V. Adan-Lifante, V. Arizpe, N. J. Bracher, L.
B. Cooke, O. M. Cooke, R. D. Critchfield, R. K. Curry, N. J.
Dyer, E. Espina, E.P.Garrison, R. J. Golsan, M. C. Hawthorne,
B. Imhoff, C.W.Kallendorf (Interim Head), H. Kallendorf, C. F.
Konrad, T. V. Laane, R.Larson, E. Mallén, M. M. Martin-Rodriguez*,
S. J. Miller, T.J.Mitchell, O. L. Naudeau, S. M.Oberhelman, R.
E. Petrillo, L. Powell, E. T. Rich, R. Schoolcraft, R. R. Shandley,
C. J.Steppich, E. Urbina, J. P. Villalobos, E. Williams
(HISP)
600. Introduction to Hispanic
Studies. (3-0). Credit 3.
Examination from an interdisciplinary
perspective of the cultural history of the Hispanic world,
with particular emphasis on what the different disciplinary
approaches reveal about literature, language, historical
development and socioeconomic issues. Prerequisite: Graduate
classification.
601. Research, Theory and Writing.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Orientation to traditional and
new issues in advanced study of Spanish-language literature,
linguistics, cultural studies; mechanics and ethics of scholarly
procedure and bibliographical guidance on original research
project; and individually-tailored Spanish-language writing
practicum. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
602. Applied Linguistics for
Teachers of Spanish. (3-0). Credit 3.
Overview of Spanish including regional
and national variation with special reference to relationship
of language acquisition, performance analysis and teaching
methodology. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
603. Development of the Spanish
Language. (3-0). Credit 3.
The origin and development of the
Spanish language from pre-Roman to modern period with emphasis
on the socio-historical contexts; analysis of literary and
documentary evidence of linguistic evolution. Prerequisite:
SPAN 602 or approval of instructor.
606. Spanish of the Southwest.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Descriptive analysis of written
varieties of southwest Spanish from Texas, New Mexico, and
Arizona. Structure and variation of (a) the sound system,
(b) grammatical patterns, and (c) the lexicon. Instruction
to sociolinguistic issues relevant to the southwest language
studies. Prerequisite: HISP 602 or approval of instructor.
607. Seminar in Spanish Linguistics.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Intensive investigation of an issue
important to understanding historical linguistics, dialectology,
sociolinguistics, developments in theoretical and applied
linguistics. May be repeated for credit as content varies.
Prerequisite: HISP 602 or approval of instructor.
614. Hispanic Dialectology.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Topics include varieties of Spanish
spoken throughout the Americas. Spanish speaking regions
covered include South America, the Caribbean, Center America
and North America, including the southwestern United States.
The course covers historical background, structural linguistics,
and sociolinguistic issues (social and stylistic variation.)
Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
618. Hispanic Folklore and
Popular Culture. (3-0). Credit 3.
An examination of popular literature
and other cultural forms in the Hispanic world. Students
will learn to appreciate, evaluate, and compare written and
oral traditional formats, and acquire methods of analyzing
language and cultural artifacts that reflect recent research
trends. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
620. Studies in Critical Theory.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Examination of the development
of theories of literary criticism and their application to
the study of literary texts. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
625. U.S. Hispanic Literature
and Culture. (3-0). Credit 3.
Study of the origins and evolution
of U.S. Hispanic literature, culture and folklore, and U.S.
Hispanic regional dialects. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
630. Studies in Latin American
Literature. (3-0). Credit 3.
Possible topics include colonial
literature, the chronicles, Romanticism, Modernism, contemporary
trends in the Latin American novel, the novel of the Mexican
Revolution, Ruben Dario, contemporary Argentine fiction,
the literature of revolution in Latin America, Afro-Hispanic
literature, Hispanic Caribbean literature. Prerequisite:
Graduate classification.
640. History of Ideas in the
Hispanic World. (3-0). Credit 3.
Intensive study of cultural and
ideological currents, especially as they are reflected in
the works of essayists and other writers. Possible topics
include Spain and European culture, European thought in Latin
America, the Renaissance in Spanish literature and social
life, Spain and the Western tradition, the search for national
identity in Mexico, U.S. Hispanic nationalism. Prerequisite:
Graduate classification.
645. Hispanic Women Writers.
(3-0). Credit 3.
A study of the development of writing
by women in the Hispanic world, including Spain, Latin America,
and the United States. Topics include identity and nation,
building of a feminine aesthetics, the reception of women
writers, literary canons and exclusion, women and/in the
Latin American boom, Latina writers in the United States.
Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
646. Cultural Encounters and
Border, from Baroque to the Present. (3-0). Credit 3.
Topics include literature of marginalization
in medieval Spain, colonial literature and the chronicles,
Modernism, Vanguardism, contemporary trends in the Latin
American novel, the novel of the Mexican Revolution, Afro-Hispanic
literature, Hispanic Caribbean literature. Prerequisite:
Graduate classification.
650. Methods of Study in Spanish
Literature. (3-0). Credit 3.
Examination of various methods
of linguistic analysis in Spanish, such as transformational
grammar, socio or psycholinguistics in Spanish. Prerequisite:
Graduate classification.
653. Don Quixote and the Hispanic
Novel. (3-0). Credit 3.
Don Quixote and the development
of modern fiction, its influence in the Hispanic narrative
tradition, from Fernandez de Avellaneda to Perez Galdos,
G. Garcia Marquez, and Carlos Fuentes, and the presence in
the U.S. Hispanic novel. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
654. Contemporary Spanish American
Literature. (3-0). Credit 3.
Recent major and representative
authors and works of drama, poetry and prose. Prerequisite:
Graduate classification.
660. Reading and Research in
Hispanic Cultural Studies. (3-0). Credit 3.
Independent research in specialized
subjects not normally or not often included in the regular
course offerings. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
664. Hispanic Theatre. (3-0).
Credit 3.
Topics include Golden Age drama
and the antecedents, Neo-Classical movement in Spain, regionalized
and criollo drama in Latin America, avant-garde and collective
creation theatre, Teatro Campesino and Chicano movement drama,
Hispanic performance artists. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
665. Studies in Spanish Literature.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Topics include El Cid, El Arcipreste
de Hita, El Romancero, Spanish Renaissance poetry, Golden
Age theater, Cervantes, Lope de Vega, Gongora and Gongorismo,
eighteenth-century essayists, Galdos, the Generation of 98,
Romanticism, Miguel de Unamuno, the theater of Garcia Lorca,
contemporary Spanish poetry, Spanish literature after Franco.
Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
667. Hispanic Genre Studies.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Selected topics in the works, authors,
characteristics and classifications of a given genre cultivated
by Hispanic writers. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
669. Seminar in Hispanic Literature.
(3-0). Credit 3.
Selected movements, authors or
works of Spanish-language literature. Prerequisite: Graduate
classification.
670. Studies in U.S. Hispanic
Literature. (3-0). Credit 3.
Topics include bilingual literature,
Nuyorican literature, Cuban American literature, Chicano
literature, the immigrant novel, ethnic autobiography, U.S.
Hispanic theater, Chicano theater. Prerequisite: Graduate
classification.
671. Bilingualism in Hispanic
Literature. (3-0). Credit 3.
This course will explore bilingualism
in Hispanic letters. From Spanish medieval literature to
contemporary Hispanic literature in the United States, the
course will focus on artistic, aesthetic, social, historical,
and cultural aspects of the uses of two languages in Hispanic
literary works. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
672. Hispanic Film and Performance
Arts. (3-0). Credit 3.
A theoretical and historical exploration
of cinema and performance arts in the Hispanic world. The
description and interpretation of films and performance arts
such as flamenco and folkloric ballet with particular attention
to history, ethnology, artistic trends, and tendencies and
relationships to other arts. Prerequisite: Graduate classification.
675. Methods of Teaching Spanish
to Native Speakers. (3-0). Credit 3.
Presentation of the various theories
and methods for the teaching of Spanish to students of Spanish-speaking
backgrounds in the United States. Prerequisite: HISP 602
or approval of instructor.
685. Directed Studies. Credit
1 to 4 each semester.
Directed individual study of selected
problems in the field of Spanish language or literature.
Prerequisite: 12 hours of advanced courses in Spanish.
689. Special Topics in... Credit
1 to 4.
Selected topics in an identified
area of Spanish. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite:
Approval of instructor.
691. Research. Credit 1 or
more each semester.
Thesis research credit given only
upon acceptance of completed thesis. Prerequisite: Twelve
hours of advanced courses in Spanish.