Courses
Spring 2008
CAN160S.01 (new special topics course in Canadian Studies)
"Staging Gender and Sexuality in Francophone Canadian Theatre"
TTH 10:05 - 11:20 AM
CARR 106
CROSSLISTED WITH:
FRENCH: 191S.01
LITERATURE: 125S.01
SEXUALITY STUDIES: 120S.03
THEATER STUDIES: 129S
WOMEN STUDIES 150S.08
Instructor: Jane M. Moss
CAN170S.01 (new special topics course in Québec Studies)
"The History of French Canada Through Literature and Film"
CARR 242
TTH 1:15 - 2:30 PM
CROSSLISTED WITH:
FRENCH: 191S.02
HISTORY: 106S.05
LITERATURE: 161S.01
Instructor: Jane M. Moss
PUBPOL 196S.15 Canadian-American Relations
CROSSLISTED WITH: PS199BS.05
WF: 10:05-11:20 AM
FRANKLIN CENTER 016A/B
Instructor: Gilbert Gagné, Ph.D.
Canadian Fulbright Visiting Chair
this course seeks to describe the main aspects of the relations between Canada and the United States. We will concentrate on the main determinants of the bilateral relationship, analyzed around five major themes: the political relations, the economic and trade relations, the
cultural relations, the defense and security relations, and the environmental relations. Counts toward elective credit for Canadian Studies.CAN103S.01 Geography of Canada
TTH 11:40-12:55 PM
West Duke 202
Instructor: Dietlinde WittmannSpring 2007
CAN103S Geography of Canada
Tu TH 1:15 - 2:30 PM
West Duke 100
Instructor: Dietlinde WittmannFall 2006
FR 132.01 French in the New World
TU TH 1:15 PM - 2:30 PM
Languages 211
Professor: Jean-Jacques Thomas, romance studiesFR 169
M W 4:25 PM - 5:40 PM
SOC SCI 120
Professor: Paol Keineg, romance studiesHST 103.10
Environmental History of North America
WF 1:15-2:30 PM
Instructor: Mike Crotty
SyllabusSpring 2006
CAN103S Geography of Canada
Taught by: Dietlinde Wittmann
FR135 From New France to Québec
Taught by: Paol Keineg, Ph.D. (Romance Studies)HST183S Canada from the French Settlement
Taught by: John Herd Thompson, History
PUBPOL 196S.70 US, Canada & North American Integration
Crosslisted with: POLISCI 199BS.70 & Canadian Studies
TH 2:50-5:20
Description:
This course examines the effects and implications of North American economic integration on relations between the United States and Canada, particularly institutional pressures for and constraints on policy coordination and harmonization. It is organized as a seminar course, with the instructor leading discussions based on readings and student presentations. It will address the challenges of managing public policy issues in ways that balance the management of varied domestic political, trans-national and sometimes trans-cultural interest. The course examines contemporary theories of the interaction between domestic politics and international relations in a context of decentralized policy arrangements. It considers three major dimensions of U.S. Canada relations (political-strategic, trade-commercial, and cultural-psychological). Finally, it explores the implications of North American economic integration for domestic and cross-border relations in three major policy fields.
Taught by: Geoffrey Hale, Ph.D., Visiting Fulbright Chair in Canadian Studies
Questions? Email: geoffrey.hale@uleth.caFall 2005
FR141S Introduction Au Cinema Québecois
Taught by: Vincent Desroches, Visiting Professor in Romance StudiesSpring 2005
CAN 098
INTRODUCTION TO CANADA
MW 11:40 am - 12:55 pm
Room: Sanford 03
Taught by: Dr. Eunice Sahle, Visiting Professor, African & African American Studies, including International Studies at UNC-CH. A Kenyan by birth, she is a Canadian citizen. Dr. Sahle has taught at Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario.
Crosslisted with: HST 098, PS 098, SOC 098, & COMPARATIVE AREA STUDIES
Questions? Email: Eunice@email.unc.edu CAN 103S.01
GEOGRAPHY OF CANADA
TTH 1:15 - 2:30 PM
Room: Art Museum 105
Taught by: Dr. Dietlinde Wittmann, long time sessional instructor for Canadian Studies.
Questions? Email: wittmannd@earthlink.net or phone: 493-2805*NAS 150S.01
FRENCH-CANADIAN SOCIETY AND LITERATURE
TTH 10:05 am - 11:20 am
Room: Art Museum 110
Taught by: Dr. Jane Moss, Visiting Professor. Dr. Moss is the Robert E. Diamond Professor of Women's Studies and Professor of French at Colby College, in Waterville, Maine. Dr. Moss has tentative plans to eventually relocate to the Piedmont area of N.C.
CROSSLISTED WITH FR 120S.01, LIT 162Z.01 & COMPARATIVE AREA STUDIES
Questions? Email: jmmoss@colby.edu
*This is our special topics number in North American Studies PPS 264S.90
NORTH AMERICAN INTEGRATION
W 2:50-5:20 pm
Room: Sanford 04 TAUGHT BY: Dr. Debora VanNijnatten, Associate Professor of Political Science at Wilfrid Laurier University. Her expertise is on Canadian Environmental policy. Her proposed Fulbright research focuses on the impacts of increased cross-border regional cooperation environmental policies in Canada and the U.S.
Questions? Email: dvannijn@wlu.ca Spring 2004
CAN 103S Geography of Canada
Dietlinde Wittmann, sessional instructor for canadian studies
Canadian Studies HST 119 North American Indian History
Peter Wood, history
HST 183S Canada Since the French Settlement
John H. Thompson, history
NAS 110 Introduction to North America
Dominique Bregent-Heald & Ben Grob-Fittzgibbon, history
Fall 2003
HST 108D U.S. and Canadian Wests
John H. Thompson, history
PS 163S Democracy in North America
Allan Kornberg & Scott Morgenstern, political science
CAN184S Canada and the U.S. in Comparative Perspective
Tom Scotto, political science
Spring 2003
NAS110 Introduction to North America
John H. Thompson, history
History CAN184S United States and Canada in Comparative Perspective
Allan Kornberg, Political Science
PS163S Democracy in North America
Allan Kornberg & Scott Morgenstern, Political ScienceFR142S Literature of French Canada/Quebec
Paol Keineg, Romance StudiesHST119 North American Indian History
Peter Wood, HistoryHST 106S Disasters in North America
Elizabeth Fenn, historyPS 199B-52 Mexican Politics
Elizabeth Zechmeister, Political Science