Skip to main content
This course is designed to acquaint the student with the history, culture, and people of German-speaking countries and regions outside Germany itself. The course is conducted in English.
This advanced seminar highlights major literary and cultural movements, genres, issues, and people from the German-speaking world.
German literature is surveyed, encompassing works from the earliest periods to the beginning of the 19th century. This course is conducted in German.
German literature is surveyed, encompassing works from the Romantic period to the present. This course is conducted in German.
This course provides the student with a working knowledge of biblical and modem Hebrew. With the successful completion of this course, the student will be able to read selected passages of narrative in biblical and modem texts with the aid of a lexicon/dictionary, will gain knowledge of modem Hebrew in both written and spoken form and will strengthen her/his cultural understanding of ancient and modem Israel. Students will build a strong knowledge base in Hebrew vocabulary, verb paradigms, and grammar essentials.
This course provides further advancement of a student’s knowledge of biblical and modem Hebrew. Students will become adept in the usage of a Hebrew-English dictionary/lexicon for translation of texts in biblical and modem contexts and will improve their conversational skills in modem Hebrew. Students will continue to build a strong knowledge base in Hebrew vocabulary, verb paradigms, and grammar. (This course may be taken for credits as RELS 271)
This is the first of a sequence of three courses emphasizing the acquisition of Italian language skills needed to satisfy basic social requirements in Italian-speaking countries. Listening, speaking, reading, and writing needs are addressed, and students are introduced to Italian cultures and issues. Italian I is intended primarily for students who have no acquaintance with the language.
This is the second of three courses: See ITAL 110.
This is the third of three courses: See ITAL 110.