German, Russian, and Asian Languages and Literature
Last updated: August 15, 2024 at 11:12 AM
Programs of Study
- Asian American Pacific Islander Studies
- Chinese
- East Asian Studies (major/minor)
- European Cultural Studies (major)
- German Studies (major/minor)
- Japanese
- Korean
- Russian Studies (major/minor)
- South Asian Studies (minor)
Faculty
Robin Feuer Miller, Chair of the Department of German, Russian and Asian Languages and Literature
Dostoevsky and Tolstoy. Nineteenth-century Russian literature and comparative literature. The novel. Reader-response criticism.
Kathrin Breuer, Undergraduate Advising Head for German Studies and Director of the German Language Program
German language and literature. German literature in its South American reception.
Stephen Dowden, Chair and Undergraduate Advising Head for the European Cultural Studies Program
German modernism. Romanticism. The Novel: Kafka, Bernhard, Thomas Mann, Broch, Musil, Goethe. Austrian literature.
Irina Dubinina, Director of the Russian Language Program
Bilingualism. Russian heritage speakers. Teaching language through culture/film/theater. Second-language acquisition in Russian. First-language attrition.
Yu Feng, Director of the Chinese Language Program and Director of Graduate Studies for the Master of Arts Program in Teaching Chinese
Instruction of modern Chinese as a foreign language. Chinese pedagogy. Classical Chinese language. Traditional Chinese and oriental philosophy (Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism). Comparative ideas, and Chinese cultural heritage as a whole.
Matthew Fraleigh, Chair and Undergraduate Advising Head of the Comparative Literature and Culture Program and Co-chair and Undergraduate Advising Head of the Program in East Asian Studies
Classical and modern Japanese literature and language. Cultural and literary exchange between China and Japan. Literature and travel.
Hisae Fujiwara, Director and Undergraduate Advising Head for the Japanese Language Program
Vocabulary acquisition in Japanese as a foreign language. Kanji acquisition for students with alphabet-language backgrounds. Using strategies for reading Japanese as a foreign language.
Eun-Jo Lee
Korean language.
Xiwen Lu, Undergraduate Advising Head for the Chinese Language Program
Teaching Chinese as a second language. Computer-based and Internet-based teaching method. Teaching Chinese at secondary level.
Yukimi Nakano
Japanese Language. Second language acquisition (English as a second language and Japanese as a foreign language). Japanese literature (seventeenth-century Haikai and work of Matsuo Basho).
David Powelstock, Undergraduate Advising Head for Russian Studies
Nineteenth- and twentieth-century Russian literature. Romanticism. Modernism. Czech literature. Poetry. Translation. Literary theory.
Harleen Singh
South Asian studies. Comparative literature. Postcolonial theory and studies.
Sabine von Mering, Director of the Center for German and European Studies
Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century German literature. German women writers. Feminist theory. Language pedagogy. Drama.
Pu Wang
Modern Chinese literature and culture in comparative frameworks. Critical theory and translation studies. Cultural Marxism. Aesthetic modernity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Intellectual history of China. Comparative poetics.
Jian Wei
Chinese language. Computer-based teaching method. Teaching Chinese at beginning level and advanced level. Advanced conversational Chinese.
Affiliated Faculty (contributing to the curriculum, advising and administration of the department or program)
ChaeRan Freeze (Near Eastern and Judaic Studies)
Gregory Freeze (History)
Eugene Sheppard (Near Eastern and Judaic Studies)
Govind Sreenivasan (History)
Aida Yuen Wong (Fine Arts)
Bernard Yack (Politics)