164 / FIELDS OF INSTRUCTION FRW 6276-The Novel of the Eighteenth Century (3) FRW 6288-Twentieth-Century French Novel (3) FRW 6315-Seventeenth-Century French Drama (3) FRW 6328-Twentieth-Century French Theater (3) FRW 6346-French Poetry of the Renaissance (3) FRW 6355-Modern French Poetry (3) FRW 6415-Early French Medieval Literature (3) FRW 6416-Later French Medieval Literature (3) FRW 6536-The Romantic Period (3) FRW 6556-French Realism and Naturalism (3) FRW 6715-The Philosophic Movement (3) FRW 6755-Sub-Saharan, Maghrebian, and Caribbean Litera- tures in French (3; max: 9) FRW 6805-Introduction to Graduate Study and Research (3) Tools, problems, and methods of literary and linguistic research. FRW 6825-French Critical Theory (3) FRW 6900-Special Study in French Literature (3; max: 9) Selected topic or problem (varied each semester). FRW 6905-Individual Work (1-3; max: 9) Available only by special arrangement with graduate adviser. FRW 6910-Supervised Research (1-5; max: 5) S/U. FRW 6938-Seminar in French Literature (3; max: 15) Intensive research study of an author or topic. FRW 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. FRW 7979-Advanced Research (1-9) Research for doctoral students before admission to candidacy. Designed for students with a master's degree in the field of study or for students who have been accepted for a doctoral program. Not open to students who have been admitted to candidacy. S/U. FRW 7980-Research for Doctoral Dissertation (1-15) S/U. Portuguese POW 6275-The Nineteenth-Century Brazilian Novel (3) POW 6276-The Twentieth-Century Brazilian Novel (3) POW 6385-Brazilian Poetry (3) POW 6386-Brazilian Drama (3) POW 6405-Medieval and Renaissance Portuguese Literature (3) POW 6905-Individual Work (1-3; max: 9) Available only by special arrangement with graduate adviser. POW 6930-Special Study in Brazilian or Portuguese Literature (3) Selected topic or problem (varied each semester). Spanish SPN 6060-Beginning Spanish for Graduate Students I (3) For students with no formal preparation who need a reading knowl- edge. S/U. SPN 6061-Beginning Spanish for Graduate Students II (3) Prereq: SPN 6060 or the equivalent. For students who need proficiency in reading. S/U option. SPN 6315-Advanced Composition and Syntax (3) SPN 6735-Special Study in Spanish Linguistics (3) SPN 6785-Advanced Spanish Phonetics (3) SPN 6845-History of Spanish Language (3) SPN 6855-The Structure of Spanish (3) SPN 6940-Supervised Teaching (1-5; max: 5) S/U. SPN 6943-Internship in College Teaching (2, 4, 6; max: 6) Prereq:graduate standing. Required for students needing practice and direction in college-level teaching. SPW 6209-Colonial Spanish-American Literature (3) SPW 6216-Spanish Prose Fiction of the Golden Age (3) SPW 6237-The Spanish-American Narrative from the Origins to Criollismo (3) SPW 6269-Spanish Novel of the Nineteenth Century (3) SPW 6276-Spanish Post-War Narrative (3) SPW 6285-Contemporary Spanish-American Narrative I (3) SPW 6286-Contemporary Spanish-American Narrative II (3) SPW 6306-Spanish-American Theater (3) SPW 6315-Spanish Drama of the Golden Age (3) SPW 6325-Contemporary Spanish Theater (3) SPW 6337-Spanish Poetry of the Golden Age (3) SPW 6345-Twentieth-Century Spanish Poetry (3) SPW 6356-Spanish-American Poetry from Romanticism to Vanguardism (3) SPW 6357-Contemporary Spanish-American Poetry (3) SPW 6366-The Spanish-American Essay (3) SPW 6400-Old Spanish Literature (3) SPW 6535-Spanish Romanticism (3) SPW 6606-Cervantes (3) SPW 6726-Generation of 1927 to the Present (3) SPW 6729-The Generation of '98 (3) SPW 6806-Introduction to Graduate Study and Research (3) Tools, problems, and methods of literary and linguistic research. SPW 6902-Special Study in Spanish or Spanish-American Lit- erature (3; max: 9) Selected topic or problem (varied each semester). SPW 6905-Individual Work (1-3; max: 9) Available only by special arrangement with graduate adviser. SPW 6910-Supervised Research (1-5; max: 5) S/U. SPW 6971-Research for Master's Thesis (1-15) S/U. SPW 7979-Advanced Research (1-9) Research for doctoral students before admission to candidacy. Designed for students with a master's degree in the field of study or for students who have been accepted for a doctoral program. Not open to students who have been admitted to candidacy. S/U. SPW 7980-Research for Doctoral Dissertation (1-15) S/U. SOCIOLOGY College of Liberal Arts and Sciences GRADUATE FACULTY 1992-93 Chairman: J. H. Scanzoni. Graduate Coordinator: R. L. Akers. Graduate Research Professor: J. R. Feagin; G. F. Streib (Emeritus). Professors: R. L. Akers; F. M. Berardo; L. Beaulieu; L. Beeghley; E. W. Bock; L. Crandall; C. E. Frazier; B. L. Gorman;J. F. Gubrium; A. J. LaGreca; G. R. Lee; T. L. McCoy; M. K. Miller; J. H. Scanzoni; G. A. Soares; J. S. Vandiver (Emeritus); M. White. Associate Professors: D. Berardo; J. C. Henretta; R. Hollinger; L. Lanza-Kaduce; M. L. Radelet; P. J. Richards; K. Seccombe; C. Shehan; H. Vera; C. Wood. Assistant Professors: R. S. Ford; W. Marsiglio. The Department of Sociology offers the Master of Arts degree with both a thesis and a nonthesis option and the Doctor of Philosophy degree with these areas of special emphasis: criminology/deviance/law, family, gerontology, racial/ethnic relations, Latin American studies, medical sociology, stratification, urban studies, and social psychol- ogy. Admission to the master's degree program requires a bachelor's degree in sociology or relevant social science as approved by the Department. The Department and the College of Law offer a joint M.A./J.D. program. Admission for the two degrees must be simultaneous. Admission to the Ph.D. program requires a master's degree in sociology or related field as approved by the Department. Students planning to apply for admission should take the Graduate Record Examination at the earliest possible date. The GRE Sociology Test is recommended for all applicants for admis- sion and is required of all applicants for assistantships and fellowships. Applicants for admission who do not have a degree in sociology must also take the GRE Sociology Test. A course taught in the College of Nursing, NGR 6609- Family Dynamics and Organized Health Care, is sociologi- cal in content and comprises a part of the offerings of the Department of Sociology in medical sociology. SYA 5905-Individual Work (1-4; max: 12 including SYA 6905)