Bulletin Archive
This archived information is dated to the 2009-10 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
This archived information is dated to the 2009-10 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
Majors must demonstrate basic language skills, either by completing GERLANG 1,2,3, First-Year German, or the equivalent such as an appropriate course of study at the Stanford in Berlin Center. Students then enroll in intermediate and advanced courses on literature, culture, thought, and language. Requirements for the B.A. include at least three courses at the 120-139 level (introductory surveys on topics in German literature, thought, linguistics, and culture). Every major is expected to complete at least one Writing in the Major (WIM) course. Including GERLANG 1,2,3, the total requirement for the B.A. is a minimum of 60 units of work; the German and Philosophy option requires 65 units. At the discretion of the Director of Undergraduate Studies, appropriate courses offered by other departments or relevant transfer units can be accepted toward this total, up to a maximum of 25 units. All GERLANG courses count as department electives. Courses counted toward degree requirements must be taken for a letter grade unless that grading option is not available.
Requests for exceptions to any of these requirements must be referred to the Director of Undergraduate Studies who, in consultation with the Chair, makes a final decision.
InternshipsInternships in Germany are arranged through the Overseas Studies Program. In addition, students may consult with the department to arrange local internships involving German language use or issues pertaining to Germany or Central Europe. Interns who prepare papers based on their experience enroll in GERLIT 298.
Extended Major in English and German LiteraturesStudents may enter this program with the consent of the chairs of both departments. See the "English" section of this bulletin.
Multiple MajorsStudents can combine a major in German Studies with a major in any other field. By choosing courses in such disciplines as history, international relations, or economics, students can prepare themselves in the area of Central Europe. Multiple majors are especially recommended for students spending one or more quarters at the Stanford in Berlin Center.
Degree Requirements
Three 120-139 courses:
GERGEN 122Q. The Culture of Pessimism
GERGEN 125. Varieties of Freedom in Modern German Culture
GERLIT 120Q. Is God Dead?
GERLIT 121. The Viennese Coffeehouse
GERLIT 129. The German Novella
GERLIT 130. Brecht and Modern Aesthetics
GERLIT 131B. German Lyric and the Oriental Tradition
One Writing in the Major course (WIM):
GERLIT 127A. The German Ballad
GERLIT 135. Outsiders and Outcasts: Introduction to German Prose Fiction
GERLIT 123N. Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales
Elective courses:
GERGEN 104N. Resistance Writings
GERGEN 161. Wagnerian Echos
GERGEN 177. Culture and Politics in Modern Germany
GERGEN 201. Conservative Revolution
GERGEN 211. Theodor W. Adorno
GERGEN 212. The Invention of Experience
GERGEN 221. Memory and Modernism
GERGEN 221A. Modernism and the Jewish Voice
GERGEN 246. Kant's Third Critique and Its Repercussions
GERGEN 268A. Freud and Psychoanalysis
GERGEN 291A. Foundations of Psychoanalysis/ Oedipus, Hamlet, Moses: Archetypes of the Hero
GERLIT 177. Movies from GDR
GERLIT 217. Holderlin's Poetry
GERLIT 159. Reading Dutch
GERLIT 219. German Utopias and Dystopias
GERLIT 242. Narrative and Ethics
GERLIT 250C. Postwar German Culture and Thought: 1945-to the Present
GERLIT 258. German Dialect
GERLIT 369. Introduction to Graduate Studies
COGNATE COURSES
Credits earned for completion of the following cognate courses may be applied to unit requirements for the departmental major.
Autumn Quarter:
RELIGST 278/378. Heidegger: Hermeneutics of the Self
Winter Quarter:
CLASSGEN 6N. Antigone: From Ancient Democracy to Contemporary Dissent (Same as DRAMA 12N)
ENGLISH 140A. Creative Resistance
MUSIC 17N. Operas of Mozart
MUSIC 312A. Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Ancients and Moderns: Plato to Nietzsche
Spring Quarter:
MUSIC 16N. Music, Myth, and Modernity: Wagner's Ring Cycle and Tolkien's Lord of the Rings (Same as GERLIT 16N.)
MUSIC 312B. Aesthetics and Criticism of Music, Contemporaries: Heidegger to Today
PHIL 125/225. Kant's First Critique
The German and Philosophy major option offers students the opportunity to combine studies in literature and philosophy. Students take most of their courses from departments specializing in the intersection of literature and philosophy. This option is not declared in Axess; it does not appear on the transcript or diploma.
The German and Philosophy major option requires a minimum of 16 courses, for a minimum total of 65 units, distributed as follows:
The capstone seminar and the two related courses must be approved by both the German Studies Director of Undergraduate Studies and the undergraduate adviser of the program in philosophical and literary thought administered through the DLCL. Substitutions, including transfer credit, are not normally permitted for items 3b, 3c, and 3d, and are not permitted under any circumstances for items 2, 3a, and 5. Up to 10 units taken in the Philosophy Department may be taken CR/NC or S/NC; the remainder must be taken for a letter grade.
Majors with a minimum grade point average (GPA) of 3.3 in German courses are eligible for departmental honors. Students interested in the honors program should consult the undergraduate adviser early in their junior year. The essay topic is chosen in consultation with a faculty member of the department, and opportunities to start research projects are offered at the Stanford in Berlin Center. In addition to the requirements listed above, the student must submit a proposal for the honors essay to the German faculty by the end of Spring Quarter of the junior year. During this quarter, students may enroll for 2 units of credit in GERLIT 189B for the drafting or revision of the thesis proposal. In Autumn Quarter of the senior year, the student must enroll in DLCL 189, a 5-unit seminar that focuses on researching and writing the honors thesis. Students then enroll for 5 units of credit in GERLIT 189A while composing the thesis during Winter Quarter. Students who did not enroll in 189B in the junior year may enroll in GERLIT 189B in Spring Quarter of the senior year while revising the thesis, if approved by the thesis supervisor. A total of 10-12 units are awarded for completion of honors course work, independent study, and the finished thesis.
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