in the early modern period. Texts include Descartes, Cyrano de Bergerac, Pascal, Fontenelle, La Rochefoucauld, La Fayette, La Bruyère and Sévigné.

FRW 4273 Readings in 18th Century French Literature
Credits: 3; rotating topics. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
Rotating topics exploring the fiction, theatre, or intellectual prose of the Enlightenment. Special emphasis placed on the cultural climate and productions of the Ancient Régime.

FRW 4281 Readings in the 20th Century French Novel
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course examines representative novels in 20th-century French literature from Proust to the New Novel and beyond. Course emphasis may include, but is not restricted to, study of genre, narrative techniques, literary modernism and major themes. The course combines an historical approach with close textual readings. Authors frequently studied include Proust, Gide, Malraux, Céline, Camus, Sartre, Robbe-Grillet, Butor, Sarraute and Duras.

FRW 4310 Seventeenth-Century French Drama
Credits: 3.
Theory and practice of dramaturgy in classical period as reflected in plays of Corneille, Molière, and Racine. Close textual analysis to disengage aesthetic and ideological problematics posed by each play.

FRW 4324 Readings in 20th Century French Theatre
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
A study of selected plays (e.g. by Jarry, Claudel, Giraudoux, Camus, Anouilh, Ghelderode, Beckett, Ionesco, Genet, etc.), dramatic techniques and the evolution of modern French theatre as a genre.

FRW 4350 Modern French Poetry from Baudelaire to the present
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course combines an historical approach with close readings of poetic texts. It also introduces students to a number of theoretical and critical writings. Although poetic texts taken from the traditional canon are paid due attention, students are also presented with the works of less frequently-taught poets.

FRW 4391 Concepts of French Cinema
Credits: 4; Prereq: FRE 3300.
A critical and historical study of the representation of gender and ethnicity in French cinema.

FRW 4410 Readings in Early French Medieval Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
Old French texts from the tenth through the thirteenth centuries. The student will acquire a reading ability in old French through the study of works and authors such as: La Chanson de Roland, La Prise d'Orange, Chrétien de Troyes, Le Roman de la Rose, Ruteboeuf, Thibaut de Champagne, Adam de la Halle, Le Lancelot en Prose and Joinville.

FRW 4480 Readings in 20th Century French Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
Study of representative works in their historical contexts. Selections may include but are not restricted to Proust, Gide, Malraux, Camus, Duras in prose fiction; Claudel, Giraudoux, Anouilh, Beckett, Genet in theatre; and Apollinaire, Péguy, Valéry, Ponge, Char in poetry.

FRW 4532 Survey of French Romantic Literature
Credits: 3; rotating topics. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course traces the development and the main tenets of nineteenth-century French Romanticism. The class concentrates on the various themes and genres (including poetry, theater, the novel, etc.) exploited by "romantic" artists as well as the socio-economic and cultural matrices which fostered the movement. Specific attention may be devoted (but not limited) to: the relationship between literature and the visual arts, constructions of gendered, cultural and artistic subjectivities, exoticism (spatial, temporal and mystical voyages), representations of Paris and French society, etc. Beginning with pre-romantic authors, the course moves on to writers such as Lamartine, Stendhal, Hugo, Vigny, Balzac, Sand, Musset, Desbordes-Valmore, Nerval and Baudelaire.

FRW 4552 Introduction to Realism and Naturalism
Credits: 3; rotating topics. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course introduces students to the development and the main tenets of latter nineteenth-century literary, artistic and cultural production. Over the semester students may concentrate on the various themes and genres (including poetry, theatre, the novel, etc.) exploited by writers of the period, as well as the socio-economic and cultural matrices which fostered the plethora of movements arising between 1850 and the fin de siècle. Specific attention may be devoted (but is not limited) to: definitions of Realism, Naturalism and Symbolism; representations of "modern life" and the industrialization of the literary market; the infiltration of scientific and mechanistic thought into literary production (poetry or prose); representations of women and the female body, of Paris and Parisian society.

FRW 4762 Readings in Francophone Literatures and Cultures (excluding the Caribbean and Sub-Saharan Africa)
Credits: 3; can be repeated with change in content up to 9 credits. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
Rotating topics in the literatures and cultures of the Francophone world, including North America (Quebec), Europe (Belgium, Switzerland and regional France), Asia (Vietnam, Indian Ocean), and the Middle East.

FRW 4770 African and Caribbean Literatures
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course explores the production of Sub-Saharan African writers from its inception to the present. The course examines several representative works and figures, genres (epics, poetry, drama, and novels), discourses and critics that inform the production. Particular attention is paid to historical, political and cultural issues that figure in the development and orientation of African literature in French. Occasional inclusion of Caribbean literature, for purpose of comparison.

FRW 4822 Introduction to French Critical Theory
Credits: 3; Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or equivalent.
Review and comparative analysis of approaches to literature from Romanticism to Deconstructionism. The act of reading and writing is examined through the eyes of Sainte-Beuve, Taine, Lanson, Bachelard, the Geneva School, Ricoeur, Bataille, Blanchot, Barthes, Foucault, Genette, Lacan, Kristeva, Todorov, Derrida and others.

FRW 4932 Senior Seminar in French Literature
Credits: 3; maximum 6 credits; rotating topics. Prereq: FRE 3320 and FRW 3100 or FRW 3101, or the equivalent.
This course is for French majors and minors of their senior year. Topics rotate given research interests or field of specialization of the teaching faculty. Recent topics have included La Poésie du Voyage; L'Ecriture Féminine; Le Discontinu chez La Rochefoucauld et La Bruyére; Charles Baudelaire: poète/critique de la vie moderne; Qu'est-ce que la Révolte?

Haitian Creole Language

HAI 1130 Beginning Haitian Creole 1
Credits: 5; Prereq: bilingual students are encouraged to speak to the instructor as they may be able to enter directly into HAI 1131 to satisfy their foreign language requirement.
This course and its sequel, HAI 1131, constitute the basic sequence for the development of overall skills in the language. Conversational approach, with essentials of grammar.

HAI 1131 Beginning Haitian Creole 2
Credits: 5; Prereq: HAI 1130, or equivalent.
Second part of the basic Haitian Creole sequence.

HAI 2200 Intermediate Haitian Creole 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: HAI 1131, or equivalent.
This course concentrates on conversation, readings and introduction to Haitian culture through music and film.

HAI 2201 Intermediate Haitian Creole 2
Credits: 3.
Continued concentration on conversation with added emphasis on reading, as well as perspectives on issues related to the Haitian way of living.

HAI 3930 Haitian Culture and Society
Credits: 3.
Central aspects of history, politics, environment, and development are addressed, including attention to gender relations, medicine, education, work, race and class. No knowledge of Haitian Creole is required.

HAI 4905 Individual Work
Credits: 1 to 4; Prereq: permission of department.

HAT 3564 Haitian Culture and Society
Credits: 3.
Central aspects of history, politics, environment and development are addressed, including attention to gender relations, medicine, education, work, race and class. No knowledge of Haitian Creole is required. (H, I, S)

Italian Language and Literature

ITA 1130 Beginning Italian 1
Credits: 5.
This course and its sequel, ITA 1131, constitute the basic sequence in Italian. Emphasis on the development of broad competence in the language. Oral-aural approach ensures competence in the four skills.

ITA 1131 Beginning Italian 2
Credits: 5; Prereq: ITA 1130 with a grade of C or better, or S, or the equivalent.

ITA 2203 Intermediate Italian 1
Credits: 4; Prereq: ITA 1131, or the equivalent.
This course is designed to enhance the student's knowledge of Italian in all four skills: listening, reading, speaking and writing. The goal is to create communicative competence that will allow students to advance to third year and to benefit from their visits to Italy.

ITA 2204 Intermediate Italian 2
Credits: 4; Prereq: ITA 2203, or the equivalent.
Completes second year sequence with emphasis on composition, literature and communication skills. (H, I)

ITA 3070 Accelerated Introduction to Italian
Credits: 5; Prereq: fourth semester of another romance language, or permission of instructor.
An intensive course designed primarily for speakers or students with knowledge of another Romance Language or strong linguistic abilities in another foreign language. Assumes no prior study of Italian and offers a complete four skill (listening, speaking, reading and writing) introduction to the language.

ITA 3224 Italian Enhancement Section
Credits: 1 to 5; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or permission of instructor. Not for major credit.
Italian-language reading and discussion to accompany and complement courses in other departments. Readings and discussion will be in Italian to allow students to develop specific vocabulary and fluency related to the content of the companion course and to provide an international perspective on the issues of the main course. (I)

ITA 3411 Advanced Italian Conversation 1
Credits: 1.

ITA 3420 Grammar and Composition 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or equivalent.
Intensive language course designed to develop students' mastery of grammatical principles, increase their vocabulary and enhance their writing and compositional skills.

ITA 3500 Italian Civilization
Credits: 3; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or the equivalent.
Varied topics class which introduces Italian civilization in historical, artistic and literary context. Students can take the course over without duplicating the content of the class. Maximum three times. (H, I)

ITA 3564 Contemporary Italian Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or the equivalent.
Varied topics class focusing on modern Italy through literature, art and mass media, current events. Students can take the course over without duplicating the content of the class. Maximum three times. (H, I)

ITA 4905 Individual Work
Credits: 1 to 4; Prereq: permission of program coordinator.

ITT 2100 Masterpieces of Italian Literature 1
Credits: 3; not for major credit.
Major Italian authors from the Middle Ages through the Renaissance. Designed especially for students with no knowledge of Italian. Qualifies as general education course. (H, I)

ITT 2530 Italian Literature and Film
Credits: 3; not for major credit.
Study of modern Italian narrative and its adaptation to film by major Italian directors. (H, I)

ITT 3431 Italy and Pilgrimages
Credits: 3.
Through lectures, readings and discussions in English, this course considers the continuing presence of Rome, or other Italian cities as both metaphoric and actual focal points of Italian artistic and literary sensibilities. (H, I)

ITT 3521 Italian Cinema
Credits: 4; can be repeated up to 8 credits.
A critical and historical study of Italian film and directors. Topics may vary. (H, I)

ITT 3930 Special Topics in Italian Literature and Culture
Credits: 3.
Selected topics in Italian literature civilization and culture, including crossover influence of media. Can focus on one Epoch's influence on another.

ITT 4956 Overseas Studies in Italian Literature and Culture
Credits: 1 to 18; Prereq: permission of section coordinator or undergraduate adviser.
This revolving topics course provides a mechanism by which course work taken abroad as part of an approved study program can be recorded on the transcript and counted toward graduation at UF.

ITW 3100 Introduction to Italian Literature 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or the equivalent.
The origins of early Italian literature, its central themes and the cultural factors that influenced its development. The course develops an ability to read in the Italian language and to read critically. (H)

ITW 3101 Introduction to Italian Literature 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: ITA 2201 or ITA 2204 or the equivalent.
The major Italian authors from the Renaissance through the twentieth century. (H)

Portuguese Language and Literature

POR 1130 Beginning Portuguese 1
Credits: 5.
The sequence POR 1130, 1131, is a basic course in Portuguese stressing the language as spoken in Brazil.

POR 1131 Beginning Portuguese 2
Credits: 5; Prereq: POR 1130 with a grade of C or better, or S, or the equivalent.

POR 3010 Introduction to Portuguese and Brazil (accelerated)
Credits: 5; Prereq: FRE 3300, SPN 3300 or equivalent.
This course is designed for those with knowledge of another Romance Language (usually Spanish) either through study or home experience. The class is a complete introduction to the language, assuming that students have no previous study of Portuguese. It also satisfies the CLAS and Journalism foreign-language requirement in one semester. (H, I)

POR 3224 Applied Portuguese
Credits: 1 to 5; can be repeated for up to 5 credits; 3 credits can count for major or minor. Prereq: permission of instructor.
Portuguese-language reading and discussion section designed to accompany and complement courses of diverse content offered in other departments. Readings and discussion in this course will be in Portuguese to allow students to develop specific vocabulary and fluency related to the content of the companion course, as well as to provide them with an international perspective on the issues of the main course. (I)

POR 3242 Oral and Written Practice
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 1131, POR 3010, or the equivalent.
This intermediate course, emphasizing all four skills, consists of printed and electronic readings, writing of essays and note taking, oral discussion and student presentations, lab activities, and grammar review.

POR 3243 Composition and Conversation
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 1131, POR 3010, or the equivalent.
An intermediate course with continued expansion of vocabulary, review of essential grammar and structures and development of reading, writing and speaking skills.

POR 3500 Luso-Brazilian Civilization
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 3242, or the equivalent, or permission of instructor.
Introduction to the central historical events, political institutions, intellectual currents and artistic movements in the foundation and development of Portugal, Brazil and Lusophone Africa. Preview of topics studied in other literature and culture courses. (H, I)

POR 3502 Brazilian Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 3242 or permission of instructor.
Introduction to the study of modern cultural forms, including folk pageantry, performance arts, literature, film, and television.

POR 4420 Advanced Composition and Syntax
Credits: 3; Prereq: intermediate proficiency in Portuguese (POR 3243, or the equivalent).
A language course that distinguishes Portuguese from related Romance tongues, the more difficult aspects of grammar and structure, specialized vocabulary, different stylistic registers and application of these to translation and original composition.

POR 4956 Overseas Study in Portuguese Language and Brazilian Culture
Credits: 3 to 6; Prereq: approval of study-abroad program coordinator or undergraduate coordinator.
This revolving topics course provides a mechanism by which course work taken abroad on a UF-Sponsored Program can be recorded on the transcript and counted toward graduation.

POW 3100 Introduction to Literature in Portuguese
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 3243, or the equivalent, or permission of instructor.
A survey covering literature written in Portuguese by major authors from Portugal, Brazil and Lusophone Africa. Primary emphasis falls on narrative and comparisons of developments in Portugal and the former colonies. (H, I)

POW 3130 Introduction to Brazilian Literature 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 3243, or the equivalent, or permission of instructor.
A survey of literary production in Brazil 1500-1900, including the literature of Discovery, colonial manifestations, and the major works of Romanticism, Realism and Parnassianism. (H, I)

POW 3131 Introduction to Brazilian Literature 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: POR 3243, or the equivalent, or permission of program coordinator.
A survey of twentieth-century literary movements: premodernism, modernism and regionalism in prose and poetry, with an emphasis on the fiction of contemporary writers. (H, I)

POW 4380 Contemporary Brazilian Poetry
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
A study of lyric—both literary and musical—in the second half of the twentieth century, including experimental trends, political verse, popular music and youth movements.

POW 4382 Brazilian Drama
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
A survey of the milestones of Brazilian theatre with an emphasis on the plays of the twentieth century. In addition to the plays themselves, the course will present the theoretical framework and political context of theatrical production in Brazil. (H, I)

POW 4450 The Modernist Movement in Brazilian Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
Readings in fiction, poetry and essay of the nationalist and avant-garde decades of the 1920s and 1930s. Discussions are designed to situate Brazilian letters in diverse national and international contexts. Literary works are complemented by considerations of concurrent production in music and the fine arts.

POW 4454 Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
This course traces the major literary trends of the nineteenth century primarily in fiction (Romanticism, Realism and Naturalism), along with poetry and essay, to familiarize students with representative works of each literary movement and genre. (H, I)

POW 4480 Contemporary Brazilian Narrative
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
Rotating topics may include studies in genre (e.g., the short story, the novel), theme (readings in science fiction) or author (Rubem Fonseca, Clarice Lispector, Guimarães Rosa). (H, I)

POW 4700 Machado de Assis and His Contemporaries
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Brazilian literature.
Machado de Assis, the nineteenth-century master of Brazilian letters, produced writings of every literary genre, including literary criticism, poetry and drama, in addition to his ingenious short stories and novels. This course surveys the varied work of Machado and compares his novels to those of his contemporaries. (H, I)

POW 4905 Individual Work
Credits: 1 to 3; Prereq: permission of instructor.

POW 4930 Readings in Luso-Brazilian Literature and Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: introductory knowledge of Luso-Brazilian literature.
Diverse subjects in Brazilian and Portuguese studies fall under this rubric, including the Brazilian Northeast, the Afro-Brazilian world, the culture of dictatorship and popular music. In addition to readings of original texts, courses may incorporate sound recordings and film.

PRT 2490 Modern Brazilian Literature in Translation
Credits: 3.
Readings of outstanding Brazilian novels, short stories, poetry and plays. Designed especially for students with little or no knowledge of Portuguese who desire to study Brazilian life, character and culture as portrayed in the writings of some of Brazil's greatest authors. (H, I) (WR)

PRT 3930 Special Topics in Lusophone Culture and Civilization
Credits: 3.
Selected variable topics in Brazilian, Portuguese or Luso-African culture and civilization, including globalism, regionalism, song literature, film and video, negritude, women's movements and Amazonian discourse.

Spanish Language and Literature

SPN 1115 Elementary Spanish: Review and Progress
Credits: 3; Prereq: refer to placement section. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Alternative to SPN 1130, for students who have some previous experience in Spanish. This course covers the material of SPN 1130. Course meets three times per week. SPN 1131 follows this course in the sequence.

SPN 1116 Preparation for Intermediate Spanish
Credits: 3; Prereq: refer to placement section. Not open to bilingual speakers.
Alternative to SPN 1131, for students who have had four years of high school Spanish or equivalent, but whose placement scores are not high enough for SPN 2200. This course combines the material of SPN 1130 and 1131 in one semester. Course meets three times per week. SPN 2200 follows this course in the sequence.

SPN 1130 Beginning Spanish 1
Credits: 5; Prereq: refer to placement section. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
This is the first course in the basic Spanish language sequence. Focus is on developing basic communication skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening. Course meets five times per week.

SPN 1131 Beginning Spanish 2
Credits: 5; Prereq: SPN 1115 or SPN 1130 with a grade of C or better, or S, or the equivalent as proven by placement test score. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
This is the second course in the basic Spanish language sequence. Focus is on developing basic communication skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening. Course meets five times per week.

SPN 2032 Spanish for Medical Personnel
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2201 or SPN 2340, or the equivalent, or permission of instructor.
Designed to develop the practical medical vocabulary and conversational skills needed in a clinical situation.

SPN 2200 Intermediate Spanish 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 1116 or SPN 1131, or the equivalent placement score. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
This course is the first of the intermediate Spanish language sequence. Focus is on developing intermediate skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening. The primary goals are to build communicative competence and enhance social and cultural awareness of the Spanish-speaking world. The course is taught entirely in Spanish.

SPN 2201 Intermediate Spanish 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2200, or the equivalent placement score. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
This course is the second of the intermediate Spanish language sequence. Focus is on continued development of intermediate skills in reading, writing, speaking and listening. The primary goals are to further enhance communicative competence and social and cultural awareness. The course is taught entirely in Spanish.

SPN 2240 Intensive Aural and Reading Comprehension
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2201, the equivalent placement score, or equivalent course work as approved by undergraduate coordinator. Can be taken concurrently with SPN 3300. Not open to bilingual speakers; bilinguals should take SPN 2340.
Preparation for 3000 level courses. The course concentrates on developing the ability to understand both oral and written Spanish. This course is required of all majors and minors who are not bilinguals unless they initially placed above this level.

SPN 2270 Intermediate Spanish Abroad
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2201, or equivalent placement scores on SATII, IB or AP tests and permission of the undergraduate coordinator.
This is considered the equivalent of SPN 2240, the obligatory first course in the Spanish major and minor for non-bilinguals. The objectives of this course are to prepare the student to participate in upper division Spanish courses, to promote cultural awareness and to develop an active command of the language by means of intensive interaction with the people and current issues and events of the Spanish-speaking host city and surrounding area.

SPN 2340 Introduction to Reading and Writing for Bilingual Speakers
Credits: 3; Prereq: placement test or department- administered test for bilingual speakers.
An intermediate-level course for bilingual speakers of Spanish who have achieved a certain speaking and listening ability outside of the classroom, but who have had little or no formal exposure to the language (e.g., one or two years of high school Spanish). Emphasizes practice in reading and developing vocabulary. Introduction to grammar and orthographic rules. Selected literary readings from Hispanic/ Latino and Spanish or Spanish-American writers. This course is required of all majors and minors who are bilinguals unless they initially place above this level.

SPN 2442 Intensive Intermediate Spanish for Business
Credits: 5; Prereq: SPN 1131, or the equivalent.
This is an intensive intermediate-level course for the student interested in learning Spanish in the context of the business world. Introduces students to the vocabulary and business practices of the Hispanic world.

SPN 2471 Accelerated Spanish Abroad
Credits: 1 to 5; Prereq: SPN 2200, or equivalent placement scores on SAT II, IB, or AP tests and permission of section coordinator or undergraduate adviser.
This course reviews major aspects of grammar in a context which enhances the students' understanding of the Spanish or Spanish-American way of life and modes of expression. Reading comprehension and composition are further developed through readings on diverse topics related to Latin America and Spain.

SPN 3020 Accelerated Introduction to Spanish
Credits: 5; Prereq: must speak or have studied another romance language. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
An intensive course designed primarily for speakers or students of another Romance language who wish to learn Spanish, for students with superior language ability and for graduate students seeking proficiency in all four skills of Spanish. May not be used for major or minor credit.

SPN 3224 Applied Spanish
Credits: 1 to 5; can be repeated for up to 5 credits; 3 credits can count for major or minor. Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or permission of coordinator.
Spanish-language section designed to accompany and complement courses offered in other departments. Readings and discussion in this course will be in Spanish to allow students to develop specific vocabulary and fluency related to the content of the companion course, as well as to provide them with an international perspective on the issues of the main course. (I)

SPN 3300 Spanish Grammar & Composition 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2240. Can be taken concurrently with SPN 2240 or SPN 3301. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Intensive language course designed to develop students' mastery of grammatical principles, increase their vocabulary and enhance their writing and compositional skills. This course (or SPN 3350 for bilingual speakers) is a prerequisite for most 3000 and 4000 level courses in Spanish.

SPN 3301 Spanish Grammar & Composition 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300. Can be taken concurrently with SPN 3300. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Continues review of Spanish grammar begun in SPN 3300, while concentrating on intensive practice in writing expository Spanish. Highly recommended for majors and minors in Spanish not taking bilingual sequence. This course is a prerequisite for SPN 4420, Advanced Composition and Syntax.

SPN 3350 Spanish Grammar and Composition for Bilingual Speakers
Credits: 3; Prereq: placement test or department- administered test for bilingual speakers, or permission of coordinator of bilingual sequence or SPN 2340 with grade of B or better.
Emphasizes the normative aspects of the language, as well as those areas of grammar which are problematical for students who have learned the language primarily through extended exposure outside the classroom setting (formal training of three or four years in high school) and whose speaking and comprehension abilities are more developed than their writing and reading skills. Develops vocabulary, style and ability to use different levels of language. Weekly compositions. (C) This course (or SPN 3300 for non-bilinguals) is a prerequisite for most 3000 and 4000 level courses in Spanish.

SPN 3412 Advanced Spanish Conversation 1
Credits: 1; Prereq: SPN 2240, or permission of instructor. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Oral/aural practice in an expanded range of communicative situations or "genres," for example, persuasion, evaluation, reporting, giving instructions, etc.

SPN 3414 Advanced Spanish Conversation 2
Credits: 1; Prereq: SPN 2240, or permission of instructor. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Authentic materials of the Hispanic world are used to improve students' listening-comprehension and speaking skills. Oral expression is used in conversation and in formal and informal presentations on a variety of topics.

SPN 3440 Commercial Spanish
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent as approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
An introduction to the vocabulary and business practices of the Hispanic world. Emphasis on oral and written business communications. Overview of cultural differences within the Hispanic world and between the U.S. and the Hispanic world, with emphasis on their impact on business. (S, I)

SPN 3442 Marketing and Advertising in the Spanish-Speaking World
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 2340 or SPN 3300 or permission of instructor.
An introduction to the related fields of marketing and advertising as they pertain to the Spanish-speaking world. Focuses on marketing campaigns and advertising strategies, both in print and on television. Emphasis is placed on the cultural element(s) and context(s) of the marketing/advertising campaigns. Covers a representative sampling of Spanish-speaking countries, with special attention paid to the cases of Spain, Mexico, Argentina and the United States. Group work required for some class projects.

SPN 3472 Advanced Communicative Spanish Abroad
Credits: 3; can be repeated up to 6 credits. Prereq: SPN 2240 or SPN 2340, or placement scores on SAT II, IB, or AP tests, or equivalent course work approved by section coordinator or the undergraduate adviser.
Designed to give students practical, in-class communication exercises in comprehension, speaking, reading and writing. Classroom activities are coordinated with homework activities that directly stress communication. The foreign setting also serves as a living language laboratory.

SPN 3510 Culture and Civilization of Spain
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or equivalent course work approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A survey of Spanish history, customs and the arts from ancient times to the present. The course devotes considerable attention to life in contemporary Spain since the death of General Franco in 1975. (H, I)

SPN 3520 Culture and Civilization of Spanish America
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or equivalent course work approved by the undergraduate adviser.
The course focuses on the rich and often conflictive diversity of the Americas, as well as the historical experiences that allow us to speak of the Americas as a whole: The Conquest, the colonial period, the struggles for independence and against (neo) colonialism, the clashing and mixing of cultures, the yoke of slavery and of servitude, the formation of rigid social hierarchies, the frustrated search for democracy and economic development. The traces of these phenomena are followed in a variety of artistic media, from painting to poetry, from music to film. (H, I)

SPN 3700 Introduction to Hispanic Linguistics
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350. This course may not be taken by students who have taken LIN 3010 or its equivalent.
Initial overview of central theories and applications of linguistic analysis in the study of Spanish. The phonological, grammatical, discursive and social structures of Spanish are considered within five areas of popular inquiry in Hispanic Linguistics: history of Spanish, language variation and change, Spanish in contact with other languages, political and educational linguistics, and acquisition of Spanish as a first and second language. Conducted entirely in Spanish. This course is a prerequisite for all 4000 level courses in Hispanic Linguistics.

SPN 3930 Topics in Latin American Culture and Civilization
Credits: var. 3 to 9 max. Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or permission of undergraduate adviser.
Selected variable topics in Latin American culture and civilization, including racial identity, feminism, regionalism, music, film, art, religion and sports.

SPN 4314 Advanced Composition and Syntax for Bilingual Speakers
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3350, with a grade of B or better, or placement test or department-administered test for bilingual speakers.
Emphasizes those aspects of Spanish style, syntax and registers which are problematic for the bilingual speaker (as defined in SPN 2340 and SPN 3350). Some formal training in the language is expected (SPN 3350 or equivalent in a Spanish-speaking country). Prospective students must take a department placement test and/or see faculty member in charge of the course. (C)

SPN 4420 Advanced Composition and Syntax
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3301 or the equivalent; permission of the undergraduate coordinator. Not open to bilingual speakers of Spanish.
Emphasizes the finer aspects of Spanish syntax, vocabulary and style which give the advanced student difficulties. Class discussion, drills and written compositions.

SPN 4780 Spanish Phonetics
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010.
Focuses primarily on the precise description of Spanish pronunciation, with some attention to dialect features and contrastive English phonetics.

SPN 4822 Sociolinguistics of the Spanish-Speaking World
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010.
General overview of sociolinguistic issues of the contemporary Spanish-speaking world: language variation, language contact, discourse analysis, language attitudes, policy and planning, social factors in language acquisition and use.

SPN 4830 Introduction to Spanish and Spanish American Dialectology
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010.
Principles and methods of dialectology, applied to the study of regional varieties of Spanish in Spain and in Spanish America.

SPN 4840 Introduction to the History of the Spanish Language
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010.
The phonological, morphological, syntactic and semantic evolution of the Spanish language from Latin.

SPN 4850 Introduction to the Structure of Spanish
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350 and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010.
Explores syntactic, morphological and semantic aspects of the Spanish language.

SPN 4905 Individual Work
Credits: 1 to 4; only 3 credits can count toward the minor or major; Prereq: permission of the undergraduate coordinator.
For advanced majors and minors who seek independent work not offered in another course.

SPN 4930 Revolving Topics in Literature, Culture and Linguistics
Credits: 3; can be repeated up to 9 credits. Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350. For linguistics topics, SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, and SPN 3700 or LIN 3010 are prerequisites. For literature and culture topics, two SPW 3000-level courses are necessary.
Variable content course providing opportunity for in depth study of topics not offered in other courses and of topics of special current significance.

SPN 4956 Overseas Studies in Spanish
Credits: 3; Prereq: permission of section coordinator or undergraduate adviser.
This revolving topics course provides a mechanism by which course work taken abroad as part of an approved student programs can be recorded on the transcript and counted toward graduation at UF.

SPT 2101 Masterpieces of Spanish Literature
Credits: 3; not for major or minor credit.
Selected readings in English translation of major works of Spanish literature. Designed especially for students with no knowledge of Spanish. Qualifies as general education course. (H, I)

SPT 2511 US Latino/Hispanic Cultures
Credits: 3; not for major or minor credit.
Examines major cultural trends in U.S. Latino/Hispanic communities; explores music, dance, film, literature, theatre, oral culture, art, food and fashion. This course is taught in English and draws on readings, film, video, and slide viewing, lectures and class discussions.

SPW 3030 Survey of Spanish-American Literature: From Discovery to Independence
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent.
Provides an overview of Spanish-American literature and its cultural context from the European conquest of the Americas to the 19th century. Introduces principal literary movements and authors; trains students to read critically and appreciate literary Spanish. (H, I)

SPW 3031 Survey of Spanish-American Literature: From Independence to Contemporary Times
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent.
End of the 19th century to the present. Introduces principal literary movements and authors; trains students to read critically and to analyze literary Spanish. Reading of major authors, who may include: Borges, García Márquez, Neruda, Fuentes, and Ferré. (H, I)

SPW 3080 Survey of Spanish American Literature: Mexico
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent.
Instruction in critical reading and writing about selected works from representative authors and movements in Mexican literature. The course will focus on issues of genre, historical development and Mexican culture.

SPW 3100 Intro to Spanish Literature 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent.
Selected readings in epic, lyric, ballad and popular poetry, early forms of recreational and didactic prose, and dramatic works from Spain's Medieval and Golden Ages are presented with attention both to form and historical context. (H, I)

SPW 3101 Intro to Spanish Literature 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: SPN 3300 or SPN 3350, or the equivalent.
Provides an overview of Spanish literature and its cultural context from the 18th century to the present. Introduces principal literary movements and authors; trains students to read critically and to analyze literary Spanish. (H, I)

SPW 4190 Seminar in Spanish-American Literature and Culture
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
The advanced study of a writer, period, movement, region or topic of Spanish-American literature not ordinarily offered in the department. Check department Web page for a more specific description.

SPW 4204 Readings in Colonial Spanish-American Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Examination of the literature produced in the territories colonized by Spain from the Conquest to the declaration of independence by the colonies.

SPW 4233 Readings in Spanish-American Narrative from the Origins to Criollismo
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A guide to the narrative fiction of Spanish America before the "take-off" of the 1940s-1950s that prepared the so-called "boom" of the Spanish American new narrative of the 1960s. It covers the period between the 19th century (from Romanticism) and the 1930s.

SPW 4263 Readings in the Spanish Novel of the Nineteenth Century
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Readings in the Spanish novel of the 19th century. A survey of major authors from costumbrismo to the realism and naturalism of Galdos, Clarín and Pardo Bazan.

SPW 4282 Readings in Contemporary Spanish-American Narrative 1
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
The period of modernization of fiction and the development of new narrative modes in the 1940s and the 1950s; this may include magical realism, the detective story and the new urban narratives.

SPW 4283 Readings in Contemporary Spanish-American Narrative 2
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses, or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
The new narrative or the "boom" and "post-boom" of Latin-American fiction, 1960s until present times.

SPW 4304 Readings in Spanish-American Theatre
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
The analysis of selected plays and films from Spanish-America and an introduction to the history, theory and practice of the theatrical arts in the region, with some comparisons to theatre of other regions (e.g., the U.S., Europe, Brazil), and a focus on the 20th century.

SPW 4310 Readings in Spanish Drama of the Golden Age
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Variable readings in Spanish Classical Theater by Lope de Vega, Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Tirso de Molina and others, including entremeses and Autos sacramentales. The course focuses on the comedia's appeal to both lettered and unlettered spectators, and on its consequent potential both for mass control and social protest.

SPW 4353 Readings in Spanish-American Poetry from Romanticism to Vanguardism
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A close reading and critical analysis of the masterpieces of Spanish-American poetry from Romanticism to the Avant-Garde movements of the twentieth century, including Modernism. Authors studied include Heredia, Echeverria, Hernández, Avellaneda, Martí, Darío and the women writers of posmodernismo among others.

SPW 4354 Readings in Contemporary Spanish-American Poetry
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW-3000 level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A close reading and critical analysis of masterpieces by the major twentieth-century poets of Spanish-America, including some very recent writers.

SPW 4364 Readings in the Spanish-American Essay
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Examination of major texts from the early nineteenth century to the present focusing on such themes as the search for identity, or the definition of ethnic, racial, social and class categories.

SPW 4393 Contemporary Spanish Theater and Film
Credits: 4; Prereq: one SPW 3000 or equivalent.
Analysis of plays and films in the context of contemporary Spanish society, such as the crisis of traditional institutions, the shifting roles of women and the impact of immigration.

SPW 4400 Readings in Medieval Spanish Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Anything but dark, Spain's Middle Ages were illuminated by Jewish, Muslim and Christian cultural expressions. This course explores this diverse legacy left on literature composed or recorded in romance or early Spanish. Variable readings may include: La dança de la muerte, El libro del Conde Lucanor and La tragicomedia de Calixto y Melibea.

SPW 4521 U.S. Hispanic Literature
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Reading, discussion and analysis of works by U.S. Hispanic or Latino/a writers with an examination of the cultural life and social conditions of the Puerto Rican, Cuban and Chicano communities in the U.S.

SPW 4532 Introduction to Spanish Romanticism
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
By studying the canonical works of that moment (Rousseau, Feijoo, Cadalso, Jovellanos, Miranda, Bolivar, Zorrilla, Rivas, Larra, Espronceda, Gomez de Avellaneda, Goya) this class will explore the achievements, contradictions and failures of the enlightenments as well as their new organization by Romanticism in Spain and Latin America.

SPW 4604 Don Quixote
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A close reading of Cervantes' masterpiece that emphasizes the origins of the modern novel as a genre, and its implication in the history of ideas.

SPW 4720 Readings in Spanish Literature from the Generation of '98 to 1927
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Readings in Spanish literature from the Generation of '98 to 1927. A survey of the turn-of-the-century Spanish crises from the perspective of the first generation of Spanish modernists. Authors include Unamuno, Costa, Machado, Valle-Inclán, Baroja and Ortega y Gassett.

SPW 4723 Readings in Spanish Literature from the Generation of 1927 to the Present
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
Studies the development of Spanish literature in this century beginning with the brilliant poets of the generation of 1927, continuing with representative fiction, drama and poetry of the years after the Civil War and concluding with fiction and poetry of the 1990s.

SPW 4780 Hispanic Women Writers
Credits: 3; Prereq: two SPW 3000-level courses or equivalent, approved by the undergraduate coordinator.
A seminar dedicated to the exploration of literary works written in Spanish by women of Spain and/or Latin America and/or the United States.



General Education Categories

  • Composition (C)
  • Mathematical Sciences (M)
  • Humanities (H)
  • Social and Behavioral Sciences (S)
  • Physical (P) and Biological (B) Sciences
  • International and Diversity focus (I)

Symbols Used in Course Descriptions

  • (WR) indicates the course satisfies the writing requirement.
    The Schedule of Courses lists the amount of writing credit per course section.
  • (MR) indicates the course satisfies the math requirement.
  • †† indicates the course may be taken on an S-U basis.