Schedule of Classes Undergraduate / Spring 2019 / Italian Studies

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Subject Notes for Undergraduate Students

Students enrolled in language courses numbered 10-106 must earn at least a C- in order to continue in the language sequence. Students who earn grades of D+ and below will have to re-enroll in the course and earn at least a C- to continue.

(1-99) Primarily for Undergraduate Students

Course # Course Title Time
Location
Enrl / Lim / Wait Instructor(s) View Books
ITAL 20B 1 Continuing Italian
See Course Catalog for prerequisites.
Instructor's Signature Required.
Consent code required. Students currently enrolled in ITAL language courses will receive instructions about consent code distribution before the beginning of registration. All others should email Professor Harder (harder@brandeis.edu) as soon as possible with a description of their background in Italian, including classes taken, standardized test scores, and/or other exposure to the language. She will reply with further information about obtaining a consent code for the appropriate language course.
M,T,W,Th 10:00 AM–10:50 AM
Olin-Sang Amer Civ Ctr104
Closed
Consent Req.

19 / 18 / 0
Servino, Paola View Books
ITAL 20B 2 Continuing Italian
See Course Catalog for prerequisites.
Instructor's Signature Required.
Consent code required. Students currently enrolled in ITAL language courses will receive instructions about consent code distribution before the beginning of registration. All others should email Professor Harder (harder@brandeis.edu) as soon as possible with a description of their background in Italian, including classes taken, standardized test scores, and/or other exposure to the language. She will reply with further information about obtaining a consent code for the appropriate language course.
M,T,W,Th 11:00 AM–11:50 AM
Shiffman Humanities Ctr122
Open
Consent Req.

6 / 18 / 0
Monteleone, Silvia View Books
 

(100-199) For Both Undergraduate and Graduate Students

Course # Course Title Time
Location
Enrl / Lim / Wait Instructor(s) View Books
ITAL 105A 1 Italian Conversation and Composition
[ fl hum oc ]
See Course Catalog for prerequisites.
Instructor's Signature Required.
Consent code required. Students currently enrolled in ITAL language courses will receive instructions about consent code distribution before the beginning of registration. All others should email Professor Harder (harder@brandeis.edu) as soon as possible with a description of their background in Italian, including classes taken, standardized test scores, and/or other exposure to the language. She will reply with further information about obtaining a consent code for the appropriate language course.
M,W,Th 1:00 PM–1:50 PM
Shiffman Humanities Ctr201
Open
Consent Req.

5 / 18 / 0
Monteleone, Silvia View Books
ITAL 134B 1 Nella cultura ebraica italiana: cinema e letteratura
[ fl hum wi ]
See Course Catalog for prerequisites.
Th 2:00 PM–4:50 PM
Shiffman Humanities Ctr201
Open
8 / 15 / 0
Servino, Paola View Books
 

Electives

Course # Course Title Time
Location
Enrl / Lim / Wait Instructor(s) View Books
CLAS 115B 1 Topics in Greek and Roman History
[ hum wi ]
Topic for spring 2019: Military History
M,W 3:30 PM–4:50 PM
Mandel Ctr for HumanitiesG11
Open
9 / 999 / 0
Walker, Cheryl L View Books
CLAS 145B 1
Syllabus
Topics in Greek and Roman Art and Archaeology
[ ca hum ]
Topic for spring 2019: Roman Provinces.
M,W 5:00 PM–6:20 PM
Mandel Ctr for HumanitiesG11
Open
21 / 999 / 0
Ratzlaff, Alexandra View Books
ENG 183B 1 Gods and Humans in the Renaissance
[ ca hum ]
T,F 12:30 PM–1:50 PM
Mandel Ctr for HumanitesG12
Open
20 / 999 / 0
Targoff, Ramie
Unglaub, Jonathan W
View Books
FA 145A 1
Syllabus
St. Peter's and the Vatican
[ ca ]
M,W,Th 1:00 PM–1:50 PM
Mandel Ctr for HumanitiesG11
Open
17 / 999 / 0
McClendon, Charles View Books
FA 191B 1 Studies in Renaissance and Baroque Art
[ ca oc wi ]
See Course Catalog for Special Notes.
Topic spring 2019: Caravaggio the Revolutionary. The vivid and dramatic works of Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610) have captured the modern imagination more than those of any other Baroque painter. Our weekly meetings will probe Caravaggio's revolutionary paintings in terms of their style, radical naturalism, iconography, patronage, cultural context, contemporary critical reception, and question how to reconcile his towering artistic achievement in Catholic Rome with his scandalous, profane and violent life. Student research projects will investigate Caravaggio's extraordinary legacy in Seventeenth-century art and beyond.
Th 2:00 PM–4:50 PM
Kutz Hall 132
Open
8 / 12 / 0
Unglaub, Jonathan W View Books
HIST 142A 1
Syllabus
Crime, Deviance, and Confinement in Modern Europe
[ ss wi ]
T,F 11:00 AM–12:20 PM
Mandel Ctr for HumanitesG12
Open
37 / 999 / 0
Kelikian, Alice A View Books