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theundergraduateschoo ls - Wake Forest University

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COM (cont.) 310. Advanced Media Production. (3h)<br />

316. Screenwriting. (3h)<br />

THE 141. On-Camera Performance. (3h)<br />

General Film Studies Electives<br />

German (GER)<br />

ART 260. Classics of World Cinema. (3h)<br />

261. Topics in Film History. (3h)<br />

396K. Art History Seminar: Film (3h)<br />

COM 312. Film History to 1945. (3h)<br />

313. Film History since 1945. (3h)<br />

370. Special Topics. (when topic relates to film studies)<br />

ENG 373. Literature and Film. (3h)<br />

SOC 366. Sociological Analysis of Film. (3h)<br />

G E R M A N A N D R U S S I A N<br />

137<br />

German and Russian<br />

Chair Kurt C. Shaw<br />

Professors William S. Hamilton, Larry E. West<br />

Associate Professors Kurt C. Shaw, Rebecca Thomas<br />

Assistant Professors Alyssa Lonner, Grant P. McAllister<br />

Lecturers Perry L. Patterson, Heiko Wiggers<br />

Adjunct Senior Lecturer Christa G. Carollo<br />

A major in German requires eight courses beyond 153 to include 217, 300, and at least one<br />

course from among the sequence 249, 281, 283, 285. A minor in German requires five courses<br />

beyond 153, to include 217 and at least one course from among the sequence 249, 281, 283, 285.<br />

Highly qualified majors will be invited by the department to participate in the honors<br />

program in German. To be graduated with the designation “Honors in German,” students must<br />

complete a senior research project. For additional information, members of the departmental<br />

faculty should be consulted.<br />

Students of German are invited to apply for the W. D. Sanders Scholarships and for programs<br />

of study at Freiburg, Berlin, and Vienna, administered by the Institute for the International<br />

Education of Students (IES).<br />

111, 112. Elementary German. (3h, 3h) Introduction to German language and culture. Two<br />

semester sequence.<br />

113. Intensive Elementary German. (4h) One-semester course covering the material of GER 111<br />

and 112. For students whose preparation for GER 153 is inadequate or who have demonstrated<br />

proficiency in another language. Not open to students who have had GER 111 or 112.<br />

153. Intermediate German. (4h) The principles of grammar are reviewed; reading of selected<br />

prose and poetry. P—GER 112 or 113.<br />

215. Introduction to German Literature. (3h) Masterpieces of German literature from the early<br />

period to 1848. P—GER 153 or equivalent. (Note: GER 215 is not a prerequisite for GER 216.<br />

Both courses satisfy the language requirement, and neither is a prerequisite for the other.)

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