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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.
The undergraduate minor in Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies is an interdisciplinary area studies program that allows the participating undergraduate the opportunity to select REEES courses in various departments according to his or her interests.
Foreign LanguageThe REEES minor has no language requirement, but students are strongly encouraged to attain working competence in Russian or another relevant language. Courses at the third-year level or above in Russian or another language of Central Asia, the Caucasus, or Eastern Europe may be counted towards the REEES minor, up to a maximum of 3 units per academic quarter, 9 units total.
Additional InformationCourses counting towards the REEES minor may not be counted towards the student's major. Courses taken at Stanford overseas campuses in Moscow and Berlin may count towards the REEES minor, with the approval of the CREEES associate director; at least three courses for the minor must be taken in residence at Stanford.
Approval of CREEES Associate DirectorStudents interested in pursuing the REEES minor should consult the CREEES associate director. The minor is declared online using the Axess system. Students declaring the REEES minor must do so no later than three quarters prior to their intended quarter of degree conferral. Approval of minor declarations and certification of requirements are made by the associate director.
Students pursuing the REEES minor work with the CREEES associate director, who is responsible for determining that requirements for the minor are satisfied.
Core Courses for 2009-10
FILMSTUD 145. Politics and Aesthetics in East European Cinema
HISTORY 120A. Russian Civilization from Beginnings to the Enlightenment
HISTORY 125. 20th-Century Eastern Europe
POLISCI 140C. The Comparative Political Economy of Post-Communist Transitions
SLAVGEN 146. The Great Russian Novel: History and Other Theories of Time and Action
SLAVGEN 148. Dissent and Disenchantment: A Survey of Russian Literature and Culture, 1953 to Present
Additional 2009-10 courses which may be counted for the minor
ANTHRO 147A. Folklore, Mythology, and Islam in Central Asia
ANTHRO 148A. Nomads of Eurasia: Culture in Transition
COMPLIT 248. Afghanistan: Literature and History
HISTORY 20Q. Russia in the Early Modern European Imagination
HISTORY 22N. Crime, Punishment, and Rebellion in Early Modern Russia
HISTORY 24S. The Soviet Union Through Western Eyes: Workers' Paradise and Evil Empire
HISTORY 27S. LIfe in the Divided City: A History of Postwar Berlin, 1945-2009
HISTORY 123. Reform and Revolution in Modern Russia, 1856-2009
HISTORY 220G. Demons, Witches, Holy Fools, and Folk Belief: Popular Religion in Russia, 19th-20th Centuries
HISTORY 221A. Men, Women, and Power in Early Modern Russia, 1500-1800
HISTORY 221B. The Woman Question in Modern Russia
HISTORY 223F. The Nationality Question in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union
HISTORY 227. East European Women and War in the 20th Century
HUMANITIES 100: Text and Context in Humanities: Oedipus and His Vicissitudes (Same as ENGLISH 184B)
INTNLREL 122A. The Political Economy of the European Union
LINGUIST 167. Languages of the World
MS&E 193. Technology and National Security
OSPBER 11. The Vanishing City: Lost Architecture and Art of Commemoration in Berlin
OSPBER 60. Cityscape as History: Architecture and Urban Design in Berlin
OSPBER115X. German Economy: Past and Present
OSPBER 161X. German Economy in the Age of Globalization
OSPMOSC 57. Social Inequality in Socialist and Post-Socialist Societies
OSPMOSC 62. Economic Reform and Economic Policy in Modern Russia
OSPMOSC 72. Space, Politics and Modernity in Russia
OSPMOSC 74. Post-Soviet Eurasia and SCO: Society, Politics, Integration
OSPMOSC 78. Russian-American Relations: from the War of Independence to the War on Terror
REES 35. Documentary Films of Central Asia: Two Epochs of National Identity Formation
POLISCI 114S. International Security in a Changing World
RELIGST 27. Exploring Islam
RELIGST 225. Unveiling the Sacred: Explorations in Islamic Religious Imagination
SLAVGEN 13N. Russia and the Russian Experience
SLAVGEN 77Q. Russia's Weird Classic: Nikolai Gogol
SLAVGEN 145. Age of Experiment: From Pushkin to Gogol
SLAVGEN 151. Dostoevsky and His Times (Same as COMPLIT 119)
SLAVLIT 100. Oedipus and his Vicissitudes: Tales of Modernity from Sophocles, Freud, Turgenev, Chekhov, Babel, and Virgina Woolf
SLAVLIT 129. Poetry as System: Introduction to Theory and Practice of Russian Verse
SLAVLIT 167: Introduction to Russian Cultural Studies (in Russian)
SLAVLIT 169. Advanced Russian Seminar: Reading Pushkin's Evgenii Onegin (in Russian)
SLAVLIT 184. History of the Russian Literary Language
SLAVLIT 188. From Aleksandr Blok to Joseph Brodsky: Russian Poetry of the 20th Century
SLAVLIT 225. Readings in Russian Realism
SLAVLIT 226. Bakhtin and His Legacy
SOC 15N. The Transformation of Socialist Societies
Other courses may be counted towards the minor by special arrangement with the instructor and the CREEES associate director.
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