Academic Catalog 2024-2025
Modern Languages and Literatures
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Chair: Associate Professor M. Ricci Bell
Faculty: Professors C. Batson, K. Bidoshi, M. Ferry, W. Garcia, C. Henseler, D. Mosquera, C. Ndiaye, J. Ueno; Associate Professors M. Chilcoat, S. Mueller, E. Nelson-Mukherjee, Z. Zhang; Senior Lecturers M. Osuna, A. Pease; Assistant Professor S. Yi; Visiting Assistant Professors M. Dawson, R. Pasquer, M. Mayna
Administration: A. Sartiaux (Director of Language Center)
Staff: F. Li (Administrative Assistant)
All students who begin the study of a new foreign language at Union College are encouraged to pursue it for at least three terms. Students who take 100-level courses in more than one foreign language will receive credit for the second 100-level course only upon completion of the 101-level course in at least one of the two languages. Students continuing a foreign language previously studied will be assigned to the proper course level by the department. Placement will be made in consultation with the Chair and faculty members of the department on the basis of the secondary school record and testing scores. Students may construct full majors or interdepartmental majors in Chinese, French and Francophone, German and Spanish and Hispanic Studies. Students in Japanese, and Russian have the option of an interdepartmental major with any other field. Minors are possible in Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Russian, and Spanish. Students of Chinese and Japanese have the option of the major or interdepartmental major in Asian Studies. Introductory courses are also offered in Arabic, Hebrew, Italian and Portuguese.
Requirements in All Languages
Requirements for Honors:
- A candidate for honors shall have an index in Departmental courses of not less than 3.5 and an overall cumulative index of not less than 3.3.
- The candidate shall have achieved a grade of “A” in three courses in the department, with at least one at the 300-level or higher.
- Additional stipulations for full and interdepartmental majors in French, German, and Spanish. Majors shall have achieved a grade of at least “A-” in two 400-level courses (not including FRN 489 , GER 489 , SPN 489 ). Interdepartmental majors shall have achieved a grade of at least “A-” in no fewer than three courses at the 300-level or higher, with at least one at the 400-level (not including FRN 489, GER 489, SPN 489).
- Additional stipulations for interdepartmental majors in Chinese, Japanese, and Russian. Interdepartmental majors shall have achieved a grade of at least “A-” in no fewer than three courses at the 300-level or higher, and one in an MLT course.
- For the major, the honors candidate shall complete a project of a literary and/or cultural nature. For the interdisciplinary major, the candidate may elect to complete a thesis/project relating the candidate’s chosen disciplines. In all cases, the topic shall have received prior approval from the faculty advisor.
- For the major, the honors project is expected to be written in the foreign language studied. For the interdisciplinary major, the honors project should be written in the language deemed appropriate by the faculty advisor. For the interdisciplinary major in Chinese and Japanese, the project shall normally be written in English.
- The honors project shall have been awarded a grade no lower than “A-.”
- When declaring candidacy for honors, a student shall write a statement outlining the nature and scope of the project and present it to the faculty member chosen to supervise the honors project, as well as to the Chair of the Department. The candidate’s proposal must meet with the approval of both faculty members. This stipulation is waived when the honors project is written under the direct supervision of a Departmental faculty member in a class setting.
Requirement for taking a course without its prerequisites
In order to be placed at the proper level for their first language course at Union or to be assigned to any other course without having completed its prerequisite, students should contact the Departmental office for an appointment with the appropriate professor to get a signed permission slip or petition on the necessary waiver.
Course Selection Guidelines
Students should be aware that many of our language programs offer the 100 class (Basic 1) only in the Fall term.
Students with previous experience in a language should come to the Department office to make an appointment to see a professor in the appropriate language for proper placement. Our MLT courses do not require such placement, as they are taught in English.
Courses in Modern Literature, Culture, and Cinema in Translation (Taught in English)
Faculty in the Department of Modern Languages & Literatures offer a variety of courses on works of literature, culture, cinema, and media that have been translated into English. “MLT” courses allow English-speaking students to engage with texts and other cultural artifacts from around the world to help them to develop the awareness of cultural diversity that is needed to be a global citizen in the twenty-first century.
ProgramsMajorInterdepartmental MajorMinorCoursesGerman- GER 303 - Topics and Themes in German Drama
- GER 304 - Once Upon a Time: German Fairy Tales, Folklore, and Fantasy
- GER 305 - Topics and Themes in German Poetry: Love, Songs and Love Songs
- GER 306 - Twentieth and Twentifirst Century German Literature
- GER 307 - East German Culture
- GER 334 - Femme fatales? Women in 19th and 20th Century German Culture and Society
- GER 335 - Voices from Abroad: German Exile Culture, 1933-1990
- GER 336 - The Thrill of Victory: Reading German Sports and Culture
- GER 337 - Flashy Erotics to Forbidden Laughter: German Cabaret through the 20th Century
- GER 338 - Poetry, Performance, Protest & Power: A History of Twentieth-Century Germany
- GER 339 - The Holocaust in Film: Cinematic Treatments of Violence, Trauma and Memory
- GER 340 - Beyond Bedtime Stories: Retelling the Tales of the Brothers Grimm
- GER 341 - Grounding in German Texts
- GER 401 - Meeting the Other: Migration and Multiculturalism in Contemporary Germany
- GER 402 - German Film Studies
- GER 403 - Shoah: Literary, Artistic and Filmic Representations of the Holocaust
- GER 404 - Kafka and Mann: German Modernism
- GER 406 - The City in German Cineman
- GER 489 - German Senior Writing Project
- GER 490 - German Independent Study 1
- GER 491 - German Independent Study 2
- GER 492 - German Independent Study 3
- MLT 234 - Femmes fatales? Women in 19th- and 20th-Century German Culture and Society
- MLT 235 - Voices from Abroad: German Exile Culture, 1933-1990
- MLT 236 - Poetry, Performance, Protest & Power: A History of Twentieth-Century Germany
- MLT 237 - Of Ghosts and Demons: Encountering the Uncanny in German Literature
- MLT 239 - Beyond Bedtime Stories: Retelling the Tales of the Brothers Grimm
- MLT 267 - Disability in Film: Theoretical, Cultural and Cinematic Practices
- MLT 336 - The Thrill of Victory: Reading German Sports (and) Culture
- MLT 339 - The Holocaust in Film: Cinematic Treatments of Violence, Trauma and Memory
HebrewItalianJapaneseLatinModern Languages & LiteraturesModern Literature in TranslationPortugueseRussianSpanishPage: 1
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