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Canada 
Associate Professor: McCormick (Psychology) and Ms. D'Angelo (French) 
During fall semester 1999 Bates students, including entering first-year students, can study
language, culture, and identity in Montréal. 
Montréal, the second-largest French-speaking city in the world, celebrated its 350th anniversary in
1992. In addition to its rich French cultural heritage, Montréal is a multicultural mosaic, home to
immigrants from more than eighty countries. The program highlights the history, politics, and
culture of the city of Montréal and the province of Québec. An important focus of the courses is the
struggle to maintain the French heritage and identity in Québec and the tensions between Québec
and the other Canadian provinces. 
Between September and December, students live with local host families. The first two weeks of
the program feature a series of lectures by Montréal scholars on the history and politics of the
province of Québec. The lectures are supplemented with trips to relevant local historic and cultural
sites. In October students travel to Québec City, and in November, to Ottawa. 
Courses 
001. The Psychology of Bilingualism. The topic of bilingualism is approached from many levels,
from the neurological to the sociopolitical, using, where possible, examples drawn from Québec
and the rest of Canada. Questions raised include: What are the cognitive advantages linked to
bilingual development? What is the relevance of the sociocultural context for the development of
bilingualism? How is bilingualism related to in-group favoritism and identity? Open to first-year
students. C. McCormick. 
002. Québec Literature and Identity. Québec's Franco and Anglo novelists, playwrights, and poets
are read to explore the Québécois identity and the contribution of Québec's authors to literature.
Authors may include Michel Tremblay, Anne Hébert, Mordecai Richler, Hugh MacLennan,
Gabrielle Roy, and Roch Carrier. All texts are read in English. Open to first-year students. L.
D'Angelo. 
003. Intensive French I. Open to first-year students. Staff. 
004. Intensive French II. Open to first-year students. Staff. 
 
Croatia 
Professor Jones (History) and Associate Professor Browne (Russian) 
During fall semester 1999 Bates students, including entering first-year students, study history,
language, and culture in Croatia. No prior experience with Croatian language is required. 
Contemporary Croatia and its neighbors are a historical laboratory where a number of processes
shaping world history are vividly and obviously at work. How modern Croatia negotiates the
multiple layers of its tumultuous history and addresses its place in Europe and the world is still
very much an experiment in progress. The program concentrates on five key themes: empire,
ideology, ethnicity, migration, and identity. 
The program begins in mid-August with two weeks of intensive Croatian language study in the
Baroque town of Varazdin, an ancient Pannonian city near the Croat-Slovene border. After a brief
visit to Zagreb, capital of the Republic of Croatia, students travel to Zadar on the Adriatic coast for
the ferry ride to Split. In September students begin the full academic program in central Dalmatia.
Trips to Istria, Venice, Dubrovnik, and the island of Hvar take place in September. October
excursions are scheduled to the cities of Sarajevo and Mostar in Bosnia-Hercegovina, and in
November to Montenegro. In addition to program-related travel, students have several weekends
and sufficient time at the end of the program for independent travel in Split or the nearby islands. 
Courses 
001. Medieval Croatia. The program is situated in the Adriatic port of Split, one of the political
centers of the Late Roman world. Students trace the history of this region and its peoples from late
antiquity to the Ottoman conquest (200-1500 C.E.). For Romans, Byzantines, Slavs, Hungarians,
Venetians, and Turks, Croatia was a vital frontier, the setting for the clash and assimilation of
Eastern and Western cultures. Open to first-year students. D. Browne, M. Jones. 
002. Modern Croatia. The Republic of Croatia is one of the world's newest independent countries.
The creation of the country's identity involves a complex and at times painful conversation with the
region's past. In the last 200 years alone Napoleon, the Habsburgs, fascist Italy, Nazi Germany,
and Tito's communist partisans sought to shape the political landscape of the Dalmatian coast and
its hinterland, and all left their mark on the Croatian collective psyche. Open to first-year students.
D. Browne, M. Jones. 
003. Intensive Croatian I. All participants study Croatian, a Slavic language that uses an alphabet
similar to that in Western European languages. Students with particular interest in the region may
petition the program faculty to study Croatian intensively for two course credits (003 and 004).
Open to first-year students. Staff. 
004. Intensive Foreign Language II. Each student takes another language based on individual
preferences and appropriateness to the student's field of study; Latin, German, and French are
offered. Alternatively, a student may take a second course in Croatian. Open to first-year students.
Staff. 
 
 
 
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