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Bulletin Archive

This archived information is dated to the 2008-09 academic year only and may no longer be current.

For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.

Graduate courses in Slavic General

Primarily for graduate students; undergraduates may enroll with consent of instructor.

SLAVGEN 210. The Gogol Bordello: Ukraine as a Meeting House of Cultures

(Same as SLAVGEN 110.) The cohabitation of authors and cultural geography in multiethnic Ukraine. Comparison of Ukrainian texts, images of Ukraine and Ukrainians by their Polish, Jewish, German, and Russian cohabitants. Possible authors include : Andrukhovych, Aleichem, Babel, Celan, Franko, Gogol, Lewycka, Mickiewicz, Shevchenko, Pushkin, Schulz, Ukraina, and Zabuzhko.

3-5 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 222. Yiddish Story

(Same as SLAVGEN 122.) The humor, drama, anger, and artistry of modern E. European and American Yiddish writers including Sholem Aleichem, I. L. Peretz, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Chaim Grade, and Yankev Glatshteyn. In English.

5 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 223. The Yiddish Novel

(Same as SLAVGEN 123.) How Yiddish novels reveal changes in modern Jewish life and literature in Europe and the U.S. The influences of folklore, traditional Jewish culture, and European literature. Works by Isaac and Joshua Singer, Joseph Opatoshu, Der Nister, Chava Rosenfarb, Sholem Asch, and David Bergelson. Readings in English; optional sessions for close readings in Yiddish.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 233. Poles and Others: Literature and History in Modern Poland

(Same as SLAVGEN 133.) The physical and cultural territories of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth have long been objects of contest. The 20th century witnessed two or three rebirths of Poland and one or two deaths; a belated modernization of Polish society; the final inclusion of Polish-speaking peasants and burghers in a Polish national identity; and the exclusion of Jews, Germans, Lithuanians, Belarusans, Ukrainians, and others from the state and participation in a partially shared culture.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 241. Staging the Revolution: Russian Theater and Society, 1917-1937

(Same as SLAVGEN 141.) Between 1917 and 1937, artistic experimentation in the Russian theater coincided with political and social changes in Russian society. Modernist artists interpreted the revolution as an artistic possibility to demolish conventions of representation. Mass festivals, circus, and street performances replaced the old theater. In the time of the Great Terror and staged trials, theater and opera remained among the leading arts, but state patronage caused a major reorientation of artistic practices. Readings include plays by Mayakovsky, Bulgakov, Babel, Tretiakov, and Erdman. Readings in English.

4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 245. Age of Experiment: From Pushkin to Gogol

(Same as SLAVGEN 145.) The Russian leap into European culture after the Napoleonic Wars and the formative period of Russian literature. Readings seen as local literary developments and contemporary European trends including Pushkin's Eugene Onegin, The Belkin Tales, and The Captain's Daughter; Lermontov's Hero of Our Time; and Gogol's Petersburg Tales and Dead Souls.

3-4 units, Aut (Fleishman, L)

SLAVGEN 246. History and Other Theories of Time and Action in the Great Russian Novel

(Same as SLAVGEN 146.) Connections of philosophy to literary form in Turgenev's Fathers and Sons, Tolstoy's War and Peace, Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov, and Chekov's The Cherry Orchard, and other stories.

3-4 units, Win (Greenleaf, M)

SLAVGEN 247. The Age of War and Revolution: A Survey of Russian Literature and Culture, 1900-1950s

(Same as SLAVGEN 147.) First of two-part sequence. Russian modernism and the avant garde.The Russian Revolution, the era of the NEP, Soviet civilization, and the literature of opposition following Stalin's death. Texts in English translation.

3-4 units, Spr (Fleishman, L)

SLAVGEN 248. The Age of Dissent: A Survey of Russian Literature and Culture, 1953 to the Present

(Same as SLAVGEN 148.) From the death of Stalin to post-communist Russia. Literature of the thaw and de-Stalinization, official and unofficial literature of dissent, samizdat, village and urban prose, literature of the new emigration, late Soviet underground, sots-art, perestroika, and post-communist literature and culture. Texts in English translation. For graduate credit for research paper, register for 399.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 250. Countercultures in Conversation: Russian and American Rock Music and Protest Poetry

(Same as SLAVGEN 150.) Non-conformist protest movements in contemporary Russian poetry; historical and cultural context; and comparison with similar processes in American social and cultural life. Sources include Russian and American poetry, songs, and DVDs. Fourth unit for readings in Russian.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 251. Dostoevsky and His Times

(Same as COMPLIT 119, COMPLIT 219, SLAVGEN 151.) Open to juniors, seniors, and graduate students. Major works in English translation with reference to related developments in Russian and European culture, literary criticism, and intellectual history.

4 units, Win (Frank, J)

SLAVGEN 253. Russian Jewish LIterature

(Same as SLAVGEN 153.) Russian Jewish experience inspired books and films in Hebrew, Yiddish, Russian and English that reveal a world of conflict, humor and beauty. From the mid-19th century to the t21st century. Authors include Haim Nahman Bialik, Sholem Aleichem, Isaac babel, Osip Mandelstam, Joseph Brodsky, Leonid Tsypkin, Ludmila Ulitskaia, Gary Shteyngardt.

3-4 units, Win (Safran, G)

SLAVGEN 255. Anton Chekhov and the Turn of the Century

(Same as SLAVGEN 155.) Chekhov's art in its Russian literary, historical, philosophical, and political contexts. Short stories and major plays; supplemental readings for graduate students from Chekhov's letters and works by his friends and contemporaries, such as Leskov, Tolstoy, Korolenko, and Gorky.

4 units, Spr (Safran, G)

SLAVGEN 256. Nabokov in the Transnational Context

(Same as COMPLIT 115, COMPLIT 215, SLAVGEN 156.) Nabakov's techniques of migration and camouflage as he inhabits the literary and historical contexts of St. Petersburg, Berlin, Paris, America, and Switzerland. His early and late stories, last Russian novel The Gift, Lolita (the novel and screenplay), and Pale Fire. Readings in English.

3-4 units, Spr (Greenleaf, M)

SLAVGEN 262. Gender Images in Film

(Same as SLAVGEN 162.) Film creates permanent new images of femininity. One of its conscious prerequisites is the notion of social stereotypes. The development of enduring images of the film heroine, 1914-90, through a comparison of the Russian, American, and W. European cinema, and analytical approaches to them from feminist film theory.

3 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 263. Gender in Postwar Russian Culture

(Same as SLAVGEN 163.) Issues of femininity and masculinity in Russian literature, film, and popular culture from the 40s to the present. Readings include fiction, memoirs, poetry, drama, and theoretical works in gender studies.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 265. Poetry, Painting, and Music of the Russian Avant Garde

(Same as SLAVGEN 165.) Interrelationships between poetry and other arts in Russia, 1905-30. The pursuit of synthesis of arts and the modernist agenda of life creation and immortality. Parallel developments in literature, painting, and music, and style and poetics. Russian modernist poetry in the context of changes in the language of visual arts and music). Women poets and artists. Native sources and Western influences; non-Russian elements and transnational tendencies. The impact of scientific discoveries and technological inventions on artistic experimentation.

3-4 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 269. Mermaids, the Firebird, and the Singing Tree: Russian Folklore and Its Theory

(Same as SLAVGEN 169.) Russian culture through its oral folklore and music. Theory, current data and its interpretation, how scholars collect and understand traditional oral poetry, and the lessons of folklore.

3-5 units, not given this year

SLAVGEN 290. Tolstoy's Anna Karenina in Dialogue with Contemporary Philosophical, Social, and Ethical Thought

(Same as HUMNTIES 197F, SLAVGEN 190.) Themes: institutions of the family and gender; debate about the female body, church, and religion; the decline of privilege and the rise of capital and industry; the meaning of art and the artist; conflicts of law and custom, country and city, andnationalism and cosmopolitanism; and the ascetic rejection of the world. Authors include Marx, Mill, Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Weber, and Freud.

3-4 units, Spr (Freidin, G)

SLAVGEN 295. RUSSIAN THEATER

(Same as SLAVGEN 195.) Reading plays in juxtaposition with clips from performances and famous directors' writings (Stanislavsky, Meyerhold, and beyond). Evolution of Russian theatrical theory and practice, with particular attention to the present. Some knowledge of Russian desirable.

3-4 units, Aut (Greenleaf, M)

SLAVGEN 313. Visuality and Literacy Workshop

Relationships among visual arts, theater, and literature in the culture of modernity.

1-2 units, not given this year

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