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Fall 2024

Fall 2024 Course Offerings

French 3303 – French Composition and Conversation  
Professor: Dr. Moira DiMauro-Jackson, md11@txstate.edu

FR 3303MW2-3:20 p.m.CRN: 14396

Description: The focus of this course is to give you ample practice in speaking and writing in French through analyzing, making, and responding to arguments in a wide range of topics in current French society and culture. You will improve your written style, deepen your understanding of authentic French texts, and increase your ability to understand spoken French. You will also improve your grammatical accuracy, enlarge your vocabulary, and acquire more ease and confidence speaking French, in a friendly environment. The topics we will discuss are certain to trigger ideas and interest, and you will acquire the skills to express your own opinion on them in French.

 

French 3341 – Advanced Grammar in French  
Professor: Dr. Peter Golato, pgolato@txstate.edu

FR 3341MW9:30am-10:50amCRN: 13848

Description: Does jargon such as groupe, proposition, conjonction, accord, etc. make you experience fight or flight? Well, bid that fear adieu! By this course’s end you’ll be very familiar with these and many other descriptive grammatical terms. Along the way, we’ll slay some old grammatical dragons – looking at you, accord du participe passé – while also taking the names of some new ones (how would one say “however difficult it might be…”?). You’ll go from jargon to j’adore - and let's be honest, what could be cooler than impressing your fellow Francophile friends with your impeccable grasp of French past participle agreement?  
 

 

French 4350C – French Directors’ Series  
Professor: Dr. Jennifer Forrest, jf05@txstate.edu

FR 4350CMW9:30am-10:50amCRN: 20007

Description: This course will explore French directors who have adapted canonical French literature to the screen. One associates French cinema with the original script, but the adaptation of literature was the dominant script type until 1960, and important directors often chose to adapt culturally meaningful novels when the new medium acquired the technical ability to tell complex stories (the 1910s) and to express subjective experience (the 1920s); when the industry made the transition to sound (the 1930s); when it attempted to find a niche market in the costume drama possessing high production values during the uncontested dominance of Hollywood (the 1950s and the 1980s). Students will view films by directors of stature like Jean Renoir, Robert Bresson, Raymond Bernard, and Claude Berri.

 

French 4370 – Civilization  
Professor: Dr. Jennifer Forrest, jf05@txstate.edu

FR 4370MW12:30pm-1:50pmCRN: 19404

Description: This course will examine the exciting culture of technological advancement in 19th-century France through…  
•    the rise of the press and print publication with industrialized printing techniques (the second revolution of the book!)  
•    the creation of the locomotive and railways (changing notions of time and space!)  
•    the harnessing and implementation of electricity (ZAP!)  
•    the reign and celebration of technology in the Galerie des machines at the expositions universelles de Paris or Paris World’s Fair (oooooh!)  
•    the architecture of the industrial era (glass and iron, so modern!)  
•    the century’s fascination with technological progress, and so much more!