Content Courses

111. Histories of Paris 

Professor Christina von Koehler
Using the buildings and space of Paris as a laboratory, this course surveys key events in the histories of Paris and France. The course will focus on the social and cultural history of the city in its material dimensions; the relation of streets and buildings to the unfolding events of French history, and the meanings of local topography within the enduring mythologies of the city. A central goal of the course is to teach students to read and write critically about the history of Paris and the cityscape around them. Includes some excursions.
5.0 UC quarter units.  
This course has previously transferred for these subject areas:  History/Sociology/Urban Studies

115. Unbound Boundaries:  The Idea of Europe and European Integration

Professor Mariam Habibi
This course aims to provide a general introduction to the history, the structure and the current developments of the European Union with a specific focus on France. We shall look at the circumstances after the second World War that once again put the 'Idea of Europe' on the agenda and the role that France played in the rebirth of this idea. The EU will be studied from a theoretical point of view; how do we define its structure? What determines the shape and speed of the integration process? How does this institution maintain its legitimacy? We will evaluate the success of this project by looking at specific policies, such as the common agricultural policy, the economic and social policy and common foreign and security policies. Finally we will consider the role of the EU as a global actor and study the EU's link with the rest of the world.
5.0 UC quarter units. 
This course has previously transferred for these subject areas:  European Studies/History/Political Science

117. Media, Politics & Society in France & the EU

Professor Joav Toker
This course will explore and critically analyse major institutions, actors and trends in contemporary French Media and attempt to situate them in the larger contexts of “unifying” Europe and “globalized” world-media-scene. It will examine the operational schemes, performances and internal decisional and power structures of different branches of French media: written national & regional press, specialized magazines, the publishing industry, advertising, radio, television, the internet. It will also engage in a specific analysis of ‘New Media’ and ‘Social Networks’ involvement, influence and interaction with ‘traditional’ media spheres and their political, social, and cultural impacts.
5.0 UC quarter units. 
This course has previously transferred for these subject areas:  Communication/Film and Media Studies/Political Science

119.  Science in Paris:  From the Jardin des Plantes to the Tour Eiffel

Professor Justin E.H. Smith
Since the Scientific Revolution of the early 17th century, France has been the site of many of the most important scientific innovations of the modern age. More than this, science has played a crucial role in the construction of French national identity. From the 1635 foundation of the Jardin des Plantes by Louis XIII as a center of botanical and medical research, to the construction of the Eiffel Tower as a monument to the scientific accomplishments and to the engineering might of France, discoveries, innovations, and scientific feats have long been at the heart of France’s understanding of its own place in the world. In this course, we will investigate the history of science in modern France, with a particular focus on the figures and institutions that contributed to this history within the walls of Paris. We will develop a critical approach to these figures, borrowing methods and insights from the scholarly discipline known as ‘history and philosophy of science’, or ‘HPS’.
5.0 UC quarter units. Suggested subject areas for this course:  Philosophy/History

125. French Art: 1715 - 1914

Professor Christopher Boicos
This course traces the evolution of French painting from the decline of the Ancien Régime, through the upheavals of the Revolutionary age, to the birth of modern industrial and capitalist France in the 19th century. It ends with the last heroic re-definition of "modernity" in art at the opening of the 20th century.
5.0 UC quarter units. 
This course has previously transferred for these subject areas:  Art History/European Studies/History

129. Parisian Voices in Literature

Professor Carole Viers-Andronico
In this course, students will engage in discussions prompted by a multiplicity of voices that make up what has been often referred to as the Parisian mosaic - a mosaic whose colorful tiles represent a collection of diverse and multivalent identities. Students will explore how the voices that have emerged in the past several decades bring myriad perspectives, ranging from "traditional" French culture to first and subsequent generation immigrant cultures, many of which come from former French colonies in the Francophone world, to bear on Parisian society and how these contemporary voices take a sometimes playful but often critical look at the identity of their post-war and postcolonial society. The course will, therefore, focus on examining the different social worlds that make contemporary Paris such a fascinating, diverse, and culturally important city. Through readings and class excursions to sites important to their understanding of the texts, students will trace some of the ways French alongside the more problematically termed Francophone writers and filmmakers have made their sundry voices heard over the past half a century.
5.0 UC quarter units. 
This course has previously transferred for these subject areas: Comparative Literature/French/History

133.  Sexuality and its Subjects in French Culture

Professor Will Bishop
This course will explore what it has meant to be marked as a subject to sexuality at different eras in French culture. We will begin the course with a discussion of Manet's 1863 portrait of Olympia, pivotal for both all of modern art and for its portrayal of the sexual subject that the prostitute is when s/he finds the space to rise above his or her status as an object of (male) desire. We will then turn to two early 20th century novels by Gide and Colette which both stage a first person's confrontation with various aspects of his and her sexuality. We will conclude the first part of our course with an autobiographically-based novel from the period just after the Second World War: Genet's Thief's Journal, a text that problematizes its relation to truth and anticipates the gay liberation movement of the 1970's. The second part of our course will focus largely on several films. We will begin with Jean Eustache's 1973 New Wave classic La Maman et la Putain. We will then consider Virginie Despentes's theorization of her sexuality and film work in King-Kong Theory before turning to two contemporary films that portray lesbian sexuality from very different cultural standpoints: Colline Scianna's Naissance des Pieuvres (Water Lillies, 2007) and Abdelatif Kechiche's international and controversial hit, La Vie d'Adèle (Blue is the Warmest Color, 2013). We will end the semester with Abdellah Taïa's An Arab Melancholia and its portrayal of an openly gay man's emergence in between Morocco and Europe.
5.0 quarter credit hours. Suggested subject areas for this course: Gender Studies, Film, Comp Lit

134.  The Fabric of History:  Paris as a Fashion Capital

Professor Dimitri Papalexis
This course traces how what we understand as the fashion capital of Paris is a result of an evolution that spanned centuries. Paris and its museum collections will provide the concrete background for a discussion of how fashion was borne of artistic, political, social and economic moments in history. Students will receive a basic grounding in the stylistic trends (Antiquity, Medieval and Byzantine, Renaissance, 18th century, 19th century, and 20th century) and will become familiar with the Paris collections from the Louvre Museum, Carnavalet Museum, and the Musée d’Orsay. Classic statuary collections, as well as tapestries and paintings, will be used as sources for analyzing changing styles and forms.
5.0 UC quarter units. Suggested subject areas for this course: History/Art History/Anthropology

110.  Directed Study

Professor Viers-Andronico
The directed study course provides students an opportunity to conduct research on a topic related to the UC French and European Studies Program. The course meets once every two to three weeks for two hours and will take the form of a workshop. Students in the course will complete a research project on a topic of their choice by participating in workshops with their instructor and peers at key moments in the research and writing process. For their topics, students may choose from a list of suggested topics provided by the instructor or propose a topic of their own design, subject to approval by the instructor. In addition to writing a research paper, they will lead a presentation and discussion of their topic in the final class. Students will develop research and presentation skills and will use a range of resources available in Paris.
2.0 UC quarter units.  Suggested subject areas for this course: Anthropology/Comparative Literature/Ethnic Studies/European Studies/Film and Media Studies/History/Global and International Studies/Political Science/Sociology/Urban Studies




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