2005/2006 Calendar
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Slavic Languages and Literatures Courses

See page 30 for Key to Course Descriptions.

(Croatian; Czech & Slovak; Macedonian; Polish; Russian; Serbian; Slavic Linguistics; Ukrainian)

For Distribution Requirement purposes (see page 24), all SLA courses are classified as HUMANITIES courses.

Note
The Department reserves the right to place students in the language course best suited to their linguistic preparation.

| Course Winter Timetable |


HUM199Y1
First Year Seminar        52S

Undergraduate seminar that focuses on specific ideas, questions, phenomena or controversies, taught by a regular Faculty
member deeply engaged in the discipline. Open only to newly admitted first year students. It may serve as a distribution
requirement course; see page 40.


SLA202H1
Jewish Communities in Slavic Countries       26L


Literature about the Jewish community in Slavic countries. How do these Jewish minorities perceive and identify themselves?
How are they perceived by others?


SLA251H1
Origins of the Slavic Civilization        26L

Surveys the history, archaeology, anthropology, religions, literature, architecture, and art of the Slavs from their pre-historic
origin to the Baroque era. Examines the rise of the medieval Slavic nations, states, churches, and cultures; Scythian, Greco-
Roman, Byzantine, Western European, and Oriental influences. Lectures are richly illustrated with slides.


SLA253H1
East Slavic Civilizations to  the 18th Century      26L


A survey of East Slavic civilizations through art, architecture, literature and religion. Includes the Scythians, whose battle skills
and gold fascinated the ancient world; Kyivan Rus' and its princes, monks and martyrs; the rise of the Cossacks; and Peter the
Great, founder of the Russian Empire and St. Petersburg. Lectures, with emphasis on visual presentation. Readings in
English.


SLA254H1
Stone Books to Sky Books: Book as Institution, Commerce and Art in the Slavic Tradition       13L, 13S


Evolution of book and written/printed media in the Slavic world: legends (and forgeries) of ancient letters, mediaeval illuminated
manuscripts, baroque visual poetry, pocket books for enlightened ladies and peasant comic strips, futurist painting and writing
on faces, hand-written and painted books of the modernist artists and poets. Readings in English.


SLA299Y1
Research Opportunity Program

Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. See page 43 for details.


SLA302H1
The Imaginary Jew        39S

The course examines the genesis and evolution of the image of the Jew, central to all European cultures, from the theology
and psychology of Christian anti-Judaism to their reflection in folklore, visual, plastic, and verbal arts, and to the survival of the
imaginary Jew in secular forms. Special attention is given to the Jews of Slavic and East European imagination. All readings
are in English.


SLA395Y1
Readings in Slavic Literature        52S

This course examines a special topic in Slavic Literature. The topic varies from year to year. Consult the department for more
details.


SLA396H1
Readings in Slavic Studies        26S

This course examines a special topic in Slavic Studies. The topic varies from year to year. Consult the department for more
details.


SLA398H0/399Y0
Independent Experiential Study Project


An instructor-supervised group project in an off-campus setting. See page 43 for details.


SLA422Y1
History into Literature: Jaan Kross and the 20th Century East European Historical Novel        26L, 26S


A seminar focused on contemporary Estonian novelist Jaan Kross (1920- ), whose historical fictions of the distant past
resonated analogically with Soviet realities. East and West European traditions of historical fiction; questions of national
identity, cultural diversity, and postSoviet challenges to revisioning the past. Readings (in English) also include Pushkin,
Tolstoy, Tynianov and Sienkiewicz.


SLA424H1
Theatre and Cinema in Extremis       26L, 26P


A study of the effects on aesthetic form of the totalitarian experience in Russia, Poland and Czechoslovakia. The Russian,
Polish, and Czech avant-garde, poised between the bankruptcy of traditional aesthetics and the search for new forms in the
post-revolutionary/post-Holocaust world. Co-taught course. Readings in English. (Offered every three years)

Exclusion: SLA424Y1
Recommended preparation: Prior completion of a course in drama or cinema



SLA 453H1
Women in East European Fiction 26S


In East European literary texts of the post 1990 era, this course examines connections and disconnections between gender
and social change, and women's resistant and compliant discourses on war, nationalism, reproduction, the fictional
representation of rape as a war crime, and women writers' responses to postcommunist eroticism and feminisms. All readings
in English.


SLA476H1
Revolution in the Theatre: Stanislavski, Meyerhold, Grotowski, and Kantor       39S

Theoretical thought and theatre practice of these directors are placed within a context of theatre reforms in the 20th century,
from naturalism and symbolism, through retheatricalization of theatre, to a ritualistic and mythic holy theatre. Readings in
English.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA485H1
Laughter and Forgetting in Milan Kundera      26S


Laughter and forgetting is a recurrent theme in both Kundera's fictional and essayistic work. This class will examine the
variations of this topic in Kunders's work and discuss the prosaic, dramatic and essayistic texts of his Czech period and attempt
to place Kundera within the European context of the 'art of fiction'. All readings in English.


SLA498Y1
Independent Studies

A scholarly project on an approved literary or linguistics topic supervised by one of the Department's instructors.
Prerequisite: Permission of the Department


SLA499H1
Independent Studies

A scholarly project on an approved literary or linguistics topic supervised by one of the Departments instructors.
Prerequisite: Permission of the Department




Croation and Serbian Courses

SLA207Y1
Elementary Serbian        104P

Basic phonology, morphology and sentence structure. Composition, oral practice and readings from Serbian literature. Open
only to students with little or no knowledge of Serbian. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA217Y1
Serbian Cultural History        52L

(formerly SLA217H1)
A survey of culture in literature, film and the fine arts from the coming of the Serbs to Southeastern Europe until World War I.
The legacy of Byzantium and Rome; the Middle Ages; the Baroque Enlightenment; the Serbian National Revival; Romanticism,
Realism, and Modernism. Readings in English.

Exclusion: SLA217H1


SLA227Y1
Croatian Cultural History        52L

(formerly SLA227H1)
A survey of culture in literature, film and the fine arts from the coming of the Croats to Southeastern Europe until World War I.
The Greek and Latin heritages; the medieval Croatian State; Humanism and Reformation among the Croats; the Dalmatian
Renaissance and Baroque; the Illyrian Movement and Croatian National Revival; Romanticism, Realism, and Modernism.
Readings in English.

Exclusion: SLA227H1


SLA237Y1
Elementary Croatian        104P

Basic phonology, morphology and sentence structure. Composition, oral practice and readings from Croatian literature. Open
only to students with little or no knowledge of Croatian. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA307Y1
Advanced Serbian        104P

Systematic study of orthography and syntax. Advanced composition and oral practice. Reading and translation of more
complex texts from Serbian writers. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: SLA207Y1 or equivalent knowledge of the language


SLA316Y1
Advanced Croatian        104P

Systematic study of orthography and syntax. Advanced composition and oral practice. Reading and translation of more
complex texts from Croatian writers. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: SLA237Y1 or equivalent knowledge of the language


SLA327H1
The Balkan Short Story        26S

Studies of short stories written since 1950. Focus on innovative writers and current trends. Readings in the original and
English.


SLA337H1
Political Drama from        26S

Dubrovnik to the Danube
Classic plays from the Renaissance to the present studied in reference to the contemporary national, ethnic and ideological
background of south-eastern and central Europe.


SLA347H1
South Slavic Folklore        26S

Historical and stylistic study of the customs, oral lore and traditions among pagan, Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox and
Moslem Slavs. The role of folklore in the ethnogenesis of national culture. Readings in the original and English.


SLA407H1
Modern Croatian Bards        26S

Verse since 1900 by the major poets of the nation. Focus on the Croatian Moderna, Expessionism and other Avant-Garde
movements. Readings in Croatian and English.


SLA417H1
Modern Serbian Bards        26S

(formerly SLA407H1)
Verse since 1900 by the major poets of the nation. Focus on the Serbian Moderna, Expessionism and other Avant-Garde
movements. Readings in Serbian and English.




Czech Courses

SLA105Y1
Elementary Czech        104P

Grammar, composition, and conversation. Readings from Czech literature. Open only to students with little or no knowledge of
the language.


SLA205H1
Intermediate Czech        54P

Using selected texts of diverse styles, this class surveys Czech grammar and introduces various aspects of syntax,
composition and translation. Special attention will be paid to oral practice.


SLA215H1
Czech and Slovak Cultures        26L

(formerly SLA215Y1)
Some of the most important features of Czech and Slovak cultural history are introduced in a survey of the national myths,
traditions and cultural trends. (Offered every three years)

Exclusion: SLA215Y1


SLA225H1
The Czech and Slovak Cinema        26S, 13P

From the "New Wave" of the 60s to the present. The films of major directors - Forman, Menzel, Chytilov  - and of talented
newcomers. Screening of films censored and prohibited over the last 25 years. English subtitles. (Offered every three years)


SLA305H1
Advanced Czech        104S

Morphology, syntax, composition and translation, oral practice. Contemporary Czech texts representing diverse styles.
Prerequisite: SLA205Y1


SLA404H1
From The National Revival to Modernism: Czech Literature of the 19th Century       26S


Beginning with the forged manuscripts of the early 19th century this course examines Czech Romanticism, Realism and
Symbolism within the context of European culture. Readings include works by Macha, Nimcova, Neruda, Zeyer, Havlieek
Borovsky.
(Offered every three years). Readings in Czech and Slovak.
Prerequisite: SLA305Y1 or permission of the instructor

Exclusion: SLA405Y1


SLA405H1
On the Waves of the Avant-garde and Beyond: Czezh Literature of the 20th Century        52S

The experiments of the 1920s serve as a point of departure for studies in Czech culture from the early 20th century to the
present artistic innovations. Readings include works by Jaroslav Seifert, Karel Teige, Karel apek, F. Langer, V. Nezval, M.
Kundera, V. Linhartov  and others. (Offered every three years). Readings in Czech.
Prerequisite: SLA305Y1 or permission of the instructor


SLA425Y1
History of the Czech Literary Language        52S


A study of original and translated works to trace the formation and development of the Czech literary language and to train
students to differentiate literary styles, genres, and epochs. Readings include chronicles, sermons, travel accounts, dialogues
and significant literary texts. (Offered every three years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA435H1
Readings in Czech and Slovak        52P

Advanced students are presented with a variety of texts - literary, journalistic, scientific - tailored to their needs and interests.
(Offered every three years)

Exclusion: SLA435Y1
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA445H1
Magic Prague        39S

This class explores Prague as a meeting point of different cultures. Questions of centre and margin of multiculturalism and
nationalism are discussed, based on texts by Jan Neruda, F. Kafka, M. Cvetaeva and others.


SLA455H1
Czech Style and Syntax        39S

Based on the theories of the Prague linguistic Circle this class explores selected concepts of Czech stylistics and syntax.
Examples include a variety of literary styles, genres, and epochs. This is a Literature course that requires an advanced
knowledge of Czech.


SLA465H1
Czech Short Story        39S

Introduces the problematics of public places and private spaces through various works of Czech writers from the 19th and 20th
centuries. A variety of texts by modern Czech authors are explored through the prism of contemporary narrative theory. Special
attention is paid to questions of differences in styles and epochs.


SLA475H1
Modern Czech Drama        39S

Introduces students to the most important plays of contemporary Czech authors. (This is graduate/undergraduate course)




Macedonian Courses

SLA109Y1
Elementary Macedonian        78P

The basic features of the grammar of the Macedonian literary language. Acquisition of essential vocabulary for practical
conversation and for comprehension. Development of reading and writing skills. Open only to students with little or no
knowledge of the literary language. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA209Y1
Intermediate Macedonian        78P

Systematic study of morphology. Reading and translation of more complex texts; more advanced composition; oral practice.
(Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: SLA109Y1





Polish Courses

SLA106Y1
Elementary Polish        26L, 78P

Basic vocabulary, essential morphology, simple sentence patterns. Regular language laboratory sessions. Reading of
contemporary texts. Open only to students with little or no knowledge of the language.


SLA206Y1
Intermediate Polish        26L, 78P

Intensive study of morphology; translation into Polish. Literary texts; oral practice.
Prerequisite: Grade 13 Polish/SLA106Y1


SLA216Y1
The Dynamics of Polish Literature and Culture: A Survey       52L


Major cultural traditions, historical processes, myths, and figures that have shaped and redefined Polish civilization and
national identity are problematized and contextualized with the help of works of literature, history, philosophy, political science,
music, visual and performing arts. Readings in English (also available in Polish). (Offered in alternate years)


SLA226H1
Postwar Polish Cinema        26L, 26P

The "Polish School" in cinema, its predecessors and successors, their artistic accomplishments, major theoretical and thematic
concerns, and their place on the map of European cinema. Films of Ford, Wajda, Polanski, Konwicki, Borowczyk, Has,
Kawalerowicz, Zanussi, Kieslowski, and of the new generation of Polish film makers. Films and discussions in English. (Offered
every three years)


SLA306H1
Advanced Polish I        52P

Syntax, word formation, and stylistics. Compositions and precis. Critical evaluation of literary works and articles in Polish.
Extensive reading and translation. (Offered in alternate years)
Prerequisite: SLA206Y1


SLA336H1
Advanced Polish II        52P

Continuation of 306H1. A variety of cultural materials are used to advance skills in composition, translation, and conversation.
Reading and discussion of literary and non-literary texts.
Prerequisite: SLA306H1 or permission of instructor


SLA346H1
From Eastern Europe to European Union: Polish Postwar Culture       26S


Probes the paradoxes of politics, culture and everyday life by analyzing the complex coexistence of art and literature with
changing cultural politics in a totalitarian and post-totalitarian system, with simplistic ideology and political dissent, and with
prevailing myths about the West and the East. Readings in English (Polish for majors).
Recommended Preparation: SLA216Y1


SLA356H1
What's New? Polish Culture Today        26S

The amazing cultural transformations of Poland in the last fifteen years within a changing Europe. The impact of these changes
on Poland's social consciousness and the perception of identity, history, and nationhood. The most recent literature, fine arts,
music, and popular culture. Readings in English (Polish for majors).
Recommended Preparation: SLA216Y1


SLA406H1
The Curtain Never Falls: Polish Drama and Theatre in Context        26S


(formerly SLA406Y1)
Study of drama as a literary and theatrical genre in its thematic and formal diversity in Polish literature from the 16th to the 20th
century is combined with investigations of the role of the theatre as cultural institution in different periods of Polish history.
Readings in English (in Polish for students in the major program). (Offered every three years)

Exclusion: SLA406Y1


SLA416H1
Polish Fiction or a Disrupted Funeral of the Novel        26S


Innovative reading of Polish fiction from the 18th to the 20th century. Study of narrative strategies, of the function of language
and literary conventions, of various styles and poetics, of the issue of representation. In addition to the works of fiction
(primarily novels, but also short stories), the reading list includes literary criticism and literary theory. Readings in English (in
Polish for students in the major program). (Offered every three years)


SLA436H1
Rebels, Scoffers, and Jesters: Polish Culture from Different Perspectives        26S


An advanced course on artistic, political, aesthetic, philosophical, and ideological dissenters who questioned, undermined, and
redefined the main traditions in Polish culture from the 18th to the 21st centuries.Readings in English (Polish for majors).
Prerequisite: SLA216Y1
Recommended Preparation: SLA336H1


SLA446H1
Polish Poetry        26S

Polish literature is known for its exquisite poetry, from the works of Jan Kochanowski, Sep-Szarzynski, Adam Mickiewicz,
Juliusz Slowacki, and C.K. Norwid, through the great modernists like Kasprowicz and Boleslaw Lesmian, to the postwar Polish
School of Poetry of Czeslaw Milosz, Herbert, Tadeusz Rozewicz, Wislawa Szymborska, and Miron Bialoszewski. This course
puts the canon of Polish poetry to a comparative, analytical, and re-interpretative test.
Prerequisite: SLA336H1 or Permission of instructor



Russian Courses

SLA100Y1
Elementary Russian        130P

The basic features of the grammar. Acquisition of essential vocabulary for practical conversation and for comprehension.
Development of reading and writing skills. (May not be taken by students who, in the judgement of the Department, qualify for
entry into SLA220Y1)


SLA220Y1
Intermediate Russian        130P

Continuation of morphology. Word formation, composition, and translation. Intensive reading of classical and contemporary
literary texts. Oral practice. Not intended for native speakers.
Prerequisite: Grade 13 Russian/SLA100Y1


SLA234H1
Russian and Soviet Cinema        13L, 26P

A survey of the Russian cinematic tradition from its beginnings through the first decade following the disintegration of the
USSR. The course examines the avant-garde cinema and film theory of the 1920s; the totalitarian esthetics of the 1920s-
1940s and the ideological uses of film art; the revolution in film theory and practice in the 1950s-1960s; cinema as medium of
cultural dissent and as witness to social change. Students also acquire basic skills of film analysis. Taught in English, all films
subtitled in English.


SLA240H1
The Great Age Of Russian Prose Fiction I       26L, 13T


Stories and novels by Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov, and others. The construction of personal and national identity:
changing relations between self and society, women and men, parents and children, rich and poor. The development and
diversity of narrative forms. Readings in English and, for majors, in the original. Offered alternate years.


SLA241H1
The Great Age of Russian Prose Fiction II      26L, 13P


Fathers and Children (Turgenev), Notes From Underground and Crime and Punishment (Dostoevsky), Anna Karenina
(Tolstoy), Lady With A Dog (Chekhov): why do these great Russian works and others still have the power to fascinate and
change us? Readings in English and, for majors, in the original. Offered alternate years.

Exclusion: SLA240Y1
Recommended Preparation: SLA240H1


SLA250Y1
Russian Cultural Heritage        52L

A chronological multimedia survey of Russian culture from pre-Christian to post-Soviet times, emphasizing the clash between
established authority and dissent, and tracing the conservative and radical currents in Russian literature and the arts, social
thought and spirituality. Readings in English of classic poems, stories and novels, supplemented by videos and slides.


SLA252H1
Russian Short Fiction        26S

An exploration of the elements of the short story through close readings of works by 19th and 20th century writers. Stories in
translation by Pushkin, Gogol, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, Olesha, Babel, and others.


SLA311H1
Gogol        26S

Fantastic and grotesque works by the most hilarious, obsessive, and delusional character in Russian literature, who teased,
fascinated, and polarized readers. Gogol's writings are examined with various theoretical approaches. Includes cinematic (Taras
Bulba, Viy, Overcoat) and musical (Ribsky-Korsakov's "Chirstmas Eve," Shostakovich's "Nose") re-creations of Gogol's works.
All readings in English.


SLA312H1
Nabokov        26S

A study of Vladimir Nabokov's novels written in Europe and the United States. Special attention is paid to the nature and
evolution of Nabokov's aesthetics; the place of his novels in European and American literary traditions; Nabokovs creative
uses of exile to artistic, philosophical and ideological ends; the aesthetic and cultural implications of the writer's switch from
Russian to English. Novels studied: Defense, Despair, The Gift, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight, Lolita, Pnin, Pale Fire. The
course is taught in English. All readings are in English.


SLA314H1
Dostoevsky        13L, 13T

Crime and Punishment, The Brothers Karamazov, and short works. Dostoevsky's political, psychological, and religious ideas
as they shape and are shaped by his literary art. Readings in English.


SLA315H1
The Russian Novel: Case Studies        26S

One major Russian novel: its genesis, structure, artistic devices, and philosophical significance. Various critical approaches;
cognate literary works. Students are expected to have read the novel before the course begins. Consult the Department for title
of novel. Readings in English. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA317H1
Tolstoy        26S

War and Peace, Anna Karenina, and some shorter works. Tolstoy's political, psychological, and religious ideas as they shape
and are shaped by his literary art. Readings in English.


SLA320Y1
Advanced Russian        130S

Syntax of the simple sentence. Problems in grammar and word formation. Composition, translation and conversation. Reading
and discussion of literary and non-literary texts.
Prerequisite: SLA220Y1; native speakers of Russian admitted only with permission of instructor


SLA321Y1
Conversational Russian        78S

Expansion of vocabulary and development of conversational skills. Readings and films stimulating discussion of Russian
history, culture, art, and contemporary events and issues.

Exclusion: Native speakers of Russian
Prerequisite: SLA220Y1and permission of instructor


SLA323H1
War and Peace        26S

War and Peace in depth, and from various points of view, literary, political, philosophical, historical, and psychological. Various
critical approaches; cognate literary works. Students are expected to have read the novel before the course begins. Readings
in English. (Offered in alternate years)
Recommended Preparation: SLA317H1


SLA324H1
Anna Karenina        26S

Anna Karenina in depth, and from various points of view, literary, political, philosophical, historical, and psychological. Various
critical approaches; cognate literary works. Students are expected to have read the novel before the course begins. Readings
in English. (Offered in alternate years)
Recommended Preparation: SLA317H1



SLA 331H1
Experiments and Revolutions in Art and Literature of the Late Russian Empire-Early Soviet Union 26S

Painting, literature, and film from 1890-1930s. New revolutionary paths for the advancement of man and society through art.
Symbolism, neoprimitivism, futurism, suprematism, and constructivism. Chekhov, Kandinsky, Bely, Stravinsky, Goncharova,
Malevich, Tatlin, Eisenstein, and many others. All readings in English.


SLA332H1
Literature and Music in Russia        13L, 13S

This course, on the interaction between artistic genres, introduces a series of Russian and other literary works of the 19-20th
C that have inspired Russian musical masterpieces in the operatic, song, and symphonic repertoire. Texts are studied in
translation. Basic Russian and musical literacy useful, but not obligatory.


SLA339H1
20th Century Russian Prose I: Modernism, Avant-garde, Totalitarianism       13L, 26T


A survey of Russian prose from the turn of the century to the imposition of total state control over arts in the 1930s and 1940s.
Readings include: stories from Chekhov's last creative period; Symbolist novels; the experimental prose of the 1920s; the
Soviet picaresque; and the literature of "Socialist realism." Taught in English. Readings may be done in English or in Russian.
(Offered in alternate years)


SLA340H1
20th Century Russian Prose II: Internal and External Exile        13L, 26T


Alternative currents in Russian literature during the Soviet period. Readings include: works by First Wave ‚migr‚ writers
(Bunin, Gazdanov, Nabokov); literature of the Soviet samizdat (Bitov, Daniel', Venedikt Erofeev, Solzhenitsyn, Abram Terts);
and the writings of the Third Wave emigration (Aksenov, Voinovich, Aleshkovskii). Taught in English. Readings may be done in
English or in Russian. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA343H1
Post-Stalinist and  Contemporary Russian Literature      13L, 13S


A study of major books and writers of the last forty years (novels, short stories, verse) which are involved in the post-Stalin
artistic and cultural liberation, the rediscovery of Russian literature's links with its own vital tradition, and development of a
Russian brand of modern and 'post-modern' writing. (Readings in English)


SLA344H1
The Gulag in Literature        13L, 13S

The experience of prison as reflected by Russian writers. The rise and persistence of the prison camp system; physical and
spiritual survival; the literary value of the prison experience. Works (in translation) by Dostoevsky, Solzhenitsyn, Shalamov,
Ginzburg and others.


SLA351H1
Language Practice        TBA

Development of writing and translating skills. For more advanced students including native speakers.


SLA367H1
Chekhov        26S

Selected stories, plays; stylistic, structural, and thematic analysis, literary and historical context, influence in Russia and the
West. Readings in English and, for Specialists in Russian, in the original. (Offered in alternate years)


SLA370H1
Russian Romantic Poetry        39S

An introduction to Russian Romanticism through the major works of one or more poets (chosen variously from Pushkin,
Lermontov, Tyutchev, Baratynsky, et al.). Close readings of lyric and narrative verse. The rudiments of Russian versification.
Relations with Western European poets. All texts read in Russian.
Co-requisite: SLA320Y1


SLA402H1
Advanced Russian Language Skills        39S

A series of translation exercises from English to Russian (and some from Russian to English) designed to expand students'
ability to respond to and translate a variety of advanced prose texts in different styles and registers.
Prerequisite: SLA320Y1 or permission of the instructor


SLA415H1
Studies in Russian Literature of the 18th Century       39S


The prose, poetry and dramaturgy of the most prominent literary figures of the eighteenth century, including Karamzin,
Lomonosov, Fonvizin, Derzhavin and Krylov; aspects of literature during the reign of Peter I; literature and satirical journalism
during the reign of Catherine II. (Taught in Russian)
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor


SLA420Y1
Studies in Russian Syntax and Stylistics       130S


Syntactic structures and their relation to meaning and style, word order, intonation. Consolidation of morphology, vocabulary
building through extensive reading. Translation, composition, and oral practice.
Prerequisite: SLA320Y1; native speakers of Russian admitted only with permission of instructor


SLA440Y1
Russian Poetry, 1820-1960        78S

The lyric poetry of Pushkin, Lermontov, Tyutchev, Nekrasov, Fet, Blok, Akhmatova, Esenin, Mayakovsky, Tsvetaeva and
Pasternak. Stylistic and structural aspects. Readings in Russian.
Prerequisite: SLA320Y1/340Y1


SLA450H1
Pushkin and His Age        26P

Lyric poetry, poems, selected prose and Evgeny Onegin. Pushkin and the idea of a writer in the Russia of his time; his image
as a national poet. Readings in Russian.
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor.


SLA460H1
Contemporary Russian Literature        26L

Major writers and literary groupings of the past decade; the literary process in post-Soviet Russia. (Taught in Russian)
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor


SLA461H1
Literary Scandals in 20th Century Russia        26L


An examination of twentieth-century literature through exploration of major literary scandals, including Blok/Bely, Mayakovsky,
Voloshin, Zoshchenko/Akhmatova, the Nobel and Booker Prizes; how these illustrate tensions within literature and reveal the
literary process. (Taught in Russian)
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor


SLA464H1
Studies in the Russian Novel        26L

An examination of the most prominent Russian novelists of the last several decades, including Erofeev, Bitov, Sorokin and
Azolsky. The genesis, structure, artistic devices and philosophical significance of their novels, critical approaches to them,
cognate works. (Taught in Russian)
Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor




Slavic Linguistics Courses

SLA330Y1
Old Church Slavonic        52S

Structure and history. Reading and linguistic study of Old Slavonic texts.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA452Y1
Structure of Russian        52S

The phonology, morphology and syntax of contemporary standard Russian from a formal and semantic standpoint.
Prerequisite: SLA320Y1




Ukrainian Courses
Web site: www.chass.utoronto.ca/~tarn/courses/

SLA108Y1
Elementary Ukrainian        104P

Basic vocabulary, simple sentence patterns, essential morphology. Internet language laboratory drills. Intended for students
with little or no knowledge of the language.


SLA208Y1
Intermediate Ukrainian        104P

Study of morphology through grammar drills; oral practice; reading of texts from Ukrainian literature.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA218Y1
Ukrainian Literature and Culture        26L, 26S


A general survey of Ukrainian culture through an examination of selected literary works and their social, political, historical,
philosophical, and aesthetic context. The course covers the period from Kyivan Rus' to the present. Readings in English.
(Offered in alternate years)


SLA228H1
20th Century Ukrainian Fiction in Translation       13L, 13S


A selection of twentieth century Ukrainian novels and short prose in English translation. From the intellectual novel of the
1920s, through socialist realism, to the new prose of the 1990s. Authors include Pidmohylny, Antonenko-Davydovych,
Honchar, Shevchuk, Andrukhovych and Zabuzhko. (Offered in alternate years)
Recommended preparation: any course in literature


SLA238H1
Literature of the Ukrainian-Canadian Experience        13L, 13S


A selection of literary texts depicting or reflecting the experience and perceptions of Ukrainians in Canada from the first
immigrants to the present. Texts include works originally written in English, French and Ukrainian, but all readings are in
English. Authors include: Kiriak, Kostash, Ryga, Galay, Suknaski, Kulyk Keefer. (Offered in alternate years)
Recommended preparation: any course in literature


SLA248H1
Women and Women's Themes in Ukrainian Literature        26S


This course examines the presentation of women and women's themes in works of Ukrainian literature. The subjects covered
include: role models, freedom, socialism, nationalism, feminism, and sexuality.


SLA308Y1
Advanced Ukrainian        104P

Review of morphology and study of syntax. Short compositions based on literary and critical texts. Voluntary language
laboratory.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA318H1
Kyiv-Kiev-Kijow: A City through Cultures and Centuries 26L


A cultural history of the Ukrainian capital; Ukrainian, Russian, Polish and Jewish "versions" of the city; artworks and literary
texts that capture the complexity of Kyivan history and culture. Readings in the original languages encouraged but not required.


SLA408H1
The Ukrainian Short Story        26S

The development of the short story from Kvitka-Osnovianenko to the present day. All readings in the original. (Offered every
four years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA418H1
Ukrainian Drama        26S

The development of Ukrainian drama from Kotliarevsky to the present day. All readings in the original. (Offered every four
years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA419Y1
Ukrainian Poetry        52S

A survey of Ukrainian poetry from Skovoroda to the present day. All readings in the original. (Offered every four years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA428Y1
The Ukrainian Novel        52S

Major works by Kulish, Nechui-Levytsky, Myrny, Franko, Kotsiubynsky, Kobylianska, Vynnychenko, Ianovsky, Pidmohylny,
Honchar, Andrukhovych, and Zabuzhko. Readings in Ukrainian. (Offered every four years)
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA429H1
Shevchenko        26S

A critical study of Taras Shevchenko. Life, works, and significance. Readings in Ukrainian.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA438H1
Style and Structure of Ukrainian        39S

Beginning with an overview of the synchronic structure of Ukrainian (phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax), the course
introduces various styles of contemporary Ukrainian. Emphasis is on the practical usage of various styles. A number of
sociolinguistic questions are examined: dialects, jargons, slang, and the language situation in contemporary Ukraine.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor


SLA448H1
Ukrainian Literature of the17th and 18th Centuries        26S


A survey of Ukrainian literature from the Renaissance to the National Revival: polemical literature, baroque poetry, school
drama, religious and philosophical treatises, history-writing, dumy and satire. Major figures include Smotrysky, Vyshensky,
Prokopovych and Skovoroda. Works are read in modern Ukrainian and English translations.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Recommended preparation: A 400-level course in Ukrainian literature


SLA458H1
Ukrainian for the 21st Century        39S

This course introduces students to contemporary Ukrainian using approaches beyond grammar and traditional classroom
interaction. Emphasis is on the enhancement of language skills in the context of contemporary Ukraine. Students develop
practical skills based on traditional media as well as on multimedia resources, including those of the Internet.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Recommended preparation: SLA208Y1, SLA308Y1


SLA468H1
Aspects of LiteraryTranslation of Ukrainian        39P


This course introduces the problems of written translation of literary works from Ukrainian into English: evaluation and
comparison of existing translations, practical exercises; treatment of common difficulties in translating, various literary genres
and styles, dialectical, social, generational and other subvarieties of language, as well as idiomatic and figurative language.
Prerequisite: Permission of instructor
Recommended preparation: SLA308Y1 or permission of instructor


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