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 2051 - 2060 of 4003
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Modern Spanish Poetry
Poetry from the late 19th century to the Spanish Civil War, considering modernismo and the generations of '98 and '27 in relation to European symbolism and the avant-garde. One three hour seminar. Prerequisite: a 200-level Spanish course or equivalent.
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Latino Global Cities
This seminar focuses on the comparative study of Latino urban cultures in U.S., Caribbean and Spanish cities (mainly New York City, San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Madrid). Topics include the 2008 Financial Crisis, Occupy-like movements, global migratory flows, popular culture, memory, debt, visuality and citizenship. Paying close attention to their political and cultural contexts, flamenco, hip-hop, graffiti, visual culture, poetry, documentary films and political performances will be analyzed. Guest speakers and musicians will be part of the conversation.
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Poisonous Flowers: Radical Women in Latin America
The starting point is the art show Radical Women: Latin American Art (Los Angeles, 2017). The exhibition reevaluates the contribution of Latin American, Latina, and Chicana women to contemporary art. "Poisonous Flowers" examines the productions of outstanding Latin American female whose work has challenged our understanding of politics and the arts and had significant impact on lives and histories in the region.
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Junior Seminar: Spanish and Portuguese-Speaking Worlds
The junior seminar discusses major challenges to the study of culture, literature and society in Portuguese and Spanish-speaking countries. Focusing on text and audiovisual materials, students will acquire methodological tools to develop their own independent research projects. Topics may include: identity, memory, democracy, visual arts, health, race, gender, migration, global cities, sustainability, climate change, citizenship, and digital humanities. It is co-taught in English, with sources in English, Spanish and Portuguese. Students are welcome to use any of the three languages in their written work.
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Modern Latin American Fiction
Major themes, forms, and techniques in Latin American novels and short stories. Close analysis of texts by Borges, Rulfo, García Márquez, Bolaño, Vallejo, and others. Consideration will be given to historical contexts and contemporary ideological currents. Two 90-minute classes. Prerequisite: a 200-level Spanish course or instructor's permission.
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Modern Latin American Poetry
An introduction to the major poets and poetic trends in modern Latin America and the Caribbean, with emphasis on Martí, Darío, Huidobro, Vallejo, Mistral, Neruda, Palés Matos, Borges, and Saer. Special attention also to the rich oral traditions represented by popular genres such as boleros, tango, nueva canción and rock, and particularly the work of Silvio Rodríguez, Violeta Parra, Rubén Blades, Tite Curet Alonso, and Charly García available in audio recordings or videos. Two 90-minute seminars. Prerequisite: a 200-level Spanish course or equivalent.
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Obsession and Addiction in Early Modern Spain
Early Modern Spain exhibits a variety of fascinating obsessions and addictions resulting from extreme and rapid political, social, and economic changes. Addiction to sex crimes, to transgendering and tobacco offer some of the most spectacular accounts of the period. The advent of mass culture produced by print technology, tabloid journalism, and public theaters leads to the rise of the "vulgo" which the elite seek to control and condemn. The obsessive focus on money (both for "pícaros" and "indianos") as well as attempts at social engineering by the would-be problem-solving "arbitristas" and inquisitors all make for compelling reading.
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Mexico's Tenth Muse: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
Studies a variety of texts (poetry, comedia, mystery play, letters) written by the most celebrated female Hispanic writer of the seventeenth century, widely considered to be the first feminist of the American hemisphere. Discussions include: rhetoric and feminism; Sor Juana's literary forbearers; freedom and repression in the convent; correspondence with other writers in the viceroyalties of New Spain and Peru; performances of gender and sexuality in colonial Mexico. Sessions to view and analyze first editions of Sor Juana's works of the Legaspi collection will be held at the Rare Books and Special Collections in Firestone.
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The Prado Museum: A Virtual Tour of Spain
This course focuses on the Prado Museum in Madrid as a central institution to understand Spanish art and culture. Using different sources (paintings, literature, documentary films, audiovisual resources, essays), this class will offer a virtual tour to one of the most important art institutions worldwide. The course will consider topics such as gender, nation-building, the popular, nature, historical memory and democracy, in relation to art and exhibitions. It offers a general overview of Spanish history since 1819 to present day.
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The Body in Pieces
In 2012, the Reina Sofia Museum presented the exhibition "Losing the Human Form," featured works from the 1980s in Latin America that focused on the violence against bodies, and the radical responses of artists who based their work on liberty and transformation. This seminar takes the problems posited by the show as a point of departure for thinking about unmaking the body as a central function of modern and contemporary visual culture. Cognizant of the violence of 20th century Latin America, it places emphasis on the dictatorships of the Southern Cone, Colombia, Mexico, and cases in Brazil, Cuba, Guatemala, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela.