Professors: Herbert A.
Arnold, Peter M. Frenzel, Leo A. Lensing, Krishna R. Winston
(Chair)
Adjunct Associate Professors: Annemarie Arnold, Vera B.
Grant (Director, Wesleyan University Program in Germany, spring)
Assistant Professor: Noah W. Isenberg
Interdisciplinary in nature, the academic field known as German studies has undergone rapid development in recent years. At Wesleyan, the Department of German Studies takes an active part in internationalizing the curriculum so as to educate students for a world in which a sophisticated understanding of other cultures has become increasingly important. A background in German studies can provide preparation for careers in many fields, including teaching, translation, publishing, arts administration, international law, business, and foreign service. Graduate study in certain subfields of literature, as well as linguistics, philosophy, art history, history, psychology, the natural sciences, music, and many other disciplines, calls for fluency in German.
At every level, the German Studies DepartmentÃs courses in German stress the four basic skills¤reading, writing, listening, and speaking¤and attempt to develop studentsà sensitivities to language and its relationship to culture. Instruction in the German language helps students gain an appreciation of the significance of grammar, syntax, idiom, and levels of diction. The departmentÃs courses offered in English focus on the German-speaking countriesà specific historical experiences and on their contributions to literature, the other arts (film, photography, music, painting), and many other areas. These courses often raise the question of translation, asking how successfully cultural phenomena particular to a certain place and time can be expressed in another language.
In its classes and in other activities, such as conversation hours, lectures, and the film-on-videotape series, the department provides rich opportunities for students to encounter the cultures of the German-speaking countries past and present. All students interested in German are welcome to take courses in the department and to participate in department-sponsored events.
Major program. The German Studies Department has recently eliminated the distinction between the concentration in literature and the concentration in German studies. The change applies to students entering the major in 199697 and thereafter. To become a German studies major, a student should have no grade lower than a B in any course offered by the department, except GERM 101/102 or GERM 105. The department recognizes the diversity of studentsà interests and goals by allowing majors great flexibility in designing their programs of study, which are arranged in close consultation with a faculty adviser in the department. While a specific concentration is not required, coherence should be a guiding principle. Majors are expected to adhere to the guidelines on general education.
Requirements and procedures. The department requires ten creditsà worth of courses. At least five credits must be earned in courses taught in German above the level of GERM 214. Courses in which class discussion is conducted in English may be taken in the German Studies Department and, with the major adviserÃs approval, in other departments. In accordance with WesleyanÃs academic regulations, a maximum of four courses from other departments may be counted. For additional practice in German, majors taking courses taught in English by faculty in the department are strongly encouraged to do part of the reading and writing in German and to have extra sessions with the instructor to discuss the material in German. All majors must take GERM 299, Introduction to German Studies, and GERM 301, MajorÃs Seminar. GERM 299 is offered almost every year in the first semester and should be taken in the sophomore or junior year. GERM 301 is offered in alternate years in the second semester and should be taken in the junior or senior year. Majors are normally required to spend a semester in Germany with the Wesleyan Program in Regensburg. Courses taken in Regensburg, with the exception of intensive language courses, count toward the major, provided their subject matter is relevant to German studies; the director of the program should be consulted as to whether a given course will count. In the senior year, every major must complete an honors thesis or a one-semester project.
Criteria and procedures for departmental honors.
1. Eligibility. To become a candidate for honors in German, a student must maintain a grade-point average of 88.3 (B+) in all German courses credited toward the major and must fulfill the departmental requirements for the Majorsà Seminar or the Introduction to German Studies as stated above.
2. Candidacy. The senior must sign up for German 409/410, (Senior Thesis Tutorial). Candidates for honors in German studies or in German and another major may need two tutors. By the deadline set by the Committee on Honors, the department will formally nominate the candidate if it appears reasonably certain that the project will be completed on time and in the prescribed form.
3. Honors projects. The following are examples of two-semester senior-year projects: a traditional research thesis; a detailed analysis of a text, to be presented in written form; a translation from German to English, accompanied by a critical essay or introduction; a production of a play, accompanied by a written analysis.
4. Deadline. All theses and written projects must be submitted by the spring deadline established by the Committee on Honors. Suitable dates for theatrical productions will be arranged by the department.
5. Evaluation and award of honors. The studentÃs project will be evaluated by the tutor(s) and a designated reader or readers. If honors are awarded, they may be either oehonors or oehigh honors. The award will be reported to the Honors Committee and the faculty. A student receiving high honors may, at the departmentÃs discretion, be nominated to take the qualifying examination for University honors.
The German House. This small house at 135 High Street, with seven single rooms, sponsors many cultural and social activities. To apply for a place, a student should get in touch with the residents of the house by the end of the first semester.
Department prizes. Students who demonstrate excellence
in the study of German may be candidates for prizes given from
the Scott, Prentice, and Blankenagel Funds. For information, see
the department chair.
The Wesleyan University Program in Germany (WUPG) offers an extended
second semester under the auspices of a partnership agreement
with the University of Regensburg. Since the program is an integral
part of WesleyanÃs undergraduate curriculum and an organic
component of the German Studies DepartmentÃs offerings,
majors in German studies are urged to participate, either as sophomores
or, at the latest, as second-semester juniors. Up to 20 students
from Wesleyan and other colleges and universities are admitted
to the program annually. Open to students who have had at least
three semesters of college German or the equivalent, the extended
semester is divided into intensive language preparation (FebruaryMarch)
and regular matriculation at the University of Regensburg for
the German second semester (MayJuly). Students choose from
a broad selection of University courses, supplemented by group
tutorials organized and monitored by the Wesleyan resident director.
A series of cultural events includes visits to theaters and concerts,
excursions to historic sites and museums, and guest lectures.
Students earn credit for four, in special cases five, courses;
three of these may be applied to the requirement for the German
major at Wesleyan. The preparatory language course is taught by
the staff of the UniversityÃs Institute for German as a
Foreign Language. A Wesleyan faculty member administers all aspects
of the program and advises students during their six-month stay
in Germany. Under the terms of the agreement with the University
of Regensburg, all Wesleyan participants are guaranteed rooms
in dormitories and other housing facilities that ensure maximum
contact with German students. Descriptive brochures and application
forms are available from the German Department, 401 Fisk Hall.
The deadline for applications is November 1.
Contact wesmaps@wesleyan.edu to submit comments or suggestions.
Copyright Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, 06459