Level 1
- SP 1022 - TEXTUAL & VISUAL REPRESENTATION IN THE LATIN-AMERICAN WORLD
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
None.
Overview
This course focuses on Latin American cultural history, from pre-conquest 'America' to the present day. It explores key themes in Latin American cultural experience as they are presented in a variety of written and visual texts, including monuments and codices, explorer and missionary accounts, history and ethnography, fiction and film, songs, rituals, and rebel communiqués.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures/seminars a week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 essay (40%), 1 two-hour examination (40%) and in-course assessment (20%).
Resit: written examination (100%).
- SP 1023 - SPANISH LANGUAGE 1
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
No previous knowledge of the language required.
Notes
Not available to students qualified for Spanish Language 2, 3, 4 or higher level courses and/or native speakers of Spanish. Students with little knowledge of the language will sit a placement test to ensure they have been allocated to the appropriate level course.
Overview
The course will involve three closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and listening skills, and a further hour to assist students towards the rapid acquisition of spoken Spanish.
Structure
3 one-hour classes per week; one further tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%), in-course assessment: written exercises (30%), class test (10%) and oral skills (10%).
In order to pass the assessment overall, students must pass the written examination and oral skills element of assessment and present themselves for all elements of assessment.
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 1024 / SP 1524 - SPANISH LANGUAGE 2
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language 1 or Higher or A level Spanish or equivalent.
Notes
Not available to students qualified for Spanish Language 1, 3, 4 or higher level courses and/or native speakers of Spanish. Students who have not recently completed Spanish Language 1 will sit a placement test to ensure they have been allocated to the appropriate level course.
Overview
The course will involve three closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and listening skills, and a further hour to assist students towards the rapid development of basic communicative fluency.
Structure
3 one-hour classes per week; one further tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%); in-course assessment: written exercises (30%), class test (10%) and oral skills (10%).
- SP 1522 - A CULTURAL HISTORY OF SPAIN
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J A Biggane
Pre-requisites
None.
Notes
This course is compulsory for students on the MA Honours Programme in Hispanic Studies.
Overview
This course focuses on cultural history in the Iberian peninsula, from the early medieval period to the present day. It explores selected key themes of cultural experience as they are presented in a variety of written and visual texts, which will include some of the following: contemporaneous accounts, narrative fiction, graphic fiction, poetry, film, visual arts and architecture. All texts studied will be available in English translation.
Structure
3 one-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%), essay: 1,500 words (50%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
Level 2
- SP 2025 / SP 2525 - SPANISH LANGUAGE 3
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language 2 or equivalent.
Notes
Not available to students qualified for Spanish Language 1, 2, 4 or higher level courses and/or native speakers of Spanish. Students who have not recently completed Spanish Language 2 will sit a placement test to ensure they have been allocated to the appropriate level course.
Overview
The course will involve three closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and listening skills, and a further hour to assist students towards the rapid development of communicative fluency.
Structure
3 one-hour classes per week; one further tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (40%); in-course assessment: written exercises (30%), class test (10%) and oral skills (20%).
In order to pass the assessment overall, students must pass the written examination and oral skills element of assessment and present themselves for all elements of assessment.
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 2026 / SP 2526 - SPANISH LANGUAGE 4
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language 3 or equivalent. Not available to students qualified for Spanish Language 1, 2, 3 or higher level courses and/or native speakers of Spanish.
Notes
Students who have not recently completed Spanish Language 3 will sit a placement test to ensure they have been allocated to the appropriate level course.
Overview
The course will involve two closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and listening skills, and a further hour to assist students towards the rapid development of communicative fluency. In addition to the three weekly classes, students follow a programme of private audio-visual and phonetics study (1 hour per week) in the Language Centre.
Structure
2 one-hour seminars per week; one further tutorial per week (plus one-hour private study in the Language Centre).
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (40%) and in-course assessment: written exercises (30%), class test (10%) and oral skills (20%).
In order to pass the assessment overall, students must pass the written examination and oral skills element of assessment and present themselves for all elements of assessment.
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 2027 / SP 2527 - SPANISH LANGUAGE & LITERATURE
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language 4.
Notes
Not available to native speakers of Spanish.
Overview
The course will involve two closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and comprehension skills, and a further hour to assist students towards consolidation of communicative accuracy and fluency. In addition to the three weekly classes, students follow a programme of private audio and audio-visual study (1-1.5 hours per week) in the Language Centre.
Structure
3 one-hour seminars per week (plus 1-1.5 hours private study in the Language Centre).
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%), 1 oral examination (20%) and 1 in-class test (10%), 2 written assessments (10%) and 1 oral project (10%).
Students must complete and present themselves for all the above in order to pass this course.
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 2028 - LATIN AMERICA: TEXTS AND CONTEXTS
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D James
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language Level 1 and Spanish Language Level 2 or equivalent.
Overview
This course explores themes and issues raised by written and visual texts from Latin America. The texts will be related to their local and international contexts of production and consumption. The course aims to equip students with analytical skills in preparation for more advanced study of literary and visual texts at Honours level, but is also suitable for students not intending to proceed to Honours.
Structure
Two 1.5 hour seminars/lectures per week - Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 mid-term written in-class examination (35%); 1 two-hour final written examination (40%); in-class exercises (25%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination.
- SP 2529 - SPAIN: TEXTS AND CONTEXTS
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language Level 1 and Spanish Language Level 2.
Overview
This course explores themes and issues raised by written and visual texts from Spain from the early modern to the contemporary period. The texts will be related to their local and international contexts of production and consumption. The course aims to equip students with analytical skills in preparation for more advanced study of literary and visual texts at Honours level, but also suitable for students not intending to proceed to Honours.
Structure
Two 1.5 hour seminars/lectures per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 written mid-term in-class examination (35%); in-class exercise (25%); 1 two-hour final written examination (40%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
Level 3
- SP 3009 - SPANISH-ENGLISH TRANSLATION
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in European Studies in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course is run over the full session.
Overview
Prose passages for translation.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 3063 / SP 3563 - SPANISH-ENGLISH TRANSLATION
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to Honours candidates in European Studies in Programme Year 3.
Overview
Prose passages for translation.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 3069 - LEVEL 3 SPANISH LANGUAGE
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
SP 2518. May be taken only by candidates for Honours in Hispanic Studies.
Notes
This course is run over the full session. Assessed in the summer diet for SP 4003. One half-session of this course may be completed during residence abroad for students following Mode B Hispanic Studies programmes.
Overview
This course is topic-based, and aims to enable students to identify and use, accurately and fluently, a wide range of vocabulary and linguistic registers. Reading and writing skills are honed though the exploitation of a wide variety of literary, journalistic and other Spanish and Latin-American texts. Skills and techniques for beginning advanced translation into Spanish will be introduced. Aural and oral skills will be further developed through the linguistic exploitation of Spanish and Latin-American programmes and films, and other activities. Special attention will be paid to those advanced grammatical areas which are still likely to cause difficulty to students. The course curriculum reflects the emphasis placed on self-directed learning and private study at this level.
Structure
1 one-hour seminar a week; one further tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (75%) and 1 oral examination (25%) (for those students not continuing to Senior Honours only see Note(s) above).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 3080 - NARRATING COLLECTIVE PASTS IN THE HISPANIC WORLD A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4080 (Narrating Collective Pasts in the Hispanic World B). It will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
All societies give collective accounts of their collective pasts. However, these accounts differ in kind from one society to another, even across the Hispanic world. The first part of the course looks at different approaches to the study of such accounts. The second part of the course compares and contrasts accounts of collective pasts across the Hispanic world. It focuses on history as one particular way of narrating a collective past.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (100%).
- SP 3083 - LEVEL 3 SPANISH LANGUAGE 2
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
SP 2518. May be taken only by students not taking Honours in Hispanic Studies.
Notes
This course is run over the full session.
Overview
This course will be based on a series of topic areas aiming at covering as wide a range of vocabulary and linguistic registers as possible, with particular emphasis on those areas related to current affairs. Reading and writing skills will be developed through a series of contemporary written materials. Listening and speaking skills will be developed through the use of audio-visual material and different oral activities in class. Particular emphasis will be placed on those grammatical areas which are likely to cause difficulties to students.
Structure
3 one-hour classes per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (50%), in-course assessment (30%), oral skills in-course assessment (10%) and oral examination (10%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 3084 / SP 3584 - LEVEL 3 TRANSLATION, COMPREHENSION AND COMPOSITION FOR MODE B STUDY
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
SP 2518 (Level 2 Spanish Language 2), may be taken only by Junior Honours Mode B candidates in Hispanic Studies while studying or working in a Spanish-speaking country.
Co-requisites
SP 3069
Notes
This course, open only to mode B Junior Honours students of Hispanic Studies, fulfilling their residence requirements in a Spanish-speaking country.
Overview
An intensive programme of language exercises is designed to develop linguistic competence in a variety of registers, including formal and informal.
Structure
Required field work; regular submission of written and/or recorded material by correspondence.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
- SP 3087 - THE BODY POLITIC IN SOUTHERN CONE NARRATIVE A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
240 credit points (including SP 2518). Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4087 (The Body Politic in Southern Cone Narrative B). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The course will focus on narrative accounts that challenge the boundaries between personal and public spheres. One of the key themes of the course will be the power and limitation of linguistic communication when exploring the issue of political repression.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two 2,000-word essays (50% each).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 3088 - CITIZENSHIP IN LATIN AMERICA A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4088 (Citizenship in Latin America B). It will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course focuses on the principles and practices of citizenship across Latin America. It begins by considering different models of citizenship and then looks at the application of those models across diverse contexts in Latin America.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 3091 - LEVEL 3 SPANISH LANGUAGE 2A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
SP 2518. May be taken only by students not pursuing Hispanic Studies at Honours level.
Overview
This course will be based on a series of topic areas, aiming to cover a selected range of vocabulary, grammar and registers, with a particular emphasis on current affairs. Reading and Writing will be developed through a selection of contemporary written materials. Listening and speaking skills will be developed through the use of audio-visual and selected oral activities in class. Particular emphasis will be placed on selected grammar points likely to cause difficulties to students.
Structure
3 one-hour classes per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute written examination (50%) in-course assessment (30%), oral skills assessment (20%).
Resit: 1 ninety minute written examination (100%).
- SP 3092 - SPANISH MODERNISMS A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4092 (Spanish Modernisms B). This course is not available in session 2008/09.
Overview
This course will examine the structures, politics and forms of modernism in early twentieth-century Spain. There will be some exploration of the relation between these movements and wider European modernisms and avant-garde trends. Materials studied will include items from some of the following: narrative fiction, film and other visual culture, the polemic essay, poetry and architecture.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays and an oral presentation.
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 3095 - COLONIAL CHRONICLES 1A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4095 (Colonial Chronicles IB).
Overview
This course studies some of the most important sixteenth chronicles concerning the New World. Primary texts - written by Cristobal Colon, Bartolome de las Casas, Gines de Sepulveda, Hernan Cortes, Fray Toribio de Benavente, Bernal Diaz del Castillo, Jose de Acosta, and Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca - will be complemented by critical and historiographical literature. The class will be conducted in Spanish.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Tues 12-2pm) for eleven weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (3,000 word essay) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 3096 - BASQUE CULTURE: MEMORY AND MODERNITY A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
240 credit points (including SP 2518). Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4096 (Basque Culture: Memory and Modernity B). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course reflects a current and growing interest in the autochthonous in an increasingly global environment. It aims to reflect the plurality of cultures and the conflict between peripheral politics and central government in the Spanish peninsula. It will analyse the various definitions of nationalism that have offered specific constructions of the Basque nation throughout history. Moreover, it will explore realities and myths surrounding the Nationalist ideology. In order to teach this multifaceted phenomenon, the approach will be an interdisciplinary one, building on historical, political and cultural discourses within the field.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays.
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 3097 - THE MOVIDA CULTURE: THE EUPHORIC DISENCHANTMENT OF THE SPANISH POLITICAL TRANSITION (1973-1993) A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2009/10. This course may not be studied as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4097 The Movida Culture: the Euphoric Disenchantment of the Spanish Political Transition (1973-1993) B.
Overview
This course engages in a psychoanalysis-based, theoretical study of the broad and unorthodox urban cultural production put in place in Madrid and Barcelona by the generation that came to age during the Spanish political transition. Texts studied include Pedro Almodovar's and Ivan Zulueta's first movies: the photographys of Ouka Lele and Alberto Alix; the paintings of Costus: the comic-book production boom of the period; the music of Sisa and other urban groups; and the iconoclast literary texts published at the time in the magazine "La luna de Madrid."
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (one 4,000 word essay) (100%).
- SP 3098 - JORGE LUIS BORGES A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
This course is only available to students in Programme Year 3 or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in session 2008/09. Class will be conducted in Spanish. This course cannot be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4098.
Overview
The course studies the life and work of Argentinean author Jorge Luis Borges. Particular attention will be paid to Borges' mature fiction and essays. A biographical study will be conducted on the basis of Edwin Williamson and Emir Rodriguez Monegal's biographies, as well as Adolfo Bioy Casares's extensive diary entries concerning his friendship with Borges.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment; one essay (3,000 words) (80%); oral presentation (20%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 30AA - BASQUE ARTS: THE CONFLICT OF BELONGING A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
240 credit points (including SP 2518). Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 40AA (Basque Arts: The Conflict of Belonging B). It will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course focuses on Basque literature and visual arts from the 1898 period onwards. The course will study both traditions of writers writing in Spanish and those writing in Basque (for the purpose of this course read in Spanish). The Basque writing tradition in Spanish language will be studied from the critical framework for the “minor literature”; their problematic insertion into the Spanish canon will also be explored. The tensions between the local and global will also be studied in the visual media, from the interest in Basque art exclusively from the anthropological perspective, to the current global spectacle created by the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays.
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 30BA - ADVANCED HISPANIC STUDIES SEMINAR A
-
- Credit Points
- 5
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Overview
This seminar programme covers a broad range of topics embracing political, philosophical, social and aesthetic ideas, and aims to broaden and deepen students' understanding of major questions and debates within the field of Hispanic Studies, placing this field within a wider humanities-study context. It aims to help students prepare for honours study, the Hispanic Studies dissertation and beyond. The programme will combine tutor-led discussion, visiting lectures and student-led seminars.
Structure
6 two-hour seminars in alternate weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 oral presentation (100%).
Resit: 1 oral presentation (100%).
- SP 30BB - HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CONTEMPORARY SPANISH LITERATURE AND FILM A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 40BB Historical Memory in Contemporary Spanish Literature and Film B. This course will be taught in Spanish.
Overview
Over the last twenty years, the Spanish Civil War has become subject to intense interest and debate in Spanish cultural production, civil society and state policy, the latter culminating in the 2007 "Law of Historical Memory". This course will engage in critical study and theoretical analysis of Spanish literature and film of the 1990s and 2000s that represents the Civil War within this context. The course will interrogate the concept of "historical memory", and the complex relations between the contemporary socio-political conjuncture in Span and the need/desire to remember or commemorate the events and victims of 1936-1939.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks (Friday 9-11).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: two 2,000-word essays (50% each).
Resit: Two 2000-word essays (50% each).
- SP 30BC - ADVANCED TRANSLATION SKILLS I
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
240 credit points (including SP 2518). Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Overview
This course aims to extend and refine students’ practical translation skills from Spanish into English. It will also introduce students to selected key issues in translation studies and theory, and enable students to think critically about linguistic, political, cultural, and philosophical issues associated with translation from Spanish into English. Students will translate texts on a variety of topics using a variety of discourses, evaluating published translations, discussing, analysing and engaging with different translation theories and strategies, and will produce annotated translations.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: four written exercises (60% each), and 1 two-hour written examination (40%).
- SP 30DA - ADVANCED SPANISH LANGUAGE & LITERAT URE
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms S Domingo
Pre-requisites
Spanish Language 4. May be taken only by Hispanic Studies candidates in their Junior Honours year.
Notes
Not open to students who have take SP 20XX / SP 25XX Spanish Language and Literature. Not available to native speakers of Spanish.
Overview
This course provides advanced training in Spanish through guided readings of landmark literary texts from Spain and Latin America. Emphasis is on reading skills, strengthening of grammar, and syntax. The course will involve two closely integrated classes per week to develop speaking, writing and comprehension skills, and a further hour to assist students towards consolidation of communicative accuracy and fluency. In addition to the three weekly clases, students follow a programme of private audio and audio-visual study in the Language Centre.
Structure
3 one-hour seminars per week (plus 1-1½ hours private study in the Language Centre).
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%), 1 in-class test (20%), 4 written assessments (20%) and 2 oral projects (10%). Students must complete and present themselves for all the above in order to pass this course.
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 30JA - THE LIFE AND TIMES OF EVITA PERON A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D James
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 40XX Life and Times of Evita Peron B. This course will be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course aims to introduce the student to the various aspects of Evita Peron's life and career. Evita Peron was a crucial figure in the history of twentieth-century Argentina combining a wide array of roles from Argentina's First Lady, champion of the underprivilidged, militant feminist to religious icon and revolutionary symbol after her death. The seminar will be structured around the study of a range of historical documents, and visual and cultural artifacts and texts. In the course of the seminar the student will also be introduced to some crucial theoretical concepts such as "populism" and "gender" essential to understand twentieth-century Latin American.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Thursdays 12:00-14:00).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 3,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 30SA - DEMOCRACY IN LATIN AMERICA A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 40XX: Democracy in Latin America B. This course will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate years thereafter. The course willl be taught in English.
Overview
There has been much talk of a "transition to democracy" in Latin America (just as in Spain and other countries). This course will interrogate that claim and, in the process, take a broad look at democracy in a variety of Latin American contexts. We will note the increase in electoral competition, but we will also ask other questions of that "democracy". Does electoral competition benefit everyone? Does democracy go beyond the vote? Is there more to citizenship than democracy? Must deomocracy be focused on government? Is civil society democratic? How important is the rule of law for democracy? Do the media facilitate or subvert democracy? How about other business interests? Can democracy be multicultural? What do coups and rebellions do to democracy? How does the idea of "democracy" play out internationally? Students will be encouraged to compare what they learn about democracy in Latin America with democracy in other countries, including Spain, the USA and the UK.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay 3,000 words (100%).
Resit: Essay 3,000 words (100%).
- SP 3568 - QUESTIONING THE QUESTIONER: THE WORK OF MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4568 (Questioning the Questioner: the work of Miguel de Unamuno B). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course will focus on a selection of Unamuno’s narrative, drama and political writing in order to explore some of the characteristics of the often experimental and always challenging work of one of the major figures of early twentieth century Spanish literary, intellectual and political life.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays and an oral presentation.
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 3588 - URBAN TRADITIONS IN THE HISPANIC WORLD A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Normally available only to students in Programme Year 3.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4588 Urban Traditions in the Hispanic World B. This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
The course looks at a range of issues concerning urbanism in Spain and Latin America. It will begin with the meeting of Spanish and American urban traditions in the 16th century and will end with mass urbanization of the 20th century. Topics will include urban architecture and planning, the rise and fall of the "lettered city", and the relationship between urban and national citizenship.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 3590 - CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN CINEMA: THE NEW WAVE A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 3 or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4590 Contemporary Latin American Cinema: The New Wave B. This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course aims to broaden and deepen students' appreciation of key works in contemporary Latin American cinema by analysing the films' representation of Latin America's modern history, politics and culture.
Structure
1 two-hour class per week. Classes will be structured as a combination of lecture and seminar, depending on material/topics to be studied.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 2 essays (2,000 words) (50% each).
Resit: 2 essays (2,000 words).
- SP 3591 - SPAIN IN THE SIXTIES I: BANALITY AND BIOPOLITICS A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4591 (Spain in the Sixties I: Banality and Biopolitics B)
Overview
This course engages in a theory-based analysis of the state-sponsored, mass-culture production put in place during the middle years of the Francoist dictatorship, in relation to the local launching of the Spanish mass-tourism industry and global Cold War politics. Texts studied include child-actress Marisol's film hits such as Fernando Palacio's Búsqueme a esa chica, official propaganda documentries like José Luis Sánchez de Heredia Franco, ese hombre, Pedro Lazaga's successful B-movies Los tramposos or EL turismo es un gran invento, as well as mass-pop music and TV programmes of the period.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (4,000 word essay) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 3592 - SPAIN IN THE SIXTIES II: LA ESCUELA DE BARCELONA IN FILM AND LITERATURE A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4592 (Spain in the Sixties II: La Escuela de Barcelona in Film and Literature B).
Overview
This course offers a theory-based analysis of two related movements of the sixties, one literary and one cinematic, known as La Escuela de Barcelona. The course engages with selected novels, poetry, and films produced by both schools in relation to broader left-wing ideologies and political aims of the period. Literary texts include novels and poetry by Juan, Jose Agustin, and Luis Goytsisolo, Gabriel Ferrater, Carlos Barral and Jaime Gil de Biedma. Cinematic texts include the avant-garde production of Joaquim Jordà, Jacint Esteve, Pere Portabella, Carles Duran, and Vincente Aranda.
Structure
1 two-hour seminars per week for eleven weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (4,000 word essay) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 3593 - COLONIAL CHRONICLES IIA
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
SP 3095 Colonial Chronicles IA
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4593 (Colonial Chronicles IIB).
Overview
This honours seminar studies some of the most important chronicles concerning the New World from the mid 16th to the late 17th centuries. Primary texts - written by Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca, Pedro Cieze de Leon, Fernando de Alva lxlilxhochiti, and Fernando Alvarado Tezozomoc - will be complemented by critical and historiographical literature, notably books by Serge Gruzinski and J. H. Elliott. The class will be conducted in Spanish.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (3,000 word) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 3594 - FILM AND THE POLITICAL: SPANISH FILM FROM ITS BEGINNINGS UP TO 1975 (A)
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4594 (Spanish Film) B. Available to Film Studies studens also.
Overview
This course engages in a theory-based, critical study of the broad Spanish film production of the twentieth century in relation to the political. Texts studied include films by Buñuel, Heredia, Lucia, Maso, Bardem, Berlanga, Jorda, Patiño, Erice, Saura, film theory texts, and writings on political theory.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks and weekly film screenings.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (one 4,000 word essay) (100%).
Resit: 2 hour written examination (100%).
- SP 3595 - THE GOLDEN STATE: HISTORY, CULTURE AND POLITICS OF CALIFORNIA A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above, or by the permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2009/10. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4595 (The Golden State: History, Culture and Politics of California B).
Overview
This course engages in a broad-based analysis of the history, culture and politics of the state of California. It begins with the indifenous and Spanish colonial settlement of the region, followed by the period within the independent Mexican Republic, before California became one of the United States of America. More recent topics will include the fate of the Californios after Independence and mass immigration in the 20th century, especially from Mexico, as well as the status of the Spanish language in contemporary California. The course will include approaches from history, anthropology, cultural studies, and political science.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 3598 - CONTEMPORARY HISPANIC NOVEL A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Class will be conducted in Spanish. This course cannot be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 4598.
Overview
This course studies the contemporary novel in Latin America and Spain. It focuses on new tendencies. By targeting individual reading of some of the best authors of the present it aims to produce direct knowledge of the main problems confronting not just the Hispanic literary tradition today, but also the societies where they live. Spanish authors will be studied together with Argentinean, Peruvian, and Chilean.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment: Essay (3,000 words) (80%); oral presentation (20%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 35AA - FILM AND VISUAL CULTURE IN SPAIN AND LATIN AMERICA A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 45AA: Film and Visual Culture B. Available in 2008/09 and alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The first block of the course will engage in a theory-based, critical study of the broad Spanish film production of the twentieth-century. The second block of the course will study contemporary Latin-American cinema and photography in relation to the political. Materials studied within the course will include the following: film, painting, photography and architecture.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and one-hour tutorial per week. Two-hour film screening per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two 2,000-word essays (50% each).
Resit: Two 2,000-word essays (50% each).
- SP 35AB - RESEARCH METHODS FOR HISPANIC STUDIES
-
- Credit Points
- 5
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
Compulsory course for Honours students in Hispanic Studies.
Overview
This course provides a foundation for students beginning research into the Hispanic Studies dissertation and, more generally, for other Honours-level assessments. Students will review the critical apparatus relevant to the topic chosen and will consider the approach and technique to be adopted in carrying it out.
Structure
6 one-hour seminars in alternate weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: bibliographical exercise (100%).
Resit: Continuous assessment: bibliographical exercise (100%).
- SP 35BA - REPRESENTATIONS OF SPAIN IN UK CULTURAL PRODUCTION 1975-2005 A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J A Biggane
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 3 or above or by the permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2009-10 and alternate years thereafter.
This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 45BX Representations of Spain in UK cultural production 1975-2005 B.Overview
This course examines visions and representations of Spain in UK cultural production (which may include music, literature, the essay, travel writing, visual arts, film and television) between 1975 and 2005. It will consider the ways in which such representations have altered (or have remained unaltered) in the forty years since the end of the Franco dictatorship, a period in which both countries underwent major political, economic, social and cultural change and entered global postmodernity. It will examine how textual constructions of Spain might be viewed as responding to various and shifting political and social needs, desires and fantasies played out in UK cultural production of the period.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: 100% continuous assessment: 2 x 1,500-word essays (40%) each; oral presentation (10%) and regular brief oral and written assignments (10%).
Resit: 2 x 2,000-word essays. - SP 35MA - MEXICAN VISIONS A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 45MA: Mexican Visions B. The course will be conducted in Spanish. Available in 2008/09 and alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
From DH Lawrence, B Traven, Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille, Graham Greene to John Houston, Malcolm Lowry, Rebecca West, a number of Mexican representations by a foreign gaze have influenced Mexican self-understanding and the international place of Latin America in world culture. This course will attempt to understand these movements through careful attention to the authors named above.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay (3,000 words) (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 35MB - SPANISH CIVIL WAR A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D James and Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 45MB: Spanish Civil War B. The course will be conducted in Spanish and English. The course will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The Spanish Civil War was the defining event of twentieth-century Spanish history and a defining moment in European history. This course aims to provide students with an understanding of the fundamental reasons for the conflict, the main participants and the long term consequences for Spain and the world. The course will draw upon a wide range of materials including historical documents, film and literary texts.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 3,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 35SA - POLITICS IN MEXICO A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 45SA (Politics in Mexico B).
Overview
This course gives a broad introduction to the political system of modern Mexico from the early twentieth-century to the present day. It will focus on the rise and fall of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and its system of government, but it will also consider the rise of the National Action Party (PAN), which finally won the Presidency in 2000, and of the left-wing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). Beyond party politics, the course will consider a range of other actors, including trade unions, the Church, artists and intellectuals, and social movements such as the Zapatistas.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for twelve weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: One 3,000-word essay (100%).
Resit: One 3,000-word essay (100%).
- SP 35VA - FROM GAUDI TO DALI A
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduation curriculum with SP 45VA: From Gaudi to Dali B. The course will be taught in English. The course will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course will provide an exposure to architecture, film, painting and literature. It references the relation between art and political movements, both within Spain and in the wider European context. The seminar engages in four interrelated units, one per artist, offering a study of the propositions of modernism and the new art, cubism, the avant-garde and provides exposure to the organic naturalism of Gaudi, and Dali's nuclear-paranoid method.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar/lecture/discussion per week. Film screening second and fourth.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 3,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
Level 4
- SP 4002 - DISSERTATION IN HISPANIC STUDIES
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- To be confirmed
Pre-requisites
Available only to Senior Honours students in Hispanic Studies.
Overview
A dissertation of 8,000-10,000 words on a topic approved by the Dissertation Co-ordinator to be submitted by the beginning of Senior Honours.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Dissertation (100%).
- SP 4003 - LEVEL 4 SPANISH LANGUAGE
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
SP 2518. May be taken only by candidates for Honours in Hispanic Studies.
Overview
Building on SP3069 (Level 3 Spanish Language), this course is topic-based, and aims to enable students to identify and use, accurately and fluently, a further range of advanced lexical & syntactical features, and linguistic registers. Reading and writing skills are further honed though the exploitation of a wide variety of literary, journalistic and other Spanish and Latin-American texts. Skills and techniques for advanced translation from and into Spanish will be developed and extended from SP3069. Aural and oral skills will be further developed through the linguistic exploitation of Spanish and Latin-American programmes and films, and other activities. Special attention will be paid to further advanced grammatical areas which are still likely to cause difficulty to students. The course curriculum reflects the emphasis placed on self-directed learning and private study at this level.
Structure
1 one-hour seminar a week; one further tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 3 three-hour written examination (75%) and 1 oral examination (25%).
- SP 4080 - NARRATING COLLECTIVE PASTS IN THE HISPANIC WORLD B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Normally only available to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3080 (Narrating Collective Pasts in the Hispanic World A). It will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
All societies give collective accounts of their collective pasts. However, these accounts differ in kind from one society to another, even across the Hispanic world. The first part of the course looks at different approaches to the study of such accounts. The second part of the course compares and contrasts accounts of collective pasts across the Hispanic world. It focuses on history as one particular way of narrating a collective past.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 4087 - THE BODY POLITIC IN SOUTHERN CONE NARRATIVE B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
Normally only available to Senior Honours students or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3087 (The Body Politic in Southern Cone Narrative A). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The course will focus on narrative accounts that challenge the boundaries between personal and public spheres. One key theme of the course will be the power and limitation of linguistic communication when exploring the issue of political repression.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two 2,500 word essays (50% each).
- SP 4088 - CITIZENSHIP IN LATIN AMERICA B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3088 (Citizenship in Latin America A). It will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course focuses on the principles and practices of citizenship across Latin America. It begins by considering different models of citizenship and then looks at the application of those models across diverse contexts in Latin America.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
Resit: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 4092 - SPANISH MODERNISMS B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 4.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3092 (Spanish Modernisms A). This course is not available in session 2008/09.
Overview
This course will examine the structures, politics and forms of modernism in early twentieth-century Spain. Contextualising these movements in relation to wider European modernisms and avant-garde trends will be an important part of the course. Material studied will include items from some of the following: narrative fiction, film and other visual culture, the polemic essay, poetry and architecture.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week, one further two-hour workshop.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays and an oral presentation.
- SP 4095 - COLONIAL CHRONICLES IB
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3095 (Colonial Chronicles IA).
Overview
This course studies some of the most important sixteenth chronicles concerning the New World. Primary texts - written by Cristobal Colon, Bartolome de las Casas, Gines de Sepulveda, Hernan Cortes, Fray Toribio de Benavente, Bernal Diaz del Castillo, Jose de Acosta, and Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca - will be complemented by critical and historiographical literature. The class will be conducted in Spanish.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Tues 12-2pm).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (4,000 words) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (3 hour) (100%).
- SP 4096 - BASQUE CULTURE: MEMORY AND MODERNITY B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 4 or above.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3096 (Basque Culture: Memory and Modernity A). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course reflects a current and growing interest in the autochthonous in an increasingly global environment. It aims to reflect the plurality of cultures and the conflict between peripheral politics and central government in the Spanish peninsula. It will analyse the various definitions of nationalism that have offered specific constructions of the Basque nation throughout history. Moreover, it will explore realities and myths surrounding Nationalist ideology. In order to teach this multifaced phenomenon, the approach will be an interdisciplinary one, building on historical, political and cultural discourses within the field.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays.
- SP 4097 - THE MOVIDA CULTURE: THE EUPHORIC DISENCHANTMENT OF THE SPANISH POLITICAL TRANSITION (1973-1993) B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be studied as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3097 The Movida Culture: the Euphoric Disenchantment of the Spanish Political Transition (1973-1993) A.
Overview
This course engages in a psychoanalytical, theoretical study of the broad and unorthodox urban cultural production put in place in Madrid and Barcelona by the generation that came to age during the Spanish political transition. Texts studied include Pedro Almodovar's and Ivan Zulueta's first movies; the photographs of Ouka Lele and Alberto Alix; the paintings of Costus; the comic-book production boom of the period; the music of Sisa and other urban groups; and the iconoclast literary texts published at the time in the magazine "La luna de Madrid."
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Tuesday 1-3pm).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (one 5,000 word essay) (100%).
- SP 4098 - JORGE LUIS BORGES B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
This course is available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Class will be conducted in Spanish. This course cannot be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3098.
Overview
The course studies the life and work of Argentinean author Jorge Luis Borges. Particular attention will be paid to Borges' mature fiction and essays. A biographical study will be conducted on the basis of Edwin Williamson and Emir Rodriguez Monegal's biographies, as well as Adolfo Bioy Casare's extensive diary entries concerning his friendship with Borges. In addition, students will extend their understanding of the subject by means of reading and independent research and by synthesizing material from a range of sources.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment; one essay (4,000 words) (80%); oral presentation (20%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 40AA - BASQUE ARTS: THE CONFLICT OF BELONGING B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 4 or above.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 30AA (Basque Arts: The Conflict of Belonging A). It will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course focuses on Basque literature and visual arts from the 1898 period onwards. The course will study both traditions of writers writing in Spanish and those writing in Basque (for the purpose of this course read in Spanish). The Basque writing tradition in Spanish language will be studied from the critical framework of the “minor literature”; their problematic insertion into the Spanish canon will also be explored. The tensions between the local and global will also be studied in the visual media, from the interest in Basque art exclusively from the anthropological perspective to the current global spectacle created by the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.
Structure
1 two-hour lecture/seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays.
- SP 40BA - ADVANCED HISPANIC STUDIES SEMINAR B
-
- Credit Points
- 5
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J A Biggane
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 4 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Co-requisites
SP 30XX Advanced Hispanic Seminar A.
Overview
This seminar programme covers a broad range of topics embracing political, philosophical, social and aesthetic ideas, and aims to broaden and deepen students' understanding of major questions and debates within the field of Hispanic Studies, placing this field within a wider humanities-study context. It aims to help students prepare for honours study, the Hispanic Studies dissertation and beyond. The programme will combine tutor-led discussion, visiting lectures and student-led seminars.
Structure
6 two-hour seminars in alternate weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 oral presentation (100%).
Resit: 1 oral presentation (100%).
- SP 40BB - HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CONTEMPORARY SPANISH LITERATURE AND FILM B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above, or by permission of the Head of School
Notes
This course will be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 30BB Historical Memory in Contemporary Spanish Literature and Film A. This course will be taught in Spanish.
Overview
Over the last twenty years, the Spanish Civil War has become subject to intense interest and debate in Spanish cultural production, civil society and state policy, the latter culminating in the 2007 "Law of Historical Memory". This course will engage in critical study and theoretical analysis of Spanish literature and film of the 1990s and 2000s that represents the Civil War within this context. The course will interrogate the concept of "historical memory" , and the complex relations between the contemporary socio-political conjuncture in Spain and the need/desire to remember or commemorate the events and victims of 1936-1939.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks (Friday 9-11).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: two 2500-word essay (50% each).
Resit: Two 2500-word essays (50% each).
- SP 40JA - THE LIFE AND TIMES OF EVITA PERON B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D James
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 30XX Life and Times of Evita Peron A. This course will be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course aims to introduce the student to the various aspects of Evita Peron's life and career. Evita Peron was a crucial figure in the history of twentieth-century Argentina combining a wide array of roles from Argentina's First Lady, champion of the underprivileged, militant feminist to religious icon and revolutionary symbol after her death. The seminar will be structured around the study of a range of historical documents, and visual and cultural artifacts and texts. In the course of the seminar the student will also be introduced to some crucial theoretical concepts such as "populism" and "gender" essential to understand twentieth-century Latin America.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 4,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 40SA - DEMOCRACY IN LATIN AMERICA B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 30XX: Democracy in Latin America A. This course will be available in 2008/09 and in alternate years thereafter. The course will be taught in English.
Overview
There has been much talk of a "transition to democracy" in Latin America (just as in Spain and other countries). This course will interrogate that claim and, in the process, take a broad look at democracy in a variety of Latin American contexts. We will note the increase in electoral competition, but we will also ask other questions of that "democracy". Does electoral competition benefit everyone? Does democracy go beyond the vote? Is there more to citizenship than democracy? Must democracy be focused on government? Is civil society democratic? How important is the rule of law for democracy? Do the media facilitate or subvert democracy? How about other business interests? Can democracy be multicultural? What does coups and rebellions do to democracy? How does the idea of "democracy" play out internationally? Students will be encouraged to compare what they learn about democracy in Latin America with democracy in other countries, including Spain, the USA and the UK.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: One 4,000-word essay (100%).
Resit: One 4,000-word essay (100%).
- SP 4568 - QUESTIONING THE QUESTIONER: THE WORK OF MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Biggane
Pre-requisites
240 credit points. Normally only available to students in Programme Year 4 or above.
Notes
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3568 (Questioning the Questioner: the Work of Miguel de Unamuno A). It will be available in 2009/10 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
This course will focus on a selection of Unamuno’s narrative, drama and political writing in order to explore some of the characteristics of his often experimental and always challenging work. The course involves placing Unamuno’s work within some of its early twentieth-century cultural, historical and political contexts, so that students will form a nuanced understanding of early twentieth-century Spanish culture as well as focusing on the work of one writer.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week and one two-hour workshop to be arranged.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%): two essays and an oral presentation.
- SP 4587 - CREATIVITY IN HISPANIC WRITING B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- To be confirmed
Pre-requisites
Available only to Senior Honours students in Hispanic Studies.
Overview
This course will examine theories of creativity with an emphasis on creativity in literary writing. It will focus on a piece of writing by a Spanish author and will consider the creative process involved in that writing. In addition, students will extend their understanding of the subject by means of independent research, setting the topics treated in their wider context, and synthesizing material from a range of sources.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment: two essays (50% each).
- SP 4588 - URBAN TRADITIONS IN THE HISPANIC WORLD B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T R Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above who have a reading knowledge of Spanish.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09.
This course may NOT be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3588.Overview
The course looks at a range of issues concerning urbanism in Spain and Latin America. It will begin with the meeting of Spanish and American urban traditions in the 16th century and will end with the mass urbanization of the 20th century. Topics will include urban architecture and planning, the rise and fall of the "lettered city", and the relationship between urban and national citizenship. In addition, students will extend their understanding of the subject by means of independent research, setting the topics treated in their wider context, and syntheisizing material from a range of sources.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 4590 - CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN CINEMA: THE NEW WAVE B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 4 and above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3590 Contemporary Latin American Cinema: The New Wave A. This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course aims to broaden and deepen students' appreciation of key works in contemporary Latin American cinema by analysing the films' representation of Latin America's modern history, politics and culture. Students will engage with selected theoretical issues at stake in film's representation of national identity.
Structure
1 two-hour class per week. Classes will be structured as a combination of lecture and seminar, depending on material/topics to be studied.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment: 2 essays (2,500 words) (50% each).
Resit: 2 essays (2,500 words).
- SP 4591 - SPAIN IN THE SIXTIES I: BANALITY AND BIOPOLITICS B
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3591 (Spain in the Sixties: Banality and Biopolitics 1A).
Overview
This course engages in a theory-based analysis of the state-sponsored, mass-culture production put in place during the middle years of the Francoist dictatorship, in relation to the local launching of the Spanish industry of mass-tourism and global Cold War politics. Texts studied include film hits such as Fernando Palacio's Búsqueme a esa chica, official propoganda documentaries, successful B-movies, as well as mass-pop music and TV programmes of the period. Students will extend their understanding of the subject by means of independent research, setting the topics treated in an appropriately wide context, and synthesising and analysing material from a range of sources.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (5,000 words) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 4592 - SPAIN IN THE SIXTIES II: LA ESCUELA DE BARCELONA IN FILM AND LITERATURE B
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3592 (Spain in the Sixties II: La Escuela de Barcelona in Film and Literature A).
Overview
This course analyses two related movements of the 1960s, one literary and the other cinematic, known as La Esceula de Barcelona. The course relates texts of both schools in relation to broader left-wing ideologies and political aims of the period, examining, amongst other things, their relation to events of May 1968. Students will extend their understanding of the subject by means of independent research, setting topics treated in an appropriately wide context, and synthesising and analysing material from a range of sources.
Structure
1 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (5,000 words) (100%).
Resit: Written examination (2 hours) (100%).
- SP 4593 - COLONIAL CHRONICLES IIB
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
SP 4095 Colonial Chronicles IB
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3593 (Colonial Chronicles IIA).
Overview
This honours seminar studies some of the most important chronicles concerning the New World from the mid 16th to the late 17th centuries. Primary texts - written by Garcilaso de la Vega el Inca, Pedro Cieza de Leon, Fernando de Alva lxlilxhochitl, and Fernando Alvarado Tezozomoc - will be complemented by critical and historiographical literature, notably books by Serge Gruzinski and J.H. Elliott. The class will be conducted in Spanish.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Tues 12-2pm).
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (one essay 3,000 words) (100%).
Resit: Three-hour written examination (100%).
- SP 4594 - FILM AND THE POLITICAL: SPANISH FILM FROM ITS BEGINNINGS UP TO 1975 (B)
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above, or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09. This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3594 Film and the Political: Spanish Film from Its Beginnings up to 1975 (A).
Overview
This course engages in a theory-based, critical study of the broad Spanish film production of the twentieth century in relation to the political. Texts studied include films by Buñuel, Heredia, Lucia, Maso, Bardem, Berlanga, Jorda, Patiño, Erice, Saura, film theory texts, and writings of political theory.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week (Thursday 1-3pm) and weekly film screenings.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Essay (one 5,000 word essay) (100%).
- SP 4595 - THE GOLDEN STATE: HISTORY, CULTURE AND POLITICS OF CALIFORNIA B
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programm Year 4 or above,or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2009/10. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3595 (The Golden State: History, Culture and Politics of California A).
Overview
This course engages in a broad-based analysis of the history, culture and politics of the state of California. It begins with the indigenous and Spanish colonial settlement of the region, followed by the period within the independent Mexican Republic, before California became one of the United States of America. More recent topics will include the fate of the Californios after Independence and mass immigration in the 20th century, especially from Mexico, as well as the status of the Spanish language in contemporary California. The course will include approaches from history, anthropology, cultural studies, and political science.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two essays (50% each).
- SP 4598 - CONTEMPORARY HISPANIC NOVEL B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
This course is available only to candidates for Honours in Hispanic Studies.
Notes
This course will not be available in 2008/09.
Class will be conducted in Spanish. This course cannot be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 3598.
Overview
This course studies the contemporary novel in Latin America and Spain. It focuses on new tendencies. By targeting individual reading of some of the best authors of the present it aims to produce direct knowledge of the main problems confronting not just the Hispanic literary tradition today, but also the societies where they live. Spanish authors will be studied together with Argentinean, Peruvian, and Chilean.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: One essay (no more than 4,000 words, minimum of 2,000): (80%); continuous assessment (20%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 45AA - FILM AND VISUAL CULTURE IN SPAIN AND LATIN AMERICA B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr N Arruti
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 35AA: Film & Visual Culture in Spain and Latin America A. Available in 2008/09 and alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The first block of the course will engage in a theory-based, critical study of the broad Spanish film production of the twentieth-century. The second block of the course will study contemporary Latin-American cinema and photography in relation to the political. Materials studied within the course will include the following: film, painting, photography and architecture.
Structure
1 one-hour lectures and one-hour tutorial per week. Two-hour film screenings per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Two 3,000-word essays (50% each).
Two 3,000-word essays (50% each).
- SP 45FA - ADVANCED TRANSLATION II
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Ms M Fernandez
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Senior Honours in Hispanic Studies.
Notes
This course will be available in 2008/09.
Overview
This course aims to extend and refine students' practical skills for translation from English into Spanish. By the end of the course, students will have acquired and/or developed: practical strategies for translation into Spanish at an advanced level; the terminology and techniques necessary for analytical discussion of selected issues in recent translation theory; the ability to read modern English discourse in various registers with due sensitivity to translation issues; the ability to apply and evaluate appropriate translation strategies with respect to various forms of literary and non-literary English discourse. Particular attention will be paid to the ability to analyse, self-reflexively, one's own translations.
Structure
1 two-hour session per week, combining lecture, practical and seminar elements.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (5 written exercises) (60%); 2 hour written examination (40%).
Resit: 3 hour written examination (100%).
- SP 45MA - MEXICAN VISIONS B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 35MA: Mexican Visions A. The course will be conducted in Spanish. Available in 2008/09 and alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
From DH Lawrence, B Traven, Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille, Graham Greene to John Houston, Malcolm Lowry, Rebecca West, a number of Mexican representations by a foreign gaze have influenced Mexican self-understanding and the international place of Latin America in world culture. This course will atttempt to understand these movements through careful attention to the authors named above.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 4,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
- SP 45MB - SPANISH CIVIL WAR B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D James and Professor A Moreiras
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 35MB: Spanish Civil War A. Class will be conducted in Spanich and English. The course will run in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The Spanish Civil War was the defining event of twentieth-century history and a defining moment in European history. This course aims to provide students with an understanding of the fundamental reasons for the conflict, the main participants and the long term consequences for Spain and the world. The course will draw upon a wide range of materials including historical documents, film and literary texts.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar meeting per week, including lecture and discussion.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 4,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).
- SP 45SA - POLITICS IN MEXICO B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Stack
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 4 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course will be available in 2008/09. This course may not be included as part of a graduating curriculum with SP 35SA (Politics in Mexico A).
Overview
This course gives a broad introduction to the political system of modern Mexico from the early twentieth-century to the present day. It will focus on the rise and fall of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and its system of government, but it will also consider the rise of the National Action Party (PAN), which finally won the Presidency in 2000, and of the left-wing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). Beyond party politics, the course will consider a range of other actors, including trade unions, the Church, artists and intellectuals, and sociol movement such as the Zapatistas.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week for eleven weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: One 4,000-word essay (100%).
Resit: One 4,000-word essay (100%).
- SP 45VA - FROM GAUDI TO DALI B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T M Vilarós
Pre-requisites
Available only to candidates in Programme Year 3 or above or by permission of the Head of School.
Notes
This course may not be taken as part of a graduation curriculum with SP 35VA: Gaudi to Dali A. The course will be taught in English. Available in 2008/09 and in alternate sessions thereafter.
Overview
The course will provide exposure to architecture, film, painting and literature. Critical and political theory. The seminar references the various relations established between art and the political movements and propositions of the period encompassing the 1898 Spanish-American War and the end of the Spanish Civil War. Based on the Spanish historical context, the seminar explores its material of study in relation to the wider European and global context. The seminar engages in five interrelated units, one per artist. Readings include Jose Ortega's, Walter Benjamin's, Hanna Arendt's, and Dalis' and Lorca's own writings. Among others, films included are a Thomas Edison's sample of fake-documentaries on the 1898 war; Buñuel's Land without Bread; Dali and Buñuel's Le chien Andalou; Lopez-Linares documentary on Trotsky's assassination; and Orson Welles's Fake.
Structure
1 two-hour seminar per week, film viewing second and fourth.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment: essay 4,000 words (80%); presentation (10%); seminar participation (10%).
Resit: Essay (100%).