Some courses displayed may not be offered every year. For actual course offerings by quarter, please consult the Quarterly Class Search
or GOLD (for current students). To see the historical record of when a particular course has been taught in the past, please visit the Course Enrollment Histories.
FR 202.
Introduction to French Studies
(2)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: Designed for majors. Quarters usually offered: Fall. Required of all French graduate students. Normally taken in fall quarter of entering academic year.
This proseminar includes presentations and discussions by faculty of research areas that compose the field of French literary studies and its interdisciplinary components. Students will be introduced to research methodologies, including those requiring historical and bibliographic investigation.
FR 226AAZZ.
Literary and Critical Theory
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Comparative examination of contemporary continental philosophy and of the canonical texts that have defined literary criticism and cultural theory. Critical reevaluation of the field of French studies.
FR 226B.
Feminist Theory and Gender Studies
FR 226BN.
Literary and Critical Theory
FR 226E.
Literary and Critical Theory
FR 227AAZZ.
Medieval and Renaissance Studies
(4)
BROWN, ENDERS, SKENAZI
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Close literary investigation and cultural analysis (theoretical, rhetorical, codicological, artistic, performative, political and religious) of the most exciting literature and critical trends in this burgeoning field.
FR 227A.
Introduction to Old French
(4)
BROWN, ENDERS
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Introduction to old French and examination of a number of early medieval works.
FR 227B.
Courtly Love and Courtly Romance
(4)
BROWN
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Courtly love and courtly romance.
FR 227C.
Medieval Theater and Theatricality
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Medieval theater and theatricality.
FR 227F.
Religion and Skepticism in Renaissance Europe
(4)
SKENAZI
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
A study of the connections between religion and skepticism in a time of political and religious turmoil. Readings include works by Marguerite de Navarre, Rabelais, Machiavelli, Montaigne.
FR 227H.
Irony in the Renaissance
(4)
SKENAZI
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Irony in the Renaissance.
FR 228AAZZ.
Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Studies
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Study of early modern French literature at a time of cultural and political transformation. Practice of theoretical approaches to early modern aesthetics, from Baroque and Classical theater and philosophy to Enlightenment fiction and epistemology.
FR 228A.
Classical Tragedy
FR 228B.
Classical Comedy
FR 228C.
Les Moralistes
FR 228D.
Topics in the French Classical Age
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Study of the historical, intellectual, and cultural dimensions of France in the seventeenth century and/or the eighteenth century, with a focus on social institutions, literature, philosophy, religion and aesthetics. Emphasis on interdisciplinary methodology. Content varies.
FR 228E.
The Libertine Novel
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Exploration of the literary, philosophical, and aesthetic experimentations known as libertinage. In-depth study of various libertine novels, and their sexual and moral dimensions. Focus on the privileged spaces as well as the illustrations of libertinism.
FR 228F.
Les Lumihres: Fiction and Philosophy
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
What is Enlightenment in relation to the social institutions and the philosophical and religious traditions of the 18th century? Focus on the reinvention of nature, reason, passion, sentiment and morality in philosophical essays and new literary forms, including utopia.
FR 228G.
Topics in Enlightenment Studies
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Study of the Enlightenments central debates on education, religion, philosophy, and aesthetics, and of the main figures of the print and visual media, such as Chardin, Fragonard, Watteau, Grafigny, Montesquieu, Diderot, and Rousseau. Content varies.
FR 229AAZZ.
Modern and Contemporary Studies
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Close readings of nineteenth and twentieth-century literary texts; multi-disciplinary inquiry into the art and character of modernity. Practice of critical approaches for achieving an understanding of the literary, cultural, and social aspects of modernity and post-modernity.
FR 229A.
Studies in the Novel
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Close readings of nineteenth and twentieth-century literary texts; multi-disciplinary inquiry into the art and character of modernity. Practice of critical approaches for achieving an understanding of the literary, cultural, and social aspects of modernity and post-modernity.
FR 229AS.
Modern and Contemporary Studies
FR 229B.
The Theory of Fantastic Literature
FR 229BN.
Modern and Contemporary Studies
FR 229C.
Poetry and Poetics
FR 229E.
Autobiography, Autoportrait, Autofiction
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Close readings of nineteenth and twentieth-century literary texts; multi-disciplinary inquiry into the art and character of modernity. Practice of critical approaches for achieving an understanding of the literary, cultural, and social aspects of modernity and post-modernity.
FR 229F.
Topics in Modernism
(4)
NESCI, MALEUVRE
Literary works read from various theoretical and cultural perspectives (psychoanalysis, feminism, cultural history, critical theory). Topics include: gender and sexuality in the novel, reading hysteria, the political unconscious, theorizing the gaze, Western representations of the Orient and the Other.
FR 229G.
Modern and Contemporary Studies
FR 230AAZZ.
Post-colonial and Francophone Studies
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Study of the literature and culture from French-speaking countries around the world, with emphasis on post-colonial politics and interactions between widely divergent cultural traditions. Theoretical examination of the epistemological issues raised by the introduction of non-Western perspectives.
FR 230B.
Francophone Literature: The Caribbean
(4)
PRIETO
Readings from Haiti, Martinique, and Guadeloupe, with emphasis on the Creole oral tradition; slavery and the plantation system; race and multiculturalism; relations with France and the United States.
FR 230E.
Literature of Immigration and the Minority Experience
(4)
PRIETO
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Study of the literary and cinematic currents reflecting the increasingly vital role played by immigrants and their descendents in the shaping of contemporary French culture. With an emphasis on the Beur phenomenon. Works by Sebbar, Begag, Beyala, Dridi, Allouache, among others.
FR 231AAZZ.
Cultural Studies and Intellectual History
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Analyses of literary, historical and philosophical readings that have shaped the ways in which French and European writers represent the human experience of time and space. Close look at the political, moral, and philosophical functions of art and literature.
FR 231A.
The French Nation
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Analyses of literary, historical and philosophical readings that have shaped the ways in which French and European writers represent the human experience of time and space. Close look at the political, moral, and philosophical functions of art and literature.
FR 231AZ.
Game and Literature: historical, cultural and theoretical approaches
FR 231B.
Modernity and the City
FR 231C.
Literature and Travel
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Analyses of literary, historical and philosophical readings that have shaped the ways in which French and European writers represent the human experience of time and space. Close look at the political, moral, and philosophical functions of art and literature.
FR 231E.
Poetics and Politics of Place
(4)
PRIETO
Investigation of literary representation of place, focusing on texts where the evocation of place goes beyond mere setting or background, playing a central role in meaning of the work. Theoretical inquiry into epistemological and ideological issues that influence representation of place.
FR 231F.
World Literature: the Intellectual and the Republic of Letters
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Studies in the contribution of French thought to the world of ideas, from Montaigne, Pascal, Descartes, Montesquieu, Rousseau, Stakl, Tocqueville, Zola, Bergson, Sartre, Weil, Beauvoir, Barthes, Foucault, among others.
FR 231G.
Questioning Animality
FR 231J.
Cultural Studies and Intellectual History
FR 231NN.
Europe's Visions of the Orient
FR 232AAZZ.
Literature, Science, and the Arts
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Repeat Comments: Super course. May be repeated for credit provided the letter designation is different.
Interdisciplinary studies of the cross-fertilization between literature, the performative and visual arts,and other disciplines.
FR 232B.
Literature and the Visual Arts
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Focus on the cross-fertilization between literature and the visual arts in various periods. Topics include the rhetoric of images; the connections that link image and text in high and popular art; poetry and painting; art criticism, and hybrid forms such as comic strips.
FR 232C.
The Medival Book as Literary Artifact
(4)
BROWN
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Study of the materiality of books as critical to understanding literary works, especially during, but not limited to, the Middle Ages. Emphasis on the dynamic interaction between text and paratext, between writers and patrons, between authors, scribes and editors.
FR 232D.
French Film and Theory
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Analysis of French film that attempts to integrate a cultural-historical approach together with some theoretical considerations.
FR 232E.
Literature and Science
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Literature and science.
FR 232F.
Music and Literature
(4)
PRIETO
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Music and literature.
FR 232GG.
Desire in French
FR 233A.
Advanced Critical Writing
(4)
ENDERS
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Workshop on the style, structure, and ideology of crafting persuasive critical arguments and creating authority in writing (in French or English). Focus on introductions, conclusions, definitions, proofs, refutation, and interaction with sources, through analysis, critique, practice, and peer review.
FR 279.
Contemporary Theory in Translation
(4)
SNYDER
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
Survey of the principal issues of contemporary theory. Readings range from classic texts by Adorno, Bakhtin, Benjamin, Cixous, Foucault, Heidegger et al. to recent essays in the new cultural studies. In English.
FR 299.
Topics in Applied Linguistics
(4)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: Same course as Education 299, German 299, Linguistics 299, and Spanish 299.
Repeat Comments: May be repeated for credit.
Specialized topics in the study of applied linguistics.
FR 500.
Apprentice Teaching
(4)
SCHULTZ, STAFF
Enrollment Comments: Units earned in this course, which is required of all teaching assistants, do not apply toward degree.
Includes orientation week, weekly meetings with supervisor, preparation of examinations, class visitations and discussions, and occasional workshops.
FR 596.
Directed Reading and Research
(2-12)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Graduate standing; consent of instructor.
Individual tutorial. Instructor is usually student's thesis advisor. Students doing initial research on the doctoral dissertation may sign up for this course.
FR 596SS.
Directed Reading and Research
(2-6)
Individual tutorial. Instructor is usually student's major professor. Students doing initial research on the doctoral dissertation may sign up for this course.
FR 597.
Independent Study
(4)
Prerequisite: Consent of graduate advisor.
Individual research projects, supervised by a faculty member. Requires permission of graduate adviser to enroll.
FR 598.
Master's Examination Research and Preparation
(1-12)
STAFF
Enrollment Comments: Letter grade if the course counts toward the student's degree units and involves writing papers; S/U if this is not the case.
Tutorials aimed at the preparation of the master examination, including reviews of reading lists, and completion of coursework counting toward the degree.
FR 598SS.
Master's Thesis
(2-6)
Under the supervision of the director, third-summer student will write a thesis incorporating written works produced and approved during the previous two summers.
FR 599.
Dissertation Research and Preparation
(1-12)
STAFF
Reserved for writing of the doctoral dissertation once the student has advanced to candidacy. Instructor should be chair of student's doctoral committee. A progress report must be turned in in order to receive a satisfactory grade for the course.
ITAL 101.
Advanced Reading and Composition: Modern Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent
Enrollment Comments: Designed for majors.
(Taught in Italian) Interdisciplinary introduction to modern Italian culture, art, and society from unification (1870) to the present, through readings, oral presentations, and composition. Advanced grammar topics are coordinated with cultural themes, such as nationalism, war, religion and politics.
ITAL 102.
Advanced Reading and Composition: Medieval and Renaissance Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent
Enrollment Comments: Designed for majors.
(Taught in Italian) Interdisciplinary introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Italian culture, art, and society, through readings, oral presentations, and composition. Advanced grammar topics are coordinated with cultural themes, such as courtly love, the development of Italian city-states, humanism, the role of women, art and artists.
ITAL 103.
Advanced Communication in Italian: Mobility, Travel, and Tourism
(4)
FIORINA
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent.
Enrollment Comments: Open to non-majors.
(Taught in Italian) Interdisciplinary introduction to contemporary Italian culture and society through readings, movies, oral presentations, and cross-disciplinary and multimedia projects. Advanced grammar topics are coordinated with cultural themes, such as mobility, travel, and tourism in modern Italy.
ITAL 109.
Advanced Italian Conversation
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 5. Concurrent enrollment in Italian 6 or upper-division standing.
Enrollment Comments: Concurrently offered.
(Taught in Italian) Discussion of contemporary issues selected by the instructor. Emphasis on idiomatic speech and vocabulary building.
ITAL 111.
Italian Short Fiction
(4)
FOGU, STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102.
(Taught in Italian) A study of the briefest forms of Italian narrative fiction ranging from the exemplum to the TV script, the short story, and the novella, leading to an exercise in creative writing in Italian.
ITAL 112.
Italian Narrative Fiction
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102.
(Taught in Italian) A study of the longer forms of Italian narrative fiction, particularly the prose romance and the novel.
ITAL 114X.
Dante's "Divine Comedy"
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Upper-division standing or instructor approval.
Enrollment Comments: Same course as Religious Studies 114X
(Taught in English) Dante's masterpiece, The Divine Comedy, remains among the most astonishing works of world literature. This course follows the pilgram's progress through Inferno, Pergatorio and Paradiso in search of "love that moves the sun and the other stars."
ITAL 119A.
The Art of Translation
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 1-6 or equivalent
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.Enrollment Comments: Open to non-majors. Designed for majors.
(Taught in Italian) An intensive workshop exploring the theory and practice of translation. Students work at translating literary texts from Italian to English and vice versa.
ITAL 119B.
Italian Culture in Translation
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 1-6 or equivalent
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.Enrollment Comments: Designed for majors.
(Taught in Italian) Focuses on forms of cultural translation between Italy and America. Examples of these translations: American travelers in Italy to nineteenth-century translators of Dante, from emigrant culture to the mafia to the 'spaghetti' western to Italian hip-hop.
ITAL 119X.
Found in Translation: Transnational Italian Culture
(4)
FOGU, HOM
Recommended Preparation: ITAL 20X or ITAL 120X
This course explores the cross-cultural constructions and hybridizations of Italian-ness from abroad and by foreign-born visitors or residents of Italy from the Grand Tour (18th century) to the present. Topics include: tourism, travel literature, Spaghetti Westerns, cinema and mafia, and Italian theme parks. (Taught in English).
ITAL 120X.
Transnational Italian Studies
(4)
FOGU, HOM
Recommended Preparation: ITAL 20X or ITAL 120X
An introduction to transnational identity formation through examples of how both Italians abroad and foreign constructions of Italian-ness have contributed to the formation of Italian culture and identity from the age of the Grand Tour to the present.
ITAL 121.
The Art of Italian Drama (Page to Stage)
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102
(Taught in Italian) Intensive study of a single text for the Italian theater leading to its staging in the original language with students as actors.
ITAL 123X.
Italian Opera
(4)
Studies Italian operas, from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Students learn to appreciate these musical masterpieces as literary works as well, through analyzing plots, studying the librettos, and listening to the music. In English.
ITAL 124.
Italian Theater
(4)
FOGU
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102.
(Taught in Italian) A study of the most important Italian theatrical texts and practices from the Renaissance comedy and the "commedia dell'arte" to contemporary works for the stage.
ITAL 124X.
Italian Theatre
(4)
FOGU
Prerequisite: Upper Division standing.
A study of the most important Italian theatrical texts and practices from the Renaissance comedy and the commedia dell'arte to contemporary works for the stage. In English.
ITAL 126AAZZ.
Literature in Italian
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102.
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 16 units provided letter designations are different.
The literatures of Italy do not constitute a single canon but include many overlooked regional, migrant,and postcolonial texts all written in various forms of Italian. Consult the department for specific topics.
ITAL 126A.
Literature in Italian
ITAL 126AA.
Literature in Italian
ITAL 126BB.
Literature in Italian
ITAL 126DD.
Literature in Italian
ITAL 126EE.
Literature in Italian
ITAL 130X.
Holocaust in Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Upper Division Standing
Through readings of memoir, fiction, and film, this course investigates the fate of Jews under the Italian Fascists of Benito Mussolini (1922-1945). Topics include Fascism, Communism, anti-Semitism, Italian cooperation with the Nazis, the Catholic Church, the Resistance Movement, deportations and extermination camps, and individual / collective memory after World War II. Students will be exposed to great literary and cinematographic works and through them develop a thorough understanding of this pivotal period in modern Italian history.
ITAL 138AAZZ.
Made in Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent.
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 16 units provided letter designation is different.
(Taught in Italian) An interdisciplinary study of the ways in which representational practices (texts, images, sounds) have affected Italian culture over the ages.
ITAL 138A.
Cultural Representations in Italy
ITAL 138AA.
Interrogating the Real: Italian Literature & Cinema from Realism to Virtual Reality
ITAL 138D.
Representing the South
ITAL 138EX.
Cultural Representations in Italy
ITAL 138F.
Futurism
ITAL 138N.
Cultural Representations in Italy
ITAL 138T.
Italy as Destination: Italian Travel Literature
ITAL 139AAZZ.
Transnational Italian Culture
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Upper division standing.
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 16 units provided letter designation is different.
(Taught in English) A super series of lecture courses taught from an interdisciplinary and transnational perspective, focusing on representational practices (texts, images, sounds) from within and without Italy that have contributed to the formation of Italian identities, and or ideas of Italian-ness over the ages.
ITAL 139CX.
Italian Colonialism
ITAL 139DX.
Representing the South
ITAL 139EX.
The Southern Question
ITAL 139FX.
Gastronomic Italy: Italian Food Culture in Transnational Perspective
ITAL 139GX.
Emigrant Nation and Charisma in the Making of Italians
ITAL 139HX.
Asia and Italy: From the Silk Road to Weibo
ITAL 139IX.
Italia-Stile: the Transnational Creation of Made in Italy
ITAL 139TX.
Italy as Destination: Italian Travel Literature
ITAL 139YX.
Biopolitics and Medical Humanities
ITAL 139ZX.
Crime Italian Style
ITAL 142.
Women in Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent.
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.
(Taught in Italian) An intensive study of writing by and about women from the early modern and modern eras.
ITAL 142X.
Women in Italy
(4)
An intensive study of writing by and about women from the early modern and modern eras. In English.
ITAL 144AAZZ.
Women in Italy
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent.
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 8 units provided letter designations are different.
TAUGHT IN ITALIAN. Studies in the production of gender and the functions of sexuality in Italian culture including plays, films, painting, and literary texts.
ITAL 144A.
Women, Gender, and Sexuality in Italy
ITAL 144AA.
Women in Italy
ITAL 144AX.
Gender and Sexuality in Italian Culture
ITAL 144BB.
Gender and Sexuality in Italian Culture
ITAL 145AAZZ.
Gender and Sexuality in Italian Culture
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Upper division standing.
Enrollment Comments: May be repeated for credit to a maximum of 8 units provided letter designations are different.
TAUGHT IN ENGLISH. Studies in the production of gender and the functions of sexuality in Italian culture including plays, films, painting, and literary texts.
ITAL 145AX.
Gender and Sexuality in Italian Culture
ITAL 148X.
Cities of Italy
(4)
FOGU
A close-up look at the great texts, histories, and cultures of Italian cities such as Rome, Venice, Florence, Ferrara, and Naples. In English.
ITAL 160.
Senior Seminar
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Italian 101 or 102.
Seminar for Italian majors wishing to participate in intensive study of a major work of Italian culture (filmic, literary, or artistic) of the past or present. See department for further information.
ITAL 161X.
The European Union
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: POLS 7
Enrollment Comments: Same course as POL S 145.
Introduction to the history and organization of the European Union (the institutions, policies, goals, and successes of the EU). Focus on the ongoing process of economical, political, social, and cultural integration in Europe since the Second World War. In English.
ITAL 178.
Italian Cinema
(4)
FOGU
Prerequisite: Italian 6 or equivalent and Upper-division standing.
Recommended Preparation: Italian 101 or 102.Enrollment Comments: Not open for credit to students who have completed Italian 178.
(Taught in Italian) Contemporary Italian cinema from neorealism to the present, in light of the themes of Mafia, Camorra, 'ndrangheta.
ITAL 179X.
Italian History in Fiction and Film
(4)
FOGU
(Taught in English) A course focusing on and comparing the representation of Italian history in film and literature.
ITAL 180X.
Italian Cinema
(4)
FOGU
Prerequisite: Upper-Division Standing only
Enrollment Comments: Formerly offered as ITAL 180Z.
A survey of the major trends and directors in Italian cinema since World War II. Directors to be studied include: Rossellini, De Sica, Visconti, Fellini, Antonioni, and Rosi. In English.
ITAL 180XH.
Italian Cinema: Honors Section
(1)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Concurrent enrollment in Italian 180Z
Enrollment Comments: Formerly offered as ITAL 180ZH.
(Taught in English) A 1 unit seminar accompanying the regular Italian 180Z lecture course on major trends and directors in Italian cinema since World War II. Students will be expected to do extra readings, in class presentations, and watch additional films to those assigned in 180Z.
ITAL 189X.
Italy in the Mediterranean: History, Arts, and Culture
(4)
FOGU
Prerequisite: Upper-division standing.
Enrollment Comments: Quarters usually offered: Winter, Summer. Course is open only to students who do not intend to enroll in the EAP Summer Program ?Mediterranean Crossroads.? ITAL 189A is the former number for ITAL 189X.
Repeat Comments: ITAL 189X is a legal repeat of ITAL 189A.
(Taught in English) The history, culture, and arts of Italy, and in particular of the greater Gulf of Naples area, seen from and exclusively Mediterranean perspective from antiquity to the present.
ITAL 195H.
Senior Honors Independent Studies in Italian
(4)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Senior standing; completion of 24 upper-division units in Italian.
Enrollment Comments: Students must have a cumulative 3.5 for the proceeding 3 quarter(s). Designed for majors. Students must have a minimum 3.5 GPA for the preceding 3 quarters.
Individual investigations in literary and related fields to Italian Studies in fulfillment of senior honors thesis. Limited to honors students only.
ITAL 199.
Independent Studies in Italian
(1-5)
STAFF
Prerequisite: Upper-division standing; completion of 2 upper-division courses in Italian.
Enrollment Comments: Students must have a minimum 3.0 GPA for the preceding 3 quarters and limited to 5 units per quarter and 30 units total in 98/99/198/199/199AA-ZZ courses combined. 16 units max w/ only 8 towards major
Individual investigations in literary fields.
ITAL 199RA.
Independent Research Assistance
(1-5)
Prerequisite: Upper-division standing; completion of 2 upper-division courses in Italian;consent of instructor.
Enrollment Comments: Students must have a minimum 3.0 GPA for the preceding 3 quarters and are limited to 5 units per quarter and 30 units total in all 98/99/198/199/199AA-ZZ courses combined.
Independent research, under the supervision of a consenting faculty member.