About the Program
The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers a minor in Armenian Studies, consisting of Armenian language, literature, culture, and history courses. The Department also offers a Major Track in Russian/East European/ Eurasian Languages and Cultures with a concentration in Armenian.
For more information, see Major Tracks and Minor Tracks in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures.
Minor Requirements
Students who have a strong interest in an area of study outside their major often decide to complete a minor program. These programs have set requirements and are noted officially on the transcript in the memoranda section, but they are not noted on diplomas.
General Guidelines
- All minors must be declared no later than one semester before a student's Expected Graduation Term (EGT). If the semester before EGT is fall or spring, the deadline is the last day of RRR week. If the semester before EGT is summer, the deadline is the final Friday of Summer Sessions. To declare a minor, contact the department advisor for information on requirements, and the declaration process.
- All courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements below must be taken for graded credit.
- A minimum of three of the upper division courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements must be completed at UC Berkeley.
- A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 is required for courses used to fulfill the minor requirements.
- Courses used to fulfill the minor requirements may be applied toward the Seven-Course Breadth requirement, for Letters & Science students.
- No more than one upper division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student's major and minor programs.
- All minor requirements must be completed prior to the last day of finals during the semester in which the student plans to graduate. Students who cannot finish all courses required for the minor by that time should see a College of Letters & Science adviser.
- All minor requirements must be completed within the unit ceiling. (For further information regarding the unit ceiling, please see the College Requirements tab.)
Requirements
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
Courses Prerequisites 1 | ||
ARMENI 1A | Introductory Armenian | 3 |
ARMENI 1B | Introductory Armenian | 3 |
Requirements 2 | ||
ARMENI 101A | Continuing Armenian | 3 |
ARMENI 101B | Continuing Armenian | 3 |
Select three from the following | ||
ARMENI 102 | Advanced Readings in Specialized Armenian | 4 |
ARMENI 124 | Armenian Literature in Social Context | 4 |
ARMENI 126 | Armenian Culture and Film | 4 |
HISTORY 177A | Armenia: Armenia from Ethnogenesis to the Dark Ages | 4 |
HISTORY 177B | Armenia: From Pre-modern Empires to the Present | 4 |
1 | Or equivalent as determined by examination. |
2 | Or equivalent as determined by examination. If the upper-division language requirements (Armenian 101A and 101B) are passed by examination: two additional courses relevant to the minor should be added, to be determined in discussion with the Undergraduate Adviser. |
Courses beyond those listed also apply, to be determined in discussion with the Undergraduate Adviser.
Advising
The department provides programmatic and individual advising services to prospective and current students who are pursuing major and minor tracks. Advisers assist with a range of issues including course selection, academic decision-making, achieving personal and academic goals, and maximizing the Berkeley experience. Students who are looking to explore their options or are ready to declare a major, double major, or minor should contact the undergraduate student services adviser.
Advising Staff and Hours:
Amanda Minafo
issaug@berkeley.edu
6303 Dwinelle Hall
510-642-4661
Appointments: amandaminafo.youcanbook.me
Faculty and Instructors
+ Indicates this faculty member is the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award.
Faculty
David A. Frick, Professor. Slavic languages and literatures.
Research Profile
Lyubov (Luba) Golburt, Associate Professor. Pushkin, Russian literature and art of the 18th and 19th centuries, Derzhavin, Turgenev, history and literature, historical novel.
Research Profile
Darya Kavitskaya, Associate Professor. Phonological theory, opacity, contrast, Slavic phonology, phonetics/phonology interface, field linguistics (Slavic, Turkic, Uralic).
Research Profile
Eric Naiman, Professor. Sexuality, history, comparative literature, Slavic language, ideological poetics, history of medicine, Soviet culture, the gothic novel.
Research Profile
Anne Nesbet, Associate Professor. Culture, film studies, Slavic languages, early Soviet culture, Sergei Eisenstein, silent film, Soviet film, GDR history, children's literature and Stalinism, the Soviet Union, American minority movements.
Research Profile
Irina Paperno, Professor. Russian language and literature, intellectual history.
Research Profile
Harsha Ram, Associate Professor. Russian and European romanticism and modernism, Russian and European avant-gardes, Russian, European, Near Eastern and South Asian poetic traditions, Indian literature, Italian literature, Georgian history and literature, theories of world literature, literary theory, comparative poetics, genre theory, literary history, comparative modernisms and modernities, vernacular and high culture, cultural and political history of Russia-Eurasia and the Caucasus, postcolonial studies, theories of nationalism, imperialism and cosmopolitanism, the city and literature .
Research Profile
Edward Tyerman, Assistant Professor. Early Soviet culture, Soviet internationalism, cultural connections and exchanges between Russia and China, Russian and Soviet Orientalism, theories and experiences of post-socialism, politics and aesthetics, subjectivity and self-narration .
Research Profile
Lecturers
Myrna Douzjian, Lecturer.
Ellen R. Langer, Lecturer.
Anna Muza, Senior Lecturer.
Antje Postema, Lecturer.
Eva Soos Szoke, Lecturer.
Katarzyna Zacha, Lecturer.
Emeritus Faculty
Ronelle Alexander, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, Balkan Slavic dialectology, Balkan linguistics, language contact, oral tradition, Parry-Lord theory of oral composition, South Slavic epic singers, issues of language and identity.
Research Profile
Joan Grossman, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, Russian symbolism and decadence viewed especially as a cultural process, questions of literary evolution, and Russian modernism .
Research Profile
Olga Hughes, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, literature and culture of the 20th century, Pasternak, Tsvetaeva, Remizov, autobiographical prose, history and literature of Russian emigration, Russian literary developments and cultural life of the early 20th century .
Research Profile
+ Robert P. Hughes, Professor Emeritus. Critical theory, comparative literature, Slavic languages and literatures, Pushkin, Russian and European modernism, Russian poetry, Nabokov, Russian prose in the 1920s, Khodasevich's poetry, forms of autobiography, Andrei Belyi.
Research Profile
Olga Matich, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, Russian symbolism and post-Stalin literature, women in Russian literature, Zinaida Gippius, Russian emigre literature, conceptualization of love in Russian culture, theory and practice of private life.
Research Profile
Johanna Nichols, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, Slavic languages, syntax, historical linguistics, typology, including historical typology, linguistic geography and areal linguistics, languages of northern Eurasia, particularly languages of the Caucasus.
Research Profile
Walter Schamschula, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, influences of cultural contacts on Czech literatures, especially Germanic, movement and migration of literary themes and topics in Europe, Czech cultural history and theory of literature, theory and practice of translation.
Research Profile
Alan Timberlake, Professor Emeritus. Slavic languages and literatures, descriptive grammar of Russian, chronicles.
Research Profile
Contact Information
Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
510-642-6220
Phone: 510-642-2979
Undergraduate Student Services Adviser
Amanda Minafo
6303 Dwinelle Hall
Phone: 510-642-4661