REES 100: Current Issues in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies (REES 200)
Enrollment limited to REEES students. Scholars present analyses of methodologies, challenges, and current issues in the study of Russia, E. Europe, and Eurasia.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr
| Units: 1-2
| Repeatable
3 times
(up to 3 units total)
REES 200: Current Issues in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies (REES 100)
Enrollment limited to REEES students. Scholars present analyses of methodologies, challenges, and current issues in the study of Russia, E. Europe, and Eurasia.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr
| Units: 1-2
| Repeatable
3 times
(up to 3 units total)
REES 299: Directed Reading
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr
| Units: 1-12
| Repeatable
for credit
Instructors:
Dunlop, J. (PI)
;
Ilchuk, Y. (PI)
;
Lapidus, G. (PI)
...
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Instructors:
Dunlop, J. (PI)
;
Ilchuk, Y. (PI)
;
Lapidus, G. (PI)
;
Lazic, J. (PI)
;
Milani, A. (PI)
;
Naimark, N. (PI)
;
Safran, G. (PI)
;
Stoner, K. (PI)
;
Young, P. (PI)
REES 300: MA Capstone Seminar
Required for and limited to REEES MA candidates. Colloquia with CREEES Director and Associate Director to assist with refinement of research topic, advisor support, literature review, research, and thesis writing.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr
| Units: 1-3
Instructors:
Lazic, J. (PI)
;
Levi, P. (PI)
REES 301B: History and Politics in Russian and Eastern European Cinema (FILMSTUD 245B, FILMSTUD 445B)
From 1945 to the mid-80s, emphasizing Polish, Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, and Yugoslav contexts. The relationship between art and politics; postwar establishment of film industries; and emergence of national film movements such as the Polish school, Czech new wave, and new Yugoslav film. Thematic and aesthetic preoccupations of filmmakers such as Wajda, Jancso, Forman, and Kusturica. Permission of instructor required prior to the first day of classes.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 5
Instructors:
Levi, P. (PI)
REES 326: The Russian Revolution: Politics, Society, Culture
The centennial of the Russian Revolution of 1917 serves as the occasion for this course, which surveys the political, social, and cultural upheavals that transformed Russia under the last Tsars and the first Soviet commissars. The course will be offered in conjunction with the exhibition "The Crown under the Hammer: Russia, Romanovs & Revolution," jointly sponsored by the Hoover Institution and the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford and opening at both venues on October 18, 2017. Several class sessions will be held at the Hoover Institution, where students will be invited to examine archival documents, rare books and periodicals, and the visual arts, including propaganda posters, photographs, motion picture film, and paintings in the collections of the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. One class session will be held at the Cantor Arts Center. The course is open to undergraduate and graduate students.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 3-5
Instructors:
Patenaude, B. (PI)
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