CROSS-CULTURAL TESTIMONIES OF VIOLENCE (FR3025)

This course explores how genocide is represented across different media, focusing on French and Francophone testimonies. Examining the Holocaust, the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, and the Khmer Rouge atrocities, we will analyze literature, films, and songs. A comparative, transnational approach will highlight cultural specificities, trauma theories, and intermediality. Taught in English; French materials available.

FRENCH FOR INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS (FR3028)

The French for International Affairs course is specifically designed for students willing to improve, reinforce and develop their communication skills in French - vocabulary, structures, debate skills and argumentation techniques - focusing on the field of International Relations. The main objectives of this French language course are to offer students the opportunity to:
• increase their knowledge and information,
• compare different points of view on the same past or current topic,
• express and share their point of view in a structured and convincing way,
• develop their analytical and synthesis skills as well as to reinforce their autonomy in expression.
Students with a special interest in international politics, in international relations, in European, African, Middle Eastern Studies and in environmental issues will benefit greatly from this course.
Prerequisites: FR 2100 or equivalent

DISSIDENT HISTORIES FROM THE FRANCOPHONE WORLD (FR3029)

 “History [with a capital H] ends where the histories of those peoples once reputed to be without history come together. History is a highly functional fantasy of the West, originating at precisely the time when it alone "made" the history of the World.” (Edouard Glissant)

 

In this course, students will be introduced to this current issue: who writes History? 

By studying the works of contemporary Francophone artists – poets, writers and graphic novelists, filmmakers and painters, etc. – born in Africa, the Indian Ocean, the Caribbean and Europe, we will examine not only how they tell their stories but how they create histories of and for their societies and the world, how they attempt to remake “History [with a capital H]” (as Carribean poet Glissant called it) by other means.

Their refashioning of what was formerly a hegemonic knowledge produced by “the Powerful” allows for new approaches and comprehension of their heritage and values, traditions, conflicts and commonalities. Through these artistic works, students will discover or deepen their knowledge of Africa (the Democratic Republic of Congo), southwestern Indian Ocean islands (Madagascar, Reunion, Mauritius, the Comoros) and the French Caribbean islands (Martinique, Haiti) in particular. 

To develop the students’ understanding of these Francophone artists and their historiographical endeavors in their poems, novels, films, sculptures, or paintings, we shall use contemporary theories of race, gender, ecocriticism, and postcolonialism.

 

*In this course taught in French, you will improve your French language oral and written skills. However, if you are not a French minor, you may write and present in English.   

THE MONSTROUS AND FABULOUS RENAISSANCE (FR3032)

This course is bilingual in nature and outlines the historical and literary contexts of the Renaissance from a Franco-centric perspective. Students will study texts by a range of Renaissance authors (including Erasmus, Rabelais, Marguerite de Navarre, Louise Labé, Montaigne, Marlowe and Shakespeare) while learning about earlymodern book culture, medicine, cartography, religion, colonization, magic, monsters, witchcraft and plagues. They shall also seek to comprehend how France became dominant in language and literature throughout Europe for centuries to follow.

TWO FRENCH CLASSICS (FR3046)

By promoting careful analysis of two landmarks of French literature while building skills in language and cultural semantics, oral and written communications, this course aims at helping students weave together literary meaning and cross-cultural belonging. By becoming more familiar with French literary language and mindscapes, students will further their understanding of L’Esprit français, the special relationship between literature and culture, writers and intellectual history in France.
The choice of works and pairings will differ every year according to the instructor’s interests.

(DE)COLONIAL NARRATIVES IN FRENCH (FR3052)

Embark on a journey through the French-speaking world, exploring diverse literary and cultural expressions from Africa, the Indian Ocean, the Caribbean, and Europe. This course surveys multigeneric colonial and postcolonial narratives, spanning continents and mediums-poems, novels, graphic novels, and films-dating from 1661 to today. We analyze how authors and directors (de)construct(neo-)colonial archives, ideologies, and stereotypes. Prerequisite: FR2100.

POLITICS IN FRANCE (FR3053)

Studies France's development from a provincial peasant society, hampered by weak governments and enduring colonial wars, to a technologically sophisticated industrial democracy and a major international power. Studies France's cultural, social, and economic contexts, evolving party system, and institutions and policy-making processes to better understand this phenomenal change and its consequences for France's role in the world. The ability to read in French will facilitate research, but is not required.

ROMANTIC LIT AND ITS DISCONTENTS: FLAUBERT, SAND, BAUDELAIRE (FR3059)

Studies in the literary works, poetic aspirations and legal trials of Flaubert, Sand, and Baudelaire, while tracing their tremendous influence on the 19th-century French literature and their contribution to the emergence of modernity. Readings include Indiana, Madame Bovary, Trois contes, Bouvard et Pecuchet, and Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal among other works, as well as a range of critical and philosophical commentaries.

CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND COMMUNITY SERVICE IN FRANCE (FR3083)

This course offers global explorers with a strong desire to engage in local Parisian communitites, not only to deepen their understanding of French society's make-up and current social issues, but also to experience suring (at least) one semester what volunteer work in a Parisian advocacy or charity organization feels like.

FRENCH CINEMA: LA NOUVELLE VAGUE (FR3086)

Shows the evolution of modern French culture in its relationship to cinema. Examines the early influence of literature and theater on cinema and its subsequent detachment, to be recognized as an art in itself with its own particular form. Emphasizes the viewing and discussing of one film each week: two class meetings plus one film per week. One or two off campus visits organized per semester.Taught in French.