Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Undergraduate–Newark
 
About This Catalog
About the University
Undergraduate Education in Newark
Liberal Arts Colleges
Admission to the Liberal Arts Colleges
Newark College of Arts and Sciences
University College–Newark
Academic Programs and Courses
Availablity of Courses, Majors, and Minor Programs
Course Notation Information
Academic Foundations 003
African American and African Studies 014
Allied Health Technologies 045
American Studies 050
Ancient and Medieval Civilizations 060
Anthropology 070
Arabic 074
Art, Design, and Art History (080; 081; 082; 083; 085)
Biological Sciences
Chemistry 160
Chinese 165
Clinical Laboratory Sciences 191
Computer Science 198
Earth and Environmental Sciences (Geology 460)
Economics 220
Urban Education 300
English (350 and 352)
English: Composition and Writing 355
Environmental Sciences 375
French 420
Minor Requirements
Courses
Geoscience Engineering 465
Greek 490
History (History 510, American 512)
Honors 525
International Affairs
Italian 560
Japanese 565
Journalism and Media Studies 086
Korean 574
Latin 580
Legal Studies
Linguistics 615
Mathematics 640
Medical Technology 660
Microbiology
Music 087
Persian 685
Philosophy (Philosophy 730, Applied Ethics 733)
Physics 750
Political Science 790
Portuguese and Lusophone World Studies 812
Psychology 830
Religious Studies
Russian 860
Slavic Literature 861
Social Work 910
Sociology 920
Spanish 940
Theater 088
Urban Studies 975
Video Production 089
Women's Studies 988
Administration and Faculty
Consortium with New Jersey Institute of Technology
College of Nursing
Rutgers Business School: Undergraduate–Newark
School of Criminal Justice
School of Public Affairs and Administration
General Information
Divisions of the University
Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  Newark Undergraduate Catalog 2011–2013 Liberal Arts Colleges Academic Programs and Courses French 420 Courses  

Courses

21:420:101-102 Elementary French (3,3) Beginning course designed to develop the basic skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing; study of basic grammar and vocabulary. Students are required to do supplementary work in the language laboratory. Intended for students with little or no previous knowledge of French. Both semesters must be completed to receive credit.
21:420:131,132 Intermediate French (3,3) Practice in speaking, reading, and writing French; review of grammar; readings from representative authors and contemporary French texts. Prerequisites: 21:420:101-102 or equivalent as determined by placement examination.
21:420:203 Conversation and Composition (3) Grammar review through oral and written usage. Oral exposés; compositions; language laboratory for conversation, grammar, and pronunciation reinforcement.
21:420:204 Composition and Conversation (3) Intensive practice in oral and written French. Prerequisite: 21:420:203 or permission of instructor.
21:420:205,206 Introduction to French Literature (3,3) Readings in French literature chosen to illustrate various literary forms and periods. Conducted as far as is practical in French. Prerequisite: 21:420:132 or equivalent. 21:420:205 and 206 are prerequisites to advanced courses in French literature.
21:420:260 Contemporary France (3) Interdisciplinary study of contemporary France and the French: political, social, and economic concerns; technological innovations; the arts and their function in society; the continuity of tradition and the challenge of change. Taught in English. Not open to French majors or minors.
21:420:301 Advanced Grammar (3) Special stress on unusual points of grammar and syntax. Prerequisites: 21:420:203, 204. For prospective teachers and others who wish to acquire more fluency in spoken and written French.
21:420:302 Advanced Grammar (3) Conversation practice and composition on a wide range of subjects. Special emphasis on unusual points of grammar and syntax. Prerequisites: 21:420:203, 204.
21:420:304 Black Writers in French from Africa and the West Indies (3) Study of the major writers of French-speaking Africa and the West Indies, with emphasis on the poets of "négritude," especially Césaire, Senghor, and Damas. Prerequisites: 21:420:203, 204 or 205,206.
21:420:311,312 French Literature in English Translation (3,3) In-depth reading of major works in French literature; content varies each semester. When the theme of "Sexual Politics in the Novel and Drama" is taught, 3 credits toward the women's studies major and minor are granted. Other themes include "The Novel as Social Document" and "The Many Faces of Love in Various Genres." Open to all students except French majors and minors. Prerequisite: 21:350:102.
21:420:347 French Civilization (3) The development of French political, social, cultural, and artistic institutions and traditions from pre-Roman Gaul to the 20th century. Required for prospective teachers of French.
21:420:353,354 Individual Study in French (3,3) Individual study for students interested in specialized topics and research in French language or literature. Prerequisite: Permission of department chair or instructor.
21:420:361 Molière (3) Major and selected minor plays; lectures, class discussions, and reports.
Prerequisites: 21:420:205,206.
21:420:362 Voltaire (3) Historical works, drama, poetry, satire, and fiction; lecture, class discussion, papers. Prerequisites: 21:420:205,206, or permission of instructor.
21:420:415 Medieval French Literature (3) Deals principally with the Chansons de Geste, the Arthurian romances, the Tristan story, the theater, and lyric poetry.
21:420:416 French Literature of the Renaissance (3) Deals principally with Rabelais and Montaigne and the development of lyric poetry from Marot to La Ceppède.
21:420:417 The French Theater since 1700 (3) Major works and critical theories of the last three centuries; close reading of selected plays.
21:420:418 French Poetry (3) An exploration of poetry--forms, language, and themes--in works by Ronsard, Christine de Pisan, Lamartine, Baudelaire, La Fontaine, Anna de Noailles, and others.
21:420:421,422 French Literature of the Golden Age (3,3) Readings of 17th-century masterpieces, with a background of critical theory and literary history; the Baroque and préciosité--examples of late Renaissance style; analysis of French classicism; emphasis on the theater of Corneille, Racine, and Molière; and various works by La Fontaine.
21:420:427,428 Seminar in French Literature (3,3) Exploration of ideas and concepts as they are reflected in diverse genres of French literature throughout the eight centuries of its history; content varies each semester. Prerequisites: 21:420:205,206 or permission of instructor.
21:420:431,432 Eighteenth-Century French Literature (3,3) The major writers and genres of the century; first semester: Voltaire and the Age of Reason; second semester: Rousseau and the Age of Sentiment.
21:420:441 Nineteenth-Century French Literature (3) The innovative movements of romanticism and realism in prose fiction, criticism, verse, and drama; thematic and structural study of major texts by Lamartine, Musset, Hugo, Vigny, Madame de Staël, Constant, Chateaubriand, Balzac, Stendhal, and others.
21:420:442 Nineteenth-Century French Literature (3) The development of the romantic movement through realism, naturalism, Parnasse, and symbolism; thematic and structural analysis of works of Flaubert, Gautier, Heredia, Leconte de Lisle, Zola, Baudelaire, Verlaine, and Rimbaud.
21:420:451,452 Twentieth-Century French Literature (3,3) First semester: in-depth reading and analysis of the major novelists and playwrights of this century: Proust, Mauriac, Colette, Cocteau, Anouilh, and the surrealist poets. Second semester: existentialism, the theater of the absurd, and the new novel, with special attention to Malraux, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Camus, Beckett, Ionesco, Genet, and Rochefort.
21:420:453,454 The French Novel (3,3) French novelists from Madame de Lafayette to Robbe-Grillet and other authors of the nouveau roman.
 
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