ɬÀï·¬

German Undergraduate Programs

The Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures - German StudiesÌýoffers a variety of major and minor options to meet the different needs and qualifications of students. While students will be exposed to a broad array of courses that cover the history of German literary and cultural life, special emphasis will also be placed on such fields as film studies, media studies, print culture studies, critical theory, translation theory and the history of lyric form.


Program Information

(Students shouldÌýconsult theÌý for complete information on program requirements, as well as the for availability.)

Subject to approval by the Department, may count toward fulfilling program requirements.

Minor Concentration in German Language (18 credits)

German Language Minor Concentration (B.A.) (18 credits)

Offered by: Languages,Literatures,Cultures (Faculty of Arts)
Degree: Bachelor of Arts
Program credit weight: 18

Program Description

The Minor Concentration in German Language is designed to allow students to achieve linguistic proficiency in German and to introduce students to some of the major aspects of German culture.

This program may be expanded to the Major Concentration German Studies.

Students may begin at the intermediate or advanced level in their first year if they have taken German courses in high school or in CEGEP or through ɬÀï·¬ Summer Studies.

Note: Beginners' and Intermediate language levels are offered either as a one-term intensive course or a two-term spanned course. Students choose which version of the level they prefer.

Note: For information about Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 course offerings, please check back on May 8, 2025. Until then, the "Terms offered" field will appear blank for most courses while the class schedule is being finalized.

Complementary Courses (18 credits)

18 credits of language courses or any course above the 325 level given in the German language, selected from the following:

Language Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 200German Language, Intensive Beginners.6

German Language, Intensive Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

An intensive language course designed to develop communicative skills; covers the first level (GERM 202D1/GERM 202D2) in one term. Required for program students.

GERM 202German Language, Beginners'.6

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first-level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D1German Language, Beginners'.3

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D2German Language, Beginners.3

German Language, Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 202D1 for course description.

GERM 300German Language Intensive Intermediate.6

German Language Intensive Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Continuation of GERM 200; covers the second level (GERM 307D1/GERM 307D2) in one term.

GERM 307German Language - Intermediate.6

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D1German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D2German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 307D1 for course description.

GERM 325German Language - Intensive Advanced.6

German Language - Intensive Advanced.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims at developing post-intermediate proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on oral and written expression. Special attention is given to word formation and to the proper choice of grammatical structures, vocabulary, and phraseology.

List of Complementary Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 326Topics: German Language and Culture.3

Topics: German Language and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims to both improve students’ speaking and writing skills at the intermediate and advanced levels and to deepen their understanding of German culture through contemporary short texts and films. Topics include migration and national identity, memory and history, gender roles, and intergenerational conflicts. Students develop their transcultural competencies through critical engagement with the course materials. Selected grammatical topics will be reviewed.

GERM 331Germany after Reunification.3

Germany after Reunification.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

The events which led to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the changing cultural, social, political and economic landscape of the 'New Germany'. Highlighting issues of cultural and social politics, texts discussed include historical, literary and film material.

GERM 332Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of specific topics as they relate to eighteenth-century German literature and culture.

GERM 335Science and Literature.3

Science and Literature.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the complex exchanges between science and literature across German literature and culture.

GERM 336German Language, Media and Culture.3

German Language, Media and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to German culture through literary and non-literary texts, film, multimedia, commercials, painting and photography. By learning how to read these cultural productions, students will refine their communication skills, expand reading strategies, build vocabulary, and review selective grammatical structures.

GERM 337Literature and Revolution.3

Literature and Revolution.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Seminar on the relationship between literature and political, social and aesthetic change.

GERM 340Romanticism.3

Romanticism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines one of the pivotal moments of cultural transition in German literary history.

GERM 344Realism.3

Realism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

What are the different ways social life has been represented in German literature and culture?

GERM 348Nature and Ecopoetics.3

Nature and Ecopoetics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines how German literature and culture engage with and construct an understanding of nature and the environment

GERM 350Modernism and the Avant-Garde.3

Modernism and the Avant-Garde.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will focus on the variety of German modernisms and their schools of thought.

GERM 351Berlin.3

Berlin.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of the quintessential modern centers within Germanic speaking Europe.

GERM 360German Drama.3

German Drama.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will survey the theatrical tradition within German.

GERM 36220th Century Literature Topics.3

20th Century Literature Topics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to selected topics and genres in twentieth century literature and culture.

GERM 364Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.3

Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

In connection with notions of identity, nationhood, political change, and cultural difference, this course investigates concepts and issues of gender in contemporary German Society. The readings include critical essays and literary texts by writers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, politicians, and political activists.

GERM 365Modern Short Fiction.3

Modern Short Fiction.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A study of short prose forms in German throughout history.

GERM 366Lyric Poetry.3

Lyric Poetry.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the study of German Poetry from the Middle Ages to the present.

GERM 368Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.3

Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of one of the formative periods of modern European culture; examination of literature, art, thought, culture and politics in Vienna around 1900.

GERM 369The German Novel.3

The German Novel.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Sustained engagement with the major texts of the German novel from Grimmelshausen to the present.

GERM 371German Cinema.3

German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Survey of German cinema from its inception to the present

GERM 372Topics in German Cinema.3

Topics in German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course investigates a special topic related to the history of German cinema.

GERM 375German Media Studies.3

German Media Studies.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the history of German media studies.

GERM 379German Visual Culture.3

German Visual Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course engages with the different strands of German visual culture across media.

GERM 381Topics in German Thought.3

Topics in German Thought.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Special topics on German intellectual history and its contributions to major philosophical traditions.

GERM 385Critical Theory.3

Critical Theory.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Engagement with the history of critique from Kant to Adorno.

GERM 388Post-Wall Culture.3

Post-Wall Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Upper level seminar exploring topics in German culture after unification.

GERM 390Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of pressing contemporary themes within German literature.

GERM 397Individual Reading Course 01.3

Individual Reading Course 01.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Given solely at the discretion of the instructor.

GERM 401Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Advanced research course on special topic of German literature and culture.

Minor Concentration in German Studies (18 credits)

German Studies Minor Concentration (B.A.) (18 credits)

Offered by: Languages,Literatures,Cultures (Faculty of Arts)
Degree: Bachelor of Arts; Bachelor of Arts and Science
Program credit weight: 18

Program Description

The Minor Concentration in German Studies provides an introduction to and critical understanding of a variety of aspects of German culture from the eighteenth century to the present day. It is designed to complement other forms of disciplinary and cultural inquiry, such as international studies, the digital humanities, and studies in other languages or geographic areas. Courses include the study of major works of literature, philosophy, film, theory, and visual art that have made a defining impact on German and European culture.

This program may be expanded to a Major Concentration.

Note: For information about Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 course offerings, please check back on May 8, 2025. Until then, the "Terms offered" field will appear blank for most courses while the class schedule is being finalized.

Complementary Courses (18 credits)

18 credits of courses in German literature, culture, and film taught in English or German selected from the following list.

A maximum of 6 credits of LLCU courses can be taken, with prior departmental approval.

Beginners’ and Intermediate Language courses may not be applied towards this Minor Concentration.

³Ò·¡¸é²ÑÌý325 German Language - Intensive Advanced. may be applied towards this Minor Concentration.

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 259Introduction to German Literature 1.3

Introduction to German Literature 1.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the Middle Ages to the Age of Goethe, including the Nibelungenlied, Faust, classical tragedy, and the rise of the novel.

GERM 260Introduction to German Literature 2.3

Introduction to German Literature 2.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the 19th century to the present.

GERM 325German Language - Intensive Advanced.6

German Language - Intensive Advanced.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims at developing post-intermediate proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on oral and written expression. Special attention is given to word formation and to the proper choice of grammatical structures, vocabulary, and phraseology.

GERM 326Topics: German Language and Culture.3

Topics: German Language and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims to both improve students’ speaking and writing skills at the intermediate and advanced levels and to deepen their understanding of German culture through contemporary short texts and films. Topics include migration and national identity, memory and history, gender roles, and intergenerational conflicts. Students develop their transcultural competencies through critical engagement with the course materials. Selected grammatical topics will be reviewed.

GERM 331Germany after Reunification.3

Germany after Reunification.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

The events which led to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the changing cultural, social, political and economic landscape of the 'New Germany'. Highlighting issues of cultural and social politics, texts discussed include historical, literary and film material.

GERM 332Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of specific topics as they relate to eighteenth-century German literature and culture.

GERM 335Science and Literature.3

Science and Literature.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the complex exchanges between science and literature across German literature and culture.

GERM 336German Language, Media and Culture.3

German Language, Media and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to German culture through literary and non-literary texts, film, multimedia, commercials, painting and photography. By learning how to read these cultural productions, students will refine their communication skills, expand reading strategies, build vocabulary, and review selective grammatical structures.

GERM 337Literature and Revolution.3

Literature and Revolution.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Seminar on the relationship between literature and political, social and aesthetic change.

GERM 340Romanticism.3

Romanticism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines one of the pivotal moments of cultural transition in German literary history.

GERM 344Realism.3

Realism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

What are the different ways social life has been represented in German literature and culture?

GERM 348Nature and Ecopoetics.3

Nature and Ecopoetics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines how German literature and culture engage with and construct an understanding of nature and the environment

GERM 350Modernism and the Avant-Garde.3

Modernism and the Avant-Garde.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will focus on the variety of German modernisms and their schools of thought.

GERM 351Berlin.3

Berlin.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of the quintessential modern centers within Germanic speaking Europe.

GERM 355Nietzsche and Wagner.3

Nietzsche and Wagner.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the relationship between the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the composer Richard Wagner. It explores their intellectual kinship, their view of art, music, and philosophy in the context of Nietzsche's critique of modernity and decadence and analyzes the Third Reich's and Hollywood's appropriation of Nietzsche and Wagner.

GERM 357German Culture in European Context.3

German Culture in European Context.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comparative examination of selected moments in German literary, artistic and cultural history in relation to broader European movements; focus on influences, exchanges and dialogues across national boundaries.

GERM 358Franz Kafka.3

Franz Kafka.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will look at the works on Franz Kafka, a "classic" modernist author, in three characteristic genres: the story, the novel, and the short prose piece. A selection of Kafka's letters and diary entries as well as critical approaches to his work will also be studied.

GERM 360German Drama.3

German Drama.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will survey the theatrical tradition within German.

GERM 36220th Century Literature Topics.3

20th Century Literature Topics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to selected topics and genres in twentieth century literature and culture.

GERM 364Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.3

Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

In connection with notions of identity, nationhood, political change, and cultural difference, this course investigates concepts and issues of gender in contemporary German Society. The readings include critical essays and literary texts by writers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, politicians, and political activists.

GERM 365Modern Short Fiction.3

Modern Short Fiction.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A study of short prose forms in German throughout history.

GERM 366Lyric Poetry.3

Lyric Poetry.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the study of German Poetry from the Middle Ages to the present.

GERM 368Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.3

Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of one of the formative periods of modern European culture; examination of literature, art, thought, culture and politics in Vienna around 1900.

GERM 369The German Novel.3

The German Novel.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Sustained engagement with the major texts of the German novel from Grimmelshausen to the present.

GERM 371German Cinema.3

German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Survey of German cinema from its inception to the present

GERM 372Topics in German Cinema.3

Topics in German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course investigates a special topic related to the history of German cinema.

GERM 373Weimar German Cinema.3

Weimar German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Weimar Cinema brought to the screen a world populated by monsters, lunatics, workers, vamps, strangers, and doubles. These figures embodied the tensions and fears of the Weimar period (1919-1933) in a manner that continues to attract audiences today. This course explores the cultural and political history of the Weimar period through Weimar cinema. It aims to introduce the student to the fundamentals of film analysis, especially formal analysis and textual analysis.

GERM 375German Media Studies.3

German Media Studies.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the history of German media studies.

GERM 379German Visual Culture.3

German Visual Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course engages with the different strands of German visual culture across media.

GERM 381Topics in German Thought.3

Topics in German Thought.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Special topics on German intellectual history and its contributions to major philosophical traditions.

GERM 385Critical Theory.3

Critical Theory.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Engagement with the history of critique from Kant to Adorno.

GERM 388Post-Wall Culture.3

Post-Wall Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Upper level seminar exploring topics in German culture after unification.

GERM 390Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of pressing contemporary themes within German literature.

GERM 397Individual Reading Course 01.3

Individual Reading Course 01.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Given solely at the discretion of the instructor.

GERM 401Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Advanced research course on special topic of German literature and culture.

Major Concentration in German Studies (36 credits)

German Studies Major Concentration (B.A.) (36 credits)

Offered by: Languages,Literatures,Cultures (Faculty of Arts)
Degree: Bachelor of Arts; Bachelor of Arts and Science
Program credit weight: 36

Program Description

The Major Concentration in German Studies provides students with a rigorous and broad inquiry into the major features that have defined German cultural life since the eighteenth century. Knowledge of the German language is a core component of the major concentration and normally courses towards the major concentration will be taught in German. Courses will include the study of major works of literature, philosophy, film, theory, and visual art that have made a defining impact on German and European culture. Students will acquire the skills of critical reading and viewing that allow them to interpret complex works of art and evaluate their social and cultural significance.

Degree Requirements — B.A. students

To be eligible for a B.A. degree, a student must fulfil all Faculty and program requirements as indicated in .

We recommend that studentsÌýconsult an Arts OASIS advisorÌýfor degree planning.

Note: For information about Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 course offerings, please check back on May 8, 2025. Until then, the "Terms offered" field will appear blank for most courses while the class schedule is being finalized.

Complementary Courses (36 credits)

6 credits must be in pre-20th century literature and culture.

A minimum of 9 credits of literature, culture, and film courses taught in German.

A maximum of 6 credits of LLCU courses, with prior departmental approval.

Language Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 200German Language, Intensive Beginners.6

German Language, Intensive Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

An intensive language course designed to develop communicative skills; covers the first level (GERM 202D1/GERM 202D2) in one term. Required for program students.

GERM 202German Language, Beginners'.6

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first-level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D1German Language, Beginners'.3

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D2German Language, Beginners.3

German Language, Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 202D1 for course description.

GERM 300German Language Intensive Intermediate.6

German Language Intensive Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Continuation of GERM 200; covers the second level (GERM 307D1/GERM 307D2) in one term.

GERM 307German Language - Intermediate.6

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D1German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D2German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 307D1 for course description.

GERM 325German Language - Intensive Advanced.6

German Language - Intensive Advanced.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims at developing post-intermediate proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on oral and written expression. Special attention is given to word formation and to the proper choice of grammatical structures, vocabulary, and phraseology.

Literature and Culture Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 259Introduction to German Literature 1.3

Introduction to German Literature 1.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the Middle Ages to the Age of Goethe, including the Nibelungenlied, Faust, classical tragedy, and the rise of the novel.

GERM 260Introduction to German Literature 2.3

Introduction to German Literature 2.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the 19th century to the present.

GERM 326Topics: German Language and Culture.3

Topics: German Language and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims to both improve students’ speaking and writing skills at the intermediate and advanced levels and to deepen their understanding of German culture through contemporary short texts and films. Topics include migration and national identity, memory and history, gender roles, and intergenerational conflicts. Students develop their transcultural competencies through critical engagement with the course materials. Selected grammatical topics will be reviewed.

GERM 331Germany after Reunification.3

Germany after Reunification.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

The events which led to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the changing cultural, social, political and economic landscape of the 'New Germany'. Highlighting issues of cultural and social politics, texts discussed include historical, literary and film material.

GERM 332Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of specific topics as they relate to eighteenth-century German literature and culture.

GERM 335Science and Literature.3

Science and Literature.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the complex exchanges between science and literature across German literature and culture.

GERM 336German Language, Media and Culture.3

German Language, Media and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to German culture through literary and non-literary texts, film, multimedia, commercials, painting and photography. By learning how to read these cultural productions, students will refine their communication skills, expand reading strategies, build vocabulary, and review selective grammatical structures.

GERM 337Literature and Revolution.3

Literature and Revolution.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Seminar on the relationship between literature and political, social and aesthetic change.

GERM 340Romanticism.3

Romanticism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines one of the pivotal moments of cultural transition in German literary history.

GERM 344Realism.3

Realism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

What are the different ways social life has been represented in German literature and culture?

GERM 348Nature and Ecopoetics.3

Nature and Ecopoetics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines how German literature and culture engage with and construct an understanding of nature and the environment

GERM 350Modernism and the Avant-Garde.3

Modernism and the Avant-Garde.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will focus on the variety of German modernisms and their schools of thought.

GERM 351Berlin.3

Berlin.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of the quintessential modern centers within Germanic speaking Europe.

GERM 355Nietzsche and Wagner.3

Nietzsche and Wagner.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the relationship between the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the composer Richard Wagner. It explores their intellectual kinship, their view of art, music, and philosophy in the context of Nietzsche's critique of modernity and decadence and analyzes the Third Reich's and Hollywood's appropriation of Nietzsche and Wagner.

GERM 357German Culture in European Context.3

German Culture in European Context.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comparative examination of selected moments in German literary, artistic and cultural history in relation to broader European movements; focus on influences, exchanges and dialogues across national boundaries.

GERM 358Franz Kafka.3

Franz Kafka.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will look at the works on Franz Kafka, a "classic" modernist author, in three characteristic genres: the story, the novel, and the short prose piece. A selection of Kafka's letters and diary entries as well as critical approaches to his work will also be studied.

GERM 360German Drama.3

German Drama.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will survey the theatrical tradition within German.

GERM 36220th Century Literature Topics.3

20th Century Literature Topics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to selected topics and genres in twentieth century literature and culture.

GERM 364Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.3

Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

In connection with notions of identity, nationhood, political change, and cultural difference, this course investigates concepts and issues of gender in contemporary German Society. The readings include critical essays and literary texts by writers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, politicians, and political activists.

GERM 365Modern Short Fiction.3

Modern Short Fiction.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A study of short prose forms in German throughout history.

GERM 366Lyric Poetry.3

Lyric Poetry.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the study of German Poetry from the Middle Ages to the present.

GERM 368Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.3

Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of one of the formative periods of modern European culture; examination of literature, art, thought, culture and politics in Vienna around 1900.

GERM 369The German Novel.3

The German Novel.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Sustained engagement with the major texts of the German novel from Grimmelshausen to the present.

GERM 371German Cinema.3

German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Survey of German cinema from its inception to the present

GERM 372Topics in German Cinema.3

Topics in German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course investigates a special topic related to the history of German cinema.

GERM 373Weimar German Cinema.3

Weimar German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Weimar Cinema brought to the screen a world populated by monsters, lunatics, workers, vamps, strangers, and doubles. These figures embodied the tensions and fears of the Weimar period (1919-1933) in a manner that continues to attract audiences today. This course explores the cultural and political history of the Weimar period through Weimar cinema. It aims to introduce the student to the fundamentals of film analysis, especially formal analysis and textual analysis.

GERM 375German Media Studies.3

German Media Studies.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the history of German media studies.

GERM 379German Visual Culture.3

German Visual Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course engages with the different strands of German visual culture across media.

GERM 381Topics in German Thought.3

Topics in German Thought.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Special topics on German intellectual history and its contributions to major philosophical traditions.

GERM 385Critical Theory.3

Critical Theory.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Engagement with the history of critique from Kant to Adorno.

GERM 388Post-Wall Culture.3

Post-Wall Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Upper level seminar exploring topics in German culture after unification.

GERM 390Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of pressing contemporary themes within German literature.

GERM 397Individual Reading Course 01.3

Individual Reading Course 01.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Given solely at the discretion of the instructor.

GERM 401Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Advanced research course on special topic of German literature and culture.

GERM 580Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Topics in eighteenth-century German literature.

Honors in German Studies

German Studies Honours (B.A.) (60 credits)

Offered by: Languages,Literatures,Cultures (Faculty of Arts)
Degree: Bachelor of Arts
Program credit weight: 60

Program Description

The Honours in German Studies provides students with a rigorous and broad inquiry into the major features that have defined German cultural life since the eighteenth century. Knowledge of the German language is a core component of the Honours program and all courses towards Honours will be taught in German. Courses will include the study of major works of literature, philosophy, film, theory, and visual art that have made a defining impact on German and European culture. Students will acquire the skills of critical reading and viewing that allow them to interpret complex works of art and evaluate their social and cultural significance.

Note: Beginners' and intermediate language levels are offered either as a one-term intensive course or a two-term spanned course. Students choose which version of the level they prefer.

Admission to the Honours program requires departmental approval. Students may begin this program in their first year. Honours students must maintain a GPA of 3.30 in their program courses, and, according to Faculty regulations, a minimum CGPA of 3.00 in general.

Honours students, according to Faculty regulations, also must complete at least a minor concentration (18 credits) in another academic unit.

Degree Requirements — B.A. students

To be eligible for a B.A. degree, a student must fulfil all Faculty and program requirements as indicated in .

We recommend that studentsÌýconsult an Arts OASIS advisorÌýfor degree planning.

Note: For information about Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 course offerings, please check back on May 8, 2025. Until then, the "Terms offered" field will appear blank for most courses while the class schedule is being finalized.

Required Courses (6 credits)

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 575Honours Thesis.6

Honours Thesis.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Research and completion of the Honours thesis on an approved subject.

Complementary Courses (54 credits)

54 credits of complementary courses taken in German selected with the following specifications:

6 credits must be in pre-20th century literature and culture.

Students can take a maximum of 6 credits of LLCU courses and only with prior approval.

A maximum of 9 credits in GERM courses offered in English and only with prior approval.

3 credits at the 400-level.

Language Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 200German Language, Intensive Beginners.6

German Language, Intensive Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

An intensive language course designed to develop communicative skills; covers the first level (GERM 202D1/GERM 202D2) in one term. Required for program students.

GERM 202German Language, Beginners'.6

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first-level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D1German Language, Beginners'.3

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D1German Language, Beginners'.3

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 300German Language Intensive Intermediate.6

German Language Intensive Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Continuation of GERM 200; covers the second level (GERM 307D1/GERM 307D2) in one term.

GERM 307German Language - Intermediate.6

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D1German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D2German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 307D1 for course description.

GERM 325German Language - Intensive Advanced.6

German Language - Intensive Advanced.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims at developing post-intermediate proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on oral and written expression. Special attention is given to word formation and to the proper choice of grammatical structures, vocabulary, and phraseology.

List of Complementary Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 259Introduction to German Literature 1.3

Introduction to German Literature 1.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the Middle Ages to the Age of Goethe, including the Nibelungenlied, Faust, classical tragedy, and the rise of the novel.

GERM 260Introduction to German Literature 2.3

Introduction to German Literature 2.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the 19th century to the present.

GERM 331Germany after Reunification. 13

Germany after Reunification.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

The events which led to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the changing cultural, social, political and economic landscape of the 'New Germany'. Highlighting issues of cultural and social politics, texts discussed include historical, literary and film material.

GERM 332Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of specific topics as they relate to eighteenth-century German literature and culture.

GERM 335Science and Literature.3

Science and Literature.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the complex exchanges between science and literature across German literature and culture.

GERM 336German Language, Media and Culture. 13

German Language, Media and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to German culture through literary and non-literary texts, film, multimedia, commercials, painting and photography. By learning how to read these cultural productions, students will refine their communication skills, expand reading strategies, build vocabulary, and review selective grammatical structures.

GERM 337Literature and Revolution.3

Literature and Revolution.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Seminar on the relationship between literature and political, social and aesthetic change.

GERM 340Romanticism.3

Romanticism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines one of the pivotal moments of cultural transition in German literary history.

GERM 344Realism.3

Realism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

What are the different ways social life has been represented in German literature and culture?

GERM 348Nature and Ecopoetics.3

Nature and Ecopoetics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines how German literature and culture engage with and construct an understanding of nature and the environment

GERM 350Modernism and the Avant-Garde.3

Modernism and the Avant-Garde.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will focus on the variety of German modernisms and their schools of thought.

GERM 351Berlin.3

Berlin.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of the quintessential modern centers within Germanic speaking Europe.

GERM 355Nietzsche and Wagner.3

Nietzsche and Wagner.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the relationship between the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the composer Richard Wagner. It explores their intellectual kinship, their view of art, music, and philosophy in the context of Nietzsche's critique of modernity and decadence and analyzes the Third Reich's and Hollywood's appropriation of Nietzsche and Wagner.

GERM 357German Culture in European Context.3

German Culture in European Context.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comparative examination of selected moments in German literary, artistic and cultural history in relation to broader European movements; focus on influences, exchanges and dialogues across national boundaries.

GERM 358Franz Kafka.3

Franz Kafka.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will look at the works on Franz Kafka, a "classic" modernist author, in three characteristic genres: the story, the novel, and the short prose piece. A selection of Kafka's letters and diary entries as well as critical approaches to his work will also be studied.

GERM 360German Drama.3

German Drama.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will survey the theatrical tradition within German.

GERM 36220th Century Literature Topics.3

20th Century Literature Topics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to selected topics and genres in twentieth century literature and culture.

GERM 364Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.3

Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

In connection with notions of identity, nationhood, political change, and cultural difference, this course investigates concepts and issues of gender in contemporary German Society. The readings include critical essays and literary texts by writers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, politicians, and political activists.

GERM 365Modern Short Fiction.3

Modern Short Fiction.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A study of short prose forms in German throughout history.

GERM 366Lyric Poetry.3

Lyric Poetry.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the study of German Poetry from the Middle Ages to the present.

GERM 368Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.3

Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of one of the formative periods of modern European culture; examination of literature, art, thought, culture and politics in Vienna around 1900.

GERM 369The German Novel.3

The German Novel.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Sustained engagement with the major texts of the German novel from Grimmelshausen to the present.

GERM 371German Cinema.3

German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Survey of German cinema from its inception to the present

GERM 372Topics in German Cinema.3

Topics in German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course investigates a special topic related to the history of German cinema.

GERM 375German Media Studies.3

German Media Studies.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the history of German media studies.

GERM 379German Visual Culture.3

German Visual Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course engages with the different strands of German visual culture across media.

GERM 381Topics in German Thought.3

Topics in German Thought.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Special topics on German intellectual history and its contributions to major philosophical traditions.

GERM 385Critical Theory.3

Critical Theory.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Engagement with the history of critique from Kant to Adorno.

GERM 388Post-Wall Culture.3

Post-Wall Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Upper level seminar exploring topics in German culture after unification.

GERM 390Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of pressing contemporary themes within German literature.

GERM 397Individual Reading Course 01.3

Individual Reading Course 01.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Given solely at the discretion of the instructor.

GERM 401Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Advanced research course on special topic of German literature and culture.

GERM 580Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Topics in eighteenth-century German literature.

1

NOTE: Students can take either ³Ò·¡¸é²ÑÌý331 Germany after Reunification. or ³Ò·¡¸é²ÑÌý336 German Language, Media and Culture. but not both.

Joint Honours Program-German Studies Component (36 credits)

German Studies Joint Honours Component (B.A.) (36 credits)

Offered by: Languages,Literatures,Cultures (Faculty of Arts)
Degree: Bachelor of Arts; Bachelor of Arts and Science
Program credit weight: 36

Program Description

The Joint Honours – German Studies Component provides students with a rigorous and broad inquiry into the major features that have defined German cultural life since the eighteenth century. Knowledge of the German language is a core component of the Joint Honours Component and normally courses towards the Joint Honours Component will be taught in German. Courses will include the study of major works of literature, philosophy, film, theory, and visual art that have made a defining impact on German and European culture. Students will acquire the skills of critical reading and viewing that allow them to interpret complex works of art and evaluate their social and cultural significance.

Note: Beginners' and intermediate language levels are offered either as a one-term intensive course or a two-term spanned course. Students choose which version of the level they prefer.

Joint Honours students should consult an adviser in each department to discuss their course selection and their interdisciplinary research project (if applicable).

Admission to the Joint Honours program requires departmental approval. Joint Honours students must maintain a GPA of 3.30 in their program courses, and, according to Faculty regulations, a minimum CGPA of 3.00 in general.

Degree Requirements — B.A. students

To be eligible for a B.A. degree, a student must fulfil all Faculty and program requirements as indicated in .

We recommend that studentsÌýconsult an Arts OASIS advisorÌýfor degree planning.

Note: For information about Fall 2025 and Winter 2026 course offerings, please check back on May 8, 2025. Until then, the "Terms offered" field will appear blank for most courses while the class schedule is being finalized.

Required Course (3 credits)

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 570Joint Honours Thesis.3

Joint Honours Thesis.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Research and completion of the Joint Honours thesis on an approved subject.

Complementary Courses (33 credits)

33 credits of complementary courses selected with the following specifications:

Students can elect to take either the German language stream in which most courses must be taught in German or the translation stream in which courses can be taught in either German or English.

6 credits must be in pre-20th Century literature and culture.

Students of the German language stream can take a maximum of 9 credits of LLCU courses or German Studies courses taught in English, only with prior approval.

3 credits at the 400 level (only applies to German language stream).

Language Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 200German Language, Intensive Beginners.6

German Language, Intensive Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

An intensive language course designed to develop communicative skills; covers the first level (GERM 202D1/GERM 202D2) in one term. Required for program students.

GERM 202German Language, Beginners'.6

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first-level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D1German Language, Beginners'.3

German Language, Beginners'.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comprehensive first level course designed to develop communicative skills.

GERM 202D2German Language, Beginners.3

German Language, Beginners.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 202D1 for course description.

GERM 300German Language Intensive Intermediate.6

German Language Intensive Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Continuation of GERM 200; covers the second level (GERM 307D1/GERM 307D2) in one term.

GERM 307German Language - Intermediate.6

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D1German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Review of grammar, further development of basic skills; literary and cultural readings.

GERM 307D2German Language - Intermediate.3

German Language - Intermediate.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

See GERM 307D1 for course description.

GERM 325German Language - Intensive Advanced.6

German Language - Intensive Advanced.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course aims at developing post-intermediate proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills, with emphasis on oral and written expression. Special attention is given to word formation and to the proper choice of grammatical structures, vocabulary, and phraseology.

Literature and Culture Courses

Expand allContract all Course List
Course Title Credits
GERM 259Introduction to German Literature 1.3

Introduction to German Literature 1.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the Middle Ages to the Age of Goethe, including the Nibelungenlied, Faust, classical tragedy, and the rise of the novel.

GERM 260Introduction to German Literature 2.3

Introduction to German Literature 2.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the major authors, genres, and topics of German literature from the 19th century to the present.

GERM 331Germany after Reunification. 13

Germany after Reunification.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

The events which led to the fall of the Berlin Wall, the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the changing cultural, social, political and economic landscape of the 'New Germany'. Highlighting issues of cultural and social politics, texts discussed include historical, literary and film material.

GERM 332Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in Eighteenth-Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of specific topics as they relate to eighteenth-century German literature and culture.

GERM 336German Language, Media and Culture. 13

German Language, Media and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to German culture through literary and non-literary texts, film, multimedia, commercials, painting and photography. By learning how to read these cultural productions, students will refine their communication skills, expand reading strategies, build vocabulary, and review selective grammatical structures.

GERM 337Literature and Revolution.3

Literature and Revolution.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Seminar on the relationship between literature and political, social and aesthetic change.

GERM 340Romanticism.3

Romanticism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines one of the pivotal moments of cultural transition in German literary history.

GERM 344Realism.3

Realism.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

What are the different ways social life has been represented in German literature and culture?

GERM 348Nature and Ecopoetics.3

Nature and Ecopoetics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines how German literature and culture engage with and construct an understanding of nature and the environment

GERM 350Modernism and the Avant-Garde.3

Modernism and the Avant-Garde.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will focus on the variety of German modernisms and their schools of thought.

GERM 351Berlin.3

Berlin.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of the quintessential modern centers within Germanic speaking Europe.

GERM 355Nietzsche and Wagner.3

Nietzsche and Wagner.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course examines the relationship between the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche and the composer Richard Wagner. It explores their intellectual kinship, their view of art, music, and philosophy in the context of Nietzsche's critique of modernity and decadence and analyzes the Third Reich's and Hollywood's appropriation of Nietzsche and Wagner.

GERM 357German Culture in European Context.3

German Culture in European Context.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A comparative examination of selected moments in German literary, artistic and cultural history in relation to broader European movements; focus on influences, exchanges and dialogues across national boundaries.

GERM 358Franz Kafka.3

Franz Kafka.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will look at the works on Franz Kafka, a "classic" modernist author, in three characteristic genres: the story, the novel, and the short prose piece. A selection of Kafka's letters and diary entries as well as critical approaches to his work will also be studied.

GERM 360German Drama.3

German Drama.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course will survey the theatrical tradition within German.

GERM 36220th Century Literature Topics.3

20th Century Literature Topics.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to selected topics and genres in twentieth century literature and culture.

GERM 364Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.3

Gender and Society in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

In connection with notions of identity, nationhood, political change, and cultural difference, this course investigates concepts and issues of gender in contemporary German Society. The readings include critical essays and literary texts by writers, scholars, philosophers, journalists, politicians, and political activists.

GERM 365Modern Short Fiction.3

Modern Short Fiction.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

A study of short prose forms in German throughout history.

GERM 366Lyric Poetry.3

Lyric Poetry.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the study of German Poetry from the Middle Ages to the present.

GERM 368Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.3

Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Interdisciplinary study of one of the formative periods of modern European culture; examination of literature, art, thought, culture and politics in Vienna around 1900.

GERM 369The German Novel.3

The German Novel.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Sustained engagement with the major texts of the German novel from Grimmelshausen to the present.

GERM 371German Cinema.3

German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Survey of German cinema from its inception to the present

GERM 372Topics in German Cinema.3

Topics in German Cinema.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course investigates a special topic related to the history of German cinema.

GERM 375German Media Studies.3

German Media Studies.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Introduction to the history of German media studies.

GERM 379German Visual Culture.3

German Visual Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

This course engages with the different strands of German visual culture across media.

GERM 381Topics in German Thought.3

Topics in German Thought.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Special topics on German intellectual history and its contributions to major philosophical traditions.

GERM 385Critical Theory.3

Critical Theory.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Engagement with the history of critique from Kant to Adorno.

GERM 388Post-Wall Culture.3

Post-Wall Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Upper level seminar exploring topics in German culture after unification.

GERM 390Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in 21st Century German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Study of pressing contemporary themes within German literature.

GERM 397Individual Reading Course 01.3

Individual Reading Course 01.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Given solely at the discretion of the instructor.

GERM 401Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Advanced Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Advanced research course on special topic of German literature and culture.

GERM 580Topics in German Literature and Culture.3

Topics in German Literature and Culture.

Terms offered: this course is not currently offered.

Topics in eighteenth-century German literature.

1

NOTE: Students can take either ³Ò·¡¸é²ÑÌý331 Germany after Reunification. or ³Ò·¡¸é²ÑÌý336 German Language, Media and Culture. but not both.

Additional Information

German Language Courses

For information regarding placement tests, please contact the German Studies Language Program Director, Dr.Ìýsun-young.kim2 [at] mcgill.ca (Sun-Young Kim)

  • Placement Tests:ÌýIf you have any questions regarding placement tests for German language classes,Ìýplease contact the German language program director,Ìýsun-young.kim2 [at] mcgill.ca (Dr. Sun-Young Kim).
  • Beginner Classes:ÌýIf you do not have any prior knowledge of German, you can enroll in beginner German classes, provided there is space.
  • Intermediate Classes:ÌýIf you have taken 3-4 semesters of German at a CEGEP, you may register for GERM 307 D1+D2 (Intermediate German) or GERM 300 (Intensive Intermediate German).
  • Advanced Classes:ÌýIf you have already obtained a B2 or C1 level before coming to ɬÀï·¬, you have fulfilled the requirements for a German literature course.
  • Graduate Students:ÌýIf you are a graduate student who wishes to take a German language class, please contact sabrina.coronadohernandez [at] mcgill.ca (Ms. Sabrina Coronado Hernandez), our Administrative Student Affairs Coordinator, about the necessary steps.

Ìý

Study and Work in Germany

Useful links:

  • DAAD Montreal
  • Information on Working, Training and Studying in Germany, the German Embassy and Consulates Canada:Ìý
  • Research Opportunities:Ìý

  • To explore our ɬÀï·¬ exchange partners in Germany, please visit ɬÀï·¬ Abroad:Ìý
    /mcgillabroad/go-abroad/steps/destinations

Audit Sheets

Audit sheets will be updated here soon.

Program Advisors

Undergraduate Program Advisor

Prof. Tove Holmes
680ÌýSherbrooke West, Room 473
Montreal, QC ÌýH3A 2M7
tove.holmes [at] mcgill.ca

Office hours: by appointment

Language Programs Advisor

Dr. Sun-Young Kim
680ÌýSherbrooke West, Room 475
Montreal, QC ÌýH3A 2M7
sun-young.kim2 [at] mcgill.ca

Office hours: M 10:30-11:30 a.m.; Th. 4:00-5:00 p.m.; or by appointment

Student Association

The GSA, the German Studies Association at ɬÀï·¬ represents students enrolled in major, minor, honours and joint-honours undergraduate degrees and programs in the German Studies Programs at ɬÀï·¬. Throughout the year, they organize different events and activities to promote exchanges among students of the Programs, opportunities related to Germany, and networking among students and professors.

You can learn more about GSA and their activities in their page, their account or by email:Ìýgsamcgill [at] gmail.com

GSA is also responsiblefor the edition of Vielfalt, an undergraduate journal showcasing undergraduate work related to German Studies at ɬÀï·¬. Read the latest editions of .


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