Slike strani
PDF
ePub

121A-121в. Second-year Hebrew. (2-2) Yr.

POPPER

Rapid reading of selections from the historical books of the Old

[blocks in formation]

161A-161B. Elementary Egyptian. (3-3) Yr.

LUTZ

Prerequisite: Semitics 21A-21в, or six units of Greek.

171A-171B. Elementary Coptic. (1-1) Yr.

LUTZ

Prerequisite: Semitics 21A-21B, or six units of Greek.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of this announcement.

212A-212B. Semitic Epigraphy. (1-1) Yr.

POPPER, LUTZ

The Moabite, Siloam, and various Phoenician inscriptions.

224A-224B. Advanced Biblical Hebrew. (2-2) Yr.

POPPER

One or more of the prophetical and poetical books, with especial attention to literary form.

[blocks in formation]

Selections from Tabarî, Ibn Khaldûn, and Bukhârî (Semitic Studies · Series, I, IV, VI).

[blocks in formation]

251A-251B. Advanced Sumerian and Assyro-Babylonian. (2-2) Yr.

Law codes, business documents, religious texts.

[blocks in formation]

LUTZ

LUTZ

LUTZ

POPPER, LUTZ

SLAVIC LANGUAGES

GEORGE R. NOYES, Ph.D., Professor of Slavic Languages (Chairman of the Department).

ALEXANDER S. KAUN, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Russian.

GEORGE Z. PATRICK, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of French and Russian.

For students intending to do serious work in Slavic languages a knowledge of Latin or Greek is of more value than acquaintance with German or a Romanic language, and a knowledge of German is of more value than acquaintance with a Romanic language.

More language courses are announced below than can be given in any one year. Which courses will actually be given depends on the number and on the previous preparation of students applying for them.

Honors Students in the Upper Division.-Candidates for honors must do at least 24 units of work in the department, of which at least 12 units must be of grade A and the remaining 12 units must average not below grade B. The 24 units must include at least 18 units of work in one

Slavic language.

The Major.-Required: 24 units, of which 12 units must be in upper division language courses in the Department of Slavic Languages, and 6 (or by special permission not more than 9) may be chosen from other departments. Courses in other departments that will be accepted as part of the major in Slavic languages are upper division courses in the Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, or Gothic languages, in phonetics or comparative linguistics, General Literature 101A-101в, and any upper division courses in the history of European literature that may be specifically approved by the department as combining properly with the work in Slavic languages.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

1A-1B. Elementary Russian. (3–3) Yr. M W F, 1.

PATRICK

Prokosch, Elementary Russian Grammar. Boyer and Speranski, Russian Reader. Practice in conversation.

6A-6B. Elementary Polish. (3-3) Yr. M W, 11, and a third hour. NOYES Freese, Polish Manual. Reading of easy texts.

10A-10B. Elementary Serbo-Croatian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 10. NOYES Petrovitch, Servian Conversation-Grammar. Reading of easy texts.

14A-14B. Elementary Bohemian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 9. Nigrin, Bohemian Grammar. Beneš, Česká čítanka.

NOYES

18A-18B. Elementary Russian Conversation and Composition.

(2-2) Yr.

Tu Th, 1.

KAUN

Solomonoff, First Steps in Russian. Open only to students taking Russian 1A-1B, for whom it is recommended.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

A. Language Courses

102A-102B. Second-year Russian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 3.

KAUN

Reading of selections from Tolstoy, Chekhov, Goncharov, and Pushkin. Forbes, Russian Grammar. Practice in composition and conversation.

103A-103B. Third-year Russian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 9.

PATRICK

Reading of Turgenev, Fathers and Children, and of easy selections from Russian poetry. Practice in composition and conversation. 119A-119B. Russian Conversation and Composition. (2-2) Yr. Tu Th, 2. KAUN

Exercises based on the reading of easy texts by Andreyev and Korolenko.

Open only to students who are taking Russian 102A-102B or Russian 103A-103в, for whom it is recommended.

104A-104B. Fourth-year Russian. (3-3) Yr.

Rapid reading of modern Russian prose and verse. composition and conversation.

105. Written Translation from Slavic Languages.

year.

KAUN Practice in

[blocks in formation]

Practice in written translation of Slavic fiction or drama, with attention to English style. This course may be taken only in connection with other upper division work in the department. 108A-108B. Third-year Polish. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 1.

NOYES

Reading of Chrzanowski, Literatura niepodleglej Polski. Practice in composition.

113A-113B. Fourth-year Serbo-Croatian. (3-3) Yr. M W F, 1. KAUN Reading of modern Serbian and Croatian authors, and of the Serbian national ballads. Practice in composition.

115A-115B. Second-year Bohemian. (3-3) Yr.

NOYES

Reading of modern Bohemian authors. Practice in composition.

B. Lecture Courses on Slavic Literature, History, and Institutions These courses require no knowledge of any language other than English. They are open to all students of the upper division, and, with the consent of the instructor, to properly prepared sophomores.

130. Russian Novelists and Dramatists of the Nineteenth Century. (3) I. M W F, 3. NOYES

Authors: especially Tolstoy; also Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, Dostoyevsky, Ostrovsky, and others.

131. Recent Russian Literature. (3) II. M W F, 2.

KAUN

A study of important Russian writers later than Tolstoy: Chekhov, Korolenko, Merezhkovsky, Gorky, Andreyev, and others.

132. Polish Literature. (2) II. Tu Th, 11.

NOYES

An outline of the development of Polish literature, preceded by some account of its historical setting.

135. Russian Literature and Folklore. (2) I. Tu Th, 2.

PATRICK

An outline of the development of Russian literature, exclusive of the novelists, and of the general features of Russian folklore. 140. Modern Russia. (2) I. M W F, 2.

KAUN

The development of Russian institutions, currents of thought, and social movements from about 1800 to the present day.

141. Russian and Polish History. (2) II. Tu Th, 2.

PATRICK

A sketch of the general history of Russia and Poland from 862 to 1815.

C. Special Courses

160. The Works of Tolstoy. (2) II. Tu Th, 2.

NOYES

Prerequisite: course 130 or its equivalent. Some features of the literary art and of the ideas of Tolstoy. 199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (1-3) Either half-year. The STAFF (NOYES in charge)

Competent students, especially those who have received their school training in Slavic countries, will be given opportunities for independent reading and study.

GRADUATE COURSES

Concerning conditions for admission to graduate courses see page 3 of this announcement.

224. Old Church Slavic. (3) Either half-year.

NOYES

Leskien, Handbuch der altbulgarischen Sprache and Grammatik der altbulgarischen Sprache. Relations of Old Church Slavic to the other Indo-European languages.

225. Historical Russian Grammar. (3) Either half-year.

Prerequisite: course 224.

NOYES

Sobolevsky, Lektsii po istorii russkago yazyka. Reading of Buslayev, Russkaya hrestomatiya. The development of the Russian language and its relation to the other Slavic languages.

226. Lithuanian. (3) Either half-year.

NOYES

Leskien, Litauisches Lesebuch. Wiedemann, Litauische Grammatik. Relations of Lithuanian to the Slavic languages and to other IndoEuropean languages. This course is placed here for convenience; Lithuanian is not a Slavic language.

298A-298B. Individual Work. (1-4; 1-4) Either half-year.

Graduate students will be offered opportunities for independent reading and study.

The STAFF (NOYES in charge)

299. Thesis for the Master's Degree.

The STAFF (NOYES in charge)

SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS

FREDERICK J. TEGGART, A.B., Associate Professor of Social Institutions (Chairman of the Department).

NICHOLAS J. SPYKMAN, Ph.D., Assistant in Social Institutions.

3B.

COMBINATION MAJOR IN THE STUDY OF SOCIETY

Preparation for the Major.-Social Institutions 1A-1B; Philosophy 3ARecommended: Geology 1A, Paleontology 1, Zoology 10. Courses which are prerequisite to courses recommended in the upper division: Anthropology 1A-1B, Economics 1A-1B, Semitics 13A-13в, Psychology 2A.

The Major.-Social Institutions 101A-101в, 199A-199в (4 units); Philosophy 104A-104B, 121A-121B; Economics 100. Recommended: Anthropology 125A-125B; Greek 152, 153; Philosophy 102A-102B, 112A-112B; Psychology 145A-145B; Semitics 102A-102B.

LOWER DIVISION COURSES

1A-1B. The Idea of Progress. (3-3) Yr. Tu Th, 11, and section meetings. TEGGART

First half-year: theories of the origin and progress of civilization. Second half-year: the scientific approach to the study of human advancement. Prerequisite to all courses in the upper division.

UPPER DIVISION COURSES

101A-101B. Social Evolution. (3-3) Yr. Tu Th S, 9.

TEGGART

The historical background of contemporary civilization. The study of change in social organization (more particularly among cultured peoples), illustrated by the comparative study of selected institutions. 199. Special Study for Advanced Undergraduates. (1-5). Either halfyear. TEGGART

Prerequisite: 101A-101B.

GRADUATE COURSES

201A-201в. Seminar in Social Institutions. (2-2) Yr. Tu, 2-4. TEGGART 298. Special Study and Research. (1-5). Either half-year.

299. Thesis for the Master's Degree.

TEGGART

TEGGART

« PrejšnjaNaprej »