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German Courses

Key to Course Descriptions.

For Distribution Requirement purposes, all GER courses are classified as HUMANITIES courses.

Course Winter Timetable


HUM199H1/Y1
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 45.

Notes

Students with German-speaking background are expected to consult the Department about their programs. The Department reserves the right to place students in the language course appropriate to their level of language skill.

Reading lists for the various courses are available from the Department.

Students intending to specialize in German may also consult the Calendar of the University of Toronto at Mississauga for additional course offerings which may be counted for specialization.


GER100Y1
Introduction to German I        104P

An intensive language course for students with no previous knowledge of German. Practice in comprehension, reading, writing and speaking. This course can be counted towards all programs in German.

Exclusion: OAC German or equivalent


GER101H1
Introduction to German        52P

An intensive language course for students with some prior knowledge of German but not quite OAC level. This course is equivalent to the Spring Term of GER100Y1.


GER150H1
Introduction to German Culture        39S

This is a survey course which introduces students to German social, cultural, and intellectual history. This course is taught in English and is open to all students.

Exclusion: GER150Y1


GER200Y1
Introductory German II        78P, 26T

Continuation of work done in GER100Y1/GER101H1. Further expansion of basic grammar and vocabulary, practice in comprehension, translation, composition, and conversation.

Exclusion: GER200H1/201H1; not open to fluent or nearly fluent speakers of German
Prerequisite: GER100Y1/GER101H1, OAC German or equivalent, or permission of the department.


GER204H1
German Literature in Translation        39S

An overview of some key works in German literature. This course serves as an introduction to German literature, and is suited for students with little or no prior knowledge of the German language.

Exclusion: GER204Y1


GER205H1
German Literature I        39S

An introduction to the study of German literary texts in the original German. This course is required for majors and specialists.

Exclusion: GER304H1
Prerequisite: GER100Y1, or permission of department


GER232H1
German Drama in Translation        39S

Representative dramas of the 19th and 20th centuries by a variety of authors are analyzed in depth and the dramatic forms highlighted. When available, a film version of the drama will be discussed.


GER260Y1
Elementary Yiddish        104P

Introduction to Yiddish language, literature, and culture, featuring intensive practice with a native speaker. The dialect taught is that of the text College Yiddish by Uriel Weinreich.


GER299Y1
Research Opportunity Program

Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. See page 45 for details.


GER300Y1
Intermediate German        78P

German at the intermediate level: extension of vocabulary, specific problems of grammar, practice in translation, essay-writing, reading and conversation. The Department reserves the right to place students in the appropriate course in the series GER200Y1 and GER300Y1.

Exclusion: GER300H1, 301H1
Prerequisite: GER200Y1/ or permission of the department


GER305H1
German Literature II        26S

Building on the work of GER205H1, this course explores more complex literary texts in the original German. It thus provides a bridge to the other literature courses in the program. This course is required for majors and specialists.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER310H1
Topics in Contemporary German Culture        39S

Focus is on contemporary German culture as expressed through a variety of media.
Prerequisite: GER300Y1 or equivalent as decided by the department


GER324H1
Dreams- Desires - Delusions        26S

These central themes of Romanticism are examined through reading texts by authors of the era.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER325H1
19th Century German Literature        26S

An examination of German literary texts in their social and historical context.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER327H1
Deviance - Madness - Outsiders        26S

An analyzis of the literary confrontation with deviance, madness, and the outsider.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER331H1
Kafka in Context        26S

Franz Kafka’s texts situated within the literary, historical, and philosophical context of fin-de-siècle Prague and central Europe.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER334H1
Weimar Culture        26S

Expressionism, dada, Bauhaus, the ‘Golden Age’ in German film: an examination of literary and artistic movements in the era between World War I and Nazism.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER335H1
Writing Memory: 1945 to the Present       26S

An examination of post-World War II German literature and culture from “Zero Hour” through to contemporary debates about the Holocaust and its memorialization.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER351H1
Topics in German Cinema I        26S, 26P

This introduction to German Cinema will provide a historical perspective on German film and the innovations of German filmmakers. Students will engage with film language and the analysis of film.
Prerequisite: GER205H1, or permission of the department


GER354Y0
Special Topics Summer Course in Berlin

The topics depend on the instructor from year to year. Interested students can address questions to Woodsworth College. This course is taught in English and is open to students from other disciplines.
Prerequisite: Permission of the department
Recommended preparation: 100-level HIS/POL/GER course/International or European Studies


GER355Y0
Summer Course in Berlin

Students who wish to petition the department for credit toward a specialist or major program in German will be required to do part of their work in German.


GER360H1
Intermediate Yiddish        39P

Review of basic grammar, stylistics, study of short literary texts. Conducted in Yiddish.

Exclusion: GER360Y1
Prerequisite: GER260Y1


GER361H1
Yiddish Literature and Culture in Translation       26S

An overview of the major figures and tendencies in modern Yiddish literature and culture from the beginning of the 19th century to the present. Readings (in English) of modern Yiddish prose, poetry, drama and cinema.


GER362H1
Soviet and Kosher: Jewish  Culture in the Soviet Union
      26S

Soviet Jewish culture between 1917 and 1941. Works in translation by Soviet Yiddish writers and poets, performances of central Yiddish theatres, and publications in central Yiddish periodicals will be analyzed as expressions of Soviet ideology and of ethnic identity.
Recommended preparation: HIS208Y1, HIS242H1, HIS250Y1, or with permission of the department


GER363Y1
Cultural History of East  European Community 1800-2000      52S

This course examines how artistic works created by Jews portrayed and interpreted historical realities during that period. All artistic media will be examined.


GER364H1
Introduction to the History of 26L, 26P Yiddish Cinema

This course traces the history of Yddish cinema from its beginnings in 1911 to the end of the twentieth century. There will be 2 hours viewing time and 2 hours lectures per week. Cross-listed with the Cinema Studies Program Innis College.


GER370H1
Business German I        39P

An introduction to the use of German in the professional/business context. Emphasis on oral and written communication.
Prerequisite: GER200Y1 or permission of the department
Note: This course is required for the minor program in Business German.


GER398H0/399Y0
Independent Experiential Study Project

An instructor-supervised group project in an off-campus setting. See page 45 for details.


GER371H0
Berlin Summer Internship

A three week intensive internship in Berlin, focusing on work/study and intercultural learning.
Prerequisites: good working knowledge of German and permission from the instructor.


GER400H1
Advanced German (formerly GER400Y1)
        39P

For students with a firm grasp of German. Review of advanced features of the language. Emphasis on both oral and written communication. Introduction to aspects of stylistics.

Exclusion: GER403H1, GER400Y1
Prerequisite: GER300Y1 or permission of the department


GER410H1
Topics in German Intellectual History       26S

An examination of key moments and themes in German intellectual history from the Enlightenment to the present.
Prerequisite: GER305H1, or permission of the department


GER411H1
Introduction to Critical Theory        26S

Current debates in critical theory. This course will familarize students with some of the key issues in critical theory today, and provide the background to these debates.
Prerequisite: Permission of the department


GER412H1
Modernity and Its Discontents        26S

History of various concepts of modernity. This course traces theories of modernity in German literature, culture and theory.
Prerequisite: GER305H1, or permission of the department


GER420H1
The Age of Goethe        26S

An examination of Goethe and his contemporaries as they respond—through drama, prose, and poetry—to the challenges of changing times.

Exclusion: GER420Y1, 460H1, 460Y1
Prerequisite: GER305H1, or permission of the department


GER421H1
Gender and Identity        26S

With the representation of gender as its focus, this course will examine key works of modern German literature, where typical themes range from love, lust and treachery to masochism, cross-dressing and other forms of gender trouble.
Prerequisite: GER305H1, or permission of the department


GER422H1
Focus On Berlin        26S

An exploration of the cultural development of Berlin through literature, from the Bismarckian era through the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich to the construction of the Berlin Wall and German unification.
Prerequisite: GER305H1, or permission of the department


GER423H1
Different Voices        26S

Different topics and a variety of different authors; to be decided from year to year.
Prerequisite: GER305H1 or permission of the department



GER 424H1
Writing the Self in Poetry 26S

An exploration of representations and articulations of the self in German poetry.
Prerequisite: GER305H1 or permission of the department.


GER426H1
Middle High German        39S

An introduction to the language, literature and civilization of Medieval Germany.
Prerequisite: GER300Y1/GER205H1 or permission of the department


GER429H1
Topics in Medieval German Literature       26S

A study of specific topics in Medieval Literature.
Prerequisite: GER426H1 or permission of the department



GER 430H1
Topics in German Literature and Culture 26S

An open course which explores very specific aspects of German literature and culture. It may change from year to year.
Prerequisite: GER305H1 or permission of the department.


GER462H1
Advanced Yiddish        26P

Advanced reading, writing, vocabulary and conversation. Study of poetry, short fiction, and memoir literature by leading authors. Selected advanced grammatical topics presented in conjunction with the study of texts. Conducted entirely in Yiddish.

Exclusion: GER461Y1
Prerequisite: GER360Y1 or permission of the department


GER470H1
Business German II        39P

Intensive development of the linguistic skills needed in the context of a German business environment.
Prerequisite: GER370H1/370Y1 or permission of the department. This course is required for the Business German minor program.


GER490H1
Independent Study        26S

A reading and research project in Germanic literature or linguistics.
Prerequisite: Permission of Department to be obtained by May 1st for the Fall Term; by November 1st for the Spring Term.


GER491Y1
Individual Studies        52S

A scholarly project chosen by the student and supervised by a member of the staff. The form of the project and the manner of its execution are determined in consultation with the supervisor. All project proposals should be submitted by June 1, 2006.