Global Arc

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Subject

Displaying 2921 - 2930 of 4003
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Contemporary French Civilization
This course will examine the cultural and political events knows as May '68, with a focus on the historical and political context that contributed to its development as one of the watershed events of modern French history. We will study May '68 from a range of perspectives, including film and photographic representations, as well as its historical, sociological, artistic, and philosophical dimensions. Special focus in the second half of the course on 1968 is in a global context, addressing this world changing moment in sites such as Prague, Mexico, Brazil, China, Germany, Italy, US, etc.
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Les Combustibles: Contemporary French Prose (1990-2010)
The course title "Les Combustibles" comes from an Amélie Nothomb play in which three people trapped in an apartment during a war in winter must decide which books they will burn to stay warm. The choice between physical and intellectual well-being serves as an organizing theme for the course, which focuses on prose produced in an age when the latter is often subordinate to the former. Genres: novel, essay, autofiction, autobiography, blog, and philosophical treatise. Themes: representations of the body, metatextuality, the act of reading and writing, global identity, memory and trauma, and consumerist culture.
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Language, Power and Identity
This course is an intensive discussion-based seminar which offers an introduction to sociolinguistics, or the study of language as a social phenomenon. Through readings, films, and documentaries, we will explore contemporary debates related to language, culture, politics, identity, and ideology in the Francophone world. The course includes a series of guest speakers for the discussion of Francophone case studies. Past speakers were from Morocco, Québec, Louisiana, Republic of Benin, La Réunion, and the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie.
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The Confessional Self
The religious demand for self-examination and confession reaches back to the 13th century; later, the secular tradition sees confession as a requirement for authenticity. Many modern texts build on these traditions, whether in the introspection of the first-person narrative, or with the analytic attention of an outside observer, and the policing of society also makes a demand for confession from the suspect. The seminar will study a variety of confessional writings, from Rousseau to Patrick Modiano. This course will be taught inside a correctional facility.
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Tales of Hospitality: France, North Africa, and the Mediterranean
An exploration of the concept of hospitality, individual and collective, in French, Mediterranean, and Maghrebi (i.e., North African: Arab, Berber, and Jewish) cultures. Draws on materials from literature and the arts, politics and law, philosophy and religion. Issues studied include immigration, citizenship, alienation, and, more generally, the meaning of welcoming a stranger. Prerequisite: a 200-level course in French or instructor's permission. One 90-minute lecture, one 90-minute preceptorial.
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The 'Hidden Causes' of History: Integrating the Social and the Economic
Our aim is to examine how the "social" and the "economic" become intertwined. From Enlightenment narratives about the origins of civilization, whether philosophical, ethnographic, or fictional, by Swift, Rousseau, or Graffigny, we also consider history-writing by Voltaire and Gibbon. We read early economic and sociological thought by Malthus, Saint-Simon, Balzac, and Smith, and delve into the crystallization of broadly Marxist approaches to society and culture in Engels, Benjamin, and, of course, Marx. While the category of "literature" will be an important lens for our thinking, archival and historical approaches will also be stressed.
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Landmarks of French Culture
An interdisciplinary study of places, periods, persons, or questions that helped define French cultural identity, from its origins to the present. Areas of study could include courtly love; gothic art; the Enyclopedia; the Belle Epoque; the Figure of the Intellectual from Zola to Simone de Beauvoir; the sociocultural revolution of May 1968; colonization, its discontents, and its aftermaths; France in the age of globalization; Franco-American relations; etc. Prerequisite: a 200-level course in French or instructor's permission. Two 90-minute classes.
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French Renaissance Literature and Culture
Readings from the works of Rabelais, the Pléiade poets, Marguerite de Navarre, Montaigne, and d'Aubigné in the light of contemporary artistic, political, and cultural preoccupations. Themes will include the rhetoric of love, education, humanism, recurrent mythologies, and utopias. Two 90-minute classes. Prerequisite: a 200-level course in French or instructor's permission.
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Topics in the French Middle Ages and Renaissance
The continuities of French culture and its preeminence over much of Europe from its 11th-century beginnings through the 16th century. Emphasis on medieval and Renaissance literary works (in modernized versions) in their relationship to topics such as "love'' (fin'amor), saintliness, national identity, humanism, and so on. Prerequisite: a 200-level course in French or permission of the instructor. One three-hour seminar.
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Literature and Art in Renaissance France
A survey of Renaissance literature and art in France from the late 15th to the early 17th centuries. A variety of cultural aspects of the period, including major literary and art works, will be considered, and we will intergrate the colleactions of the Princeton University Art Museum into the material under study. Museum curators will also provide assistance to students. Time will be divided between formal presentations, oral exposés, textual analyses, and discussion.