IX. Graduate Programs

French

Courses

The content of the courses listed below will vary according to the research interests of the faculty involved in offering the course. Specific course descriptions for a particular offering of the course will be available from the Graduate Program Coordinator in advance of the course being offered.

FREN*6000 Research Methods Seminar F [0.50]
This course will introduce students to the field and research methods of various disciplines and of interdisciplinary studies, and it will familiarize them with field-relevant research skills and methodologies.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6020 Topics in French Literature U [0.50]
This course will focus on European French literature in relation to thematic approaches including: gender and feminism, transgression, (post)colonialisms, identity and alterity. Offered in conjunction with FREN*4600. Extra work is required of graduate students.
Restriction(s): Credit may be obtained for only one of FREN*6020 or FREN*4600.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6021 Topics in Quebec and French-Canadian Literatures U [0.50]
This course will focus on how literature functions as a socio-political institution in Quebec and in French Canada. It will also deal with elements that relate more broadly to identity, reception theory and semiotics.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6022 Topics in Caribbean and African Literatures U [0.50]
This course focuses on the works of major Francophone African and Caribbean fictional and theoretical works with particular attention being given to links between notions of cultural hierarchies, identity, métissage and creolization.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6030 Topics in Translation U [0.50]
This course deals with various aspects of literary translation, including theories of translation, the role of reading in translation, the active translation of a text from English into French, and the reflection upon the influence of each of these categories on the others.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6031 Topics in Intermediality U [0.50]
An investigation of the intersection of artistic expression taking place in literature, theatre, film, television and new media and the various effects produced by the interaction of two or more media.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6041 Topics in French and French-Canadian Sociolinguistics U [0.50]
This course will allow students to explore, within the framework of sociolinguistics and applied linguistics, the relationship between language and society, with particular reference to French and the French-speaking world.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6042 Topics in FSL Pedagogy U [0.50]
This compulsory course covers theories, methods, and real-life applications of the teaching/learning of a second language, specifically French.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6050 Reading Course S [0.50]
An independent study course, the nature and content of which is agreed upon between the student and the professor offering the course. Subject to the approval of the graduate program coordinator.
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6051 Major Research Paper U [0.50]
This independent, required course allows students to pursue research in an area of particular interest to them in the field of French Studies. A compulsory major paper 40 pages in length will be required.
Prerequisite(s): FREN*6000
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
FREN*6053 Practicum in French Studies S [0.50]
This course will allow students to engage in volunteer service in a francophone community. Students will be asked to forge links between knowledge acquired in the academic setting and problem-based learning in a real-world context. A list of authorized community partners will be provided.
Prerequisite(s): FREN*6000 and FREN*6042
Department(s): School of Languages and Literatures
University of Guelph
50 Stone Road East
Guelph, Ontario, N1G 2W1
Canada
519-824-4120