|
UC Berkeley Program in Medieval StudiesCurriculumCertain courses, including Medieval Studies 150 and 250 (which are taught by the Distinguished Visiting Professor in Medieval Studies) and Medieval Studies 200 (the team-taught graduate proseminar), are offered by the Program itself. In addition, each term a number of courses and seminars are offered at Berkeley in one or another field of Medieval Studies and in subjects of immediate interest to medievalists. Courses Offered, Fall 2003 Medieval Studies Courses Offered, Fall 2003 Relevant Undergraduate Courses Offered, Fall 2003 Relevant Graduate Courses, Fall 2003, with Course Descriptions The Curriculum in Medieval Studies
The following courses
listed in the General Catalog are offered by the Medieval Studies Program
on an occasional basis. Introduction to
Medieval Latin: selected readings in prose and poetry from Late Antiquity
to the end of the Middle Ages, with attention to the special characteristics
of the Latin language during this period. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Cross-listed with Latin 140: Medieval Latin. Normally taught
by the Visiting Distinguished Professor of Medieval Studies. An interdisciplinary
exploration of Medieval culture, focusing on an area of the instructor's
expertise. Specific topic varies with instructor. In the event that
the instructor is in residence for fewer than fifteen weeks, the course
will be offered for either 2 or 3 units of credit, in proportion to
the number of actual contact hours. Course may be repeated for credit.
The graduate proseminar.
Basic materials and resources in fields represented in the Medieval
Studies program (and in some subjects involving expertise in more than
one discipline (e.g. liturgy, codicology). Emphasis on research aids
and cricital evaluation of their use. Normally team-taught by various
members of the faculty. Must be taken on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory
basis. Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of the coordinating
instructor. This course explores
the use of medieval manuscripts as primary sources for scholarship in
a variety of discipines (including literary studies, art history, music,
intellectual history, social history, and canon law). After reviewing
the fundamentals of paleography and codicology, students will compare
various manuscripts using digitized images from special collections,
including the Bancroft Library of U.C. Berkeley and the Special Collections
Library of Columbia University. Faculty members from both those institutions
will collaborate in teaching the course using distance learning technology. Instruction in
Medieval Latin paleography and/or the paleography of one or more of
the medieval vernacular languages of Western Europe, emphasizing the
evolution of scripts as well as practice in reading them. Ancillary
instruction in the principles of codicology with attention to all aspects
of text-making and book manufacture. Course may be repeated for credit
if topic varies. Graduate readings
in Medieval Latin with attention to the evolution of literary forms
and genres from Late Antiquity to the close of the Middle Ages. Students
who take the course for 2 units must enroll on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory
basis. Students who take it for 4 units must enroll for a letter grade.
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Course may be repeated for credit
if content varies. Cross-listed with Classics 241: Latin Literature
of the Middle Ages. Taught by the
Distinguished Visiting Professor of Medieval Studies on a topic related
to his or her specialty. In the event that the instructor is in residence
for fewer than fifteen weeks, the seminar will be offered for either
2 or 3 units of credit, in proportion to the number of actual contact
hours. May be repeated for credit.
Limbourg Brothers, Calendar Page for February, Très Riches Heures of Jean Duc de Berry, Paris, c. 1415 (Chantilly, Musée Condé ms. 65, fol. 2v)
Top http://ls.berkeley.edu/dept/medieval/courses.html Updated 01/15/01 Colophon |