Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

Faculty of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

William A. Graham, Jr., Professor of the History of Religion and Islamic Studies and Murray A. Albertson Professor of Middle Eastern Studies (Chair)
Irit Aharony, Preceptor in Modern Hebrew
Ali S. Asani, Professor of the Practice of Indo-Muslim Languages and Culture (on leave 2000-01)
Gaber Ahmed Asfour, Shawwaf Visiting Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies (Cairo University)
Paul-Alain Beaulieu, Associate Professor of Assyriology (on leave 2000-01)
J. F. Coakley, Senior Lecturer on Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations
Ayman A. El-Desouky, Preceptor in Modern Arabic
William E. Granara, Professor of the Practice of Arabic (Head Tutor)
Jo Ann Hackett, Professor of the Practice of Biblical Hebrew and Northwest Semitic Epigraphy (Director of Graduate Studies)
Jay M. Harris, Harry Austryn Wolfson Professor of Jewish Studies
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs, James Richard Jewett Professor of Arabic
John Huehnergard, Professor of Semitic Philology
Miri Kubovy, Professor of the Practice of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations
James L. Kugel, Harry Starr Professor of Classical and Modern Jewish and Hebrew Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature (on leave spring term)
Peter Machinist, Hancock Professor of Hebrew and other Oriental Languages (on leave fall term)
Susan G. Miller, Senior Lecturer on Islamic Studies
Marcus Moseley, Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies
James R. Russell, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies
Richard James Saley, Lecturer on the Ancient Near East (Divinity School)
Bernard Septimus, Jacob E. Safra Professor of Jewish History and Sephardic Civilization
F. Engin Sezer, Associate Professor of Turkish
P. Oktor Skjaervo, Aga Khan Professor of Iranian (on leave spring term)
Lawrence E. Stager, Dorot Professor of the Archaeology of Israel (on leave spring term)
Piotr Steinkeller, Professor of Assyriology
Sinasi Tekin, Senior Lecturer on Turkish
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr., Professor of the Practice of Persian and other Near Eastern Languages
Stephanie Bowie Thomas, Preceptor in Modern Arabic
Rina Winkelman, Preceptor in Modern Hebrew
Robert Wisnovsky, Assistant Professor of Islamic Intellectual History
Ruth R. Wisse, Martin Peretz Professor of Yiddish Literature and Professor of Comparative Literature
Joseph Yahalom, Gerard Weinstock Visiting Professor of Jewish Studies (The Hebrew University)

Other Faculty Offering Instruction in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

Gary Anderson, Professor of Hebrew Bible (Divinity School) (on leave 2001-02)
Paul D. Hanson, Florence Corliss Lamont Professor of Divinity (Divinity School)
Cemal Kafadar, Vehbi Koc Professor of Turkish Studies
Jon D. Levenson, Albert A. List Professor of Jewish Studies (Divinity School)
Roy Mottahedeh, Gurney Professor of History (on leave fall term)
E. Roger Owen, A. J. Meyer Professor of Middle East History

Knowledge of a Near Eastern language is not required in courses designated as Near Eastern Civilizations, Ancient Near East, Jewish Studies, Early Iranian Civilizations, Islamic Civilizations, and Armenian Studies, unless otherwise stated.

Graduate students in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences may enroll in certain foreign language courses for the grade of Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory. Students should consult with course heads to determine if a course is offered on that basis.

Near Eastern Civilizations

Primarily for Graduates

[Near Eastern Civilizations 210. Death and Afterlife: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 7039
Jan Assmann
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Each session will begin with a lecture presentation on the week’s topic with special reference to Ancient Egypt, followed by discussion and presentations. Topics will vary according to the disciplinary (art history, anthropology, history, philosophy, etc.) orientations and cultural or religious (Ancient Greek, Buddhist, Christian, Islamic, etc.) specializations of participants.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Primarily for Undergraduates

Near Eastern Civilizations 90. Junior Seminars These half courses are limited in enrollment with preference given to Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations concentrators in their junior years. Undergrduate non-concentrators may enroll in junior seminars on a space available basis.
[*Near Eastern Civilizations 90a. Near Eastern Mystical Traditions in 19th-Century American Literature and Culture]
Catalog Number: 7077 Enrollment: Limited to 10.
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
The course will consider Zoroastrian, Egyptian, Sufi, Kabbalistic, and Hindu material, and the reception of these religious ideas on the works of Poe, Melville, Thoreau, Emerson, and other writers, with consideration also of utopian and millennarian communities and the theosophical movement.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. This course can function as a Junior Tutorial.

*Near Eastern Civilizations 91r. Supervised Reading and Research
Catalog Number: 1132
William E. Granara and members of the Department.
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Tutorial supervision of research in subjects not treated in regular courses.

*Near Eastern Civilizations 97r. Group Tutorial—Sophomore Year
Catalog Number: 0167
William E. Granara and members of the Department
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
An introduction to the cultures and literatures of the Near East in ancient, classical, and modern times, emphasizing major themes and problems that cut across individual cultures and historical periods.

*Near Eastern Civilizations 98r. Tutorial — Junior Year
Catalog Number: 2612
William E. Granara and members of the Department
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Designed for juniors concentrating in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations.

*Near Eastern Civilizations 99r. Tutorial — Senior Year
Catalog Number: 6623
William E. Granara and members of the Department
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Note: Designed for seniors concentrating in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Near Eastern Civilizations 300. Direction of Master’s Thesis
Catalog Number: 2448
J. F. Coakley 3409 and William E. Granara 1054
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). To be arranged.

*Near Eastern Civilizations 390. Direction of Doctoral Dissertations
Catalog Number: 3041
Ali S. Asani 7739 (on leave 2000-01), William A. Graham, Jr. 4156, Jo Ann Hackett 2389, Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School) 1394, Jay M. Harris 2266, Wolfhart P. Heinrichs 4988, John Huehnergard 7697, James L. Kugel 7575 (on leave spring term), Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School) 2264, Peter Machinist 2812 (on leave fall term), Marcus Moseley 1693, James R. Russell 3411, Bernard Septimus 7160, F. Engin Sezer 2833, P. Oktor Skjaervo 2869 (on leave spring term), Lawrence E. Stager 1468 (on leave spring term), Piotr Steinkeller 7337, Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. 4004, Robert Wisnovsky 2229, and Ruth R. Wisse 3177

Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical Studies


See also below under Akkadian and Sumerian, Aramaic, Hebrew, and Semitic Philology.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Ancient Near East 100. History of the Ancient Near East: Mesopotamia]
Catalog Number: 0702
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Surveys the political and cultural history of Mesopotamia from c. 4000 B.C.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1115.

[Ancient Near East 101. Introduction to Mesopotamian Archaeology]
Catalog Number: 1245
James Alan Armstrong
Half course (spring term). W., F., 1–2:30. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
Surveys the archaeology of ancient Mesopotamia (geographically defined as the territory of modern Iraq plus immediately adjacent areas) from the Neolithic Period until the conquest of Alexander the Great. While theoretical issues and approaches will not be neglected, the emphasis in this class will be on the archaeological data that are used in reconstructions of Mesopotamia’s history and its ancient social systems.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Ancient Near East 102. Introduction to Mesopotamian Religion
Catalog Number: 0486
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (spring term). Tu., Th., at 12. EXAM GROUP: 14
A survey of the sources, data, and principal concerns. A selection of texts are read in translation.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3661.

Ancient Near East 105. History of the Ancient Near East: The Levant (up to Alexander the Great)
Catalog Number: 0711
Lawrence E. Stager
Half course (spring term). Tu., Th., at 1. EXAM GROUP: 15
The civilization and cultural traditions of the peoples of Syria-Palestine from the third millennium to the time of Alexander the Great.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1118.

[Ancient Near East 107. History and Historiography in the Ancient Near East]
Catalog Number: 0665
Peter Machinist
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Conceptions of history and the practice of historical writing in the ancient Near East. Discussion based on a comparative study of texts from a variety of cultural traditions, such as the Hittites, Mesopotamia, ancient Israel/Hebrew Bible, and Second Temple Judaism.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1427.

Ancient Near East 115. Archaeology of the Levant (Syria-Palestine)
Catalog Number: 2813
Lawrence E. Stager and Ofer Bar-Yosef
Half course (fall term). F., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 6, 7
A chronological survey of the archaeology of the Levant in which material culture provides a window on human evolution, society, economy, and religion from the Lower Palaeolithic to Hellenistic times. Special topics include the earliest colonization of Homo erectus, the origin of modern humans, the emergence of farming and pastoral societies, the formation and dissolution of Bronze Age city-states, and the rise and fall of Iron Age kingdoms such as Israel, Moab, and Edom. This course will have a lab section.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1420.

[Ancient Near East 117. Biblical Archaeology]
Catalog Number: 1371
Lawrence E. Stager
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Archaeology and texts, such as the Bible, used to reconstruct aspects of social, economic, and religious life (from courtier to commoner) in ancient Israel during the Iron Age.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1422. This course will have a lab session to be arranged.

[Ancient Near East 118. Syro-Palestinian Pottery]
Catalog Number: 1368
Lawrence E. Stager
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A basic introduction to the pottery sequence of Palestine and Syria from Neolithic through Roman times, with emphasis on typological attributes having chronological significance. Conducted in the Harvard Semitic Museum laboratory.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1862. This course will have a lab session to be arranged.

Ancient Near East 120. Introduction to the Hebrew Scriptures
Catalog Number: 6544
Gary Anderson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). M., W., at 11. One additional hour to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 4
A survey of the Hebrew Scriptures as viewed in their historical and cultural setting in the ancient Near East and as interpreted by modern scholarship, with attention to this literature as an expression of the religious thought of Israel and one of the formative influences on Western civilization.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1101.

[Ancient Near East 121. History of the Study of the Hebrew Bible: From the Renaissance to the Present: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 8086
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Within the framework of a broad survey of Hebrew biblical scholarship since the Renaissance, the course focuses on particular scholars and their representative and seminal works. The central theme is the emergence of a historical-critical understanding of the Bible and the elaborations of and reactions to this.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1425.

[Ancient Near East 124. Myth and Mythmaking in the Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern World]
Catalog Number: 6475
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
An exploration of the nature and function of myth in the context of the ancient Near East. Focuses on selected mythic texts from various Near Eastern cultures and considers them in the light of general approaches to myth developed in Western scholarship. Particular attention given to the issue of myth in the Hebrew Bible.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. No knowledge of the ancient languages involved is assumed. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1128/3410.

[Ancient Near East 126. History of the Religion of Israel]
Catalog Number: 1672
Peter Machinist
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
The study of ancient Israelite religion and culture in comparative historical context. Topics examined include conceptions of divinity, prophecy, law, kingship, and cult. Through such topics the aim is to see how Israel related to other cultures of the ancient Near East and, thus, of what value the study of the other cultures has in understanding the character of Israelite religion itself.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1110.

Ancient Near East 127. Prophecy in Ancient Israel
Catalog Number: 6739
Peter Machinist
Half course (spring term). W., F., at 11 and an additional hour to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 4
A study of the phenomenon and history of Israelite prophecy, as recorded in the Hebrew Bible, in the light of prophecy elsewhere in the ancient Near East and in other cultures. Pertinent sociological, literary, and religious issues are explored.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1125.

[Ancient Near East 128. Jewish Apocalypticism]
Catalog Number: 6332
Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A study of Jewish apocalyptic movements, from origins in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C.E. down to their flowering in Hellenistic and Roman times. A variety of texts are examined in English translation. Special attention is given to the traditions found in these texts, the origins of those traditions in biblical and extrabiblical sources, and the use of those traditions in the literature under study. Attention also given to comparable phenomena in other ancient cultures. Questions of contemporary theological significance are also raised.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1460.
Prerequisite: Ancient Near East 120 or equivalent.

[Ancient Near East 129. Selected Literature of Second Temple Judaism]
Catalog Number: 2077
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A close critical reading in English of a selection of narrative and wisdom compositions of the late Second Temple period, such as Esther, Qoheleth (Ecclesiastes), Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus), Daniel, Judith, Tobit 3 and 4 Maccabees, Joseph and Aseneth, and the Wisdom of Solomon. Emphasis on literary and theological analysis.
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02. Expected to be given in 2002–03. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1426.
Prerequisite: An introductory course in the historical critical study of the Hebrew Bible.

[Ancient Near East 131. Readings in the Septuagint]
Catalog Number: 3661
Richard James Saley (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Aims to increase facility with Septuagint Greek by reading representative portions (predominantly prose) of the Septuagint and studying the pecularities of the grammar inductively. The fundamentals of Koine Greek will be reviewed as necessary.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: One year of Greek.

[Ancient Near East 134. Genesis: Narrative Artistry and Theological Meanings]
Catalog Number: 3291
Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A close critical reading in English of the book of Genesis with an eye both to the storytellers’ techniques and to the moral and theological dimensions of the text. Emphasis on literary and religious rather than historical and editorial issues.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1417.
Prerequisite: Ancient Near East 120.

[Ancient Near East 135. Biblical Theology: Hebrew Bible]
Catalog Number: 4476
Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
The theology of the Hebrew Bible studied by explicating major biblical themes (e.g., creation, liberation, war and peace, economic justice, social reform) and then relating them to issues in the contemporary world. Attention also given to background questions such as concepts of biblical authority and hermeneutical theory.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1150/2470.
Prerequisite: Ancient Near East 120 or equivalent.

Ancient Near East 138. The Bible and Politics
Catalog Number: 8073
Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Tu., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
Political models found in the Hebrew Bible; the role of biblical traditions in the development of church-state relations in the history of the U.S.; the possibility of a suitable political theology within the context of contemporary religion and politics.
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1465/2529.

Cross-listed Courses

History of Art and Architecture 13h. Foundations of Early Civilization: An Introduction to the Art of Ancient Mesopotamia
History of Art and Architecture 137. Cross-Cultural Aesthetics: Proseminar
[Literature and Arts A-70. The Book of Job and the Joban Tradition]
Literature and Arts C-37. The Bible and Its Interpreters

Primarily for Graduates

Ancient Near East 210. Textual Criticism of the Hebrew Bible: Seminar
Catalog Number: 5492
Richard James Saley (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Tu., 3–6. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Focus is on the art of recovering/reconstructing the text of the Hebrew Bible on the basis of Hebrew and Greek manuscripts as well as other early textual witnesses.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1819.
Prerequisite: At least two years of Hebrew and one year of Greek; some knowledge of Aramaic, Latin, and Syriac is beneficial but not required.

*Ancient Near East 215r. Problems in the Archaeology of Bronze and Iron Age Levant: Seminar
Catalog Number: 2960
Lawrence E. Stager
Half course (spring term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Topic for 2000–01: Research and Design of Museum Exhibits in Biblical Archaeology.
Note: Conducted in the Harvard Semitic Museum Laboratory.

Ancient Near East 221. The Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament in Its Communities of Interpretation: Seminar
Catalog Number: 8392
Gary Anderson (Divinity School) and Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Th., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
An examination of selected methodological issues involved in the study of the Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament, such as the value and limitations of traditional Christian and Jewish modes of study, the relationship of the history of religion and historical criticism to theological affirmation, and the treatment of the Hebrew Bible/ OldTestament as a literary classic.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1800.
Prerequisite: At least two courses in Hebrew Bible/ Old Testament.

[Ancient Near East 236. Biblical Theology: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 7022
Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
An examination of resources within the Bible for the construction of contemporary political theology.
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02. Expected to be given in 2002–03. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1801/2471.
Prerequisite: Ancient Near East 120 or equivalent.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Ancient Near East 310. Reading and Research in Ancient Near Eastern Archaeology
Catalog Number: 4264
Lawrence E. Stager 1468 (on leave spring term)

*Ancient Near East 320. Reading and Research in Ancient Mesopotamian Civilization
Catalog Number: 5678
John Huehnergard 7697, Peter Machinist 2812 (on leave fall term), and Piotr Steinkeller 7337

*Ancient Near East 330. Reading and Research in Biblical Studies
Catalog Number: 1524
Gary Anderson (Divinity School) 1771 (on leave 2001-02), Jo Ann Hackett 2389, Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School) 1394, James L. Kugel 7575 (on leave spring term), Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School) 2264, Peter Machinist 2812 (on leave fall term), and Lawrence E. Stager 1468 (on leave spring term)

Postbiblical Jewish Studies


See also below under Aramaic, Hebrew, and Yiddish.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Jewish Studies 111. Modern Jewish Thought]
Catalog Number: 5461
Jay M. Harris
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A study of significant Jewish thinkers in the modern period and their reflections on the past and present meaning of Judaism. All thinkers studied against the background of premodern Jewish thought and the challenges posed by modern Western philosophical systems.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3682.

Jewish Studies 114. Modern Hebrew Literature in Translation
Catalog Number: 0343
Marcus Moseley
Half course (fall term). Th., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
Traces the development of modern Hebrew literature from the period of the Jewish enlightenment (Haskalah), through the period of cultural “renaissance” in Jewish Eastern Europe (Tehiyyah) in the late 19th and the early 20th centuries, to the literature of contemporary Israel. Where appropriate, reading of the English translations will be accompanied by study of the Hebrew text. Authors include Mendele the Bookseller (S. Y. Abramovich), H. N. Bialik, Saul Tschernichowsky, Amos Oz, A. B. Yehoshua.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3685.

Jewish Studies 116. Messianism, Mysticism and Magic in Modern Jewish Literature
Catalog Number: 5229
Marcus Moseley
Half course (spring term). W., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 6, 7
The aim of the present course is to trace the transmigrations of Jewish mystical and messianic motifs within the modern literary context. Literature by Jews in non-Jewish languages and in Hebrew and Yiddish will be considered. Authors to be studied include Sholem Aleichem, Isaac Beshevis Singer, Sh. Ansky, Jacob Wasserman, Walter Benjamin. All texts will be in English translation.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3687.

[Jewish Studies 117. Religious Elements in Modern Jewish Poetry]
Catalog Number: 5465
Marcus Moseley
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
This course will examine aspects of continuity and discontinuity between modern Jewish poetry and the texts of traditional Judaism. We shall focus upon texts written in Hebrew and Yiddish and English. All foreign-language texts will be taught in English translation. Poets to be included in this survey: H.N. Bialik, H. Tchernikowsky, Uri Zvi Greenberg, Yankev Glatstein, Allen Ginsberg, and Leonard Cohen.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3689.

Cross-listed Courses

Comparative Literature 103r. Literature and Politics: The Case of Zionism
[Comparative Literature 104. Jewish Autobiography from the Renaissance to the 20th Century]
Comparative Literature 166. The Comic Tradition in Jewish Culture
[Foreign Cultures 56. Jewish Life in Eastern Europe]
History 1150. The Jews in Muslim and Christian Spain
History 1585. Jews in Modern Times: From the French Revolution to the Emergence of Israel
[Literature and Arts A-48. The Modern Jewish Experience in Literature]

Primarily for Graduates

*Jewish Studies 200r. Guided Readings in Jewish History
Catalog Number: 4478
Jay M. Harris
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Jewish Studies 300. Reading and Research in Postbiblical Jewish Studies
Catalog Number: 1544
Jay M. Harris 2266, James L. Kugel 7575 (on leave spring term), Bernard Septimus 7160, and Ruth R. Wisse 3177

Early Iranian Civilizations

See also below under Arabic, Aramaic, and Iranian.
[Early Iranian Civilizations 102. Old Iranian Religion]
Catalog Number: 5408
P. Oktor Skjaervo
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to and readings in Mazdaism/Zoroastrianism (on the basis of translated texts).
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3663a.

Early Iranian Civilizations 103. Manicheism
Catalog Number: 2604
P. Oktor Skjaervo
Half course (fall term). F., 12–2. EXAM GROUP: 5, 6
Introduction to and readings in Iranian Manicheism (on the basis of translated texts).
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3580.

[Early Iranian Civilizations 104. The Zoroastrian Religion]
Catalog Number: 2996
James R. Russell
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A survey of the pre-Islamic religion of the Iranian and Armenian peoples, based upon the Gathaas of Zarathustra, the Old Persian inscriptions, Pahlavi texts, and materials of surrounding countries, particularly the Hebrew Bible (Genesis, Prophets, Esther, Daniel, Tobit, etc.) Particular attention will be given to the forms of living Zoroastrianism in modern India and Iran.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3585.

Islamic Civilizations


See also below under Arabic, Iranian, and Turkish.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Islamic Civilizations 120. The City in North African History]
Catalog Number: 0686
Susan G. Miller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A survey of the city in Maghribi history from 1500 to the present, with the emphasis on the interaction of urban form and social praxis—the city as a religious space, performance/ritual space, domestic and monumental space. Topics include: Islamic urban morphology; the Maghribi city through Western eyes; the politics of colonial design; modernity and urban change; the city and memory; the post-colonial city in popular literature.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Islamic Civilizations 121. North Africa, 1500 to the Present
Catalog Number: 6224
Susan G. Miller
Half course (fall term). Th., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
An initiation to North African (Maghribi) history, surveying the evolution of relations between state and society from the late medieval period to the present and emphasizing the specificity of the North African experience. Topics include: Maghribi space and society in the medieval literature; saint worship and sultanic authority; society viewed through the literature of captivity; the 19th-century encounter with the West; race and caste in the colonial era; the Algerian revolution in essay, film and fiction; post-colonial political change.

[Islamic Civilizations 124. Central Asian Culture and Society]
Catalog Number: 3927 Enrollment: Limited.
John S. Schoeberlein
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
The course explores the diversity and continuity in contemporary Central Asian culture and society and their historical roots. After building a basis of knowledge of the pre- and early-modern history of the region and of its contemporary political context and institutions, the course will approach Central Asian culture, social structure and everyday life from a variety of angles. These will include perspectives available in various types of literature on the region, including the travel accounts of travelers to the region from pre-modern to recent time, indigenous literary folklore traditions, 19th-century orientalist scholarship, and contemporary scholarly approaches. The course will draw on ethnographic accounts to develop a rich picture of the social meaning and cultural context of ways of life (from the historical caravan trade and pastoral nomadism to contemporary collective farm and urban life), community rituals, social institutions, religious practices, moral sensibilities and aesthetic traditions.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Intended primarily for advanced undergraduates and graduate students; some background in the Near East and/or the former Soviet Union desirable.

[Islamic Civilizations 125. History and Culture of Islamic Peoples of the Former Soviet Union]
Catalog Number: 0646 Enrollment: Limited.
John S. Schoeberlein
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Themes in the history of cultural change, from prior to Russian expansion into Muslim lands until the post-Soviet period. The course encompasses territories falling under Russian dominion by the 19th century that are inhabited by peoples which are culturally more akin to Asia and the Islamic Middle East than to Europe: Central Asia, the Caucasus, and southern Russia. Themes include the background of Iranian, Turkic and Islamic culture, problems of induced cultural change (Russification/Europeanization/modernization), social transformation under the establishment and dissolution of Russian rule and the Communist system, the institutionalization of national identities, and changing family and community organization.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Intended primarily for graduates and advanced undergraduates; some background in the Near East and/or the Soviet Union desirable.

Islamic Civilizations 145 (formerly Arabic 145). Islamic Philosophy and Theology
Catalog Number: 0292
Robert Wisnovsky
Half course (fall term). M., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 8, 9
An introduction to some of the more important philosophical and theological problems that have preoccupied Muslim intellectuals from the 8th to the 20th centuries. Points of conflict amongst philosophers and theologians will be examined in detail. These include the Qur’an’s createdness, God’s causation of human acts, the primacy of human reason, the world’s eternity, the survival of human souls, and God’s ability to intervene in the natural order. The impact of European thought on 19th- and 20th-century Islamic intellectual history will also be examined. Finally, we will try to determine how “Islamic” Islamic philosophy and theology are, and how useful they might be to Muslims today.
Note: No knowledge of Arabic required. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3602.

Islamic Civilizations 160. The Meanings of Islam in Central Asia
Catalog Number: 8678
John S. Schoeberlein
Half course (spring term). W., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
The course will examine the changing role of Islam in Central Asia through history from a multidisciplinary perspective. Central Asia is on the margins of the Islamic world, though integral to it, and the course will consider the ways that regions’ position on the transcontinental trade routes and desert-oasis borderlands have led to particular expressions of the processes which are common to the Islamic world more widely. It will also look at the process of modernization and the role of Islam in the Russian and Soviet imperial contexts.
Note: Primarily for graduate students and advanced undergraduates. Some background in Central Asia and/or Islamic civilizations preferable.

Cross-listed Courses

[Foreign Cultures 70. Understanding Islam and Contemporary Muslim Societies]
History 1877a. History of the Near East, 600–1055
[History 1877b. History of the Near East, 1055–1517: Conference Course]
History 1878a. Ottoman State and Society I (1300–1550)
[History 1878b. Ottoman State and Society II (1550–1920)]
[History 1884. Introduction to Archival Research in Ottoman History: Proseminar]
[History 1889. Transmission of Traditional Islamic Learning in the Middle East from the Beginning of Islam to the Present]
[Religion 1551. For the Love of God and His Prophet: Literary and Artistic Expressions of Muslim Devotional Life: Seminar]
[Religion 1555. Introduction to Islamic Mysticism: The Sufi Tradition]
[*Religion 1585. Islam in South Asia: Seminar]

Primarily for Graduates

*Islamic Civilizations 200a. Approaches to Middle Eastern Studies: Proseminar
Catalog Number: 5918
Laila Parsons
Half course (fall term). F., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
Interdisciplinary seminar designed primarily for students in the first semester of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies A.M. program, although open to all first-year graduate students in Middle Eastern Studies and related fields. Students are introduced to the major disciplines that constitute Middle Eastern Studies, including History, Political Science, Anthropology, Literature and Islamic Studies. Faculty members who are specialists in these disciplines will serve as guest lecturers.
Note: Required for students pursuing the A.M. in Middle Eastern Studies.

Islamic Civilizations 200b. Middle Eastern Studies Research Project Seminar
Catalog Number: 9274
Laila Parsons
Half course (spring term). F., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
Interdisciplinary seminar designed primarily for students in the final semester of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies A.M. program, although open to A.M. students in related fields. Students are required to expand a short paper already written for another course in Middle Eastern Studies into a long research paper, and to present the results of their research to the seminar. Students are also required to read the materials provided by the presenters in advance of their presentations, and to critique those presentations.
Note: Recommended but not required for students pursuing the A.M. in Middle Eastern Studies.

[*Islamic Civilizations 241r. Approaches to Studying Indo-Muslim Culture and South Asian Islam]
Catalog Number: 7515
Ali S. Asani
Half course (fall term; repeated spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A seminar for graduate students focusing on current scholarship on Islamic civilization in South Asia.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Open to qualified undergraduates.
Prerequisite: Introductory coursework on Islam, Religion 1585 or equivalent.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Islamic Civilizations 300. Reading and Research in Islamic Civilizations
Catalog Number: 1963
William E. Granara 1054 (spring term only), Ali S. Asani 7739 (on leave 2000-01), William A. Graham, Jr. 4156, Wolfhart P. Heinrichs 4988, Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. 4004, and Robert Wisnovsky 2229

*Islamic Civilizations 350. Reading and Research in Ottoman History and Literature
Catalog Number: 4084
Sinasi Tekin 2353

Armenian Studies


See also below under Armenian.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Armenian Studies 100. Armenian Epic
Catalog Number: 2576
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Reading in translation of The Wild Men of Sasun, with analysis of native historical and mythological sources, and thematic comparison to epic poetry of the neighboring Iranians (Ossetic Narts, Persian Shah-nameh, Kurdish epic songs), Turks (Dede Korkut), and Greeks (Digenes Akrites).

[Armenian Studies 102. Armenian Civilization]
Catalog Number: 6070
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
An introduction to the history, traditions, religion, and literature of the Armenian people from the earliest times to the Middle Ages.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. No knowledge of Armenian is required.

Armenian Studies 200r. Guided Readings in Armenian Studies
Catalog Number: 8105
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.

Cross-listed Courses

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Armenian Studies 300. Reading and Research in Armenian Studies
Catalog Number: 1740
James R. Russell 3411

Akkadian and Sumerian


See also above under Ancient Near Eastern and Biblical Studies.

Akkadian

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Akkadian A (formerly Akkadian 230a, and 230b). Elementary Akkadian
Catalog Number: 4891
Piotr Steinkeller and assistants.
Full course (indivisible). M., W., F., at 9. EXAM GROUP: 2
Introduction to the fundamentals of Akkadian grammar and the most commonly encountered Old Babylonian and Neo-Assyrian cuneiform signs.

Akkadian 120. Intermediate Akkadian
Catalog Number: 3724
John Huehnergard (fall term) and Piotr Steinkeller (spring term)
Full course (indivisible). Fall: Tu., Th., at 12; Spring: Tu., Th., at 2. EXAM GROUP: Fall: 16, 17; Spring: 16
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 140a. Akkadian Historical Texts]
Catalog Number: 3737
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 140b. Akkadian Historical Texts]
Catalog Number: 4748
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 141r. Akkadian Myths and Epics]
Catalog Number: 6930
Peter Machinist
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Akkadian 142. Akkadian Hymns and Prayers]
Catalog Number: 6387
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Readings from the various genres of Akkadian hymns and prayers, with particular emphasis on the genre of shuilla prayers. In the course of the semester students are expected to master the style and vocabulary of these texts, as well as to learn how to reconstruct a text from several manuscripts.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 143. Neo-Babylonian Archival Texts]
Catalog Number: 7434
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Readings from letters and legal and administrative documents dated to Neo- and Late Babylonian periods (c. 750–100 B.C.). The goal of the course is to learn how to use these documents as sources for the culture and social and economic history of Babylonia in that period.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 144. Akkadian Divination Texts]
Catalog Number: 6734
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Akkadian 145. Akkadian Incantations and Rituals]
Catalog Number: 6533
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 148. Akkadian Letters]
Catalog Number: 0975
John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian A.

Akkadian 149. Akkadian Legal and Economic Texts
Catalog Number: 6703
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Th., 2–5. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17, 18
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 150. Akkadian Historiographic Texts]
Catalog Number: 2417
Peter Machinist
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

[Akkadian 153. Old Akkadian]
Catalog Number: 8334
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Readings in representative historical, epistolary, literary, and economic texts with emphasis on the grammar.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Akkadian grammar, basic vocabulary, knowledge of cuneiform script.

Akkadian 154a. Peripheral Akkadian
Catalog Number: 2416
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). W., 1–4. EXAM GROUP: 6, 7, 8
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Two full courses in Akkadian.

[Akkadian 155r. Akkadian Historical Grammar and Dialectology]
Catalog Number: 0232
John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Topic for 2000–01: To be announced.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Two full courses in Akkadian.

Primarily for Graduates

[Akkadian 200r. Readings in Akkadian: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 2970
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Akkadian 210ar (formerly Near Eastern Languages 294a). Mesopotamian History: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 8072
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Akkadian 210br. Mesopotamian History: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 6737
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Akkadian 300. Akkadian Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 2233
Paul-Alain Beaulieu 3708 (on leave 2000-01) (fall term only), John Huehnergard 7697, Peter Machinist 2812 (on leave fall term), and Piotr Steinkeller 7337

Sumerian

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Sumerian A. Elementary Sumerian]
Catalog Number: 5260
Piotr Steinkeller
Full course. Hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: Fall: 14; Spring: 16
Introduction to the Sumerian language with emphasis on grammatical structure.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Sumerian 120. Intermediate Sumerian]
Catalog Number: 2573
Paul-Alain Beaulieu and assistant
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Knowledge of basic Sumerian grammar, vocabulary, and cuneiform script.

[Sumerian 140. Sumerian Historical Texts]
Catalog Number: 2956
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Sumerian 141. Sumerian Myths and Epics]
Catalog Number: 3736
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Sumerian 145. Sumerian Incantations and Rituals]
Catalog Number: 5259
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Sumerian 146. Sumerian Religious Literature
Catalog Number: 2605
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.

[Sumerian 149. Sumerian Legal and Economic Texts]
Catalog Number: 8820
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Sumerian 160. Sumerian and Akkadian Bilingual Texts]
Catalog Number: 5027
Paul-Alain Beaulieu
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Primarily for Graduates

[Sumerian 200r. Readings in Sumerian: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 7496
Piotr Steinkeller
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Cross-listed Courses

[Linguistics 225a. Introduction to Hittite]
Linguistics 226r. Advanced Hittite

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Sumerian 300. Sumerian Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 7912
Piotr Steinkeller 7337

Arabic


See also Islamic Civilizations.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Arabic A. Elementary Arabic
Catalog Number: 5773
Ayman A. El-Desouky, Stephanie Bowie Thomas and assistant
Full course. Section I&II: M. through F., at 9; Section III&IV: M. through F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 2, 11
Introduces students to the phonology and script of classical/modern standard Arabic and covers the basic morphology and syntax of the written language. Emphasis on the development of the four skills (reading, speaking, listening and writing) at the earliest stages. Samples of modern (contemporary) and classical styles of writing introduced into basic syllabus, and audio-visual material from the contemporary Arabic media.
Note: Exam date to be announced.

[Arabic 110. Colloquial Levantine Arabic]
Catalog Number: 6732
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A basic course in the spoken Arabic of the Levant (Lebanon, Syria, Palestine). Principles of grammar and syntax and foundation for conversation.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Some knowledge of Arabic helpful but not required.

Arabic 120a. Intermediate Classical Arabic
Catalog Number: 1106
Aron Zysow
Half course (fall term). M. through F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 3, 12
A thorough review of classical Arabic grammar with emphasis on reading and writing, with some discussion in Arabic in class for vocabulary and structure reinforcement. Readings will focus on medieval Arabic historiography: biographical dictionaries, chronicles, and geography/“travel” literature. Contemporary texts dealing with “classical” themes will form part of the syllabus to help students develop better reading fluency.
Prerequisite: Arabic A or equivalent.

Arabic 120b. Intermediate Classical Arabic
Catalog Number: 0597
William E. Granara and assistant
Half course (spring term). M., through F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 3, 12
Continuation of Arabic 120a.

Arabic 121a. Intermediate Modern Arabic
Catalog Number: 0973
William E. Granara and assistant
Half course (fall term). M., through F., at 11. EXAM GROUP: 4, 13
A continuation of Elementary Arabic with equal emphasis on speaking, reading, oral and aural skills. Selections from contemporary Arabic media will be introduced and will serve as bases for reading and conversation.

Arabic 121b. Intermediate Modern Arabic
Catalog Number: 0685
William E. Granara and assistant.
Half course (spring term). M., through F., at 11. EXAM GROUP: 4, 13
A continuation of Arabic 121a.

Arabic 130a. Advanced Classical Arabic
Catalog Number: 4591
Stephanie Bowie Thomas and assistant
Half course (fall term). Tu., Th., 11:30–1. EXAM GROUP: 13, 14
Concentration on readings from classical Islamic texts, with emphasis on Qur’an, hadith, sira, and tafsir literature; directed readings and textual analysis; review of classical Arabic morphology and syntax.

Arabic 130b. Advanced Classical Arabic
Catalog Number: 2964
Stephanie Bowie Thomas and assistant
Half course (spring term). Tu., Th., 11:30–1. EXAM GROUP: 13, 14
Continuation of Arabic 130a or may be taken separately with permission of the instructor. Readings from corpus of “Adab” (Belles-Lettres) literature, as well as various pieces of classical Arabic secular prose and poetry.

Arabic 131a. Advanced Modern Arabic
Catalog Number: 0739
Ayman A. El-Desouky and assistant.
Half course (fall term). M., W., F., at 1. EXAM GROUP: 6
Reading and discussion of selections from Arabic newspapers and journals on contemporary political, social, religious, and cultural issues in the Arab world. Emphasis on developing advanced reading and speaking skills, with some attention to writing and listening comprehension.

Arabic 131b. Advanced Modern Arabic
Catalog Number: 0697
Ayman A. El-Desouky and assistant.
Half course (spring term). M., W., F., at 1, and two additional hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 7
A continuation of Arabic 131a or may be taken separately with permission of the instructor. Continued emphasis on advanced reading and speaking skills, and introduction to contemporary Arabic fiction, with emphasis on short stories and novellas.

[Arabic 140. The Qur’an]
Catalog Number: 6021
William A. Graham, Jr.
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to and selected readings from the Qur’an and Arabic exegesis.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Arabic 120b or equivalent.

Arabic 141. Introduction to the Hadith
Catalog Number: 0705
William A. Graham, Jr.
Half course (fall term). Th., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
Introduction to and selected readings in the Hadith literature.
Prerequisite: Arabic 120b or permission of instructor.

[Arabic 144. Sources for the Study of Islamic History]
Catalog Number: 3450
Roy Mottahedeh
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Elementary knowledge of Arabic.

Arabic 146r. History of the Arabic Languages
Catalog Number: 8526
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Half course (spring term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
A presentation of the linguistic and cultural history of the various forms of Arabic, including Old North Arabic, Early Classical Arabic (pre-Islamic poetry and Koran), medieval Islamic Arabic, Middle Arabic (with Judeo-Arabic) and the dialects.
Prerequisite: Two years of Arabic or equivalent.

[Arabic 150r. History of Arabic Literature]
Catalog Number: 7759
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Overview of Classical Arabic literature, including reading and discussion of selected texts.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Knowledge of Arabic an advantage, but not required.

[Arabic 160r. Readings in Arabic Historians, Geographers and Biographers]
Catalog Number: 5617
Roy Mottahedeh
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Arabic 161. Classical Arabic Grammarians on Arabic
Catalog Number: 6820
Roy Mottahedeh
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.

Primarily for Graduates

Arabic 210r. Modern Arabic Literature and Criticism: Seminar
Catalog Number: 7725
Gaber Ahmed Asfour (Cairo University)
Half course (spring term). Tu., 4–6. EXAM GROUP: 18
Topic for 2000-2001: The Contemporary Novel and Narratives of Oppression.
Note: All readings will be in English. Knowledge of Arabic useful but not necessary.

Arabic 240r. Classical Arabic Philology
Catalog Number: 5920
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Full course (indivisible). Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
Arabic philology, including discussion of difficult grammatical problems, introduction to manuscript and editorial work, and readings from the ‘ulum al-lugha (fall) and ‘ulum al-din (spring).
Note: This constitutes the fourth and final year of the Classical Arabic track.

Arabic 241a. Modern Arabic Literature
Catalog Number: 3309
Ayman A. El-Desouky
Half course (fall term). W., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
This constitutes the final year of Modern Arabic track. Representative readings from contemporary literature and culture will form bases of discussions on major themes in contemporary Arab society.
Note: Conducted in Arabic.
Prerequisite: Advanced proficiency in Arabic.

Arabic 241b. Modern Arabic Literature
Catalog Number: 6399
Gaber Ahmed Asfour (Cairo University)
Half course (spring term). W., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
A continuation of Arabic 241a.

[Arabic 245r. Classical Arabic Literature: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 4854
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 8
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Arabic 248r. Medieval Arabic Writings on Grammar and Literary Theory: Seminar
Catalog Number: 1440
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Half course (fall term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Introduction to the study of the medieval Arabic disciplines dealing with language (or with literature, depending on the interests of those who wish to take the course). Discussion of selected topics on the basis of text readings and recent secondary literature.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Arabic.

[*Arabic 249r. Arabic Philosophical Texts: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 3572
Robert Wisnovsky
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Selected readings from falsafa literature. Topic for 2001–02: To be announced.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Two years of Arabic or equivalent.

Arabic 250r. Arabic Theological Texts: Seminar
Catalog Number: 7849
Robert Wisnovsky
Half course (spring term). M., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 8, 9
Selected readings from kalam literature. Topic for 2000–01: Maturidism.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3883.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Arabic.

[Arabic 252. Arabic in the Context of the Semitic Languages: Workshop]
Catalog Number: 6146
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs and John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Two years of Arabic or special permission of the instructors.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Arabic 300. Reading and Research in Arabic Language and Civilization
Catalog Number: 7828
William A. Graham, Jr. 4156, William E. Granara 1054, Wolfhart P. Heinrichs 4988, Roy Mottahedeh 1454 (on leave fall term), Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. 4004, and Robert Wisnovsky 2229

Aramaic

For Undergraduates and Graduates

See also Ancient Near East and Biblical Studies, Jewish Studies, and Early Iranian Civilizations.
[Aramaic B. Targumic Aramaic]
Catalog Number: 4720
Gary Anderson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Basic grammar of the Targum Onqelos, with selected readings. In addition, there will be some comparative use of Targum Neophyti and a consideration of the genre and function of the literary form “Targum.”
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4060.

[Aramaic C (formerly Aramaic Ca/Cb). Elementary Syriac]
Catalog Number: 3494
J. F. Coakley
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Basic Syriac grammar and syntax, with selected readings from the Syriac Bible and other early texts.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4109.

Aramaic 124a. Readings in Syriac I
Catalog Number: 5557
J. F. Coakley
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Historical and theological texts, and early poetry.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4112.
Prerequisite: Aramaic C or equivalent.

Aramaic 124b. Readings in Syriac II
Catalog Number: 0103
J. F. Coakley
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8, 9
Special attention to exegetical texts and to reading manuscripts.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4113.
Prerequisite: Aramaic C or equivalent.

[Aramaic 128. Introduction to Turoyo]
Catalog Number: 3747
Wolfhart P. Heinrichs
Half course (spring term). To be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Some knowledge of Syriac or any other classical Aramaic language.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Aramaic 300. Aramaic Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 5758
John Huehnergard 7697 and Jo Ann Hackett 2389

Armenian


See also Armenian Studies.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Armenian A. Elementary Classical Armenian
Catalog Number: 5476
James R. Russell
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to classical Armenian grammar and reading of selected texts.

Armenian B. Elementary Modern Eastern Armenian
Catalog Number: 7168
James R. Russell
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to the spoken and literary language of the Republic of Armenia.

Armenian 120a. Intermediate Modern Eastern Armenian
Catalog Number: 4892
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Armenian B or equivalent.

Armenian 121a. Intermediate Classical Armenian
Catalog Number: 0626
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Armenian A or equivalent.

Armenian 130. Advanced Classical Armenian
Catalog Number: 4926
James R. Russell
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
The text of St. Grigor Narekats’i Matean olbergut’ean, with other mystical texts from Armenian and Eastern Christian traditions.
Prerequisite: Armenian A.

Primarily for Graduates

Armenian 240r. Readings in Classical Armenian
Catalog Number: 6603
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.

Armenian 241r. Readings in Modern Armenian Literature
Catalog Number: 8746
James R. Russell
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Armenian 300. Armenian Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 0240
James R. Russell 3411

Ethiopic

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Ethiopic A. Introduction to Classical Ethiopic (Ge‘ez)
Catalog Number: 7667
John Huehnergard
Full course (indivisible). Tu., Th., at 1. EXAM GROUP: 15
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinty School as 4090.

Ethiopic 120ar. Readings in Classical Ethiopic (Ge‘ez) Texts I
Catalog Number: 0231
John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Ethiopic A.

Ethiopic 120br. Readings in Classical Ethiopic (Ge‘ez) Texts II
Catalog Number: 0390
John Huehnergard
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Ethiopic A.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Ethiopic 300. Ethiopian Semitic Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 5135
John Huehnergard 7697

Hebrew


See also Ancient Near East and Biblical Studies and Jewish Studies.

Language Courses

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Classical Hebrew A. Elementary Classical Hebrew
Catalog Number: 8125
Jo Ann Hackett
Full course. M., W., F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 3
A thorough and rigorous introduction to Biblical Hebrew, with emphasis on grammar, in preparation for translation of biblical prose. Daily preparation and active class participation mandatory. Readings in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament begin in the first semester and increase in complexity throughout the year.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4010.

Classical Hebrew 120a. Intermediate Classical Hebrew I
Catalog Number: 5545
Jo Ann Hackett and assistant
Half course (fall term). M., W., F., at 2. EXAM GROUP: 7
Review of grammar; readings in prose books.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4020.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew A or equivalent.

Classical Hebrew 120b. Intermediate Classical Hebrew II
Catalog Number: 8494
Jo Ann Hackett and assistant
Half course (spring term). M., W., F., at 2. EXAM GROUP: 7
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4021.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 120a or equivalent.

Classical Hebrew 130ar. Rapid Reading (Classical Hebrew) I
Catalog Number: 7895
Jo Ann Hackett
Half course (fall term). M., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 6, 7
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1625/4030.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew A, 120a, and 120b, or equivalent.

Classical Hebrew 130br. Rapid Reading (Classical Hebrew) II
Catalog Number: 7896
Jo Ann Hackett and assistant
Half course (spring term). W., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 6, 7
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1626/4031.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 130a or equivalent.

Classical Hebrew 138. Historical Grammar of Biblical Hebrew
Catalog Number: 4415
John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Tu., Th., at 11. EXAM GROUP: 13
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 130, or equivalent.

[Classical Hebrew 238r. Advanced Study of Historical Hebrew Grammar]
Catalog Number: 9997
Jo Ann Hackett and John Huehnergard
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Reading of major sections of the Biblical corpus with emphasis on historical linguistic issues.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 130b and either Classical Hebrew 138 or Semitic Philology 140.

Modern Hebrew B. Elementary Modern Hebrew
Catalog Number: 4810
Miri Kubovy, Irit Aharony, and Rina Winkelman
Full course (indivisible). Section I: M. through F., at 9; Section II: M. through F., at 12; Section III: M. through F., at 3. EXAM GROUP: Fall: 5, 14; Spring: 2
For students with no previous instruction in Hebrew and for those who have had some unsystematic exposure to the language. Emphasis on developing skills necessary for fluent reading, speaking, and writing basic sentences in all tenses. Grammar is taught through the Israeli “Top 40.”
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4015.

Modern Hebrew 120a. Intermediate Modern Hebrew I
Catalog Number: 1711
Miri Kubovy, Irit Aharony, and Rina Winkelman
Half course (fall term). Section I: M. through F., at 1. Section II: M. through F., at 2. EXAM GROUP: 6, 15
For students with basic understanding of modern Hebrew grammar and some experience in reading. Emphasis on rapid reading of contemporary newspapers, magazines, short stories, and poetry.
Note: Conducted primarily in Hebrew. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4040.
Prerequisite: Modern Hebrew B or passing of special departmental placement test.

*Modern Hebrew 120b. Intermediate Modern Hebrew II
Catalog Number: 2563
Miri Kubovy, Irit Aharony, and Rina Winkelman
Half course (spring term). Section I: M. through F., at 1. Section II: M. through F., at 2 . EXAM GROUP: 6, 15
Continuation of Modern Hebrew 120a. Selected readings from 20th-century Hebrew literature prose, poetry, and drama. The linguistic analysis of the texts is followed by a literary discussion as well as an examination of the individual works in relation to various trends in modern Hebrew culture.
Note: Conducted primarily in Hebrew. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4041.

Modern Hebrew 130r (formerly Modern Hebrew 130a). Advanced Modern Hebrew: Contemporary Israeli Culture
Catalog Number: 8127
Miri Kubovy and Irit Aharony
Half course (fall term). Tu., 7–9 p.m. EXAM GROUP: 18
Surveys typical examples of contemporary Israeli culture: novels, short stories, poetry, feminist literature, Holocaust literature, literary and political journals and magazines, theater and films, rock music from the Top 40, all representing current cultural trends and expressing attitudes toward social and political issues.
Note: Conducted in Hebrew. All texts will be read in Hebrew. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4045.
Prerequisite: Modern Hebrew 120a, 120b or equivalent.

Modern Hebrew 131r. Advanced Modern Hebrew: Hebrew of the Media: Press, TV, and Radio
Catalog Number: 1940
Rina Winkelman
Half course (spring term). M., 2–5. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8, 9
Will introduce students of Hebrew language and literature courses to a central aspect of the language as practiced in the media, both orally and in writing, on radio and television broadcasts and in newspapers and magazines. In Hebrew, more than in other languages, the language of the media differs considerably: it uses terminology, vocabulary and syntactic structures which are unique to these fields, which both express and influence meaningful trends in culture and society. Samples will be presented from Israeli TV, radio and daily newspapers.
Note: Conducted in Hebrew. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 4047.
Prerequisite: Modern Hebrew 120a, 120b, or equivalent.

[Modern Hebrew 155. Masterpieces of Contemporary Israeli Literature in Translation]
Catalog Number: 2250
Miri Kubovy
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Close reading of a selection of works by three generations of Israeli writers in the second half of the 20th century, and a discussion of fiction, poetry, drama, film and essays which represent major trends in Israeli social and cultural life. The main subjects include the Holocaust; feminism; Americanization; the quest for normalcy; the departure from Zionist ideology; the genre of eternal childhood; and the polarities between Arabs and Jews, Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews, poor and rich, orthodox and secular, and right and left political camps. Among the authors to be discussed: S.Y. Agnon (Nobel Prize 1966), Amos Oz, A.B. Yehoshua, David Grossman, Yehudah Amichai, Yonah Wollach, and Orly Castel-Bloom.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. This course will be conducted in English.

Literature and History Courses

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Hebrew 142. The Dead Sea Scrolls ]
Catalog Number: 6753
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A survey of the main texts discovered at Qumran and their importance for an overall understanding of Judaism toward the end of the biblical period.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1431..
Prerequisite: A reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew.

[Hebrew 150a (formerly Hebrew 150). Introduction to Rabbinic Literature]
Catalog Number: 7629
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Designed to introduce students with a basic reading knowledge of Hebrew to Mishnah, Tosefta, Midrash and Talmud through a close study of representative texts in the original. Texts are mostly non-legal and in Hebrew (rather than Aramaic). Attention to questions of language, exegetical method, literary and intellectual history.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Intermediate biblical or modern Hebrew, or permission of instructor.

Hebrew 150b. Introduction to Rabbinic Literature
Catalog Number: 7878
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
This course is a continuation of Hebrew 150a, although it can be taken independently. The readings are slightly more difficult, and include legal texts and texts that use Aramaic as well as Hebrew. No prior knowledge of Aramaic is assumed.
Prerequisite: Hebrew 150a or permission of the instructor.

[Hebrew 153. Midrash Seminar]
Catalog Number: 3397
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
An examination of rabbinic interpretations of the Bible and their relationship to other early exegetical traditions. Focuses on a series of specific midrashic themes and motifs found in a variety of rabbinic texts and seeks to understand their original exegetical function as well as their development and history of transmission.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1840.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Mishnaic Hebrew.

[Hebrew 156. Readings in Medieval Judeo-Arabic]
Catalog Number: 1363
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Arabic and Hebrew.

Hebrew 157. Introduction to Medieval Hebrew Poetry
Catalog Number: 9010
Joseph Yahalom (The Hebrew University)
Half course (spring term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Introduction to medieval Hebrew poetry in its main phases through its main genres. The course will cover liturgical poetry, and secular poetry as well as attitudes towards poetry and the larger cultural background.
Prerequisite: Intermediate reading knowledge of Hebrew.

[Hebrew 165. Maimonides’ Book of Knowledge and its Medieval Critics]
Catalog Number: 3393
Bernard Septimus
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
The interplay of law and philosophy in the first book of Maimonides’ Code. Topics include: language; organization; legal theory; use of sources; theology; curricular ideals; historical thought; ethics; eschatology; the relationship of the Book of Knowledge to other works by Maimonides; the role of the Book of Knowledge in the Maimonidean Controversy of the 13th century.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Hebrew.

Hebrew 166. Topics in the History of Talmud Study
Catalog Number: 6457
Jay M. Harris and Bernard Septimus
Half course (fall term). M., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
An examination of changing methods of Talmud study, focusing on the interpretive history of selected passages of the Babylonian Talmud.

[Hebrew 168. Medieval Hebrew Poetry]
Catalog Number: 2715
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Close reading of selected classics of late-antique piyyut and of the Spanish “golden age.” In addition to literary analysis, focuses on: the relationship of early piyyut to the classical liturgy and to midrashic culture; the social and religious functions of Hispano-Hebrew poetry and its intellectual context.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Hebrew.

Hebrew 169. The Bavli and the Yerushalmi
Catalog Number: 2226
Jay M. Harris
Half course (spring term). M., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
A comparative study of the Babylonian and “Jerusalem” Talmuds. Emphasis on comparing their relationship to antecedent sources, their use of midrash, and their rhetorical patterns. Also studied is the historical destiny of these two works in the medieval and modern periods.

[Hebrew 171. The Problem of Language in Medieval Jewish Thought]
Catalog Number: 7205
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
The status and significance of language generally and Hebrew, in particular, viewed from a variety of perspectives in texts from several genres (exegetical, linguistic, literary, legal, philosophical and mystical) ranging chronologically from late antiquity through the Renaissance.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Hebrew.

[Hebrew 174. Political Thought: Late Antiquity through the Middle Ages]
Catalog Number: 8693
Bernard Septimus
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Explores the following interrelated topics: the debate over monarchy; divine providence and political rationality; the theological significance of political defeat; the foundations of communal government. Legal exegetical, philosophical, and literary texts treating these topics will be read against their historical backdrop.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Hebrew.

Hebrew 176. Aristotle’s Ethics in Medieval Jewish Thought
Catalog Number: 0805
Bernard Septimus
Half course (spring term). W., 3–5.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Hebrew.

[Hebrew 184. Jewish Bible Commentary in the Modern Period]
Catalog Number: 5236
Jay M. Harris
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A study of Jewish Bible commentaries in the late 18th and 19th centuries that seeks to introduce the student to the wide range of Jewish Bible commentary in this period. Commentators to be studied include the Gaon of Vilna, Moses Mendelssohn, Moses Sofer, Meir Leibush Malbim, Samuel David Luzatto, and Naftali Zvi Yehudah Berlin, each studied within the appropriate cultural context.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 3688.

[Hebrew 194. Literature and Ideology in Jewish Eastern Europe]
Catalog Number: 2015
Marcus Moseley
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
An examination of the nexus of ideology and literary aesthetics in the secular discourse of Eastern European Jews. Starting with the poetics of the early ideologues of the Haskalah in late 18th-century Berlin, varying formulations of the role and nature of literature will be studied against the background of the changing socio-cultural circumstances of the Jews in Eastern Europe, culminating in consideration of the echoes of these literary debates in contemporary Israel. Readings will be in Hebrew and Yiddish, including D. Sadan, A. Kovner, Bal-makhshoves (Eliashev), M. Y. Berdichevsky, Y. Ratosh.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Hebrew 195. The Literature of the Modern Hebrew Renaissance (Tehiyyah)
Catalog Number: 2298
Marcus Moseley
Half course (fall term). Th., 4–6. EXAM GROUP: 18
An introduction to the leading prose writers and poets of the “Renaissance” period of modern Hebrew literature. The origins and validity of the notion that the period from the 1890’s to the 1917 revolution marked a Hebraic cultural renaissance in Jewish Eastern Europe will also be examined. Equal attention will be paid to belletristic prose, poetry and publicistic writings. Writers include H. N. Bialik, S. Tschernikowsky, Y. H. Brenner, D. Frishman, U. N. Gnessin.
Note: Primary readings are in Hebrew; lectures are in English.

Cross-listed Courses

Comparative Literature 103r. Literature and Politics: The Case of Zionism
[Comparative Literature 104. Jewish Autobiography from the Renaissance to the 20th Century]
History 1585. Jews in Modern Times: From the French Revolution to the Emergence of Israel
Literature and Arts C-37. The Bible and Its Interpreters
Religion 1212a. Judaism: The Liturgical Year
Religion 1212b. Judaism: The Liturgical Year

Primarily for Graduates

*Hebrew 200r. Problems in the Literature, History, and Religion of Israel: Seminar
Catalog Number: 3265
Gary Anderson (Divinity School) and Lawrence E. Stager; Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School), and Jo Ann Hackett
Half course (fall term). Th., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Topic for 2000–01: The United Monarchy: A consideration of literary, historical, archaeological and theological factors in the emergence of the Davidic Dynasty. In addition to common secondary reading, faculty lectures, and student research papers, students will be expected to master [and be examined on] the Hebrew original from I Sam 15 through I Kings 11.
Note: Intended primarily for doctoral students. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1810.

Hebrew 208r. Literature of Israel: Seminar
Catalog Number: 1356
Peter Machinist
Half course (spring term). Th., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
Topic for 2000-2001: The Book of Exodus.
Prerequisite: Advanced reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew. Also, acquaintance with other relevant ancient and modern languages desireable.

Hebrew 209r. Literature of Israel: Seminar
Catalog Number: 1326
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 8, 9
Topic for 2000–01: Ecclesiastes
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1824.
Prerequisite: Good reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew.

[Hebrew 210r. Literature of Israel: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 6322 Enrollment: Limited to 10.
Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Topic for 2000-01: Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi. Close exegetical study, utilizing text-, literary-, and form-criticism, with attention to the location of these books in their Judean and Persian historical settings and their place in the development of the history of Israelite religion.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1820.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew.

[Hebrew 215r. Readings in the Book of Biblical Antiquities and Other Second Temple Texts: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 4083
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Knowledge of biblical Hebrew required; Latin appreciated but not required.

[Hebrew 216. Hebrew Language and Texts of the Post-Exilic Period]
Catalog Number: 2137
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Examines a series of Hebrew texts extending from the Babylonian exile to early rabbinic writings, with attention both to the linguistic character of the texts surveyed and to the world of ideas exhibited therein. Texts include parts of Ezekiel; Chronicles; Ecclesiastes; Ben Sira; Qumran documents; Mishnah. Latter part of the course specifically designed to articulate transition to Mishnaic Hebrew.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1823.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew.

[Hebrew 217. The Medieval Torah Commentary: A Practical Introduction: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 5883
Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
An introduction to the use of the Jewish biblical commentaries of the Middle Ages as a resource for the modern exegete. Primary readings include a Torah chapter with the comments of several of the following figures: Rashi, Rashbam, Ibn Ezra, Radaq, Chizquni, Ramban, Seforno, and Abarbanel. Some discussion of the relationship of the hermeneutical presuppositions of these figures to those of the distinctively modern forms of biblical study.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1836.
Prerequisite: Three years of college-level Hebrew (any period). Not a course for students with a weak control of Hebrew grammar.

Hebrew 218. Joseph and Esther: Seminar
Catalog Number: 0880
Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Tu., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: 15, 16
A close critical reading of Genesis 37-50 and the Book of Esther in Hebrew. Emphasis on the literary design and religious message of each work and on the influence of the story of Joseph upon the Book of Esther.
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1802.
Prerequisite: Three years of Hebrew or the equivalent.

Hebrew 223. The Book of Jubilees and Ancient Biblical Interpretation
Catalog Number: 1813
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). W., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 8, 9
An in-depth examination of one of the most important texts of the post-exilic period.
Note: Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1432.
Prerequisite: A reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew. (Also, welcome but not required: reading knowledge of Ge’ez and Aramaic.)

[Hebrew 224. Readings in the Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs and Other Second Temple Texts.]
Catalog Number: 4565
James L. Kugel
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A study centering on one mysterious document of the Second Temple period and the light it can shed on Jewish religious piety and practice toward the end of the biblical period.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1433.
Prerequisite: A reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew. (Also, welcomed but not required: reading knowledge of Greek and Aramaic.)

Hebrew 227. Readings in Medieval Hebrew Poetry
Catalog Number: 4333
Joseph Yahalom (The Hebrew University)
Half course (spring term). W., 1–3.
An in-depth look at the rise and development of the Hebrew poetry in Medieval Spain, both sacred and profane.The course will begin with the Arabic style Hebrew meters by Dunash and continue to the golden age of Hebrew literature: Hanagid, Gabirol, Moshe Ibn Ezra and Halevi. The couse will conclude with rhymed prose compositions of such authors as Juda Alharizia.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of Hebrew.

[Hebrew 230. Midrash: The Figure of Abraham: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 0203
Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A close reading in Hebrew of some rabbinic midrashim centering on the figure of Abraham. Emphasis on the aquisition of the textual skills necessary for studying midrash and on the role of Abraham in rabbinic theology. Comparison with other primary sources about Abraham from Second Temple Judaism and the New Testament, presented in English.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1803/3871.
Prerequisite: Sound reading knowledge of Hebrew (any period).

[Hebrew 231. Genesis 12-23: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 1109
Jon D. Levenson (Divinity School)
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
A close critical reading of Genesis 12-23 in Hebrew. Emphasis on literary design and religious message of this section of the story of Abraham and his family. Students will make presentations about historical, literary, and theological aspects of the material.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1809.
Prerequisite: An introductory course in critical biblical studies and three years of Hebrew or the equivalent.

[Hebrew 245. Early Biblical Interpretation: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 6731
James L. Kugel
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Biblical interpretation from its beginnings within the Hebrew Bible itself to evidence of its continuing development as found in ancient Bible translations, biblical apocrypha and pseudepigrapha, commentaries, sermons, liturgical poetry, and other Jewish and Christian writings of late antiquity.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Offered jointly with the Divinity School as 1804.
Prerequisite: A good reading knowledge of biblical Hebrew.

[Hebrew 250. Jewish Autobiography]
Catalog Number: 4097
Marcus Moseley
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Jewish autobiographical texts from the Renaissance to the late 20th century will be examined in the light of contemporary theoretical and critical perspectives. Authors include Y. A. Modena, Y. Emden, M. L. Lilienblum, M. A. Gunzberg, Y. L. Peretz, Mendele Mokher Sefarim (S. Y. Abramovich), S. Y. Agnon. All primary readings will be in Hebrew and Yiddish; lectures are in English.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Hebrew 300. Classical Hebrew Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 7831
Jo Ann Hackett 2389, Paul D. Hanson (Divinity School) 1394, John Huehnergard 7697, James L. Kugel 7575 (on leave spring term), Peter Machinist 2812 (on leave fall term), and Lawrence E. Stager 1468 (on leave spring term)

*Hebrew 350. Postbiblical Hebrew Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 4408
Jay M. Harris 2266, James L. Kugel 7575 (on leave spring term), and Bernard Septimus 7160

Iranian


See also above under Near Eastern Civilizations; Early Iranian Civilizations; Islamic Civilizations; and below under Persian.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Iranian A. Old Persian]
Catalog Number: 5457
P. Oktor Skjaervo
Full course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to Old Persian.
Note: Expected to be omitted in 2001–02. Expected to be given in 2002–03.

[Iranian B. Introduction to Avestan]
Catalog Number: 3936
P. Oktor Skjaervo
Full course (indivisible). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Iranian 120. Sorani Kurdish]
Catalog Number: 4915
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Introduction to Sorani Kurdish.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

[Iranian 121r. Readings in Sorani Kurdish]
Catalog Number: 3037
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Cross-listed Courses

Linguistics 221r. Workshop in Indo-European

Primarily for Graduates

Iranian 205r. Advanced Reading in Old Iranian Texts
Catalog Number: 7373
P. Oktor Skjaervo
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Two years of study in old Iranian language.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Iranian 300. Reading and Research in Iranian Languages and Literatures
Catalog Number: 8155
P. Oktor Skjaervo 2869 (on leave spring term) and Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. 4004

Persian


See also above under Near Eastern Civilizations; Early Iranian Civilizations; Islamic Civilizations; Iranian.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Persian A. Elementary Persian
Catalog Number: 8143
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Full course. M., W., F., at 10, and two additional hours to be arranged. EXAM GROUP: 3
Introduction to the grammar of modern literary and spoken Persian. Selected readings from contemporary and classical Persian literature.

Persian 120a. Intermediate Persian I
Catalog Number: 2206
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (fall term). M., W., F., at 9. EXAM GROUP: 2
Readings in modern prose literature. Introduction to classical metrics and prosody. Readings in classical prose and poetry.

Persian 120b. Intermediate Persian II
Catalog Number: 3712
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (spring term). M., W., F., at 9. EXAM GROUP: 2
Continuation of Persian 120a.

Persian 140ar. Selected Readings in Classical Persian Literature
Catalog Number: 0814
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (fall term). M., W., 2–3:30. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
Selected topics in Classical Persian literature for the advanced student. Readings from historical and belletristic texts, the classics of Sufism, and the poets of Iran and India.
Prerequisite: Persian 120b or equivalent.

Persian 140br. Selected Readings in Classical Persian Literature
Catalog Number: 0258
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr.
Half course (spring term). M., W., 2–3:30. EXAM GROUP: 7, 8
A continuation of Persian 140ar.

[Persian 150r. Readings in Persian Historians, Geographers and Biographers]
Catalog Number: 6538
Roy Mottahedeh
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Persian 300. Persian Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 6962
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. 4004 and Roy Mottahedeh 1454 (on leave fall term)

Semitic Philology

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Semitic Philology 140. Introduction to the Comparative Study of Semitic Languages ]
Catalog Number: 8602
John Huehnergard
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Knowledge of two Semitic languages.

[Semitic Philology 151. Introduction to Northwest Semitic Epigraphy]
Catalog Number: 2858
Jo Ann Hackett
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Readings in Hebrew and Phoenician inscriptions with an introduction to methods and techniques of Northwest Semitic palaeography, and attention to problems of historical grammar.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 138 or Semitic Philology 140.

Semitic Philology 152. Introduction to Ugaritic
Catalog Number: 2777
Jo Ann Hackett and assistant
Half course (fall term). M., W., at 12. EXAM GROUP: 5
Introduction to Ugaritic grammar, with readings in mythological, epistolary, and administrative texts.
Prerequisite: Semitic Philology 140 or equivalent.

[Semitic Philology 170. Old South Arabian]
Catalog Number: 8199
John Huehnergard
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Grammar and readings in Old South Arabian inscriptions.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Semitic Philology 140 and knowledge of either Classical Ethiopic or Classical Arabic.

Cross-Listed Courses

Primarily for Graduates

Semitic Philology 200r. Comparative Semitic Grammar: Seminar
Catalog Number: 0168
John Huehnergard
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Classical Hebrew 138 or Semitic Philology 140 or equivalent.

Semitic Philology 220r. Northwest Semitic Epigraphy: Seminar
Catalog Number: 2948
Jo Ann Hackett
Half course (spring term). W., 3–5. EXAM GROUP: 8, 9
Topic for 2000-01: Ugaritic Texts
Prerequisite: Semitic Philology 152.

Semitic Philology 230. The Early History of Northwest Semitic
Catalog Number: 3959
John Huehnergard
Half course (spring term). Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
Readings in the Canaanizing Akkadian tablets from el-Amarna; review of so-called “Amorite” sources, as well as early alphabetic, Egyptian, and other evidence for Northwest Semitic in the second millennium BCE.
Prerequisite: Akkadian A and Classical Hebrew 138 or Semitic Philology 151.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Semitic Philology 300. Semitic and Afroasiatic Languages and Literatures
Catalog Number: 2762
Jo Ann Hackett 2389, Wolfhart P. Heinrichs 4988, and John Huehnergard 7697

Swahili


See also above under Near Eastern Civilizations; Islamic Civilizations.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

[Swahili A (formerly Swahili Aab). Elementary Swahili]
Catalog Number: 6439
Ali S. Asani and assistant
Full course (indivisible). Hours to be arranged.
A study of the lingua franca of East Africa at the elementary level. Contact hours supplemented by language lab sessions. Emphasis on written expression, reading comprehension, and oral fluency.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Not open to auditors.

Swahili 120ar. Readings in Swahili
Catalog Number: 5026
William E. Granara and assistant
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Swahili Aab or equivalent.

Swahili 120br. Readings in Swahili
Catalog Number: 4270
William E. Granara and assistant
Half course (spring term). Th., 3–4:30, Tu., 3:30–5. EXAM GROUP: 17, 18
Prerequisite: Swahili 120ar or equivalent.

Turkish


See also above under Near Eastern Civilizations; Islamic Civilizations.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Turkish A. Elementary Modern Turkish
Catalog Number: 2527
F. Engin Sezer
Full course (indivisible). M. through F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 3, 12
Emphasis on all aspects of Turkish grammar toward developing a solid foundation for speaking, listening, reading, writing, and vocabulary skills.
Note: Not open to auditors.

Turkish 120a. Intermediate Turkish I
Catalog Number: 4009
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (fall term). M., through F., at 9. EXAM GROUP: 2, 11
Emphasis on complex sentence structure and building communicative competence in describing events and expressing ideas through exercises in reading, writing, and speaking.
Note: Not open to auditors.
Prerequisite: Turkish A or equivalent.

Turkish 120b. Intermediate Turkish II
Catalog Number: 1394
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (spring term). M., through F., at 9. EXAM GROUP: 2, 11
Studies in argumentative and literary prose.
Note: Not open to auditors.
Prerequisite: Turkish 120a or equivalent.

Turkish 121a (formerly Turkish 121). Elementary Uzbek
Catalog Number: 3006
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. and assistant
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged; four meetings per week.
Introduction to conversational and literary Uzbek. Overview of the grammar, intensive practice of the spoken language, and reading of contemporary texts.
Note: Some knowledge of Modern Turkish or other Turkic language helpful but not required.

Turkish 121b. Elementary Uzbek
Catalog Number: 7303
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. and assistant
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged; four meetings per week.
Continuation of Turkish 121a.
Note: Some knowledge of Modern Turkish or other Turkic language helpful but not required.

Turkish 130a. Advanced Turkish I
Catalog Number: 6964
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (fall term). M., through F., at 11. EXAM GROUP: 4, 13
Gaining and improving advanced language skills in Modern Turkish through reading, writing, listening, and speaking with special emphasis on the proper usage of vocabulary and idiomatic expressions.
Note: Not open to auditors.
Prerequisite: Turkish 120b or equivalent.

[Turkish 130b. Advanced Turkish II]
Catalog Number: 4354
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Studies in literary and idiomatic prose through readings, discussions, and writing of short analytical papers.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02. Not open to auditors.
Prerequisite: Turkish 130a or equivalent.

Turkish 140. Introduction to Ottoman
Catalog Number: 1906
Sinasi Tekin
Full course. Spring: Tu., at 1, Th., 1–3. EXAM GROUP: Spring: 15, 16
Introduction to basic orthographic conventions and grammatical characteristics of Ottoman Turkish through readings in printed selections from the 19th and 20th centuries, and exercises on techniques.
Prerequisite: Turkish A; and one year of Arabic or Persian desirable.

Turkish 142. Introduction to Ottoman Palaeography and Diplomatic Correspondence
Catalog Number: 0239
Sinasi Tekin
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Calligraphic, orthographic, and stylistic characteristics of Ottoman legal and diplomatic correspondence through reading and analysis of primary sources.
Prerequisite: Turkish 140 or equivalent.

[Turkish 146. Old Turkish]
Catalog Number: 2929
Sinasi Tekin
Full course. Hours to be arranged.
Writing and structure of Old Turkish through readings in Orkhon inscriptions and Old Uyghur Buddhist and Manichaean texts.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Knowledge of one Turkish language.

Turkish 147a. Advanced Uzbek
Catalog Number: 3846
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. and assistant
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.

Turkish 147b. Advanced Uzbek
Catalog Number: 4820
Wheeler M. Thackston, Jr. and assistant.
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Continuation of Turkish 147a.

[Turkish 148b. Chaghatay: Poetry]
Catalog Number: 6843
Sinasi Tekin and assistant
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Language and style of Chagatay poetry through selected readings from the post-Karakhanid period until the 16th century.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Turkish A, Persian A, or equivalents.

Turkish 149. Introduction to Modern Turkish Literature
Catalog Number: 2156
F. Engin Sezer and assistant
Half course (spring term). Tu., Th., at 12. EXAM GROUP: 14
A survey of 20th-century Modern Turkish poetry and prose through selected readings of novels, short stories and poetry in Turkish and/or in translation. Emphasis on both literary appreciation and themes such as the impact of modernization and social change on new forms and content.
Note: Some knowledge of Turkish is helpful but not necessary.

Turkish 150. Turkic Languages
Catalog Number: 9106
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (fall term). Th., at 2, Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
General and specific linguistic properties and the interrelationship of Turkic languages, old and new. The nature of linguistic evidence provided by the historical written sources.
Note: Not open to Auditors.
Prerequisite: Knowledge of one Turkic language and at least one half-course in historical linguistics is desirable, which may be taken concurrently.

Turkish 151. Issues in Turkic Linguistics
Catalog Number: 2046
F. Engin Sezer
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
A critical analysis of the (Ural-) Altaic theory and the claims that relate Turkic to various other languages. The sound changes such as lambdacism and rhotacism, the Volga shift, shortening of long vowels, etc., with extensive specific reference to sound systems of the relevant languages.
Note: Not Open to Auditors.
Prerequisite: Turkish 150 or equivalent

Primarily for Graduates

Turkish 240. Readings in Ottoman Sources
Catalog Number: 2180
Sinasi Tekin and assistant
Full course (indivisible). Hours to be arranged.
Codicological analysis of handwritten documents from the 13th to the 18th century in photocopies and in the originals from a private collection. Analysis of textual styles of different genres.
Prerequisite: Turkish 140 or equivalent.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Turkish 300 (formerly *Turkish 385 and *Turkic 385). Turkish Languages and Literatures
Catalog Number: 7702
F. Engin Sezer 2833 and Sinasi Tekin 2353

Yiddish


See also above under Near Eastern Civilizations: Jewish Studies.

For Undergraduates and Graduates

Yiddish A. Elementary Yiddish
Catalog Number: 4623
David Braun
Full course (indivisible). M., W., F., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 3
Introduction to the Yiddish language, and to the culture of Ashkenazic Jewry.
Note: For students with little or no knowledge of Yiddish.

Yiddish B. Intermediate Yiddish
Catalog Number: 6147
David Braun
Full course (indivisible). M., W., F., at 11. EXAM GROUP: 4
Further develops the four basic communication skills. Includes selected readings from modern Yiddish literature.
Prerequisite: Yiddish A or equivalent.

Yiddish Ca. Advanced Yiddish I
Catalog Number: 8331
David Braun
Half course (fall term). M., W., 4–5:30. EXAM GROUP: 9

Yiddish Cb. Advanced Yiddish II
Catalog Number: 8968
David Braun
Half course (spring term). Hours to be arranged.
Prerequisite: Yiddish Ca or equivalent.

Yiddish 102r. Modern Yiddish Literature I
Catalog Number: 4013
Ruth R. Wisse
Half course (fall term). Tu., Th., at 10. EXAM GROUP: 12
Topic for 2000-01: The Golden Age. Studies the rise of Yiddish literature through some of the major writings of Medele Mocher Sforim, Sholem Aleichem, and I.L. Peretz. Takes up problems of narration, aesthetics, ideology, gender, historicity, and canon formation.
Note: Primary readings are in Yiddish (translations available). Class discussion in English.

[Yiddish 103r. Modern Yiddish Literature II ]
Catalog Number: 8269
Ruth R. Wisse
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Topic for 2000-2001: To be announced.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.

Yiddish 105. Yiddish Language and Linguistic Theory
Catalog Number: 7146
David Braun
Half course (spring term). Th., 4–6. EXAM GROUP: 18
Yiddish, spoken among Ashkenazic Jews (i.e., Jews of Western and Central European and, later, Eastern European origin) for the past millenium, belongs to the Germanic language family, although its contacts with Slavic and Semitic (Hebrew, Aramaic) have made lasting impressions. Facts of Yiddish phonology, morphology, syntax, and the syntax-semantics-pragmatics interface pose interesting problems for linguistic theory, many of which are not common to other Germanic languages. We will look at a wide range of Yiddish data and will read and discuss some of the more recent analytical attempts to understand these phenomena.

Yiddish 108. American Jewish Literature
Catalog Number: 6058
Ruth R. Wisse
Half course (spring term). Tu., 2–4. EXAM GROUP: 16, 17
Studies major motifs and tensions in Yiddish poetry, prose and drama during the heyday of Jewish immigrant culture when America became one of the world centers of Yiddish culture. Works by Abraham Cahan, Jacob Gordin, Moishe Leib Halpern, Sholem Asch, Jacob Glatstein, Anna Margolin, Isaac Beshevis Singer; the Yiddish influence on Isaac Rosenfeld, Saul Bellow, Irving Howe, and Cynthia Ozick.

Cross-listed Courses

Comparative Literature 103r. Literature and Politics: The Case of Zionism

Primarily for Graduates

[Yiddish 200r. Modern Yiddish Literature: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 4263
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Topic for 1999-00: Memory, Autobiography and Diary. A study of the changing function of personal naratives from Gluckl of Jameln to ghetto diarists during World War II.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Yiddish.

[Yiddish 202r. Yiddish Literature: Seminar]
Catalog Number: 3854
Ruth R. Wisse
Half course (fall term). Hours to be arranged.
Topic for 2000–01: To be announced.
Note: Expected to be given in 2001–02.
Prerequisite: Reading knowledge of Yiddish.

Yiddish 204. An Introduction to Yiddish Literary Criticism
Catalog Number: 7662
Marcus Moseley
Half course (spring term). W., 4–6. EXAM GROUP: 9
Traces the development of modern Yiddish literary criticism from the late 19th to the mid-20th century. The focus will be upon varying, and often quite opposing, critical responses to the three “classic” writers of modern Yiddish literature: Mendele Moykher Sforim, Sholem Aleichem and Y. L. Peretz. Critics to be studied include Bal Makshoves, Sh. Niger, M. Weinreich, M. Erik, M. Viner, Y. Y. Trunk, N. Oyslender, M. Litvakov.
Note: Primary readings are in Yiddish; lectures are in English.

Graduate Courses of Reading and Research

*Yiddish 300. Yiddish Language and Literature
Catalog Number: 7833
Ruth R. Wisse 3177