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Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities Inclusive OptionChairman and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Inclusive Option: David Bevington, G-B 510, 702-9899, bevi@uchicago.edu Interdisciplinary Studies College Adviser: Lewis Fortner, HM 286, 702-8613 Committee Office and Secretary in the Inclusive Option: Ellie Orr, G-B 101, 702-8032 Theater and Performance Studies OptionChair of the Theater and Performance Studies Option: David Levin, Wb 126, Cl 25F, 702-8532, dlevin@uchicago.edu Director of Undergraduate Studies in Theater and Performance Studies Option: Heidi Coleman, RC 304, 834-9153, coleman@uchicago.edu Interdisciplinary Studies College Adviser: Lewis Fortner, HM 286,702-8613 Theater and Performance Studies Administrator: Heidi Thompson, RC 301,702-9315, hnthomps@uchicago.edu Web: humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/ishu Program of StudyThe Bachelor of Arts degree program in the Committee on Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities offers qualified undergraduates the opportunity to shape an interdisciplinary plan of course work centered in, but not necessarily restricted to, study in the humanities. The Committee, formerly known as the Committee on General Studies in the Humanities, was reconstituted and renamed in 2003. The first reason for the change was to stress the interdisciplinary focus of the program. The second reason for the change was to accommodate two options: (1) an "inclusive option" emphasizing various aspects of interdisciplinary study and (2) a "theater and performance option." To be considered for admission to this B.A. program, a student must submit a written proposal. The application process is designed to make clear in each individual case what interdisciplinary fields are to be related to one another and what method of comparative analysis is suited to such an approach. The program descriptions that follow include application deadlines. Inclusive Option Students should discuss plans and proposed courses with
both the Director of Undergraduate Studies and the Interdisciplinary Studies
College Adviser. In preparation for the B.A. essay, all students in their final year will enroll in a course taught by the B.A. essay preceptor, The Critical Essay: Research, Composition, and Revisions (ISHU 29801). This consists of a series of five seminars in Autumn Quarter, and is offered Pass/Fail only. While it does not generate course credits toward the major, it is a formal requirement of the program unless an exemption is granted for unusual circumstances. Over Winter and Spring Quarters, students with thematically or methodologically related projects normally continue to meet in smaller workshops for writing support and peer review. Each group convenes twice in the winter and once more in the spring, at which times members distribute and discuss new work from their essays. Although students will not register for these workshops, they are a crucial part of the B.A. process that is overseen by the preceptor and the Director of Undergraduate Studies. All students who are writing their B.A. paper are expected to register for both ISHU 29801 and 29900. Program Requirements: Inclusive OptionCompleting the Inclusive Option Worksheet available in G-B 101 will ensure that the student's program of study meets the following five distribution requirements: 1. Six courses in a primary field or in closely integrated subject areas in more than one field. 2. Four courses in a secondary field or in closely integrated subject areas in more than one field. 3. Three courses in a supporting field or combination of fields. 4. A sequence or group of two courses that emphasizes intellectual approaches, or scholarly and critical methods germane to a student's particular interdisciplinary course program. 5. One course devoted to the preparation of the B.A. paper or project (ISHU 29900). A faculty member of the student's choice will supervise the development of the B.A. paper. This faculty member need not be drawn from the Interdisciplinary Studies faculty. The Director of Undergraduate Studies for the Inclusive Option will assist in finding a suitable faculty director, and will also be a resource in advising on the development and writing of the B.A. paper. Similarly, a preceptor (normally a graduate student with interdisciplinary expertise) will also be available to help at every stage, teaching the series of seminars (The Critical Essay, ISHU 29801) in the Autumn Quarter and leading the small workshops in the Winter and Spring Quarters. Any one of the fields listed under numbers 1, 2, and 3 in the preceding paragraphs may be drawn from outside the humanities. The sequence of two courses described in number 4 must be from the humanities offerings. Commonly, this sequence consists of ISHU 23900 (Criticism: Art, Artist, and Audience) and one course in criticism and philosophy. The rationale for the proportional distribution of courses specified in the guidelines is twofold: (1) to ensure that students are given substantial exposure to more than one aspect of humanistically centered inquiry, and (2) to cultivate a level of sufficient competence in at least one field so that this field, alone or in combination with material learned in other fields, can serve as the basis for the B.A. paper or project. Summary of Requirements: Inclusive Option 6 primary field courses 4 secondary field courses 3 supporting field courses 2 critical/intellectual methods courses 1 ISHU 29900 (B.A. paper) 16 Sample Programs: Inclusive Option. While the potential for developing individual B.A. programs in Interdisciplinary Studies is as great as the combined ingenuity, imagination, and interest of each student in consultation with his or her advisers, there are identifiable patterns in the choices of fields and lines of inquiry currently being implemented in the Committee. The most prominent of these include the following: (1) Study in philosophy and literature (as six- and four-course fields with either literature or philosophy emphasized) to investigate differences in handling concepts and language in philosophy and literature and/or mutual influence between the two fields. (2) Study in verbal and nonverbal art forms and expressions (art and literature; and music and literature) leading to consideration of the implications of the verbal and nonverbal distinction for interpretation and criticism. (3) Study in the history, philosophy, language, religious expression, and literary and artistic productions of a given culture or of a given historical period within one or more cultures. Examples include American studies, the Renaissance, or Greece (and the Mediterranean) in the preclassical and classical ages. (4) Study in humanistic fields (e.g., literature and philosophy) and in a social science field (e.g., sociology, psychology, anthropology, political science). This option is particularly adapted to a focus on gender studies. Please note, however, that the College offers a major in Gender Studies. (5) Study of modern culture in its various aspects of popular and elite forms of cultural expression. (6) Study in humanistic approaches to biological or physical science. This option is particularly adapted to interest in problems or aspects of intellectual and cultural history (e.g., the impact of Newtonian physics on eighteenth-century European thought) or to study of modern society and science's role within it (medical ethics being one possible focus among many). (7) Study in human rights in relation to one or two humanistic disciplines such as philosophy, literature, or history. Application: Inclusive Option. Students who are interested in this option should make application to the Committee as soon as possible upon completion of general education requirements (normally by the end of the second year and, except in extraordinary circumstances, no later than the end of Autumn Quarter of the third year). Transfer students in particular are urged to apply at the earliest point that they can, given the large number of courses required for the Interdisciplinary Studies B.A. program. An application is initiated by securing an interview with the Chair of the Inclusive Option, and with the Interdisciplinary Studies College Adviser, to discuss the feasibility of shaping and implementing a given set of interdisciplinary concerns into a course of study for the B.A. After consultation, students who wish to pursue an application to the Committee must submit a two-part written proposal. The first part consists of a personal reflective statement of about one thousand words in length, explaining the character of their interdisciplinary interests and stating as thoughtfully as possible how they propose to channel and expand them within course offerings currently available. Some consideration of prospects and possibilities for a B.A. paper or project is a desirable part of these statements, if it can be provided. The second part of the application consists of a proposed list of courses to fill the headings given in the above set of guidelines. In addition to considering the substance and workability of a proposed program, the Committee generally requires a B average in preceding course work. Honors: Inclusive Option. To be eligible for honors, a student must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.25 or higher. Honors are reserved for the student whose B.A. paper shows exceptional intellectual merit in the judgment of the faculty adviser, the Chair of the Inclusive Option, and the Master of the Humanities Collegiate Division. Advising: Inclusive Option. This program emphasizes clarity as well as flexibility in the shaping of each student's interdisciplinary plan of course work and B.A. paper. Accordingly, we encourage discussion at an early stage of the student's career and, indeed, throughout the course of study. Close contact with advisers (including the Interdisciplinary Studies College Adviser, the Chair of the Inclusive Option, the graduate student preceptor, and the faculty adviser of the B.A. paper) is essential in a program that involves so much individual initiative and experimentation. Faculty: Inclusive OptionR. Austen, D. Bevington, T. Cohen, B. Cohler,
C. Faraone, M. Hansen, D. N. Rudall, Inclusive Option Courses:Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities (ishu)20500/30700. Colonial Autobiography. (=HIST 20101/30101) For course description, see History. R. Austen. Winter, 2005. 20600/30600. The Mande World of West Africa: An Intensive Study of a Culture through History, Literature, and Ethnography. (=ANTH 21200/30600, HIST 20100/30100) For course description, see History. R. Austen. Winter, 2005.
21202/35400. Language in Culture I, II. (=ANTH 37201-37202, LING 21100-21200/31100-31200) PQ: Consent of instructor. Must be taken in sequence. For course description, see Anthropology. M. Silverstein, Autumn; S. Gal, Winter. 21401. Writing Law. (=ENGL 11401/31401, LLSO 21300) For course description, see English Language and Literature. L. McEnerney, K. Cochran. Autumn, 2004. 21403. Writing Argument. (=ENGL 11400/31400) For course description, see English Language and Literature. K. Cochran. Spring, 2006. 21602. Travel Writing. (=ENGL 11602/31602, MAPH 37600) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. T. McNulty. Spring, 2005. 21900. Russian Culture. (=HUMA 24400, RUSS 24400) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). Spring. 22000/32000. Contemporary East European Novel. (=EEUR 22000/32001) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (East European). M. Sternstein. Autumn, 2005. 22300/32300. Austen: Emma and Pride and Prejudice. (=FNDL 25500, HUMA 21600, IMET 32400, LLSO 22401) For course description, see Fundamentals. W. Olmsted. Winter, 2005. 22400/32400. Introduction to Russian Literature II: 1850 to 1900. (=HUMA 24000, RUSS 25600/35600) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). L. Steiner. Winter, 2005; N. Ingham. Winter, 2006. 22600/32600. Introduction to Russian Literature I: From the Beginnings to 1850. (=HUMA 22600, RUSS 25500/35500) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). A. L. Crone, Autumn, 2004; L. Steiner, Autumn, 2005. 22800/32800. Rhetorical Theories of Legal and Political Reasoning. (=HUMA 21400, LLSO 22400, SOSC 22400) For course description, see Law, Letters, and Society. W. Olmsted. Winter, 2005. 22905. Beginning Poetry Workshop: Letters to Young Poets. (=ENGL 12905/32905) For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Reddy. Autumn, 2004. 23000. The Little Red Schoolhouse (Academic and Professional Writing). (=ENGL 13000/33000) PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing. P/F grading optional for English Language and Literature nonmajors. For course description, see English Language and Literature. L. McEnerney, K. Cochran, T. Weiner. Autumn, 2004. 23100/33100. Introduction to Russian Literature III: Twentieth-Century Russian Literature. (=HUMA 24100, RUSS 25700/35700). For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). R. Bird. Spring. 23201/33201. Marxism and Modernism. (=CMLT 21200, HUMA 23201, RUSS 23200/33200) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). R. Bird. Spring, 2006. 23500-23600. Multimedia Programming as an Interdisciplinary Art I, II. (=CMSC 11000-11100) PQ: MATH 10600, or placement into MATH 13100, or equivalent; or consent of instructor. Either course in this sequence meets the general education requirement in the mathematical sciences. For course description, see Computer Science. W. Sterner. Winter, Spring. 23702. Introduction to Interactive Logic. (=CMSC 11200) PQ: MATH 10600, or placement into 13100, or equivalent. Some experience with computers helpful. This course does not meet the general education requirement in the mathematical sciences. For course description, see Computer Science. W. Sterner. Spring, 2006. 23800/33800. The Thought of Hannah Arendt. In this course, we consider all of Arendt's major works: The Origins of Totalitarianism, The Human Condition, On Revolution, Eichmann in Jerusalem, and The Life of the Mind, as well as several of the shorter essays. Our focus is on the central concepts of her thought: action, revolution, thought, power and violence, freedom, and totalitarianism. One major concern is to assess the significance and success of her attempt to interpret twentieth-century experience in the traditional terms of classical thought. H. Sinaiko. Autumn, 2004. 23901. Lolita. (=FNDL 25300, RUSS 23900) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). M. Sternstein. Winter, 2005. 24002/34002. Nabokov's Early Novels. (=ENGL 22805/43501, RUSS 24001/34001) Knowledge of Russian not required. For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). R. Bird. Winter, 2005. 24701/34701. Narrative in Fiction and History. (=CMLT 20900/30900, HIST 23701/33701, RUSS 24700/34700) Class discussion encouraged. R. Bird. Spring, 2005. 25201. Human Intelligences: Animal to AI. (=HUMA 25201) For course description, see Humanities. M. Browning. Winter, 2006. 25350. Utopias. (=ARTH 22804, BPRO 25300, COVA 25301, ENGL 25302, HUMA 25350) PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing. For course description, see Big Problems. L. Berlant, R. Zorach. Spring, 2005. 25901/35901. Words and Images: Introduction to Interdisciplinary Approaches. For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (General Slavic). (=SLAV 25900/35900) B. Shallcross. Winter, 2005. 26001/36001. Introduction to Polish Literature I: From the Beginnings to the Eighteenth Century. (=POLI 26000/36000) Knowledge of Polish not required. For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Autumn, 2004. 26102/36102. Introduction to Polish Literature II: Nineteenth Century. (=POLI 26100/36100) Knowledge of Polish not required. For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Winter, 2005. 26201. On Love: Text and Context. (=BPRO 26100, HUDV 24100, HUMA 26200,) PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing. For course description, see Human Development. H. Sinaiko, D. Orlinsky. Winter, 2005. 26202/36202. Introduction to Polish Literature III: Twentieth Century. (=POLI 26200/36200) Knowledge of Polish not required. For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Spring, 2005. 26303/36303. Theories of Vision. (=SLAV 26100/36100) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (General Slavic). B. Shallcross. Spring, 2006. 26450. Evil. PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing. (=BPRO 26400, HUMA 26450) For course description, see Big Problems. M. Ehre, H. Moltz. Spring, 2005. 26901/36901. Narratives of Suspense in European and Russian Literature and Cinema. (=CMLT 22100, CMST 25102/35102, HUMA 26901/36901, SLAV 26900/36900) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (General Slavic). R. Bird. Winter, 2006. 27202/37202. Turgenev. (=HUMA 27203, RUSS 27200/37200) N. Ingham. Autumn, 2005. 27204/37204. Modern Central European Novel. (=GRMN 28900/38900, SLAV 27200/37200) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (General Slavic). M. Sternstein. Autumn, 2004. 27502/37502. Innocence and Insight in the Novel: F. M. Dostoevsky and Henry James. (=CMLT 22300/32300, ENGL 22806/43502, RLIT 30401, RLST 28700, RUSS 27501/37501) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). L. Steiner. Autumn, 2004. 27650. Creation and Creativity. (=ANTH 27610, BPRO 27600, HUMA 27600, ISHU 27650, SOSC 28601) PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing. For course description, see Big Problems. P. Friedrich, K. Mitova. Spring, 2005. 27802/37802. Bohumil Hrabal. (=CZEC 27800/37800) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Czech). M. Sternstein. Spring, 2005. 27900/37900. Kafka in Prague. (=CZEC 27700/37700, GRMN 29600/39600) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Czech). M. Sternstein. Winter, 2006. 27901/37901. Jan Svankmajer and Contemporary Surrealism. (=CMST 26701/36701, CZEC 27900/37900) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Czech). M. Sternstein. Spring, 2006. 28001. Socrates and the Sophists. (=FNDL 28001) For course description, see Fundamentals. H. Sinaiko. Spring, 2005. 28501-28502-28503. Civilisation Européenne I, II, III. PQ: Advanced knowledge of French. Enrollment in Paris study abroad program. Two of the three courses in this sequence may be counted toward major requirements in ISHU. Classes conducted in French. R. Morrissey. Autumn. 28505/38505. Czeslaw Milosz and (His) Ideologies. (=POLI 28500/38500) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Winter, 2006. 28700/38700. Human Rights I: Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights. (=HIST 29301/39301, HMRT 20100/30100, INRE 31600, LAWS 41200, LLSO 25100, MAPH 40000, PHIL 21700/31600) For course description, see Human Rights. M. Green. Autumn. 28800/38800. Human Rights II: History and Theory of Human Rights. (=HIST 29302/39302, HMRT 20200/30200, INRE 36400, LAWS 41300, LLSO 27100) For course description, see Human Rights. M. Geyer. Winter, 2005. 28801/38801. Polish Postwar Poetry. (=POLI 28800/38800) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Autumn, 2005. 28900/38900. Human Rights III: Contemporary Issues in Human Rights. (=HIST 29303/39303, HMRT 20300/30300, INRE 57900, LAWS 57900, PATH 46500) For course description, see Human Rights. S. Gzesh. Spring. 29200. Introduction to Ethics. (=HIPS 21000, PHIL 21000) For course description, see Philosophy. C. Vogler. Spring, 2005. 29401/39401. Bodies, Things, Objects: An Interdisciplinary Inquiry. (=POLI 29400/39400) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Winter, 2006. 29600. Web Design: Aesthetics and Languages. (=CMSC 10000, HUMA 25100) For course description, see Humanities. M. Browning. Winter, 2006. 29700. Reading Course. PQ: Consent of faculty adviser and Director of Undergraduate Studies. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 29801. The Critical Essay: Research, Composition, and Revisions. Required of fourth-year majors. Course must be taken for credit. M. Hofer. Autumn. 29900. Preparation of the B.A. Project. PQ: Consent of faculty adviser and Director of Undergraduate Studies. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 30500. Aesthetics and Theory of Criticism (=COVA 31300, PHIL 31300) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see Philosophy. T. Cohen. Winter. 35900. Sexual Identity, Life Course, and Life Story. (=GNDR 20800, HIPS 26900, HUDV 24600/34600, PSYC 24600/34600, SOSC 25900) For course description, see Human Development. B. Cohler. Spring. Theater and Performance Studies Option Chair of the Theater and Performance Studies Option: David Levin, Wb126, Cl 25F, 702-8532, dlevin@uchicago.edu Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Theater and Performance Studies Option: Heidi Coleman, RC 304, 834-9153, coleman@uchicago.edu Interdisciplinary Studies College Adviser: Lewis Fortner, HM 286,702-8613 Theater and Performance Studies Administrator: Heidi Thompson, RC 301,702-9315, hnthomps@uchicago.edu The Theater and Performance Studies option (TAPS) in ISHU seeks to animate the intersection of theory and practice in the arts. The program is multiply comparative, requiring that its students acquire facility in the practice of two media (e.g., theater, film, video, dance, music, creative writing) while gaining fluency in the critical analysis of those media. To this end, students receive training in both performance practice and analysis, acquiring the fundamental tools for artistic creation while developing a nuanced and sophisticated vocabulary with which to analyze creativity. In this way, the program aims to contest the ready separation of academic theory and artistic practice or, for that matter, theorists and practitioners. The program is designed to be flexible (to afford students as much latitude as possible in pursuing their particular interests) and exacting (to guarantee the development of comparative practical skills and rigorous analytic capacities). Students should work closely with the Director of Undergraduate Studies and with the preceptor assigned to the program, in shaping an individual course of study that reflects the student's interests while fulfilling the program's interdisciplinary and comparative requirements. The student's faculty adviser on the B.A. project (see below) will provide additional direction during the senior year. Program Requirements: Theater and Performance Studies Option Students in the ISHU-TAPS program must meet the following requirements: 1. The language requirement is the same as that specified by the College for completion of the B.A. degree. 2. Six courses in theory and analysis, encompassing the history, theory, aesthetics, and analysis of theatrical and/or performance practice. One of these will be the core seminar that introduces theater and performance studies (ISHU 19000). The rest of the courses in the theory and analysis rubric may be selected from the ISHU-TAPS course offerings listed below or from related course offerings in the College. Ideally, at least four of these courses will be taken from members of the faculty or resource faculty in TAPS. Course selection is subject to the approval of the Director of Undergraduate Studies. 3. Six courses in artistic practice. Of these, no more than four will include the student's primary medium; at least two will include a qualitatively different medium. Many of these courses will be found in the practical course offerings of ISHU-TAPS listed below, as well as the course offerings in the Committee on Cinema and Media Studies, the Committee on Creative Writing, the Committee on Visual Arts (COVA), and the Department of Music, among others. Students may need to supplement these course offerings with individually designed "reading" courses. Here, too, course selection is subject to the approval of the Director of Undergraduate Studies. 4. Two courses devoted to the preparation of the B.A. project, one of which, to be taken in the student's third year of studies, will normally encompass the specific technical or conceptual problems to be addressed in the B.A. project. The second B.A. project course will be the ISHU-TAPS B.A. colloquium, to be taken in the student's fourth year. The colloquium will meet bi-weekly in the Autumn quarter and weekly in the Winter quarter. Students must attend both quarters, but may only register for it once. B.A. Project: Theater and Performance Studies Option. As the culmination of an undergraduate program combining aesthetic theory and practice, B.A. projects in Theater and Performance Studies will encompass both performance (e.g., directing a play, choreographing a dance performance, shooting a film) and analysis (e.g., B.A. paper). B.A. project proposals are subject to the approval of the Chair of the Theater and Performance Studies Option and are supervised by a faculty member selected by the student. Selecting a B.A. project adviser from the core and resource faculty in ISHU-TAPS is encouraged but not required. A preceptor (typically a graduate student with special expertise in theater and performance studies) assigned to the program will serve as a supplementary resource and adviser for all B.A. projects, working with students on the mechanics of writing and providing tutorial assistance. The B.A. paper will typically engage critical issues arising from the performance component of the B.A. project. The topic of the B.A. paper will be subject to the approval of the Undergraduate Adviser. The problems addressed and encountered in the B.A. project will be further explored in the ISHU-TAPS thesis colloquium taken during the student's fourth year. Deadlines for the B.A. project, assuming spring graduation date, are as follows: a completed draft by the end of Winter Quarter, the final draft by Friday of fifth week in Spring Quarter for honors consideration, Friday of eighth week in Spring Quarter for graduation. Summary of Requirements: Theater and Performance Studies Option 1 TAPS seminar (ISHU 19000) 5 theory and analysis courses 6 artistic practice courses 2 courses encompassing supervision __ of a B.A. project (ISHU 29800 and 29900) 14 Application: Theater and Performance Studies Option. Students wishing to enter the program should consult with the Director of Undergraduate Studies in Spring Quarter of their first year or as soon as possible thereafter. Student must apply to the program by the end of their second year or, in extraordinary circumstances, no later than the end of Autumn Quarter of their third year. Participation in the program must be declared to the Director of Undergraduate Studies before registration. Honors: Theater and Performance Studies Option. Eligibility for honors requires an overall cumulative grade point average of 3.25 or higher, a GPA of 3.5 or higher in the courses taken for the Theater and Performance Studies major, and a B.A. project that is judged by the first and second readers to display exceptional intellectual and creative merit. Faculty Members: Theater and Performance Studies OptionD. Bevington, H. Coleman, J. Comaroff, T.
Gunning, D. Levin, L. Norman, Resource Faculty: T. Crews, L. Kruger, M. Lohman, C.
Mazzio, P. Pascoe, Theater and Performance Studies Option Courses:Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities (ishu)10100. Drama: Embodiment and Transformation. This course meets the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. Attendance at first class meeting is mandatory. At least three sections are offered per quarter with enrollment limited to twenty-four. Students examine the performance and the aesthetics of two dramatic works in contrasting styles but with unifying themes. The goal of the course is to develop in the students an appreciation and understanding of a variety of techniques and of the processes by which they are theatrically realized. Rather than focus on the dramatic text itself, this course concentrates on the piece in performance, including the impact of cultural context on interpretation. To achieve this, students are required to act, direct, and design during the course. P. Pascoe, D. Stearns, J. Thebus, T. Trent, Staff. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 10300 through 10499. Text and Performance. Experience in dramatic analysis or performance not required. Each of these courses meets the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. Workshops in dramatic technique and attendance at performances at Chicago theaters, in addition to class time, are required. Attendance at the first class meeting is mandatory. 10300. Reading a Staging/Staging a Reading. This course meets the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. This course considers three canonical dramatic works and their subsequent radical reinterpretation in a host of media. Students are asked to prepare their own stagings of (or similar creative encounters with) the works under discussion. Throughout, we are searching for that elusive combination of theoretical rigor and creative inspiration: probing the theoretical stakes of creativity and testing the creative implications of conceptual insights. D. Levin. Spring, 2006. 10400. Staging Family. This course meets the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. This course uses the terrain of the family to explore possibilities of staging, pairing classical and contemporary texts in conversations with each other using both dramaturgical and theoretical texts to facilitate this dialog. How do historical contexts impact our readings of relationships? How can critical analysis through staging undermine this nostalgia? How can analysis itself be a performative practice and performance serve as a critical endeavor? Through critical discussion, analytic writings, and stagings, we begin mapping this territory. H. Coleman. Autumn, 2006. 10401. Staging Terror. This course meets the general education requirement in the dramatic, musical, and visual arts. This course explores the interplay between horror, terror, and pleasure through in-class discussions of theoretical works and the possibilities of practical creative application. The paradox of the attraction to repulsion will be considered as well as the values of shock, suspense, and subtlety. Staged texts will include Jacobean drama, Grand Guignol, ghost stories, and fairy tales. H. Coleman. Autumn, 2005. 10800. Visual Language II. (=COVA 10200) For course description, see Visual Arts. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 19000. TAPS Seminar: Introduction to Performance Theory. Required of ISHU (TAPS) majors; open to nonmajors if space permits. This course is an introduction to the project of theorizing performance through extensive critical readings (e.g., P. Auslander, E. Diamond, J. Roach, P. Phelan, R. Schechner) and intensive engagement with the practices of production and reception (in the classroom and at various performance venues in the city). H. Coleman, D. Levin. Spring. 20000. Introduction to Film Analysis. (=ARTH 20000, CMST 10100, COVA 25400, ENGL 10800) For course description, see Cinema and Media Studies. J. Stewart. Autumn. 20010. Introduction to Theatrical Design. This course is a basic introduction to scenic, lighting, costume, and sound design for the theater with a major emphasis on lighting and scenic design. Students have the opportunity to pursue their own interests after the basic introduction in the form of a major project. The course develops an understanding of the design process with a historical perspective and a vocabulary specific to these four design disciplines, as well as an understanding of aesthetic visual elements of the theater. M. Lohman. Autumn, 2004. 21404. Writing Creative Nonfiction. (=ENGL 12204/32204, HUMA 25500) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. Winter, 2005. 21405. Writing the Graphic Novel. (=ENGL 15201/35201) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. I. Brunetti. Spring, 2005. 21406. Writing Biography. (=ENGL 12700/32700) For course description, see English Language and Literature. T. Weiner, L. McEnerney, K. Cochran. Autumn, 2005. 21407. Writing Profiles. (=ENGL 12702/32702, MAPH 37300) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. C. Felsenthal. Winter, 2005. 21800. Theories of Media. (=ARTH 25900/35900, CMST 27800/37800, COVA 25400, ENGL 12800/32800, MAPH 34300) PQ: Any 10000-level ARTH or COVA course, or consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. W. J. T. Mitchell. Winter, 2006. 22401. Beginning Fiction Workshop. (=ENGL 12401/32401) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. A. Logue. Winter, 2005. 22403. Beginning Fiction Workshop: Writing from the Margins. (=ENGL 12403/32403) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. A. Obejas. Spring, 2005. 22404. Beginning Fiction Writing: The Short Story. (=ENGL 12404/32404) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. M. Stielstra. Spring, 2005. 22405. Beginning Fiction: Writing from Experience. (=ENGL 12405/32405) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. Attendance and active class participation required. A. Obejas. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 22406. Beginning Fiction Writing. (=ENGL 12400/32400) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Schaeffer. Autumn, 2004. 22905. Beginning Poetry Workshop: Letters to Young Poets. (=ENGL 12905/32905) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Reddy. Autumn, 2004. 22907. Beginning Poetry Workshop. (=ENGL 12907/32907) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. A. Rollings. Spring, 2005. 22908. Performance Poetry. (=ENGL 12406/32406, MAPH 32905) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. C. Salach. Winter, 2005. 22910. Beginning Creative Writing: Creative Writing for Writers. (=ENGL 12920/32920) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. M. Sloan. Autumn, 2004. 22911. Beginning Creative Writing: Introduction to Genres. (=ENGL 12921/32921) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. Spring, 2005. 23450. American Contemporary Drama. (=ENGL 24500) This course focuses on twentieth-century American contemporary playwrights who have made a significant impact with regard to dramatic form. Texts are considered in context to historical decade and in conversation with previous forms. Playwrights include Albee, Auburn, Baraka, Kaufman, Kushner, Mamet, Miller, O'Neill, Smith, Vogel, Williams, and Wilson. H. Coleman. Winter, 2006. 23460. The Great White Way: American Musical Theater. Through the Schuberts to Disney, George M. Cohan to Sondheim, Broadway productions have been commercially motivated. This course explores how a form with roots in vaudeville, burlesque, and reviews transformed itself into a heightened storytelling medium during the golden age of the 1950s to the current trend of film adaptations. The emphasis is on the dynamic of both collaborative teams as well as the impact of producing interests. Composers and lyricists include Oscar Hammerstein II, George and Ira Gershwin, Lorenz Hart, Cole Porter, Ira Gershwin, Frank Loesser, Leonard Bernstein, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Tim Rice, Stephen Schwartz, Stephen Sondheim, Adam Guettel, Tina Landau, Ricky Ian Gordon, and, of course, Disney. H. Coleman. Winter, 2005. 23900/33900. Criticism: Art, Artist, and Audience. The diversity of critical theory and practice derives from a more fundamental diversity of views about the nature of a work of art and its relations to the artist, the audience, and the world. This course focuses on four contrasting but seminal statements on the nature of art and the kind of criticism appropriate to it: Aristotle's Politics, Plato's Phaedrus, Nietzsche's Birth of Tragedy, and Croce's Aesthetics. H. Sinaiko. Autumn. 24200/34200. History and Theory of Drama I. (=ANST 21200, CLAS 31200, CLCV 21200, CMLT 20500/30500, ENGL 13800/31000) For course description, see English Language and Literature. D. Bevington, D. N. Rudall. Autumn. 24300/34300. History and Theory of Drama II. (=CMLT 20600/30600, ENGL 13900/31100) May be taken in sequence with CMLT 20500/30500 or individually. For course description, see English Language and Literature. D. Bevington, D. N. Rudall. Winter. 24303. Advanced Poetry Workshop: Viewing and Reviewing Poetry. (=ENGL 14303/34303) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Reddy. Spring, 2005. 24305. Advanced Poetry Workshop: Writing Practices. (=ENGL 14305/34305) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Reddy. Autumn, 2004. 24400. Advanced Fiction Writing. (=ENGL 14400/34000) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. S. Schaeffer. Autumn, 2004. 24401. Advanced Fiction Workshop. (=ENGL 14401/34401) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 24402. Advanced Fiction: Research for Writers. (=ENGL 12506/32506) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. Attendance and active class participation required. A. Obejas. Autumn, 2004. 24403. Advanced Fiction Workshop: The Longer Manuscript. (=ENGL 12507/32507) PQ: Consent of instructor. For course description, see English Language and Literature. A. Obejas. Winter, 2005 24450. Arts in Education. This course examines the role of arts in the classroom, school structure, and school culture. With local arts outreach efforts as models, weekly seminars explore arts integration in curriculum planning as well as social, developmental, and economic contexts for co-curricular arts programming. To consider our particular community and environment in this context, readings in this course may include works by Jonathan Kozol, Augusto Boal, and Michael Rohd. Site visits to partner schools serve as field laboratories for this course. T. Trent. Autumn. 25100. Acting Fundamentals. PQ: Consent of instructor. Prior theater or acting training not required. This course introduces students to fundamental concepts of performance in the theatrical art form. The class emphasizes the development of creative faculties and techniques of observation, as well as vocal and physical interpretation. Participants study various acting techniques and methods. Concepts are introduced through directed reading, improvisation, and scene study. P. Pascoe, T. Trent. Autumn, Spring. 25150. Advanced Acting Techniques. PQ: Consent of instructor required; theater experience or acting training helpful. This course, which is often taught by a guest artist, targets a specific acting style, aesthetic, or technique each quarter. Past topics have included Acting the Greeks, Building a Character, Chekhov One Acts and Stories, Improvisation for Actors, Ensemble Process, Sanford Meisner, and Neo-Futurist Performance Workshop. Whatever the topic, students learn the physical, vocal, linguistic, thematic, and textual references to explore the nature of expressing with the technique. H. Coleman, P. Pascoe, Staff. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 25200. Shakespeare in Performance. (=ENGL 16700) PQ: Consent of instructor (based on conference and short audition) required; prior theater training helpful but not required. More information available from TAPS administrative office, RC 301. This course explores the dramatic texts of Shakespeare through scene-study and the mechanics of performance. Students begin by working to develop awareness of and freedom with the verse in the Sonnets. Moving toward more extensive dialogue and scene-work from the plays, students explore the building blocks of performing Shakespeare from the text itself to the actor's voice and body. The class teaches specific approaches to both verse and prose, developing a methodology of analysis, preparation, and performance. Each participant directs and performs scenes for class. D. Stearns. Winter, 2005. 25250. Styles of Performance and Expression from Stage to Screen. (=ARTH 28704/38704, CMST 28400/38400) For course description, see Cinema and Media Studies. Y. Tsivian. Winter, 2005. 25400. Advanced Directing Seminar. PQ: Third- or fourth-year standing and directing experience. This course is designed for students who have specific projects to develop (adaptations, full-length productions). Students are expected to produce dramaturgy work, stagings, and director notebooks. Required readings are determined by students' chosen projects. Scenework involves observed rehearsals as well as preparation in addition to scheduled class time. H. Coleman. Spring, 2006. 25550. Twentieth-Century Styles. (=COVA 25551) PQ: Consent of instructor. How does the dramatic artist with a vision or concept reminiscent of particular genre and philosophy of art express that impulse through performance or design? Grounded in neo-classicism and romanticism, and relying on dramaturgical research into specific periods, this class explores twentieth-century styles, primarily between the World Wars. Readings may include Ibsen, Goethe, Racine, and Zola's Diatribe on Naturalism. Styles examined may include futurism and constructivism, German expressionism, and the epic theater of Brecht. M. Lohman. Autumn, 2005. 25800. Ritual Drama. PQ: Consent of instructor. Prior theater experience or acting training helpful but not required. This workshop course explores the religious and cultural origins and occasions of performance and how those translate into style and performative techniques. Students identify contemporary scenes and contexts in which as performers or directors they might engage observed concepts of sacred movement, space, sound, rhythm, costume, and actor-audience relationship to integrate and/or [re]create communal structure and meaning for presentation. Resources include The Little Clay Cart, The Lion and the Jewel, spell #7, Victor Turner, Uta Hagen, commedia dell'arte, and the structures of traditional Indian dance (Bharatanatyam) and theater (Kathakali), and traditional West African performance. T. Trent. Winter, 2006. 25900. Theory and Control Systems of Technical Theater. Prior theater or design experience not required. An introduction to scenery, lighting, costuming, and sound for the theater, with major emphasis on lighting and scenery. After the basic introductory sessions, students have the opportunity to pursue their own interests in the form of a major project. The course develops an understanding of technical theater vis-à-vis the tools and materials available to the modern technician. Students develop a vocabulary specific to these four disciplines as well as an understanding of the historical perspective and aesthetic visual and aural elements of the theater. D. Stearns, M. Lohman. Autumn, 2005. 25901/35901. Words and Images: Introduction to Interdisciplinary Approaches. (=SLAV 25900/35900) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (General Slavic). B. Shallcross. Winter, 2005. 26000. The Art of Directing. Acting and/or directing experience is encouraged, although no prior theater experience is required. This course introduces students to fundamental skills of directing for the stage, from first contact with the script to final performance. After a preliminary examination of directing theory, the class offers practical experience in script analysis, composition work, blocking, and the rehearsal process. Students are expected to prepare a minimum of three assigned scenes ranging in style (e.g., Williams, Brecht, Shakespeare) with actors outside of class for critique, with final scenes performed publicly during tenth week. H. Coleman. Spring, 2005. 26050. Director-Designer Collaboration. The concept phase of the shared creative process in theater requires clarity of vision and impulse to dream while negotiating the realities of budget and space. With students in the roles of director and designer, this class tackles the pre-production period from initial concept meetings to design presentations for rehearsal. Students develop vocabulary that fully expresses the director's vision and simultaneously provides creative room for the designer. This course is offered in alternate years. M. Lohman, H. Coleman. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 26100. Dramaturgy. (=ENGL 11505/31505) This is an experimental seminar/workshop course. Spring, 2005. 26200. Scene Painting. (=COVA 25700) PQ: Consent of instructor. This course is an exploration of the basic tools and techniques of classical theatrical scene painting. Scene painting is a unique art that uses techniques and tools not associated with other types of painting. Some projects include faux finishes, foliage, scrim, and backdrops. M. Lohman. Spring, 2006. 26300. Costume Design for the Stage. (=COVA 26200) PQ: ISHU 20010 or consent of instructor. This course is a discovery of the history and theories of costume design as well as an interpretation of character and theme through rendering and fabrication of costumes for the stage. Students develop a visual vocabulary through use of texture, color, and period. The beginning part of the course concentrates on basic design rules and costume history. The latter part of the course is devoted to a series of design projects. Spring, 2005. 26400. Lighting Design for Stage and Film. (=COVA 26400) PQ: ISHU 20010 or consent of instructor. This is a basic exploration of the theory and practice of lighting design for both theater and motion pictures. Students develop theatrical lighting vocabulary, knowledge of basic electrical theory, color theory, theory of light, design tools, and the actual instruments used to light the stage through lectures and projects. M. Lohman. Winter, 2006. 26500. Ensemble Creation. PQ: Consent of instructor. What is an ensemble? What is the feeling of being part of one and why does it arise? In what way is the ensemble based theater making experience particular? How might the ensemble process impact production and performance differently than other models? This course examines the experience of creating and working with an ensemble through techniques for the building of collaborative group theater pieces, research into the history and context of ensemble creation, and discussion. We also explore specific companies and styles that Chicago has to offer in terms of ensemble based theater. This course is offered in alternate years. J. Thebus. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 26501. Scenic Design. (=COVA 26100) PQ: ISHU 20010 or consent of instructor. This course considers the process of stage design from both aesthetic and practical points of view. It surveys the historical development of scenography in relation to technology and theatrical style. The influence of tradition on modern stage design is investigated through a comparison of period designs and contemporary solutions established by scenographers. M. Lohman. Winter, 2005. 26550. Shakespeare I: Histories and Comedies. (=ENGL 16500, FNDL 21403). For course description, see English Language and Literature. D. Bevington. Autumn, 2004. 26560. Shakespeare II. Tragedies and Romances. (=ENGL 16600, FNDL 2140) ISHU 26550 recommended but not required. For course description, see English Language and Literature. R. Strier. Spring, 2005. 26600. Playwriting. (=ENGL 13600/43600) PQ: Consent of instructor. This course introduces the basic principles and techniques of playwriting through creative exercises, discussion, and the viewing of contemporary theater. Structural components of plot, character, and setting are covered as students find their dramatic triggers and develop their dramatic voices. Attendance at Chicago theater performances required. C. Allen. Autumn. 26700. Advanced Playwriting. PQ: ISHU 26600 and consent of instructor. (=ENGL 13700/33700) This course presumes the basic principles and techniques of playwriting (structural components of plot, character, and setting, as well as a developed dramatic voice) and explores the steps toward developing a production-worthy script for contemporary theater. Professional directors visit class two or three times during the quarter. C. Allen. Spring. 26800. Performance Art. (=COVA 25600, ENGL 13405/33405) PQ: Consent of instructor required; prior theater experience or acting training not required. This course offers students a chance to explore some of the aesthetic strategies used by artists/performers working in the genre of performance art. As scholars, we work toward an understanding of how changing notions of what constitutes the "avant-garde" influences the conceptualization, creation, and dissemination of art and performance. As performance artists, we employ various "avant-garde" techniques as we create original performances based on a theme, such as "memory." Spring, 2005. 26900. Performing Diaspora: American Theater of Immigration and Exile. We are living in an age of unprecedented movements and migrations of populations; some are voluntary and others occur under extreme duress. This course focuses on new plays written by and about those who have lived through, in one form or another, this great wave of displacement. The course is performance-based: we study theater not only through texts but also through acting exercises, scene study, and character development. Students are also expected to develop, on the basis of fieldwork, performance pieces pertaining to the topic of immigration and exile. P. Pascoe. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 26960. Translation and Adaptation. (=ENGL 11503/31503) Students should bring to this course a text of their own selection to translate or adapt for stage performance. Of import in the evolution of the work is preserving the author's original intent while responding to the linguistic and contextual needs of the translator's or adaptor's new audience. Students dissect linguistic, literary, and dramatic structure; analyze character and intentions; consider the world of author and audience; and, through these interpretations, create a work that speaks to their own world. C. Columbus. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 27000. Reading Course: Theater Practicum. PQ: Consent of instructor. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form. D. Bevington, D. Levin. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27303. Yoga. In this course, students study the physical and philosophical foundations of Yoga, the ancient art of unifying the body, mind, and spirit. Students learn and practice physical postures (asanas), as well as techniques for proper breathing, relaxation, and concentration. The philosophy and history of Yoga are also included in this study, which students explore through readings and written assignments. By the end of the course, students should have a strong understanding of Yoga and the ability to continue their own personal practice. T. Crews. Spring. 27304. Dance Composition. When does movement become text? How do bodies combine with time, space, and energy to communicate ideas? In this workshop-formatted course, we explore these questions as we study and create dance. Students develop improvisational skills by exploring the dance principles of space, time, dynamics, and the process of abstraction. Through physical exercises, discussions, and readings, students learn how to initiate and develop movement ideas. Major dance works from many styles (e.g., ballet, modern, avant-garde) are viewed and analyzed, as students develop an understanding of choreographic forms. Students also develop a proficiency in the areas of observation and constructive criticism. The course culminates with a choreographic project. T. Crews. Autumn. 27305. Solo Performance: Biography. (=ENGL 11504/31504) This course focuses on the performance of biography. Students write and perform their own forty-five minute solo performance based on the life and work of someone who inspires, shocks, or compels them. The class is a writing, acting, and staging workshop focused on getting these original pieces ready for the audience. It's an incredible Herculean task to completely create and perform one's own show, so we are a supportive performance community to each other throughout the process. J. Thebus. Winter, 2005. 27306-27309. Advanced Topics in Theater. PQ: Advanced experience in theater and consent of instructor. These courses are designed for students wishing to pursue advanced study in a specific field of theater/performance. Intensive study and reading is expected. Attendance at performances and labs required. More information available from the TAPS office. 27306 Advanced Study: Lighting Design. M. Lohman. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27307. Advanced Study: Scenic Design. M. Lohman. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27308. Advanced Study: Directing. H. Coleman, T. Trent. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27309. Advanced Study: Theater. H. Coleman, T. Trent, D. Levin, P. Pascoe, Staff. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27310. Modern Dance. The revolutionary ideas behind Modern Dance created perceptual shifts in how dance performance and the body itself were viewed. In this class students learn and develop physical skills specific to modern dance technique through the perspective of the artists who originated these ideas. Students physically embody the history of modern dance, perceiving how technique and the body became an agent of both aesthetic and cultural transformation. Major artists include Isadora Duncan, Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, Merce Cunningham, Alvin Ailey, and the Judson Church artists, as well as contemporary artists such as Twyla Tharp and Mark Morris. T. Crews. Spring, 2006. 27311. Beginning Screenwriting. (=ENGL 12205/32205) This course introduces students to the basic elements of a literate screenplay, including format, exposition, characterization, dialog, voice-over, adaptation, and the vagaries of the three-act structure. Weekly meetings include a brief lecture period, screenings of scenes from selected films, extended discussion, and assorted readings of class assignments. Because this is primarily a writing class, students write a four- to five-page weekly assignment related to the script topic of the week. Autumn. 27312. Viewpoints and Composition. Prior movement experience or skill not required. This course introduces the movement-based technique of "Viewpoints" as a method both of training for and of creating new work for the stage. The "Viewpoints" are points of awareness that a performer or creator has while working, and can be used for practicing spontaneity and connection on stage, building ensemble, and generating movement. In "Composition" work, the technique is extended into the creation of short, highly theatrical original pieces, which the class makes and presents. Intense physical movement sessions required. This course is offered in alternate years. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 27313. Television Writing: The Situation Comedy. (=ENGL 13501/ 27314. Advanced Screenwriting. (=ENGL 12208/33308) PQ: ISHU 27311 and consent of instructor based on eight-page writing sample in screenplay format. Class limited to eight students. This course requires students to complete the first draft of a feature-length screenplay (at least ninety pages), based on an original idea brought to the first or second class. No adaptations or partially-completed scripts are allowed. Weekly class sessions include reading of script pages and critique by classmates and instructor. Spring. 27315. Advanced Television Writing: W.R.I.T.E. (Writers' Room Immersion Training Experiment). (=ENGL 13502/33502) PQ: ISHU 27313 or consent of instructor based on writing sample. Enrollment limited. This workshop focuses on developing the collaborative group dynamics of writing "by committee," as well as recreating the atmosphere found in a television sitcom staff writers' room. An established network sitcom is chosen by the instructor and announced prior to the first class. As part of writing teams, students serve as "staff writers" for the selected series. Students concentrate on developing and pitching numerous story ideas and writing treatments and full scripts, as well as collaboratively rewriting/punching-up their own work and that of their peers. Attendance at each class section and classroom participation required. E. Ferrara. Offered 2005-06; not offered 2004-05. 27316. Advanced Television Writing: Creating the Situation Comedy. (=ENGL 13503/33503) PQ: ISHU 27313 or specific writing sample and instructor approval. Enrollment limited. Students build upon their knowledge of the sitcom form by conceiving and creating their own original situation comedy series. Using study and analysis of various extant series and pilots as a foundation, students develop their own series premises, populating them with a dynamic mix of rich, well-crafted comic characters. Students develop a complete proposal, known as a "Series Bible," which contains an exhaustive amount of information about every aspect of the proposed series (i.e., overview, character analysis and biographies, production and presentation considerations). Students are also responsible for writing a full treatment for the pilot episode of their series, as well as detailed "story springboards" for twelve additional episodes. Limited class size. Attendance at each class section and classroom participation required. Winter, 2005. 27317. Advanced Studies Television/Film Writing. PQ: ISHU 27316 or 27314, and consent of instructor. As with ISHU 27306-27309 this course is open only to students wishing to pursue advanced study in a specific field who are willing to commit to intensive study and reading. Check with the TAPS office for information about registration/availability. Under the close mentorship of the instructor, students revise, refine, and hone their situation comedy pilot treatment or comic screenplay, ultimately transforming it into a complete, polished script. In addition, students develop several story springboards (from their Series Bible) into fully realized treatments. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 27502/37502. Innocence and Insight in the Novel: F. M. Dostoevsky and Henry James. (=CMLT 22300/32300, ENGL 22806/43502, RLIT 30401, RLST 28700, RUSS 27501/37501) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Russian). L. Steiner. Autumn, 2004. 28100. The Radical Truth of Henrik Ibsen. (=GRMN 28100, NORW 28100, SCAN 28100) For course description, see Germanic Studies (German). K. Kenny. Autumn, 2004. 29401/39401. Bodies, Things, Objects: An Interdisciplinary Inquiry. (=POLI 29400/39400) For course description, see Slavic Languages and Literatures (Polish). B. Shallcross. Winter, 2006. 29700. Reading Course. PQ: Consent of faculty adviser and Director of Undergraduate Studies. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 29800. Theater and Performance Studies: B.A. Colloquium. PQ: Consent of Director of Undergraduate Studies and Chair of Theater and Performance Studies Option. Required of fourth-year TAPS majors. Students participate in both Autumn and Winter Quarter but only register once. Autumn, Winter, Spring. 29900. Preparation of the B.A. Project. PQ: Consent of faculty adviser and Director of Undergraduate Studies. Required of fourth-year TAPS majors. Students are required to submit the College Reading and Research Course Form. Students may only register for this course in one quarter. Autumn, Winter, Spring. Approved Courses from OutsideInterdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities Students may use the following courses to count toward Theater and Performance Studies courses required for the major. Please consult with the TAPS administrator in RC 301 for other courses that may also be appropriate. Updates to this list will also be posted on the ISHU Web site at humanities.uchicago.edu/depts/ishu and the online version of the catalog at collegecatalog.uchicago.edu. CMST 24100/34100. Film in India. CMST 28500/48500. History of International Cinema I: Silent Era. CMST 28600/48600. History of International Cinema II: Sound Era. GREK 20500. Sophocles: Antigone. |
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