
Note: You must establish a session for Winter Academic Term 2004 on wolverineaccess.umich.edu in order to use the link "Check Times, Location, and Availability". Once your session is established, the links will function.
This page was created at 6:18 PM on Wed, Jan 21, 2004.
Winter Academic Term 2004 (January 6 - April 30)
SLAVIC 481 / JUDAIC 481. Central and Eastern Europe in 20th-Century Jewish Writing.
Slavic Surveys
Section 001.
Prerequisites: (3). May not be repeated for credit. Rackham credit requires additional work.
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.
See JUDAIC 481.001.
SLAVIC 490. Issues in the Cultures of Eastern Europe.
Slavic Surveys
Section 001 — Dismantling the Totalitarian State in Poland: Rock Kills Communism. Meets March 3-April 7. Knowledge of Polish is not necessary. Meets with REES 410.001. (Drop/Add deadline=March 9).
Instructor(s):
Westwalewicz
Prerequisites: (1). May be repeated for credit for a maximum of 3 credits. Laboratory fee may be required.
Mini/Short course
Credits: (1).
Lab Fee: Laboratory fee may be required.
Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.
This course will explore the complicated dynamics between popular culture and politics in Poland during the last two decades of communism.
This course will ask a series of intriguing questions. Did Polish popular culture destroy the very foundations of Communism? Or did the decline of Communism allow the increasingly critical voices of prominent cabaret artists, pop musicians, and cartoonists to express the sentiments of the population? Students will examine humor, music, and political and social commentary by such icons of Polish counterculture as Mynarski, Grzeskowiak, Chya, Mleczko, Olewicz, Mogielnicki, Ciechowski, and others. All materials will be presented in Polish with English translations. Knowledge of Polish is not necessary.
SLAVIC 545. Workshop in Slavic Linguistics.
Slavic Linguistics
Section 001.
Prerequisites: Permission of instructor. (3). May be repeated for credit for a maximum of 6 credits.
Credits: (3).
Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.
Workshop to provide opportunity for students to apply and expand their control of current methods and theories of linguistic analysis, including the theory and practice of translation from Slavic languages. Dialogue and lively interaction. Lectures, demonstrations, discussions.
SLAVIC 662. Directed Reading in Slavic Linguistics.
Slavic Linguistics
Instructor(s):
Prerequisites: SLAVIC 483 and permission of instructor. Graduate standing. (1-4). (INDEPENDENT). May not be repeated for credit.
Credits: (1-4).
Course Homepage: No homepage submitted.
Designed for individual students who have an interest in a specific topic (usually that has stemmed from a previous course). An individual instructor must agree to direct such a reading, and the requirements are specified when approval is granted.

This page was created at 6:18 PM on Wed, Jan 21, 2004.

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