EEUR110 - Czech Through Film

Activity
LEC
Section number integer
680
Title (text only)
Czech Through Film
Term
2019C
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
680
Section ID
EEUR110680
Course number integer
110
Level
undergraduate
Description
This course has two separate but related components: a series of Czech films, shown with subtitles and open to the entire University of Pennsylvania community, and a Czech language class which relies on the films for content. Each film screening will be preceded by introductory remarks and followed by a discussion, with optional reading material made available in advance. In this way, the film series can but need not also be offered as a for-credit course, cross-listed through REES and Cinema and Media Studies. The films will be sequenced chronologically through Czech history, as opposed to film history, so that the series will double as a survey of Czech history. For example, we will begin with films set in the medieval period, such as Marketa Lazarova (dir. Frantisek Vlacil, 1967) and Cisaruv pekar-Pekaruv cisar (Emperor's Baker-Baker's Emperor, dir. Martin Fric, 1955). Eventually we will progress to recent films that deal with the current moment. Classic and contemporary films will be intermingled to simultaneously present a variety of important historical eras and cinematic techniques. Concurrently, students enrolled in the language course will learn basic Czech using custom-made materials drawn from the films. As their vocabulary and grasp of grammatical concepts increases, we will be able to work with longer and more complex sections of the film-texts. The films will provide the material for listening and reading exercises, and the students' oral and written work will be anchored by their responses to the films. We will advance from picking out simple statements to analyzing dialogue and identifying irony in film and composition, developing skills of intercultural communication and competence. By the end of the course, students will be able to read about Czech cinema using authentic materials, and discuss the films' aesthetic, historical and political importance.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

EEUR110 - Czech Through Film

Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
Czech Through Film
Term
2019C
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
001
Section ID
EEUR110001
Course number integer
110
Level
undergraduate
Description
This course has two separate but related components: a series of Czech films, shown with subtitles and open to the entire University of Pennsylvania community, and a Czech language class which relies on the films for content. Each film screening will be preceded by introductory remarks and followed by a discussion, with optional reading material made available in advance. In this way, the film series can but need not also be offered as a for-credit course, cross-listed through REES and Cinema and Media Studies. The films will be sequenced chronologically through Czech history, as opposed to film history, so that the series will double as a survey of Czech history. For example, we will begin with films set in the medieval period, such as Marketa Lazarova (dir. Frantisek Vlacil, 1967) and Cisaruv pekar-Pekaruv cisar (Emperor's Baker-Baker's Emperor, dir. Martin Fric, 1955). Eventually we will progress to recent films that deal with the current moment. Classic and contemporary films will be intermingled to simultaneously present a variety of important historical eras and cinematic techniques. Concurrently, students enrolled in the language course will learn basic Czech using custom-made materials drawn from the films. As their vocabulary and grasp of grammatical concepts increases, we will be able to work with longer and more complex sections of the film-texts. The films will provide the material for listening and reading exercises, and the students' oral and written work will be anchored by their responses to the films. We will advance from picking out simple statements to analyzing dialogue and identifying irony in film and composition, developing skills of intercultural communication and competence. By the end of the course, students will be able to read about Czech cinema using authentic materials, and discuss the films' aesthetic, historical and political importance.
Course number only
110
Use local description
No

EEUR026 - Behind the Iron Curtain

Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Behind the Iron Curtain
Term
2019C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
401
Section ID
EEUR026401
Course number integer
26
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen.
Freshman Seminar
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 2C4
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Kristen R Ghodsee
Description
This first-year seminar provides an introduction to the histories, cultures, and societies of Central and Eastern Europe, including Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, and the successor states of Yugoslavia. Through a selection of articles and essays written by anthropologists and sociologists and based on their extended fieldwork in the region, students will explore both the ethnographic method and the experience of everyday life during and after the communist era. Topics will include: popular music under socialism, food and wine, environmental concerns, the status of Muslim minorities, socialist aesthetics, public memory and cultures of commemoration, privatization, advertising, women's rights, gender and sexuality, emergent nationalisms, and the rise of income inequality and homelessness. All readings and assignments in English.
Course number only
026
Cross listings
ANTH026401, RUSS026401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

EEUR124 - Intermed Hungarian II

Activity
LEC
Section number integer
681
Title (text only)
Intermed Hungarian II
Term
2020A
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
681
Section ID
EEUR124681
Course number integer
124
Meeting times
TR 05:30 PM-07:00 PM
Meeting location
WILL 220
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Adrienn V. Mizsei
Description
The intermediate Hungarian II course continues EEUR123. Class documents and activities enable students to develop functional intermediate Hungarian competency by exploring Hungary and its culture, reading authentic online news sources, practicing listening and comprehension skills via video and audio material, researching cultural events and traditions, and exploring Hungarians' everyday lives. At the end of the semester, students will be able to participate and pass their Oral Competency Exit Interview on intermediate level and discuss topics, such as student life, family, friends, academic and student life activities/interests, travel, shopping, and cultural events. Offered through Penn Language Center.
Course number only
124
Use local description
No

EEUR124 - Intermed Hungarian II

Activity
LEC
Section number integer
680
Title (text only)
Intermed Hungarian II
Term
2020A
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
680
Section ID
EEUR124680
Course number integer
124
Meeting times
TR 04:00 PM-05:30 PM
Meeting location
WILL 307
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Adrienn V. Mizsei
Description
The intermediate Hungarian II course continues EEUR123. Class documents and activities enable students to develop functional intermediate Hungarian competency by exploring Hungary and its culture, reading authentic online news sources, practicing listening and comprehension skills via video and audio material, researching cultural events and traditions, and exploring Hungarians' everyday lives. At the end of the semester, students will be able to participate and pass their Oral Competency Exit Interview on intermediate level and discuss topics, such as student life, family, friends, academic and student life activities/interests, travel, shopping, and cultural events. Offered through Penn Language Center.
Course number only
124
Use local description
No

EEUR122 - Elementary Hungarian II

Activity
LEC
Section number integer
680
Title (text only)
Elementary Hungarian II
Term
2020A
Subject area
EEUR
Section number only
680
Section ID
EEUR122680
Course number integer
122
Meeting times
TR 07:30 PM-09:30 PM
Meeting location
WILL 220
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Adrienn V. Mizsei
Description
Continuation of EEUR121. The second semester of elementary Hungarian course continues on providing functional language competency in basic grammar, vocabulary, comprehension, reading, writing and speaking in Hungarian. Students will continue to learn communicating in everyday life situations as well as in organizing a trip to Hungary, staying in a hotel, ordering meals, buying goods, and participating in cultural activities by using authentic Hungarian online resources and interactive class activities. Offered through Penn Language Center.
Course number only
122
Use local description
No