Handbook 1996 : Faculty of Arts (Volume 3 page 160)
Russian subject : Next:126-251 | Prev:126-232 | Search | Help
126-250/350 "20th-century Russian Literature A" appears differently in several places - choose the one you want:
1. Russian, Faculty of Arts (v3, p160) : Next:126-251 | Prev:126-232
Credit points: 16.7 2nd year, 16.7 3rd year
Coordinator: Associate Professor J Armstrong.
Prerequisite: Intermediate Russian; preferably Russian Literature & Society A or B
Contact: A 2-hour seminar and a tutorial.
Timetable: First semester
Objectives:
By the end of the subject, students should be able to demonstrate:
- a thorough understanding of the cultural development of Russia and the Soviet Union to the period of glasnost;
- the ability to form critical opinions regarding the significance and value of Russian texts in a national and global context, to discuss these in a scholarly way and to communicate their knowledge to the surrounding community.
Content:
A study of Russian writing from the Revolution to 1985, centred on a core of novels, with background reading in literary theory, Soviet realism and the relationship between the society and its literature. At least parts of all texts will be studied in Russian.
Assessment:
A 3000-word essay and a 2-hour textual paper.
Prescribed texts:
1. Russian, Faculty of Arts (v3, p160) : Next:126-251 | Prev:126-232
2. Russian, Faculty of Educ(Parkville) (v5, p168) : Next:126-251 | Prev:126-232
Credit points: 16.7
Coordinator: Associate Professor J Armstrong.
Prerequisite: Intermediate Russian; preferably Russian Literature & Society A or B
Contact: A 2-hour seminar and a tutorial each week
Timetable: First semester.
Objectives:
By the end of the subject, students should be able to demonstrate:
- a thorough understanding of the cultural development of Russia and the Soviet Union to the period of glasnost;
- the ability to form critical opinions regarding the significance and value of Russian texts in a national and global context, to discuss these in a scholarly way and to communicate their knowledge to the surrounding community.
Content:
A study of Russian writing from the Revolution to 1985, centred on a core of novels, with background reading in literary theory, Soviet realism and the relationship between the society and its literature. At least parts of all texts will be studied in Russian.
Assessment:
A 3000-word essay and a 2-hour textual paper.
Prescribed texts:
* Note that CONTACT, OBJECTIVES, POINTS, PRESCRIBEDTEXTS, TITLE differs from the maintainer's version above. A log of variations is available.
2. Russian, Faculty of Educ(Parkville) (v5, p168) : Next:126-251 | Prev:126-232
Status: Official 1996 Date created: Oct 9 1995 Last modified: Oct 9 1995 Authorised by: Academic Registrar Email enquiries: Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au
Maintained by: Dept. of Germanic and Russian Studies, Faculty of Arts.
Copyright © University of Melbourne 1995,1996.