Courses

Spring 2026

Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
The French novelist Stendhal once described the novel as “un miroir qu’on promène le long d’un chemin,” a mirror we carry along the road. This course examines dystopian French novels (and some films) in order to explore what sort of reflection of reality such narratives of...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Beginning in the nineteenth century, prostitution became a central theme in canonical French literature and a central target of social scientific inquiry. Knowledge about the world seemed to flow through the figure and the body of the “prostitute.” In this course, we will...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
In this course, we will explore the imbrication of colonialism and environmentalism by focusing on “green” spaces such as plantations; botanical gardens where plants were studied to be mass produced for empire’s profit; and green spaces such as safaris and nature reserves...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Paris is one of the most visited cities in the world, drawing millions of visitors annually. What are they drawn by? Images and imaginings of the city—in art, literature, music, film, journalism, architecture, city planning, and more— have built the reputation of Paris as a...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
This course offers a concise yet complete survey of the most transformative poetic forms in Italian and Western literature, the sonnet. We will trace its evolution chronologically and thematically, using an anthology of approximately 70 sonnets to understand how this...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Current scholars in the field of Italian Studies present their books on literature, philosophy, art and architecture, music, history, politics, and the social sciences. Students also learn how to conduct video interviews and write book reviews. Course conducted in Italian...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Matter—pure potency, pure capacity for being—has consistently eluded humanity’s intellectual and experimental efforts. From the shores of Ningbo to the deserts of Los Alamos, though its names have changed, its essence remains the same. It is Hesiod’s chaos, the tehom of...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
This course engages the twin lenses of the comic and the disastrous as modes of studying Portuguese and Brazilian cultures. We will consider how reactions to disastrous events and how creating comic scenarios in written texts and performance are especially significant in...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
This course studies the literature of colonial Brazil. We will consider how texts and writing participate in empire and colonialism, and explore a range of primary texts that engage with the lands, resources, peoples, and legends of Brazil. We will also scrutinize the...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
The seminar is built around a sequence of fundamental questions regarding the literary disciplines and media studies, their history and epistemology. Discussions are instigated by readings in philology, stylistics, the history of ideas, semiotics, structuralism...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Introduction to the genres of poetry, drama and narrative prose (fiction and non-fiction) of Spain in the 16th and 17th centuries. Close reading of representative texts with attention to the emerging literary languages of this period of national consolidation, global...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
A follow-up course to Span 80T, Span 80TS continues our historical, social, cultural, literary, and linguistic journey through modern Spain by focusing on texts that foreground territorial and national debates. Through close readings and translations centering mainly on 20th...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
This course will examine a wide range of core Spanish films from directors such as Almodóvar, Amenábar, Berlanga, Bollaín, Buñuel, Coixet, Erice, and León de Aranoa, among others. It will include analyses of prominent genres (drama, comedy, terror, fantasy, meta-cinema, sci...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2026
Through novels that helped to consolidate nation-states in Latin America, explores modernity as personal and public lessons in laissez-faire. Sequels in film, telenovelas, performances show tenacity of genre. Links between creativity and citizenship. Theorists include...

Fall 2026

Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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Beauty does not lie in the eye of the beholder, nor is it an inherent property of things; it is a tool for understanding that individuality and objectivity are not the only realities, and that more important than both is the social and distinctly human capacity to develop a...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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What voices can we hear in pre-modern literature? How did literary forms (the novel, tragic drama, lyric poetry) emerge or evolve over the course of several centuries? In this class, we will examine a wide range of texts from the 12th to the 18th centuries, from a diverse...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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The course studies the historical period that, on the one hand, invented modern politics, art, and science and, on the other, an awareness of origins and respect for traditions. Was it better for a prince to be loved or feared? What did a young woman have to do to become a...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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Dante's Commedia is the story of a journey back from personal and societal Hell, through self-knowledge and friendship. The book itself is an act of friendship. It never disappoints. It teaches itself. It has been engineered to improve design thinking and emotional...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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This course explores the sea as a principle of literature, culture, and history in medieval and early modern Portugal and Brazil. It covers a broad range of textual genres and cultures of writing to understand how the sea, the oceanic, and the aquatic functioned as the basis...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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The Gothic has become an inescapable and proliferating presence in contemporary culture. The global expansion of the term, its rather astonishing plasticity, has led experts to distinguish between categories such as Urban Gothic, Rural Gothic, Eco Gothic, War Gothic...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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Between 1923 and 1970, Jorge Luis Borges wrote some of the most original poems, short stories, essays and film scripts in Latin America and anywhere in the world, and he redefined the meaning and scope of literature. In this course, we will examine the signifying power of...
Semester: Fall
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Year offered: 2026
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Introducción a la historia de la lengua española desde sus orígenes hasta el presente. Escarceos en lingüística histórica en el marco de la historia literaria y el estudio comparado de las lenguas románicas. Acercamiento interdisciplinario.

Spring 2027

Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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How do early modern texts, images, and maps contribute to — or resist — colonization and extractivism? How are notions of ’nature’ and the ‘wild’ or ’savage’ mobilised in justifying the exploitation of land and indigenous peoples, and what symbolic and rhetorical strategies...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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Islands, because of their size, boundedness by the sea and supposed isolation, have served and continue to serve as laboratories for experiments including military, nuclear, touristic, scientific and ecological ones, as well as for forms of forced labor and migrations...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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A course about the meaning of time, not just as a measurement of change, but also as the social and intellectual prerequisite for knowledge, morality, and political action. With examples drawn mostly from Italian culture—readings include Machiavelli, Galileo, Vico...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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Current scholars in the field of Italian Studies present their books on literature, philosophy, art and architecture, music, history, politics, and the social sciences. Students also learn how to conduct video interviews and write book reviews.
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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In this seminar we will study representations of urban experience, and how the evolution of cities has been shaped by writing. Each week will pair literary and planning texts from the 1860s onward. We will discuss shared aspirations and tense relations among various urban...
Semester: Spring
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Year offered: 2027
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This course studies expressions of alternate sexualities in Iberia and Latin America. It includes a wide variety of literary genres over a chronological span that ranges from the Middle Ages to the present and engages with current discussions in gender and LGBTQ+ studies...