Introduction to German Studies Fall :470:275:01 T 11:30am-12:50pm, Hardenbergh Hall A7 Th 11:30am-12:50pm, Hardenbergh Hall A5

Similar documents
Comparative Perspectives on the Romantic Revolution

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE LBCL 393: Modes of Expression and Interpretation II. ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED Section A: MW 14:45-16:00 I.

PHIL 144: Social and Political Philosophy University of California, Santa Cruz Department of Philosophy Summer 2015

Philosophy of Art and Aesthetic Experience in Rome PHIL 277 Fall 2018

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2014

DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY GEOG3811 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY FALL 2016

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 147A, Beginning Conducting, Fall 2014

A-H 624 section 001. Theory and Methods: Kant and Hegel on Art and Culture. Wednesday 5:00 7:30 pm. Fine Arts 308A. Prof.

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2015

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

MUS 111: Music Appreciation

College of the Desert

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music

Functional Piano MUSI 1181 Mondays & Wednesdays FALL 2018

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

Music Appreciation. The Final Exam will be on May 10 at 10:00 a.m. and will be comprehensive for the listening portion.

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 147C, Advanced Choral Conducting, Spring 2015

CHALLENGES IN MODERN CULTURE HUMANITIES 3303 CRN MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS, AND 10:30 / LIBERAL ARTS 302

MUSIC APPRECIATION Survey of Western Art Music COURSE SYLLABUS

Syllabus for MUS Music Appreciation 3 Credit Hours Spring 2016

Songwriting Workshop: Swedish Pop Music Spring 2018 Credits: 3 Location: Stockholm Major Discipline: Music Faculty Member: Maria Carlsson

MUSC 1313-PB3 MUSIC IN CONTEMPORARY LIFE SUMMER II, 2017

American Music (MUSI 1310) Spring, 2016 HCC Distance Education

WHAT IS THIS COURSE ABOUT?

Pre-Requisite: Prerequisite includes MUT 2117 Music Theory IV with a grade of C or higher.

Aesthetics. Phil-267 Department of Philosophy Wesleyan University Spring Thursday 7:00-9:50 pm Location: Wyllys 115

Functional Piano MUSI 1180 Monday, Wednesday Sessions FALL Course Number, Section Number, and Course Title: MUSI 1180 Functional Piano

Third World Studies 26

Music 111 Music Appreciation I, 3 Units

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2016

: Winter Term 1 English Readings in Narrative

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE WINTER 2016 TR 14:30-15:50, L123

POLS 3045: Humor and American Politics SPRING 2017, Dr. Baumgartner Meets Tues. & Thur., 9:30-10:45, in Brewster, D-202

Art of Listening (MUAR ) p. 1

Queens College, Aaron Copland School of Music Rudiments of Music 1, fall 2010 Music 060, Section BM2WA or 1M2WA Room 363

Syllabus: PHYS 1300 Introduction to Musical Acoustics Fall 20XX

LT218 Radical Theory

PHIL 107: NINETEENTH-CENTURY PHILOSOPHY University of California, Santa Cruz Department of Philosophy Spring 2016

HUMANITIES FALL 2017 WESTERN CULTURE FROM THE HIGH RENAISSANCE TO ROMANTICISM

Nineteenth-Century Europe. History 344 Fall 2015 Sarah Curtis TTh 11:00-12:15

MUSC 1313-P04 Music in Contemporary Life Spring 2016

Syllabus for MUS Woodwind Instruments Class 1 Credit hour Spring 2016

Music 111 Music Appreciation I, 3 Units

Course Syllabus. Professor Contact Information. Office Location JO Office Hours T 10:00-11:30

Core-UA 566, Spring 2018 Lectures: TuTh 12:30PM - 1:45PM, SILV 206 CULTURES & CONTEXTS: GERMANY

MUSIC INTRODUCTION TO MUSIC THEORY COURSE OUTLINE Section #1240 Monday and Wednesday 8:30-11:00AM

Classic to Romantic Day Into Night Spring 2017

PHIL 271 (02): Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art

MUS Chamber Choir (TR 2-250) Spring 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS

CIEE Global Institute Paris

COURSE SYLLABUS MUSIC APPRECIATION MUS 1113 FALL 2014

Philosophy Of Art Philosophy 330 Spring 2015 Syllabus

School of Professional Studies

British Literature I: Culture in Con(text) English 261/001: British Literature up to 1800 Spring Semester 2013

Music World Music - the art of listening -

Professor: Dr. Mathias Warnes Spring 2017 Class Number Class Meets on T/Th from 4:30-5:45pm in MND 3009


Office: 1417 Cathedral of Learning Hours: Tu: 2-3PM, W: 12-1PM, by appointment

DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY

Course Title German Intellectual Tradition: Marx, Nietzsche, & Freud SAMPLE SYLLABUS

Description: Systematic composition and conversational exercises. Description: Continuation of GERM 203.

Westminster College School of Music Fall, 2018

The Center for Bioethics & Human Dignity Trinity International University Deerfield, IL

LSC 606 Cataloging and Classification Summer 2007

Nineteenth-Century Europe. History 344 Fall 2012 Sarah Curtis TTh 2:10-3:25

Department of English and Writing Studies Western University. English 4050G January 2015

1 P a g e D r. R o g g e n k a m p

CTI 310 / C C 301: Introduction to Ancient Greece Unique #33755, MWF 2:00 3:00 PM Waggener Hall, Room 308

ENG/BC/WS 494(G) Women in Film/Television Fall 2017 Western Illinois University

Music 001 Introduction to Music. Section CT3RA: T/Th 12:15-1:30 pm Section 1T3RA: T/Th 1:40-2:55 pm

Grading Criteria: All of the following assignments assume the clarification of a theoretical position.

Freshman Writing Seminar Syllabus

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG216 WORLD LITERATURE: AFTER Credit Hours. Presented by: Trish Loomis

Courage! Honor! Intensity! Valor! Armor! Love! Romance! Youth! = CHIVALRY

Introduction to Western Music

History 2611E- Survey of Korean History Wednesday 1:30-3:30 PM

Syllabus for English 233H Literature as Satire

Office: Krannert Level Office Hours: MW 12:00-12:50 Meeting time: MWF, 11-11:50 Classroom: Armory 242

Political Theory and Aesthetics

Religion 101 Ancient Egyptian Religion Fall 2009 Monday 7:00-9:30 p.m.

Course Description. Course objectives

Eastern Kentucky University Department of Music Syllabus for MUS , Musicianship I, CRN T/TH 11:00-11:50 1 Credit Hour Fall 2012

Music majors and minors should identify themselves as such at the start of the course.

Welcome to MUCT 2210 Exploring Classical Music

Basic Course Information

AMERICAN STUDIES 2231F Selected Topic: American Captivity Narratives

LC 150, Reading Film: Introduction to Film Studies Department of Languages, Literature, and Cultures, Fall 2018

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE FALL DR 1010 (A2): INTRODUCTION TO THEATRE ART 3(3-0-0) 45 Hours for 15 Weeks

1) Three summaries (2-3 pages; pick three out of the following four): due: 9/9 5% due: 9/16 5% due: 9/23 5% due: 9/30 5%

German Associate Professor Lorna Sopcak (Chair, on leave spring 2016)

Orchestration Syllabus MUCP 4320 and MUCP 5320

WIU Spring 2016 ENG/BC/WS 494 Women in Film/Television-sec. 01 Discussion/Lecture: M and W 1:00-1:50 (SI 220) Screening: Monday 2:00-4:00 (SI 220)

M, Th 2:30-3:45, Johns 212 Benjamin Storey. Phone:

Tentative Schedule (last UPDATE: February 8, 2005 ) Number Date Topic Reading Information Oral General Presentations Assignments

Stony Brook University School of Journalism JRN 371 Television Production Fall 2017

Humanities 4: Lecture 19. Friedrich Schiller: On the Aesthetic Education of Man

Vocal/General Music Gr. 7 Page 1 COURSE TITLE: VOCAL/GENERAL MUSIC GRADE 7 SCHOOLS: PIERREPONT SCHOOL UNION SCHOOL RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY DATE:

Transcription:

Instructor: Manuel Clemens Academic Building Office: 4133 manuel.clemens@rutgers.edu Office Hours: Wednesday 2-3pm Introduction to German Studies 1750-1900 Fall 2016 01:470:275:01 T 11:30am-12:50pm, Hardenbergh Hall A7 Th 11:30am-12:50pm, Hardenbergh Hall A5 Course description An interdisciplinary inquiry into seminal literary, artistic, social, political, and intellectual movements in the history of Germanic cultures and thought from around 1750 to 1900. Open to first-year students and, more generally, to those who might not necessarily wish to become a German major or minor but who seek, as part of a well-rounded liberal arts education, basic familiarity with the rich and often vexed history of things German and their impact on Europe and the world. Topics include: Tolerance and the age of Enlightenment; Romantic music, painting and poetry; the Faust legend; the reception of the French Revolution in Germany, industrialization and social change in the 19th Century as well as the impact of Marx and Nietzsche. Short readings of texts by Lessing, Kant, Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Marx, Nietzsche. Film by A. Wajda; music by Beethoven, Mozart and Schubert; paintings by Caspar David Friedrich. No prerequisites. Readings and discussions in English. Books to be purchased at Rutgers University Bookstore Gateway Transit Bldg - 100 Somerset Street: Goethe, Faust, Part I (ISBN: 019953621X) Lessing, Nathan the Wise (ISBN: 978-0312442439) Marx, The Communist Manifesto (ISBN: 0717802418) Schivelbusch, The Railway Journey (ISBN: 0520059298) Sakai All other readings available on course website on Sakai https://sakai.rutgers.edu under title Intro to German Studies 1750-1900, subheading Resources. Requirements Students are required to write three 4-page essays in the course of the semester.

2 Final Grade First Essay 20% Second Essay 40% Third Essay 40% Grade distribution A=90-100%; B+=85-89; B=80-84; C+=75-79; C=70-74; D=65-69; F=64 and below Learning Goals The course satisfies the following Learning Goals of the Core Curriculum: AH (p) Analyze arts and/or literatures in themselves and in relation to specific histories, values, languages, cultures, and technologies. WC (s1) Communicate complex ideas effectively, in standard written English, to a general audience. WCd (t) Communicate effectively in modes appropriate to a discipline or area of inquiry. (v) Analyze and synthesize information and ideas from multiple sources to generate new insights. Departmental Policies Attendance All students must attend regularly and arrive prepared; if you expect to miss one or two classes, please use the University absence reporting websitehttps://sims.rutgers.edu/ssra/ to indicate the date and reason for your absence. An email is automatically sent to me. Those who miss more than two class sessions without a compelling excuse should expect a onestep reduction in the course grade (i.e. an A becomes a B+, a B+ becomes a B). Every additional three absences may entail a further one-step grade-reduction. Three late arrivals count as one absence. Note: It is the responsibility of students who have been absent (for any reason) to find out what they have missed and obtain materials that may have been handed out. Cell Phones Cell phones and all other technological devices (ipods, MP3players, Smartphones ) must be turned off during class out of respect for the instructor and fellow students. Please schedule all important phone communications outside of class time. Disability Support Services Students who may be requesting accommodations due to disabilities are encouraged to familiarize themselves with procedures and policies regarding disability support services at the following website: http://disabilityservices.rutgers.edu/. It is recommended that students seeking accommodations begin filing paperwork as soon as possible as the documentation review process may take up to 30 business days. Students are encouraged to speak with

3 teachers about these issues at the beginning of the term. All such conversations will be kept strictly confidential. Academic Integrity Violations of academic integrity are an extremely serious matter, and can lead to a student s failing the course and being referred to the University s Office of Student Conduct for disciplinary action. When referring to ideas other than your own, always acknowledge your sources clearly and completely, whether you are quoting or paraphrasing. Note also that use of online translation services is not permitted as a tool for generating work that you submit for course credit. Please see the University s policies on academic integrity at http://academicintegrity.rutgers.edu/, and discuss with your instructor any questions you may have about this and related issues. Cheating and Plagiarism Short version: Don t cheat. Don t plagiarize. Longer version: Cheating on tests or plagiarizing materials in your papers deprives you of the educational benefits of preparing these materials appropriately. It is personally dishonest to cheat on a test or to hand in a paper based on unacknowledged words or ideas that someone else originated. It is also unfair, since it gives you an undeserved advantage over your fellow students who are graded on the basis of their own work. In this class we will take cheating very seriously. All suspected cases of cheating and plagiarism will be automatically referred to the Office of Judicial Affairs, and we will recommend penalties appropriate to the gravity of the infraction. The university's policy on Academic Integrity is available at http://academicintegrity.rutgers.edu/academic-integrity-policy 1 I strongly advise you to familiarize yourself with this document, both for this class and for your other classes and future work. To help protect you, and future students, from plagiarism, we require all papers to be submitted through Turnitin.com. Since what counts as plagiarism is not always clear, I quote the definition given in Rutgers' policy: Plagiarism: Plagiarism is the use of another person s words, ideas, or results without giving that person appropriate credit. To avoid plagiarism, every direct quotation must be identified by quotation marks or appropriate indentation and both direct quotation and paraphrasing must be cited properly according to the accepted format for the particular discipline or as required by the instructor in a course. Some common examples of plagiarism are: Copying word for word (i.e. quoting directly) from an oral, printed, or electronic source without proper attribution. Paraphrasing without proper attribution, i.e., presenting in one s own words another person s written words or ideas as if they were one s own. Submitting a purchased or downloaded term paper or other materials to satisfy a course requirement. 1 This web link was corrected on Sept. 13, 2015. S. Lawrence

4 Incorporating into one s work graphs, drawings, photographs, diagrams, tables, spreadsheets, computer programs, or other nontextual material from other sources without proper attribution. 2 A SPECIAL NOTE: Students often assume that because information is available on the Web it is public information, does not need to be formally referenced, and can be used without attribution. This is a mistake. All information and ideas that you derive from other sources, whether written, spoken, or electronic, must be attributed to their original source. Such sources include not just written or electronic materials, but people with whom you may discuss your ideas, such as your roommate, friends, or family members. They deserve credit for their contributions too! Schedule of Classes Important: Assignments have to be completed before the class meeting indicated! Introduction 09/06: Baumgarten, Winckelmann, Klopstock 09/08: Boyle, German Literature. A Very Short Introduction, p. 8-57 Sturm & Drang and the Cult of the Genius 09/13: Herder, Journal of my Voyage in the Year 1769 Goethe, Prometheus Kant, Critique of Judgment, 46 09/15: Goethe, The Sorrows of Young Werther, Book I, p. 2-34 Enlightenment 09/20: Goethe, The Sorcerer s Apprentice Kant, What is Enlightenment? 09/22: Mercier, The Year 2440, chap. 2-6, 10-15, 18, 23-24, 26, 28-29, 32-33, 36, 44 09/27: Lessing, Nathan the Wise, Act 1, Scene 1, 2, 5 Act 2, Scene 5, 6, 7, 8 Act 3, Scene 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 2 http://academicintegrity.rutgers.edu/academic-integrity-policy/ Updated with the University s current language on July 13, 2012 and web link was corrected on Sept. 13, 2015. S. Lawrence.

5 09/29: Lessing, Nathan the Wise, Act 3, Scene 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 10/04: Lessing, Nathan the Wise, Act 4, all Scenes, Act 5, Scene 4-end Schiller/Beethoven, Ode to Joy First Paper due Idealism & Romanticism 10/06: Schiller, Aesthetic Letters on the Education of Man, letters 2-9 10/11: Schiller, Aesthetic Letters on the Education of Man, letters 10-14 10/13: Zipes, The Brothers Grimm 10/18: The Brothers Grimm, Cinderella Bettelheim, Cinderella 10/20: Mozart, Schubert and the German Lieder: Jane K. Brown, In the beginning was poetry Lorraine Gorrell, Poetry and Music 10/25: Schlegel, Athenäums-Fragment No. 116 Joseph Koerner, Romanticizing the World Fredrick Beiser, The Meaning of Romantic Poetry, p. 6-22 10/27: Schlegel, On Incomprehensibility Kleist, The very last Word in Modern Educational Theory Second Paper due Disenchantments 11/01: Kleist, Different Feelings about a Seascape by Friedrich Paintings by Caspar David Friedrich vs. N. Poussin and D. Rousseau Eichendorff, Moonlit Night 11/03: A. Wajda, Danton (Film) Büchner, Danton s Death (excerpt) 11/08: Marshall Berman on Goethe s Faust 11/10: Goethe, Faust I 11/15: Schivelbusch, The Railway Journey, chap. 3, 4, 8, 10, 11; plus Excursus The Space of Glass Architecture and Excursus History of Shock

6 Re-Enchantments 11/17: Marshall Berman on Marx 11/22: Marx, The Communist Manifesto, part I 11/24: No Class Thanksgiving Recess 11/29: Marx, The Communist Manifesto, part II 12/01: Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, Essay I 12/06: Nietzsche, On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense 12/08: Summary/Final Discussion Third Paper due: 12/16