2017-2018

TURK 30102 Advanced Turkish / Elementary Ottoman

Second quarter of Advanced Turkish / Elementary Ottoman

Ipek Huner-Cora
2017-2018 Winter

TURK 20102 Intermediate Turkish-2

Second Quarter of Intermediate Modern Turkish.

2017-2018 Winter

TURK 10106 Intro to Old Turkic

2017-2018 Winter

TURK 10102 Elementary Turkish-2

Second Quarter of 1st Year Modern Turkish

2017-2018 Winter

SUMR 30608 Advanced Sumerian Literary Texts

Advanced seminar in Sumerian literary texts

Prerequisites

Introductory Sumerian sequence

2017-2018 Winter

PERS 20102 Intermediate Persian-2

This sequence deepens and expands the students' knowledge of modern Persian at all levels of reading, writing and speaking. Grammar will be taught at a higher level and a wider vocabulary will enable the students to read stories, articles and poetry and be introduced to examples of classical literature towards the end of the sequence. Introducing the Iranian culture will be continued. Class meets three hours a week with the instructor and (with enough students) two hours with a native informant who conducts grammatical drills and Persian conversation

Prerequisites

PERS 20101

2017-2018 Winter

PERS 10102 Elementary Persian-2

This sequence concentrates on modern written Persian as well as modern colloquial usage. Towards the end of the sequence the students will be able to read, write and speak Persian at an elementary level. Introducing the Iranian culture is also a goal. The class meets three hours a week with the instructor and two hours with a native informant who conducts grammatical drills and Persian conversation.

Prerequisites

PERS 10101

2017-2018 Winter

NEHC 30937 Nationalism and Colonialism in the Middle East

2017-2018 Winter

NEHC 30853 The Ottoman World in the Age of Suleyman the Magnificent

(HIST 58303, CMES 30852)

In the second quarter we focus on research topics for students writing the seminar paper.

Prerequisites

Hist 78201; Consent of instructor; reading knowledge of Turkish, Arabic, Persian, French, Italian, German, Latin, or Greek desirable but not required.

2017-2018 Winter

NEHC 30019 Mesopotamian Law

(LLSO 20019, SIGN 26022)

NEHC 30019. Mesopotamian Law (= LLSO 20019; SIGN 26002). Ancient Mesopotamia -- the home of the Sumerians, Babylonians, and Assyrians who wrote in cuneiform script on durable clay tablets -- was the locus of many of history’s “firsts.” No development, however, may be as important as the formations of legal systems and legal principles revealed in contracts, trial records, and law collections (“codes”), among which “The Laws of Hammurabi” (r. 1792-1750 BC) stands as most important for understanding subsequent legal practice and thought of Mesopotamia’s cultural heirs in the Middle East and Europe until today. This course will explore the rich source materials of the Laws and relevant judicial and administration documents (all in English translations) to investigate topics of legal, social, and economic practice including family formation and dissolution, crime and punishment (sympathetic or talionic “eye for an eye,” pecuniary, corporal), and procedure (contracts, trials, ordeals). M. Roth. Winter 2018.

2017-2018 Winter
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