PORT 103
PORT 103 - Intensive Elementary Portuguese

Introduction to listening, speaking, reading, and writing in Portuguese. Authentic cultural readings, art, music, and films from Angola, Brazil, Cabo Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Portugal, São Tomé and Príncipe and East Timor will be included. The course covers the full-year elementary language curriculum in one semester.

Units: 1.25

Max Enrollment: 14

Prerequisites: None.

Typical Periods Offered: Fall

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Fall

Notes:

PORT 203
PORT 203 - Intensive Intermediate Portuguese

Review and expansion of all language skills and continued study of Lusophone art, music, film, and literature. Emphasis on oral and written expression and critical analysis. The course covers the full-year intermediate language curriculum in one semester.

Units: 1.25

Max Enrollment: 14

Prerequisites: PORT 103 or permission of the instructor.

Distribution Requirements: LL - Language and Literature

Typical Periods Offered: Spring

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Spring

Notes:

PORT 204
PORT 204 - Conversational Portuguese

This course focuses on developing fluency and confidence in spoken Portuguese. It is designed to advance oral proficiency through practice in authentic communicative contexts. Conducted in Portuguese, the course emphasizes listening comprehension, spontaneous speech, and the accurate use of grammatical structures in conversation. Students will engage with contemporary cultural material, including essays, short stories, films, podcasts, and journalistic sources to stimulate discussion and critical reflection.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 14

Prerequisites: Open to students who have completed PORT 203 or equivalent (NEWL 5), heritage speakers or by permission of the instructor.

Distribution Requirements: LL - Language and Literature

Typical Periods Offered: Fall

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Fall

Notes:

PORT 241
PORT 241 - Portuguese Language Around the World

Practice in oral and written Portuguese at the advanced level. Serves as a transition between language study and cultural studies through the examination of Lusophone cultural and artistic production. Designed to enhance communicative competence, this course will include a review of advanced grammatical structures within cultural contexts of the Lusophone world. Class discussions focus on the readings and films, as well as current events from around the Portuguese-speaking world. Oral interactions and critical writing will be stressed. All instructional materials provided by the instructor.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 14

Prerequisites:

PORT 250 - Research or Individual Study

Topics will vary.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 15

Prerequisites:

Typical Periods Offered: Spring; Fall

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Fall; Spring

Notes:

PORT 250H
PORT 250H - Research or Individual Study

Research or Individual Study.
Topics, assessment, and reading will vary.

Units: 0.5

Max Enrollment: 15

Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.

Typical Periods Offered: Fall and Spring

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Spring; Fall

Notes:

PORT 256
AFR 256/ CPLT 256/ PORT 256 - The Portuguese-Speaking World (Eng)

This course is conducted in English and will introduce students to the cultures of the Portuguese-speaking world through selected films, music and readings. In this interdisciplinary course, we will explore how filmmakers, musicians and writers respond to social and political changes in Angola, Brazil, Cabo Verde, Mozambique and Portugal. Topics covered include colonialism; postcolonialism; wars of independence in Africa; Brazil’s military dictatorship; Portugal´s New State dictatorship; evolving national identities; and representations of trauma and memory. Readings are in English and films have subtitles.

No textbook purchase needed.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 14

Crosslisted Courses: AFR 256,CPLT 256

Prerequisites: None

Distribution Requirements: ARS - Visual Arts, Music, Theater, Film and Video; LL - Language and Literature

Typical Periods Offered: Spring

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Spring

Notes:

PORT 266
PORT 266/ SPAN 266 - Early Modern Iberian Lit & Culture

How did authors find ways to think about the self in the Iberian Peninsula? How do their lives and works relate to the transformation of Spanish and Portuguese into global languages? This course constitutes an introduction to the literary and cultural production of Spain and Portugal from 1492 to 1681. We will discuss why the works of this period are considered "classics" and have an enduring impact in the Hispanic world. Analysis of key texts will be accompanied by samples of painting and music. Topics include: the importance of concepts such as love and honor in the private and public spheres, the role of ethnic identities and political processes in the representation of the Iberian modern subject, women writers, and self-representation through writing.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 14

Crosslisted Courses: PORT 266

Prerequisites: Open to students who have completed SPAN 241 or equivalent (AP 5) or permission of the instructor.

Distribution Requirements: LL - Language and Literature

Typical Periods Offered: Fall

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Spring

Notes:

PORT 306
PORT 306/ SPAN 306 - Sem: Iberian Lit and Maritime Expansion

This course studies how the literature of sixteenth and seventeenth century Spain and Portugal engages with the sea. We will read travel and shipwreck narratives, short novels, lyric and epic poetry and see samples of visual culture in order to understand the artistic and historical importance of the sea at a time when both Iberian countries became global powers. We will address how travel narratives and prose fiction depict inhabitants from other continents, how poetry both celebrates and critiques navigation as a worthy endeavor, how maritime expeditions facilitate and problematize encounters with humans from different religions and social groups, and why exile and love poetry allude to sea-faring and swimming to express amorous feelings. Works by, among others, Cervantes, María de Zayas, or Luis de Camões, will therefore illustrate the long-term ethical, environmental, and artistic implications of traveling by sea as both a historical and cultural practice.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 10

Crosslisted Courses: PORT 30 6

Prerequisites:

PORT 310/ SPAN 310 - Sem: Foreign Affairs- Spain & Portugal

This course explores how early modern Spanish and Portuguese literatures depict peoples and places perceived as foreign or other in relation to Spain and Portugal’s role as world powers in sixteenth and seventeenth century Europe. Places like Italy and England or social groups such as Spain's moriscos appear in Golden Age literature in complex, often surprising ways. We will analyze the historical and cultural processes that inform such representations and discuss how major works create meaning out of ethnic and cultural differences. Novels by Cervantes and María Zayas, plays by Calderón de la Barca, and poetry by Garcilaso and Camões will be discussed.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 10

Crosslisted Courses: PORT 310

Prerequisites:

MUS 314/ PORT 314 - Brazilian Music

From the dawn of the 20th century, Brazil has promoted itself to the world as a particularly musical country. In addition to samba, the country is the birthplace of many well-loved genres including choro, bossa nova, and funk carioca. Brazilian popular song is considered by many to be a literary genre where songwriters such as Vinicius de Morais and Arnaldo Antunes describe themselves as poets and their lyrics are major topics of study by scholars of Portuguese literature. In this course, we will uncover the historical and cultural origins of many of the major musical developments in Brazil and explore how they express polemics around citizenship, social activism, and cosmopolitanism. Students familiar with Portuguese will have the option of additional, focused study of Portuguese lyrics and will be encouraged to compose their writing assignments in Portuguese.

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 15

Crosslisted Courses: PORT 314

Prerequisites: MUS 100, PORT 103, or permission of the instructor. Students with prior experience with World Music, Portuguese, or Latin American Studies courses are especially encouraged to register.

Distribution Requirements: ARS - Visual Arts, Music, Theater, Film and Video

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Fall

Notes:

PORT 350
PORT 350 - Research or Individual Study

Units: 1

Max Enrollment: 4

Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor.

Typical Periods Offered: Fall and Spring

Semesters Offered this Academic Year: Spring

Notes: