Spring 2021 Courses

Foreign Teaching and Learning

FREN 601-401

Prof. Kathryn McMahon

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This course is required of all Teaching Assistants in French and Italian in the second semester of their first year of teaching. It is designed to provide instructors with the necessary practical support to carry out their teaching responsibilities effectively, and builds on the practicum meetings held during the first semester. The course will also introduce students to various approaches to foreign language teaching as well as to current issues in second language acquisition. Students who have already had a similar course at another institution may be exempted upon consultation with the instructor.

 

Topics in 19th-Century Literature: France/Amérique

FREN 675-401

Prof. Andrea Goulet

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This graduate seminar will study French representations of modern America from the Revolutionary Age through the 20th century, with an eye to what stereotypes of the transatlantic Other say about France’s own cultural, political, and literary shifts.  From Alexis de Tocqueville’s 1830’s observations on religious freedom and penal institutions in the new democracy to Jean Baudrillard’s 1986 musings on America as the site of the “hyper-real,” French writers have displayed an ambivalent fascination with their “brother nation” across the sea.  The 19th century in particular set a template of stereotypes that contrasted the dynamism of capitalist growth and technological invention in American cities with their underside of materialist corruption and cultural lack of sophistication.  In addition to reading de Tocqueville and Baudrillard, we will explore the nuanced range of literary representations of the United States through post-revolutionary ruralism (Chateaubriand, René), 19th-century vaudeville (Scribe, Le Quaker et la danseuse), satirical writing (Assolant, Un Quaker à Paris), comic journalism (Allais, “Supériorité de la Vie américaine sur la nôtre”), the scientific fantastic (Villiers, Contes cruels), science fiction (Verne, Le Testament d’un excentrique/Voyage autour du monde en 80 jours), 20th-century experimentalism (Céline, Voyage au bout de la nuit), and feminist travel writing (de Beauvoir, Amérique au jour le jour).  Secondary works will include chapters from Extrême-Occident (Mathy), Posthumous America (Hoffmann), Fascination and Misgivings (Portes), The American Enemy (Roger), and Frères Ennemis (Cloonan).  Readings in French/discussions in English.