Department: Slavic Languages and Literatures

CodeNameDescription
SLAVIC110The Russian Empire, 1450-1800(Same as HISTORY 20A. 120A is 5 units, 20A is 3 units.) The rise of Russian state as a Eurasian "empire of difference"; strategies of governance of the many ethnic and religious groups with their varied cultures and political economies; particular at...
SLAVIC111Russia and Her Conflicts: History, Literature, and FilmWinston Churchill famously characterized Russia as a "riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma." As war rages on in Ukraine, many are left wondering: why is Russia so hostile to her neighbors and the West? This course examines the origins of Russ...
SLAVIC116Literature and the Dream of Agriculture in Russia and BeyondWhy do city people think if they started farming, they could heal themselves and their society? How do writers make agriculture seem exciting, or farms seem beautiful? While agriculture is ancient and world-wide, literature and political movements th...
SLAVIC118NOther People's Words: Folklore and LiteratureWhat happens when you collect and use other people's words? This class considers folklore and literature based on it, focusing on the theme of objects that come to life and threaten their makers or owners. We read Russian fairy tales and Nikolai Gogo...
SLAVIC121Ukraine at a CrossroadsLiterally meaning "borderland," Ukraine has embodied in-betweenness in all possible ways. What is the mission of Ukraine in Europe and in Eurasia? How can Ukraine become an agent of democracy, stability, and unity? What does Ukraine's case of multipl...
SLAVIC128Literature of the former YugoslaviaWhat do Slavoj Zizek, Novak Djokovic, Marina Abramovic, Melania Trump, Emir Kusturica, and the captain of the Croatian national football team have in common? All were born in a country that no longer exists, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugosla...
SLAVIC129Russian Versification: Poetry as SystemThe study of verse is foundational to literary theory and poetics. The practical goal of the course is to acquaint the students with specific features of Russian prosody and verse in its historical development and to survey such basic concepts as met...
SLAVIC131Russia in ColorThis course explores the application, evolution, and perception of color in art, art history, literature, and popular culture - in (Soviet) Russia and emigration. Working closely with the Cantor Arts Center collection at Stanford, this course pairs a...
SLAVIC145Survey of Russian Literature: The Age of ExperimentThis course discusses the transition from predominately poetic to predominately prosaic creativity in the Russian literature of the first half of the 19th century Russian literature and the birth of the great Russian novel. It is focused on the pecul...
SLAVIC146The Great Russian Novel: Tolstoy and Dostoevsky: Anna Karenina/ The Brothers KaramazovWe will read Tolstoy and Dostoevsky's culminating masterpieces closely, with an eye to the artistic originality and philosophical intensity with which they imbue their complex fictional worlds and passionately reasoning characters. Turgenev and Chekh...
SLAVIC147Modern Russian Literature and Culture: The Age of War and RevolutionWhat makes Russian modernism special? Or is there anything special about Russian modernism? And how did modernist poets, prose writers, and filmmakers respond to the turbulent events of the first half of the 20th century, when Russia was shaken by re...
SLAVIC148Slavic Literature and Culture since the Death of StalinThe course offers a survey of Soviet and post-Soviet literary texts and films created by Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian artists and marginalized or repressed by the Soviet regime. The first part of the course will focus on the topics of opposition...
SLAVIC155St. Petersburg: Imagining a City, Building a CitySt. Petersburg, the world's most beautiful city, was designed to display an 18th-century autocrat's power and to foster ties between Russia and the West - on the tsar's terms. It went through devastating floods and a deadly siege; it birthed the "Pet...
SLAVIC156Vladimir Nabokov: Displacement and the Liberated EyeHow did the triumphant author of "the great American novel" "Lolita" evolve from the young author writing at white heat for the tiny sad Russian emigration in Berlin? We will read his short stories and the novels "The Luzhin Defense, Invitation to a...
SLAVIC15N"My Life Had Stood - A Loaded Gun": Dostoevsky, Dickinson, and the Question of Freedom.As far apart as Dickinson and Dostoevsky are in terms of national contexts, gendered possibilities of life, and their choice of minimalist or maximalist forms, their experiences of constriction and freedom bore significant similarities. Dostoevsky pe...
SLAVIC160Cultural Hybridity in Central-Eastern EuropeHistorically shaped by shifting borders and mixing of various cultures and languages, identities in-between have been in abundance in Central-Eastern Europe. This course offers a comprehensive study of the oeuvre of several major Central-European aut...
SLAVIC171Chernobyl: from Soviet Utopia to Post-Soviet ApocalypseThe course will introduce students to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster through the history of the late Soviet utopian project of the "atomic cities" to the intellectual, aesthetic, and artistic responses that the Chernobyl catastrophe generated in the...
SLAVIC173Children's Literature: Russia, Eastern Europe, and BeyondThis course traverses the world of Russian and Eastern European literature for children. In our look at a wide variety of children's cultural artifacts (from text to film), we will analyze the ways in which stories for children, and stories about chi...
SLAVIC179Literature from Medieval Rus' and Early Modern RussiaThis course traces the history of Russian literature before the eighteenth century. It is divided into two sections. The first section examines literature from Kyivan Rus' (up to the thirteenth century), the medieval conglomerate to which Belarus, Ru...
SLAVIC181Philosophy and LiteratureCan novels make us better people? Can movies challenge our assumptions? Can poems help us become who we are? We'll think about these and other questions with the help of writers like Toni Morrison, Marcel Proust, Jordan Peele, Charlie Kaufman, Rachel...
SLAVIC183Jews in the Contemporary World: Culture, Pop Culture, and Representation(HISTORY 185B is 5 units; HISTORY 85B is 3 units.) From Barbra Streisand to Volodymyr Zelenskyy, from The Dybbuk to Broad City, and from Moscow to LA, this course applies a multicultural perspective on different experiences of Jewishness in the 20th...
SLAVIC187Classical Russian PoetryA survey of Russian poetry from Lomonosov to Vladinmir Solov'ev. Close reading of lyrical poems. Prerequisite: 3rd Year Russian Language
SLAVIC18820th century Russian Poetry: From Aleksandr Blok to Joseph BrodskyDevelopments in and 20th-century Russian poetry including symbolism, acmeism, futurism, and literature of the absurd. Emphasis is on close readings of individual poems. Readings in Russian, taught in English.
SLAVIC195Russian and East European TheaterEvolution of modernist Russian/Eur. dramaturgy, theatrical practices, landmark productions from Chekhov-Meyerhold-Grotowski to present; re-performance of classics; techniques of embodiment. Taught in English.
SLAVIC196Readings in Yiddish Literature 1Yiddish literature, at a second-year language level. Readings chosen based on student interest; contact instructor with questions.
SLAVIC198Writing Between Languages: The Case of Eastern European Jewish LiteratureEastern European Jews spoke and read Hebrew, Yiddish, and their co-territorial languages (Russian, Polish, etc.). In the modern period they developed secular literatures in all of them, and their writing reflected their own multilinguality and evolv...
SLAVIC199Individual Work for UndergraduatesOpen to Russian majors or students working on special projects. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
SLAVIC203Russia and Ukraine: Empire, Nation, MythExplores theories of national myths and nationalism; identifies the founding myths of Russia and Ukraine and the medieval and early modern events they are based on. Extensive primary source readings. Focuses primarily up through eighteenth century, w...
SLAVIC221Ukraine at a CrossroadsLiterally meaning "borderland," Ukraine has embodied in-betweenness in all possible ways. What is the mission of Ukraine in Europe and in Eurasia? How can Ukraine become an agent of democracy, stability, and unity? What does Ukraine's case of multipl...
SLAVIC222Andrei Platonov's "Chevengur": Text and Contexts'The power of devastation [Platonov's texts] inflict upon their subject matter exceeds by far any demands of social criticism and should be measured in units that have very little to do with literature as such,' wrote Joseph Brodsky. The graduate cou...
SLAVIC223Russian & East European Literary Theory: Formalism, Bakhtin, & BeyondThis course explores the role of Russian and East European thinkers in creating modern literary theory, a discipline which arguably began in this region. Can we speak of "Russian theory" or "East European theory," analogous to labels such as "French...
SLAVIC225Communist and Capitalist Fantasies: Science Fiction in the Soviet Union and the United StatesWhat can science fiction tell us about life and art in the 20th century, in the Soviet Union and the United States? Speculative fiction (including sci-fi, fantasy, utopia, dystopia) combines irony and idealism, belief in science and skepticism about...
SLAVIC226Bakhtin and his Legacy"Quests for my own word are in fact quests for a word that is not my own, a word that is more than myself," writes Mikhail Bakhtin towards the end of his life. It was this ceaseless pursuit of another word that allowed Bakhtin, one of the most distin...
SLAVIC228Russian Nationalism: Literature and IdeasRussia is huge and linguistically and religiously diverse. Yet the ideology of nationalism --the idea that culturally unified groups should rule their own territories-- took root in Russia in the early 19th century and is powerful today. What made th...
SLAVIC23018th Century Russian LiteratureThis course traces major trends in 18th-century Russian literature, from baroque and neoclassical poetry to sentimentalist prose. Although the course introduces students to the major historical and literary contexts of the period, it is primarily con...
SLAVIC231TarkovskyThe relatively slim body of work produced by the great Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky helped redefine the possibilities of the art of cinema. Older and younger generations of directors continue to be inspired by his trademark long shot, unconventi...
SLAVIC249Post-Soviet Literature in Ukraine and RussiaWhat is the place of postmodernism in post-Soviet Ukraine and Russia? How do these historically related cultures respond to the post-Soviet transition? The course aims to answer the questions through close reading of the literary masterpieces of Ukra...
SLAVIC251Dostoevsky: Narrative Performance and Literary TheoryIn-depth engagement with a range of Dostoevsky's genres: early works (epistolary novella "Poor Folk" and experimental "Double"), major novels ("Crime and Punishment", "The Idiot"), less-read shorter works ("A Faint Heart," "Bobok," and "The Meek One...
SLAVIC256Language and Identity in UkraineTBD
SLAVIC267Film and TheaterThe course on contemporary Ukrainian film and theater introduces students to the Ukrainian cinematographic tradition of the Soviet period through the present day. During the study of Ukrainian cinema of the Soviet period, we will analyze the work of...
SLAVIC322Sergei Eisenstein: Theory, Practice, MethodThe work of Sergei Eisenstein has been central to the study of film since before his death in 1948, but some of his most significant work was first published only in the new millennium and is generating rich interdisciplinary scholarship. This semina...
SLAVIC325Readings in Russian RealismFor graduate students or upper-level undergraduates. What did Realism mean for late imperial Russian writers? What has it meant for twentieth-century literary theory? As we seek to answer these questions, we read Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Turgenev, and Ch...
SLAVIC327Boris Pasternak and the Poetry of the Russian Avant-gardeAn emphasis is made on close reading of the poetry of Boris Pasternak, Marina Tsvetaeva and Vladimir Mayakovsky. Taught in Russian. Prerequisite: 3rd Year Russian Language
SLAVIC328Russian Nationalism: Literature and IdeasRussia is huge and linguistically and religiously diverse. Yet the ideology of nationalism --the idea that culturally unified groups should rule their own territories-- took root in Russia in the early 19th century and is powerful today. What made th...
SLAVIC329Russian Versification: Poetry as SystemThe study of verse is foundational to literary theory and poetics. The practical goal of the course is to acquaint the students with specific features of Russian prosody and verse in its historical development and to survey such basic concepts as met...
SLAVIC331Russia in ColorThis course explores the application, evolution, and perception of color in art, art history, literature, and popular culture - in (Soviet) Russia and emigration. Working closely with the Cantor Arts Center collection at Stanford, this course pairs a...
SLAVIC332The Burden of Memory: Theory, Texts, PoliticsThis course explores the growing field of memory studies and various modes of memory-forgetting in the post-Soviet society and culture. The 'memory boom' in post-1991 Russia has significantly altered the way the post-Soviet subjects remember, forget,...
SLAVIC342Topics in Early Modern Russia and UkraineExplores and contrasts Ukraine and Russia ca 1450-1800, when most of Ukraine had not yet been conquered by Russia: governmental structures, religion and culture, ideology, social organization, agrarian economy.
SLAVIC345Survey of Russian Literature: The Age of ExperimentThis course discusses the transition from predominately poetic to predominately prosaic creativity in the Russian literature of the first half of the 19th century Russian literature and the birth of the great Russian novel. It is focused on the pecul...
SLAVIC346The Great Russian Novel: Tolstoy and Dostoevsky: Anna Karenina/ The Brothers KaramazovWe will read Tolstoy and Dostoevsky's culminating masterpieces closely, with an eye to the artistic originality and philosophical intensity with which they imbue their complex fictional worlds and passionately reasoning characters. Turgenev and Chekh...
SLAVIC347Modern Russian Literature and Culture: The Age of War and RevolutionWhat makes Russian modernism special? Or is there anything special about Russian modernism? And how did modernist poets, prose writers, and filmmakers respond to the turbulent events of the first half of the 20th century, when Russia was shaken by re...
SLAVIC348Slavic Literature and Culture since the Death of StalinThe course offers a survey of Soviet and post-Soviet literary texts and films created by Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian artists and marginalized or repressed by the Soviet regime. The first part of the course will focus on the topics of opposition...
SLAVIC356Vladimir Nabokov: Displacement and the Liberated EyeHow did the triumphant author of "the great American novel" "Lolita" evolve from the young author writing at white heat for the tiny sad Russian emigration in Berlin? We will read his short stories and the novels "The Luzhin Defense, Invitation to a...
SLAVIC36Dangerous IdeasIdeas matter. Concepts such as equality, tradition, and Hell have inspired social movements, shaped political systems, and dramatically influenced the lives of individuals. Others, like race and urban renewal, play an important role in contemporary d...
SLAVIC360Cultural Hybridity in Central-Eastern EuropeHistorically shaped by shifting borders and mixing of various cultures and languages, identities in-between have been in abundance in Central-Eastern Europe. This course offers a comprehensive study of the oeuvre of several major Central-European aut...
SLAVIC370PushkinPushkin's poems, prose, and drafts in dialogue with contemporaries and cultural milieu. Emphasis on innovation and controversy in genre, lyrical form and personal idiom, shaping a public discourse. Taught in English.
SLAVIC371Chernobyl: from Soviet Utopia to Post-Soviet ApocalypseThe course will introduce students to the Chernobyl nuclear disaster through the history of the late Soviet utopian project of the "atomic cities" to the intellectual, aesthetic, and artistic responses that the Chernobyl catastrophe generated in the...
SLAVIC373Children's Literature: Russia, Eastern Europe, and BeyondThis course traverses the world of Russian and Eastern European literature for children. In our look at a wide variety of children's cultural artifacts (from text to film), we will analyze the ways in which stories for children, and stories about chi...
SLAVIC379Literature from Medieval Rus' and Early Modern RussiaThis course traces the history of Russian literature before the eighteenth century. It is divided into two sections. The first section examines literature from Kyivan Rus' (up to the thirteenth century), the medieval conglomerate to which Belarus, Ru...
SLAVIC387Classical Russian PoetryA survey of Russian poetry from Lomonosov to Vladinmir Solov'ev. Close reading of lyrical poems. Prerequisite: 3rd Year Russian Language
SLAVIC38820th century Russian Poetry: From Aleksandr Blok to Joseph BrodskyDevelopments in and 20th-century Russian poetry including symbolism, acmeism, futurism, and literature of the absurd. Emphasis is on close readings of individual poems. Readings in Russian, taught in English.
SLAVIC395Russian and East European TheaterEvolution of modernist Russian/Eur. dramaturgy, theatrical practices, landmark productions from Chekhov-Meyerhold-Grotowski to present; re-performance of classics; techniques of embodiment. Taught in English.
SLAVIC396Readings in Yiddish Literature 1Yiddish literature, at a second-year language level. Readings chosen based on student interest; contact instructor with questions.
SLAVIC398Writing Between Languages: The Case of Eastern European Jewish LiteratureEastern European Jews spoke and read Hebrew, Yiddish, and their co-territorial languages (Russian, Polish, etc.). In the modern period they developed secular literatures in all of them, and their writing reflected their own multilinguality and evolv...
SLAVIC399INDIVIDUAL WORKOpen to Russian majors or students working on special projects. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
SLAVIC61NLiterature at WarWhy have verbal artists since Homer been fascinated with armed conflict and destruction? In the early 1990s, two self-consciously multinational and multicultural socialist states, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, broke apart. Soon, people who had liv...
SLAVIC680Curricular Practical TrainingCPT course required for international students completing degree. Prerequisite: Slavic Languages and Literatures Ph.D. candidate.
SLAVIC70NSocialism vs. Capitalism: Russian and American Writers' ResponsesThe turn of the 20th century was marked with turbulent political events and heated discussions about the future of Russian and American societies. Many writers and intellectuals responded to the burning issues of social justice, inequality, egalitari...
SLAVIC77QRussia's Weird Classic: Nikolai GogolThis seminar investigates the work and life of Nikolai Gogol, the most eccentric of Russian authors, the founder of what was dubbed Fantastic (or Magic) Realism. Our investigation will be based on close reading of the works written in various stages...
SLAVIC801TGR PROJECTNo Description Set
SLAVIC802TGR DissertationNo Description Set