WGS302 Gender, Race, Migration and Family in Spain (Fall, Spring)

WGS302 Gender, Race, Migration and Family in Spain (Fall, Spring)

This course examines how men’s and women’s lives are shaped by the concept of gender and how it interacts with other identity variables like class, race or religion. It explores the links between gender roles and family relations, and it reflects on the consequences of these interactions in the labor market. It analyzes persisting gender inequalities like the feminization of poverty and gender-based violence. It explains the social structure of the Spanish Family System and the relevance of family networks for social cohesion and stability. It explains the Spanish Labor Market from a gender perspective. The course also explores the migration model in terms of migrants’ population composition and gender-related issues.

This course may also be registered as SOC 302.

Syracuse students: Satisfies IDEA course requirement.

SPA417 The History of Women in Spain (Fall, Spring)

Taught in Spanish. Approaching the history of women in Spain always demands a look into the past: into the Muslim, Jewish and Christian societies of the Middle Ages, and also into the 16th to 18th centuries, when the model of woman and Catholic family was shaped that would endure into the 20th century. But the approach to the history of women in Spain requires also analyzing the hard path to equality — the struggle for the recognition of the rights of Spanish women in the 19th and 20th centuries. One hundred years of work to improve women’s rights, through the Second Spanish Republic and the setbacks of Francoism, concluded in Article 14 of the Constitution of 1978 in which equality was formally established. But this is not the end of the story, and leads us to a great question: Does formal equality mean real equality in the present? We’ll draw a portrait of Spanish women in the 21st century, their roles in jobs, family, education, image, society, religion, etc., in order to provide some answers.

Cross-listed with HST/WGS 417.

Syracuse students: Satisfies IDEA course requirement. 

Pre-req: SPA 202, four semesters of college-level Spanish, or the equivalent

SPA428 Spanish in Context: Oral and Writing Practice (Fall, Spring)

Taught in Spanish. In this course for advanced Spanish language learners, students will sharpen their proficiency in all four skills and engage Spanish culture and society through the reading of texts, analysis of newspaper articles and debates on topical issues, thereby mastering the nuances of Spanish conversation and writing and developing a deeper competency in the language.

Prereq: Any 300-level SPA course taught at Syracuse University, five semesters of college-level Spanish (or the equivalent), or permission of instructor

SPA364 Modern Spanish Art (Fall, Spring)

Taught in Spanish. Spanish art and architecture from the late 18th century to the present. Goya and succeeding movements including Picasso’s cubism, the surrealism of Miró and Dalí, and the modernist architecture of Gaudí. Using Goya as a point of departure, illustrated lectures concentrate on the subsequent Spanish Masters in relation to other Realists, Impressionists and Post-Impressionists in Europe and abroad. Includes visits to the Prado, the Sorolla, the Thyssen-Bornemisza, and the Reina Sofía museums (Madrid), and to galleries and exhibits in Madrid and the surrounding area.

Meets with HOA 464. Enrollment is limited with preference given to fine arts majors.

Pre-req: SPA 201, three semesters of college-level Spanish, or the equivalent

This course has an associated course fee. See the Madrid Course Fees page for more information.

SPA302 Advanced Language Usage (Fall, Spring)

Taught in Spanish. This course provides a general overview of customs in contemporary Spanish culture and how they evolved throughout Spanish history. Our aim is for you to understand Spanish social behavior and ways of thinking to help overcome any culture shock that you may feel while adjusting to life in Spanish society. The class dynamic combines important cultural content with time dedicated to communication activities, including conversation, debates, and role-playing games, requiring active participation from all students. Language practice will be based on current topics, course material, and conversational situations that you may encounter in your daily life in Madrid.

Another of the objectives of the course is to fill grammatical gaps for English-speaking students with an advanced intermediate level in Spanish. We will incorporate idioms and specific vocabulary for everyday situations and current issues to facilitate real-world conversation. During the first part of the course, we will review vocabulary, phonetics, and basic grammatical structures as they come up in the course material and per your requests. The goal is for you to acquire a good level of communicative competence in all language skills, both oral and written.

The class is based on active participation, and course topics are chosen to encourage conversation and debate. Many of the different topics are related to diversity, equity, and inclusion in contemporary Spain. We will also visit places of cultural interest.

Pre-req: Four semesters of college-level Spanish or the equivalent

SOC306 Sexuality in Spain (Fall, Spring)

Today’s sexuality in Spain cannot be understood without taking into account what it used to be just 40 years ago, when many Spaniards were educated under the principles of National Catholicism. Yet in 2005, Spain became the third country in the world to legally recognize same-sex marriage. This course explores important transformations in Spaniards’ concepts of sexuality and gender through readings, film screenings and observing certain urban areas in Madrid.

Cross-listed with QSX/WGS 306.

Syracuse students: Satisfies IDEA course requirement.

SOC300.1 Spanish Popular Culture (Fall, Spring)

How would you define the Spaniards? What does Spanish popular culture look like? These questions might be addressed to the students of Syracuse University Madrid at any time during their stay. By the end of the semester, you should be able to furnish a critical response beyond stereotypes and clichés.

When it comes to grasping unfamiliar cultural singularities in their full complexity, only the critical use of empirically-based information provided by the social sciences, which involves the reflexive assessment of the potentialities, constraints, and limits attached to the multiple research methods and techniques that sociologists and other scientists commonly use, can help prevent the assumption of stereotypical, frequently ethnocentric, over-generalizations. Definitely, Spanish popular culture does not manifest as a coherent and immutable set of beliefs, representations, attitudes, and practices. Rather, it is a polymorphous, diverse, complex, socially stratified changing object. The adjective “popular” suggests its dialectical constitution with the “non-popular,” which is also far from being static. Therefore, answering questions such as “What is Spanish popular culture like?” requires prudence and caution.

During the course, you will examine the transformations of Spanish popular culture within the context of the ongoing modernization processes. Thus, you’ll discuss its interactions and interconnectedness with current economic, social, political, and religious patterns of change. Focusing principally on the transformations that have been taking place since the end of the 20th century will lead us to consider specifically the effects of the cultural globalization processes on Spanish popular culture, as much as its own participation and imbrication in them.

The migration fluxes, tourism, the global circulation of messages, symbols, images, and their accommodation within the Spanish territory stimulates the remaking of local, regional, and national habits, practices, and identities. Sometimes, these processes are concretized through defensive reactions, communitarian closure, and what some historians and anthropologists have called the “invention” of tradition. Other observable trends point to the articulation of native traditions and cultural practices with foreign cultural creations and transnational trends. Such interesting cross-cultural dynamics of hybridism, syncretism, and bricolage will be assessed and discussed during the course. For instance, one example of the articulation of the local and the global will be analyzed in our mandatory off-site activity in the city center of Madrid exploring places, commerces, businesses, interaction spaces, and so on, to comparatively analyze through ethnographic fieldwork two things that look similar but are different. This practice will be an exercise in small groups of two or three for the evaluation. For the final exercise, you will make an autoethnography about your experience living in Madrid or in Spain.

As a result, you will be able to critically evaluate the nuances of stereotypical discourses and easy generalizations about Spanish eating and leisure habits,  lifestyles, and the normal everyday things in Spain that are the basis of  Spanish Pop Culture.

SOC302 Gender, Race, Migration and Family in Spain (Fall, Spring)

This course examines how our lives and public policies are shaped by the concept of gender and how it interacts with other identity variables such as class, race or religion. It explores the links between gender roles and family relations, and it reflects on the consequences of these interactions in the Spanish labor market. It analyzes persistent gender inequalities like the feminization of poverty and gender-based violence. It explains the social structure of the Spanish family system and the relevance of family networks for social cohesion and stability. The course also explores the migration model in terms of migrants’ population composition and gender-related issues.

This course may also be registered as WGS 302.

Syracuse students: Satisfies IDEA course requirement.

REL321 Christians, Jews, and Muslims: Historic Encounters in the Mediterranean (Fall, Spring)

In its more than two-thousand-year history, Spain has been the home of Jews, Christians, and Muslims, who over centuries met, loved, shared and fought within its borders with consequences that affected not just the entire Mediterranean basin, but also the rest of the world. This course intends to examine key “historic encounters” between the three versions of monotheism, with constant reference to the richness of past cultural and religious legacy rooted in the Mediterranean region, from the end of the Roman Empire to the birth of the modern era. Cross-listed with HUM/JSP/MES 321.

QSX306 Sexuality in Spain (Fall, Spring)

Today’s sexuality in Spain cannot be understood without taking into account what it used to be just 40 years ago, when many Spaniards were educated under the principles of National Catholicism. Yet in 2005, Spain became the third country in the world to legally recognize same-sex marriage. This course explores important transformations in Spaniards’ concepts of sexuality and gender through readings, film screenings, and observing certain urban areas in Madrid.

Cross-listed with WGS/SOC 306.

Syracuse students: Satisfies IDEA course requirement.