Global Arc

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You can now simultaneously browse international opportunities and on-campus courses; the goal is to plan coursework — before and/or after your trip — that will deepen your experiences abroad.

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Subject

Displaying 1971 - 1980 of 4003
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Workshop on Contemporary Cuban Arts
Havana is famous for its thriving cultural scene. This course will offer an introduction to some of the most dynamic contemporary works in theater, film, dance, performance, visual arts, and literature. Students will attend performances and meet theater and film directors, artists and poets. Each student will conduct an independent research project working closely with one of these authors.
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Havana: A Cultural History
This course will offer a cultural history of how Havana evolved from a sleepy colonial city in 1900 to rising as one of the cultural and architectural capitals of Latin America and the world by the 1950s. We will study the urban development of the early 20th century, the adoption of modernism and International Style in architecture, and the tensions between private enterprise and public projects.
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Puerto Ricans Under U.S. Empire: Memory, Diaspora, and Resistance
This seminar examines the ethical and historical dimensions of the 2019 Summer Puerto Rican Protests. Developing within an ongoing financial catastrophe and the trauma of Hurricane María, most issues raised today are deeply rooted in the history of U.S. imperial domination since 1898. The course aims to rethink questions of second-class citizenship, colonial capitalism, militarization, ecocide and massive migrations, as well as gender, sexual and racial inequalities. Special focus on how musical, artistic, religious, political, and literary traditions shape memory and resistance in Puerto Rico and in its vast diasporic communities.
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The Skins of the Film: Latin America and the Politics of Touching
Film is comprised of multiple surfaces: the screen, the actors, the structure of the darkroom, the mobile devices of the audiovisual present, the bodies that vibrate around us, the actual strip of plastic that records the images... Critics have already broadly debated how film touches us politically and emotionally. This seminar formulates a different question: how do we touch film? In Latin America, the interaction between filmic skins is founded on the relationship between art and politics. We will consider how filmmakers debate the politics of the surface and how spectatorship poses a deeply political problem for the region.
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Recent Experiments in Spanish Literature
The beginning of the millennium has brought new and refreshing approaches to fiction and non-fiction writing. We will examine recent novels in various genres: historical novel, testimonial poetry, auto-fiction, political narrative, chronicles, essays and also hybrids like storytelling podcasts and artist's books. In addition to reading and reflecting on these works, we will talk (in person or by Skype) with all the authors.
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How to Write a Novel: Fiction Workshop
This class will use Andrés Barba's novel, A Luminous Republic (2019) as a case study to examine how one writes a novel. We will examine the writing process, the editorial review and the final publishing of the book. We will analyze, step by step, the entire journey: the research process, the first drafts, the possible endings, the editing and publication of the final work, the agent's mission, the approach to criticism, the dilemmas of translation into other languages and formats. A 360 degree approach that combines aspects of writing workshop, thinking workshop, translation and literary criticism
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The Fiction of Mario Vargas Llosa
Mario Vargas Llosa, who received the Nobel prize in 2010, is the most important living writer in Latin America. His novels offer a unique perspective on 20th century Latin American history and politics, and deal with issues that include: dictatorship, Marxism, the conflicts between rich and poor, the left and the right, and gender stereotypes and dynamics. This seminar will offer an overview of his political fiction.
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On the Imagination in Pandemic Times in Contemporary Iberian Cultures
As on the entire planet, the tragic coronavirus pandemic has profoundly affected social relations, the interpretations of the present, and the imagination of the future in Spain. In this course we will explore narratives around the COVID-19 as part of a cultural trend of using dystopian and apocalyptic imagery to represent contemporary reality and possible futures. Through the analysis of texts of different genres (literature, cinema, television, etc.) published between the beginning of the 21st century and 2020, we will discuss the role of culture in the current state of emergency as well as in other moments of crisis.
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Poetry Matters: Latin American Poets and the Power of Language
Latin America is a land of poets who believe in the power of language and the craft of verse. If, according to Vicente Huidobro, the poet is a little god who can create new worlds with words, revolutionary poet Roque Dalton believed that poetry could change history. "La poesía es como el pan; debe ser compartido por todos," said Neruda. This course offers a brief history of modern Spanish American poetry from modernismo to slam poetry through a stellar row of Latin American poets and Nobel awardees, including César Vallejo, Gabriela Mistral, Pablo Neruda, Octavio Paz, Alejandra Pizarnik, Jorge Luis Borges, Roque Dalton, and Cecilia Vicuña.
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Comparative Studies in Spanish and Portuguese Literatures in Latin America
This co-taught course will explore relations and contrasts between the Portuguese and Spanish colonial experiences in America from the late 15th to 18th century and their later uses in contemporary Latin American national discourses. The course will focus on the first texts of the conquest and the writings of figures such as Ercilla and Camões, António Vieira and Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, as well as on 20th-century novel, cinema, music, and essay. This comparative approach is intended to stimulate students into dialogue between the languages and cultures of both traditions.