FRS 002C - Sec.
001 - (2 units) - CRN 92783 - W 9:00-10:50am - 25 Wellman
Life and Art in Hitlers Germany
Instructor: Winder McConnell, Department of German and Russian, College of Letters and Science
Description: The purpose of such a Freshman Seminar is to introduce students to an area of national Socialist Germany that is rarely discussed in courses in the Third Reich the idea of national aestheticism. What was the national Socialist concept of beauty? How did it manifest itself in the spheres of painting, sculpture, and film? What was the role of the Propaganda Ministry in disseminating an ideal of beauty? The course will also attempt to elucidate the role of Adolf Hitler and the NSDAP in arriving at a determination of national aesthetics.
Format: The course will meet for two hours each week on Wednesday morning
for eight weeks. A reader compiled by the instructor will be available in the
bookstore. Weekly sessions will consist of lectures by the instructor, the showing
the film excerpts, and discussion of group projects assigned during the first
session. Grading: There will be two papers assigned in the course, the
first, consisting of three pages, for 40%; the second, consisting of four pages,
for 50%; and class participation will make up 10% of the final grade.
About the Instructor: Professor McConnell was born in Belfast, Ireland. He received his B.A. in History and German from McGill University, Montreal, and holds an M.A. and a Ph.D. in Medieval German literature from the University of Kansas. He is the author/editor/translator of eleven books and has written numerous articles on Medieval German romance and heroic epic. His hobbies include drumming with jazz bands and collecting books on German élite military formations in World War II.