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COURSE DETAIL

INTERMEDIATE GERMAN I
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
German
UCEAP Course Number
70
UCEAP Course Suffix
A
UCEAP Official Title
INTERMEDIATE GERMAN I
UCEAP Transcript Title
INTERMEDIATE GER I
UCEAP Quarter Units
8.50
UCEAP Semester Units
5.70
Course Description

In this class on the B1 level according to CEFR, students learn to understand the main points of clear standard input on familiar matters regularly encountered in work, school, leisure, etc. They deal with most situations likely to arise while traveling to an area where German is spoken. Students learn to produce simple connected texts on topics that are familiar or of personal interest. They acquire skills to describe experiences and events, dreams, hopes and ambitions and briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans. The B1 level is split into two courses, the B1.1 course covers the first half of the level and the B1.2 course covers the second half of the level.

Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
Host Institution Course Title
NIVEAU B1.1 - SPRACHKURS
Host Institution Campus
SPRACHENZENTRUM
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Sprachenzentrum
Course Last Reviewed
2023-2024

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INTENSIVE BEGINNING GERMAN II
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
German
UCEAP Course Number
40
UCEAP Course Suffix
B
UCEAP Official Title
INTENSIVE BEGINNING GERMAN II
UCEAP Transcript Title
INTENS BEGN GER II
UCEAP Quarter Units
8.00
UCEAP Semester Units
5.30
Course Description
This pre-semester course prepares foreign students for academic study at a German university. The focus is on the improvement of oral and written expression as well as grammar and lexical proficiency. The course covers selected topics on German politics and society within a historical context. In addition, excursions are planned to introduce students to German culture. Students work with cultural topics in everyday situations and broaden their intercultural knowledge. They are introduced to independent learning methods and familiarize themselves with typical learning situations at German universities. In this class at the A2 level according to CEFR, students review and learn basic grammar points and are systematically introduced to basic vocabulary. All four skills are developed and applied to everyday situations and some study-related situations. The A2 level is split into two consecutive courses, the A2.1 course covers the first half of the level and the A2.2 course covers the second half of the level.
Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
Host Institution Course Title
PRE-SEMESTER GERMAN COURSE LEVEL A2.2
Host Institution Campus
Free University Berlin
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Sprachenzentrum
Course Last Reviewed
2023-2024

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AUTHORITARIANISM IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Political Science International Studies
UCEAP Course Number
153
UCEAP Course Suffix
M
UCEAP Official Title
AUTHORITARIANISM IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
UCEAP Transcript Title
AUTHORITRN INTL POL
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
This course systematically investigates the differences between autocracies and democracies by working through central theoretical assumptions and empirical findings of International Relations (IR) and comparative autocracy research. It starts by reviewing the unitary state assumption that is foundational for the field of IR and gradually open up our thinking about regime type in world politics. Having identified that especially democracies act differently in world politics, the course attempts to understand what is particular about authoritarian regimes by reading classical and contemporary texts from Comparative Politics. In four different case studies to be chosen in class, students study in detail various authoritarian regime types and their implications for international outcomes (e.g. conflict, human rights). The seminar concludes with a focus on the rise of the radical right and the threats it poses to democracy and international institutions.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
15132
Host Institution Course Title
AUTHORITARIANISM IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
POLITIK- UND SOZIALWISSENSCHAFTEN
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Otto-Suhr-Institut für Politikwissenschaft
Course Last Reviewed

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MODERN JEWISH IDENTITY
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Women’s & Gender Studies Religious Studies
UCEAP Course Number
119
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
MODERN JEWISH IDENTITY
UCEAP Transcript Title
MDRN JEWSH IDENTITY
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This lecture analyzes the three basic factors that have influenced modern Jewish identity: enlightenement, anti-Semitism, and Zionism. It examines the changes of how Jewish identity is understood. A special focus is placed on the differentiation of cultural or national and religious identity with an emphasis on feminism and queerness. Gender relations are examined within their respective religious, cultural, and social contexts. Social history and the history of the common man is discussed and a special focus is placed on the active participation of Jewish women in society as well as the intellectual and artistic life within European nation states.

Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
14500
Host Institution Course Title
JÜDISCHE IDENTITÄT IN DER MODERNE
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
GESCHICHTS- UND KULTURWISSENSCHAFTEN
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Judaistik
Course Last Reviewed

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MIGRATION: DYNAMICS AND CONTROVERSIES IN EUROPE AND BERLIN
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
European Studies
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Anthropology
UCEAP Course Number
108
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
MIGRATION: DYNAMICS AND CONTROVERSIES IN EUROPE AND BERLIN
UCEAP Transcript Title
MIGRATION:EUR&BERLN
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

Modern nation-states rely on borders to govern mobility as “migration.” In the context of globalization, migration governance and the public debates and societal contestations around it have become increasingly salient. This interdisciplinary course addresses different phenomena of migration and borders, paying attention to the historical contexts and the complex and contested nature of migration governance. Drawing on social, legal, cultural, historical, and political perspectives, and engaging grassroots movements and audio-visual works, the course focuses on European and German policies, institutions, practices, and debates over migration and borders. Also the Berlin level is discussed, particularly by guests and in relation to local contestations. The course takes distance from the nation-state and borders as normative frames, introducing critiques of methodological nationalism and critical perspectives emerging from (everyday) practices of migration and antiracist movements. Borders are explored as complex, contested practices / relations at the intersection of race, law, gender, control of labor, international relations, and other factors, creating (global) social hierarchies and unequal access to mobility and other rights / resources.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
FU-BEST 34
Host Institution Course Title
MIGRATION: DYNAMICS AND CONTROVERSIES IN EUROPE AND BERLIN
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Free Univ. Berlin
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
FU-BEST
Course Last Reviewed

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FILMS OF THE EARLY FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY (1949-1963)
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Film & Media Studies
UCEAP Course Number
100
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
FILMS OF THE EARLY FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY (1949-1963)
UCEAP Transcript Title
FILM EARLY FED GER
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
The seminar looks past the Heimat and German country music films, the foresters and senior physicians of the decade, to take a look at films that show how the struggle for one's own (national) identity on screen is re-articulated in the shadow of the horrors of the past. The class also examines the way in which gender relations shifted over time.
Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
17614
Host Institution Course Title
DAS KINO DER JUNGEN BUNDESREPUBLIK (1949-1963)
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
PHILOSOPHIE UND GEISTESWISSENSCHAFTEN
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Theaterwissenschaft
Course Last Reviewed

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THE SPECTRE OF REVOLUTION: RESISTANCE AND PROTEST IN POST-WAR EUROPE 1953-1989
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
European Studies
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
History European Studies
UCEAP Course Number
105
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
THE SPECTRE OF REVOLUTION: RESISTANCE AND PROTEST IN POST-WAR EUROPE 1953-1989
UCEAP Transcript Title
PROTEST EU 1953-89
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course examines the emergence of mainly youth-led resistance and protest movements in post-World War II Europe on both sides of the Iron Curtain, and attempts to understand their origins, their meaning and their effect on the societies in which they occurred. American counterculture in the 1960s is often associated with rock’n’roll music, drug-taking, dropping out, and the Anti-Vietnam protest movement. In Europe the associations are more complex and include revitalization of European feminist movements as well as countercultures in places like West Germany and Italy that are remembered for planting bombs and joining underground terror cells in the name of the New Left, or more extreme iterations of the New Left. On the other side of the Iron Curtain, in places like Hungary, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and the Soviet Union, anti-government protesters faced a very different, more dangerous existential struggle against authoritarian regimes that utilized torture and detention without trial to mute or prevent social uprisings. This course accounts for the nature and intensity of post-war European protest movements by examining the historical context of the traumatic impact of recently defeated fascism on the continent, and the division of Europe into spheres of interest reflecting the Cold War world. It examines the post-war socio-economic developments that led to the massive expansion of higher education in Western Europe, promoting a generational divide which saw a radicalized younger generation turn on their parents and other members of the older (Nazi) generation or the so called system, sometimes in rage and violence, as in the examples of the Red Army Faction in Germany and the Red Brigades in Italy. This is compared to examples in Eastern Europe, where resistance movements against Communist regimes, such as in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and East Germany, were met with deadly force and violent oppression. The course keeps as its particular focus East Germany (GDR) and West Germany (FRG), but the course also encounters the student-led uprisings against Sovietized Communism in Hungary in 1956 and during the 1968 Prague Spring, as well as the curious case of the Soviet Hippies. Throughout the course, the city of Berlin serves as a backdrop: as a place of often very radical anti-government movements in West Berlin, compared with the muted and hidden resistance to authority over the Berlin Wall in East Berlin. The course also examines how resistance in Western Europe often meant solidarity with anti-colonial movements in the Middle East, Africa, and South America. It also discusses the rise of new political movements as the Green Party.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
FU-BEST 3
Host Institution Course Title
“THE SPECTRE OF REVOLUTION”: RESISTANCE AND PROTEST IN POST-WAR EUROPE 1953-1989
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Free Univ. Berlin
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
FU-BEST
Course Last Reviewed

COURSE DETAIL

THEATER IN BERLIN
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
German Dramatic Arts
UCEAP Course Number
179
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
THEATER IN BERLIN
UCEAP Transcript Title
BERLIN THEATER
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description
This course introduces students to the history of German theater. With the multiplicity of state and city-run theaters, German theater presents an international exception. Students gain an insight into the role that theater in Germany has played in influencing international trends and in further exemplifying trends within Germany. The course first explores the rich history presented by such theaters as the Volksbühne, Deutsches Theater, Berliner Ensemble, and Schaubühne, each of which is known for its specific and quite individual style. Then the course moves on to discuss the dramaturgical concepts and individual plays for which these theaters are known. In the second half of the semester the course moves on to handle some key contemporary German works. Three class visits to the theater in Berlin help to give students a practical view into the theories discussed in lecture.
Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
16857
Host Institution Course Title
THEATER IN BERLIN
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
PHILOSOPHIE UND GEISTESWISSENSCHAFTEN
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Deutsche Philologie
Course Last Reviewed

COURSE DETAIL

FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE: WRITINGS AND MYTHS
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
German
UCEAP Course Number
140
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE: WRITINGS AND MYTHS
UCEAP Transcript Title
NIETZSCHE WRIT&MYTH
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

Even if Friedrich Nietzsche liked to see himself as a "flame" leaping out of nothing and leaving only "ashes" behind him, his writings are integrated into philological and philosophical traditions. The list of his declared friends and enemies is long, as is the list of books he acquired or borrowed. Nietzsche's work cannot be thought of without antiquity, without Schopenhauer and without the confrontation with contemporary aesthetic and philosophical positions. In this respect, his work has a prehistory, but not only this: it has also experienced a turbulent reception history from turn-of-the-century aesthetics through the world wars and fascism to postmodernism, which often has little to do with Nietzsche's actual texts. In this lecture, selected passages from Nietzsche's work are subjected to a reading and examined for their influences in order to confront them with their history of impact. From the point of view of literary studies and aesthetics, the focus is on the early aesthetic writings around the BIRTH OF TRAGEDY, DIE FRÖHLICHE WISSENSCHAFT, ALSO SPRACH ZARATHUSTRA, as well as Nietzsche's own poetry.

Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
16668
Host Institution Course Title
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE - TEXT UND MYTHOS
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
PHILOSOPHIE UND GEISTESWISSENSCHAFTEN
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Deutsche und Niederländische Philologie
Course Last Reviewed
2021-2022

COURSE DETAIL

INTERMEDIATE GERMAN I
Country
Germany
Host Institution
Free University of Berlin
Program(s)
Free University Berlin
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
German
UCEAP Course Number
70
UCEAP Course Suffix
B
UCEAP Official Title
INTERMEDIATE GERMAN I
UCEAP Transcript Title
INTERMEDIATE GER I
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.70
Course Description

In this class on the B1 level according to CEFR, students learn to understand the main points of clear standard input on familiar matters regularly encountered in work, school, leisure, etc. They deal with most situations likely to arise while travelling to an area where German is spoken. Students learn to produce simple connected texts on topics that are familiar or of personal interest. They acquire skills to describe experiences and events, dreams, hopes and ambitions and briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans. The B1 level is split into two courses, the B1.1 course covers the first half of the level and the B1.2 course covers the second half of the level.

Language(s) of Instruction
German
Host Institution Course Number
54639
Host Institution Course Title
NIVEAU B1.2- SPRACHKURS
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
SPRACHENZENTRUM
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Sprachenzentrum
Course Last Reviewed
2022-2023
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