Handbook 1996 : Faculty of Arts (Volume 3 page 161)
Russian subject : Next:126-255 | Prev:126-253 | Search | Help
126-254/354 "Russian Literature and Society C" appears differently in several places - choose the one you want:
1. Russian, Faculty of Arts (v3, p161) : Next:126-255 | Prev:126-253
Credit points: 16.7 2nd year, 16.7 3rd year
Coordinator: Associate Professor J Armstrong.
Prerequisite: Normally Russian Literature & Society A or B.
Contact: A 2-hour seminar.
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, centred on a core of novels, with background reading in literary theory, Soviet realism and the relationship between the society and its literature. No knowledge of Russian is necessary.
Assessment:
A 2-hour paper; a 4000-word essay or a 2500-word essay and a class paper.
Prescribed texts:
1. Russian, Faculty of Arts (v3, p161) : Next:126-255 | Prev:126-253
2. Russian, Faculty of Educ(Parkville) (v5, p168) : Next:126-255 | Prev:126-253
Credit points: 16.7
Coordinator: Associate Professor J Armstrong.
Prerequisite: Russian Literature & Society A or B.
Contact: A 2-hour seminar 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, centred on a core of novels, with background reading in literary theory, Soviet realism and the relationship between the society and its literature. No knowledge of Russian is necessary.
Assessment:
A 2-hour paper; a 4000-word essay or a 2500-word essay and a class paper.
Prescribed texts:
* Note that CONTACT, OBJECTIVES, POINTS, PREREQUISITES, PRESCRIBEDTEXTS differs from the maintainer's version above. A log of variations is available.
2. Russian, Faculty of Educ(Parkville) (v5, p168) : Next:126-255 | Prev:126-253
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.