GERM 303 German Studies 1900-1938 (Not offered 2004-2005)

This course surveys the major social and literary movements of Germany from the turn of the century to the rise of the Nazis. We will study various phenomena associated with modernism-urban institutions like the department store and the cinema (Hessel, Benjamin), expressionist poetry (Trakl, Lasker-Schuler), generational conflict via Kafka's alienated sons, Jews in Germany (Klemperer), the patriotic fervor of World War One and its aftermath (Toller, Junger), Dadaism (Schwitters), the Weimar Republic, inflation and the big crash (Fallada), Nazi ideology and propaganda tactics (Riefenstahl, Speer). Wherever possible, we will read journalism, diary entries or letters that give us insight into daily life during this highly fractured period of tumultuous political and social changes. Readings in German. Requirements: active class participation, midterm, oral report, two short exercises, final exam Prerequisites: German 107 or German 108. No enrollment limit (expected: 8).

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