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Dec 05, 2025
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[DRAFT] Course Catalog 2026-2027 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
German Major
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Note(s) on Requirements
- As GERM 315 and the required 400-level course are taught in German, students who pursue the major are required to acquire linguistic proficiency in German prior to taking these advanced courses. A full range of elementary and intermediate German language courses are offered each year to support students’ language acquisition.
- The six required German courses may be taught in either German or English.
- When appropriate, some first-year seminars may count toward the major; consult the department chair.
- Private reading courses do not normally count toward the major.
Learning Goals
The German major enables students to: - develop idiomatic and grammatical mastery of the German language, emphasizing speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills; and
- acquire skills that will enhance students’ capacity for analyzing and appreciating a wide variety of literary, cinematic, and other cultural artifacts. These include literary and social movements, genres, themes, individual authors, and social perspectives.
Transfer of Credit Toward the Major
Students transferring credits in German from courses taken at other institutions may apply a maximum of four courses toward the major with the approval of the department chair. Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate Credit
AP/IB transfer credit received for GERM 300 may count toward the German major. Initial Placement
Students entering Oberlin with previous knowledge of German should take the placement exam to determine their appropriate entry level. Honors in German
Qualified German majors may be invited to participate in the Honors Program in German. The honors program allows honors candidates to extend their competence by adding breadth and depth to the regular German curriculum. The honors program also serves as excellent preparation for graduate study in German. Students interested in pursuing honors should consult the department chair by the beginning of the second semester of their junior year. Qualifications for Admittance Participation in the honors program is by application. Except under unusual circumstances only two students will be admitted each year. Admittance to the program requires a minimum major GPA of 3.50 and an overall GPA of 3.00. Potential candidates will be asked to submit a rationale in German describing the intended substance of the two required papers and explaining also their motivation for pursuing the honors projects. The ability to speak and write German at an advanced level (as manifested in both the rationale and in previous coursework) is a firm prerequisite for admission to the Honors Program in German. Requirements The Honors Program in German consists of three components: - Two honors papers written within the context of two courses at the 300- and/or 400-level.
- Completion of the Honors Reading List.
- A two-part written and oral honors examination conducted by a committee comprised of members of the German department and at least one outside evaluator.
Detailed Major Requirements
German Major Course Lists
German Courses
Six German courses are required. These may include courses from the elementary and intermediate language sequence as well as 300- and 400-level courses on literary and cultural topics. Courses offered by the German department taught in English count toward the German major. - CIME 260 - Media Ecologies ⇒ cross-listed with GERM 260
- CMPL 246 - Sex under Socialism: Narratives of Sexuality and Ideology ⇒ cross-listed with GERM 246, REEE 246
- CMPL 251 - Gone Writing: Travel and Literature ⇒ cross-listed with GERM 251, REEE 251
- CMPL 254 - Deals with the Devil: The Faust Legend Across Cultures ⇒ cross-listed with GERM 254
- FYSP 107 - City as Symphony: Cinema, Music, and Modernity
- GERM 101 - Elementary German
- GERM 102 - Elementary German
- GERM 130 - Once Upon a Time: Gender, Nation, and Childhood in Grimms’ Fairy Tales
- GERM 203 - Intermediate German
- GERM 204 - Intermediate German
- GERM 232 - Writing the City: The Urban Experience from Expressionism to New Objectivity
- GERM 246 - Sex under Socialism: Narratives of Sexuality and Ideology ⇒ cross-listed with CMPL 246, REEE 246
- GERM 251 - Gone Writing: Travel and Literature ⇒ cross-listed with CMPL 251, REEE 251
- GERM 254 - Deals with the Devil: The Faust Legend Across Cultures ⇒ cross-listed with CMPL 254
- GERM 260 - Media Ecologies ⇒ cross-listed with CIME 260
- GERM 305 - Conversation and Composition
- GERM 316 - After the Ashes: German Literature Post-1945
- GERM 317 - German Literature: Young Germany to Modernism
- GERM 318 - Enlightenment to Classicism
- GERM 325 - Reproductive Tales ⇒ cross-listed with GSFS 325
- GERM 332 - Writing the City: The Urban Experience from Expressionism to New Objectivity
- GERM 345 - From Apfelstrudel to Zwiebelkuchen: Food, Culture, and Belonging in Germany and Beyond
- GERM 353 - Framing Art, Framing Power
- GERM 411 - Kafka and the Kafkaesque
- GERM 422 - Heinrich von Kleist: The Psychology of Comedy and Despair
- GERM 433 - 20th-Century German Poetry
- GSFS 325 - Reproductive Tales ⇒ cross-listed with GERM 325
- REEE 246 - Sex under Socialism: Narratives of Sexuality and Ideology ⇒ cross-listed with CMPL 246, GERM 246
- REEE 251 - Gone Writing: Travel and Literature ⇒ cross-listed with CMPL 251, GERM 251
Adjacent-Field Courses
Return to the summary of requirements. In consultation with German faculty, students are required to take two courses with substantial German content from adjacent fields, e.g., art history, comparative literature, environmental studies, history, Jewish studies, musicology, philosophy, or politics. |
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