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         Arabic Near Eastern Literature:     more detail
  1. Arabic Literature of Africa: The Writings of Eastern Sudanic Africa (Handbook of Oriental Studies. the Near and) (Handbook of Oriental Studies. the Near and)
  2. Studies in Modern Arabic Literature by Colloquium on Modern Arabic Literature London 1974, 1975-12
  3. Live Theatre and Dramatic Literature in the Medieval Arabic World (New York University Studies in Near Eastern Civilization) by Snmuel Moreh, 1992-10-01
  4. Man Is a Cause: Political Consciousness and the Fiction of Ghassan Kanafani (Near Eastern Studies, University of Washington) by Muhammad Siddiq, 1984-10
  5. Studies in the Short Fiction of Mahfouz and Idris (New York University Studies in Near Eastern Civilization) by Mona Mikhail, 1992-05-01
  6. The Pennsylvania Tradition of Semitics: A Century of Near Eastern and Biblical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania by Cyrus H. Gordon, 1987
  7. Modern Literature in the Near and Middle East (Routledge/Soas Contemporary Politics and Culture in the Middle East Series) by Robin Ostle, 1991-04-12
  8. Literature of Ideas in Egypt: Selection, Translation, and Introductions. Pt 1 (Studies in Near Eastern Culture and Society) by Louis Awad, 1987-01
  9. First lessons in literary Arabic by Ernest N McCarus, 1972

21. Majors And Careers - Near Eastern Languages & Cultures
write, and speak Modern Standard arabic as well as Qur anic arabic; knowledge ofIslamic and near eastern cultures, politics, history, and literature; Qur anic
http://www.indiana.edu/~udiv/majors/majorinfo.cgi/53
Major Related
Resources
Department of
Near Eastern Languages

and Cultures

Goodbody Hall 102 Career Related
Resources
Career Resource
Library

625 North Jordan Avenue
Phone: (812)855-0576
Career Development Center

Arts and Sciences
Career Services 625 North Jordan Avenue Phone: (812)855-0576
Description of Major
The Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures (NELC) offers a Bachelor of Arts degree with a major in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures. NELC also offers minors in Arabic, Islamic Studies, and Near Eastern Civilization, as well as graduate level studies in Hebrew language and literature. The Near East is the part of the world popularly known as the Middle East or the Islamic World. At the undergraduate level, the emphasis is on Arabic language instruction through the third year in addition to topics courses on literature, religions, cultures, and politics of the Near East.
Ability to read, write, and speak Modern Standard Arabic as well as Qur'anic Arabic; knowledge of Islamic and Near Eastern cultures, politics, history, and literature; Qur'anic studies.
Minors and Second Majors that Expand Career Options with this Major
Anthropology, comparative literature, folklore, geography, international studies, Jewish studies, linguistics, political science, religious studies, teacher certification.

22. Near Eastern Collection
Islam and Islamic philosophy (11,000 volumes), Ancient near eastern languages andliteratures (3,000 volumes), arabic language, literature, and culture (9,000
http://www.asiamap.ac.uk/collections/collection.php?ID=126

23. General Catalog - Near Eastern Studies Faculty
Comparative literature, arabic and Hebrew literature. Assistant Professors. Persianlanguage and literature. Ancient near eastern art.
http://sis450.berkeley.edu:4500/catalog/gcc_view_faculty?v_dept_cd=NE STUD&v_dep

24. Asian And Near Eastern Languages
521R. Special Topics in Ancient near eastern literature. (23) On dem. Historicaland comparative studies of ancient near eastern literature. arabic.
http://saas.byu.edu/catalog/graduate/1997/departments/Asian_Lang.html
Brigham Young University
Asian and Near Eastern Languages
A SIAN AND N EAR E ASTERN L ANGUAGES Chair: Van C. Gessel
Graduate Coordinator: Dana S. Bourgerie
4064 JKHB
Provo, UT 84602-6117
bourgerie@byu.edu
T HE P ROGRAM OF S TUDIES One degree is offered through the Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages: Language Acquisition (Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, or Korean)—MA. This is a collegewide program. Generally not more than two students per language are admitted each year to the acquisition program. The program is designed so that a student can complete the degree in four semesters if he or she enters with the appropriate background (see below). Language Acquisition (Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, or Korean)—MA This program offers professional preparation to students seeking careers in applied linguistics, foreign language education, computer-
assisted language learning and instruction, and other related areas. Students become familiar with current theories of second-language acquisition and develop basic skills in applying that knowledge to teaching, testing, and classroom-oriented research in their language of specialization. The program is quite flexible, with emphases varying according to students' interests and faculty members' expertise. It is ideally suited to the needs of the following types of students:

25. Asian And Near Eastern Languages
Advanced studies in arabic language and literature. Graduate Courses.For 521R. Special Topics in Ancient near eastern literature. (2
http://saas.byu.edu/catalog/archive/2001/departments/Asian_Lang.html
UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG 2001–2002
Brigham Young University
Asian and Near Eastern Languages
Dilworth B. Parkinson, Chair
4052 JKHB, (801) 378-3396 College of Humanities Advisement Center
3078 JKHB, (801) 378-4789
Admission to Degree Program
All degree programs in the Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages are open enrollment. Some special limitations apply for teaching majors.
The Discipline
The many countries of Asia and the Near East are among the oldest civilizations in the world. The study of the languages and cultures of these nations gives students access to some of the richest and most varied traditions of thought, belief, and behavior to be found in the world. A large percentage of the vast, essentially non-Christian segment of the world's population resides in these two zones: Asia—with its diverse heritage of belief in Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, and other systems of thought—continues to retain its “exotic” image for most Westerners, even though many nations in the region are at the forefront of contemporary politics and economics. The Near East, birthplace of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, remains a little-understood, often stereotyped area of considerable economic, strategic, and religious importance today. The languages of these regions are themselves generally difficult, with complex writing systems that require diligent study. But exposure to these languages and the cultures they express will enable students to look at the world from new perspectives and deepen their understanding of peoples whose history and practices are widely divergent from their own.

26. Courses In The Department Of Near Eastern Languages And Civilizations
30928. Role of the Bible in Modern literature Brinker. Ottoman Diplomatics and PaleographyFleischer. near eastern Languages. Epigraphic South arabic I, II Gragg.
http://catalogs.uchicago.edu/divisions/nelc-courses.html
Courses in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations
Courses
Akkadian
Staff
20307, 20308. Akkadian Literary Texts I, II
Biggs, Staff
20313, 20314. Akkadian Historical Texts I, II
Stolper
20316. Non-Mesopotamian Akkadian Texts
Roth
20323. Akkadian Religious Texts
Biggs
30315. Introduction to Assyrian Staff 30316. Akkadian Texts from Peripheral Areas Biggs 30321. Epic of Gilgamesh Farber, Roth 30332. Mesopotamian Law Collections Roth
Ancient Anatolian Languages
van den Hout 20125. Advanced Readings in Hittite van den Hout 20201. Cuneiform Luwian van den Hout 20301, 20302. Hieroglyphic Luwian I, II van den Hout 20401. Lydian van den Hout 20501. Lycian van den Hout 20601.Carian/Psidian/Sidetic van den Hout 20901. Hurrian

27. The Department Of Near Eastern Languages And Civilizations
Art and Archaeology, near eastern Judaica, and Northwest Semitic Philology. The Medievaland Modern fields are arabic language and literature, Islamic History
http://catalogs.uchicago.edu/divisions/nelc.html
The Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations
The work of the department encompasses the ancient civilizations of the Near East, Near Eastern Judaica, and the Islamic civilizations of the Middle East, including Egypt and North Africa, and the history, languages, and literatures of the modern Middle East.
The department has two main sections, each with fields of specialization. The Ancient Near East fields are: Ancient Near Eastern History, Cuneiform Studies, Egyptology, Near Eastern Art and Archaeology, Near Eastern Judaica, and Northwest Semitic Philology. The Medieval and Modern fields are: Arabic language and literature, Islamic History and Civilization, Islamic archaeology, Islamic Thought, Modern Hebrew Language and Literature, Pesian Language and Literature, and Turkish Language and Literature. The department also offers courses in Armenian and Central Asian studies in collaboration with other departments at the University.
The department has two main objectives. First, it strives to provide the specific course work and training needed for its own students to develop into outstanding scholars in their chosen fields. Second, it offers more general courses that provide its own students a broader background in areas outside their specific fields while presenting students students in other departments the opportunity to incorporate relevant Middle Eastern material into their own studies. The department also publishes the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, one of the leading academic journals in ancient Near Eastern and Islamic studies.

28. Department Of Near Eastern Studies At Cornell University
and Ancient near eastern Studies SOAS Water Issues Group School of Oriental and AfricanStudies, University of London. Languages and literature. arabic Software
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/nes/links.html
Department of Near Eastern Studies 409 White Hall neareastern@cornell.edu Related Web Pages Resources for Near Eastern and Islamic Studies
ABZU : Oriental Institute, the University of Chicago
"Guide to resources for the study of the Ancient Near East available on the internet."
American Oriental Society at the University of Michigan Centre for Arab Gulf Studies at the University of Exeter Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies , University of Bergen Columbia University Middle East Studies Resources The Dinure Center for Research in Jewish History Hebrew University, Mount Scopus Jerusalem Israel Economic Cooperation and Integration in the Middle East: A Literature Survey Indonesia Forum Internet Resources on the Middle East From the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University Islamica Collection at UC-Berkeley MENIC : The Center for Middle Eastern Studies, University of Texas at Austin The Middle East Network Information Center The Middle East Center at the University of Pennsylvania Middle East Documentation Center (MEDOC) of the University of Chicago Library Middle East Water Information Network (MEWIN) Okeanos: Biblical, Classical, and Ancient Near Eastern Studies

29. DEPARTMENT OF NEAR EASTERN STUDIES
An appreciation of arabic literature and culture will be the modern period of theNear and Middle Christianity within Judaism in the eastern Mediterranean world
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/jwst/Course Descriptions.htm
COURSE DESCRIPTIONS SPRING 2001 For a more detailed description of the following courses, go to 360 Rockefeller Hall or see the Course of Studies Catalog. See the Program of Jewish Studies Course Descriptions for additional courses. NES 102 Elementary Modern Hebrew II (also JWST 106) CID 428-032 6 CR MTWRF Shoer, S. Limited to 17 students in each section. Intended for beginners. This course provides a thorough grounding in reading, writing, grammar, oral comprehension and speaking. Students who complete the course will be able to function in basic situations in a Hebrew-speaking environment NES 102 Elementary Modern Hebrew II (also JWST 106) CID 428-263 6 CR MTWRF Shoer, S. Limited to 17 students in each section. Intended for beginners. This course provides a thorough grounding in reading, writing, grammar, oral comprehension and speaking. Students who complete the course will be able to function in basic situations in a Hebrew-speaking environment. NES 102 Elementary Modern Hebrew II (also JWST 106) CID 428-299 6 CR MTWRF Shoer, S.

30. Near Eastern Studies
In the mid1960s near eastern Studies suffered grievous losses with the in 1968 byAndras Hamori, a specialist in classical arabic literature, and subsequently
http://etc.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Companion/near_eastern_studies.html
Near Eastern Studies
Near Eastern Studies at Princeton go back to the turn of the century when, as elsewhere, interest in this field, Biblically oriented, centered on the ancient history of the ``cradle of civilization.'' The roots were diffuse, albeit vigorous; there were pioneer scholars of distinction and beginnings of a superlative library for teaching and research. The most dynamic pioneer was Howard Crosby Butler , a specialist in ancient Near Eastern archaeology and architecture who mounted expeditions to Syria and Anatolia in 1899, 1904, and 1909 and headed the notable excavations at Antioch and Sardis; he was Princeton's charter trustee of the Jerusalem School for Oriental Research. In 1901 he brought to Princeton the noted German epigrapher, Enno Littmann, who had accompanied him in Syria; Littmann served as librarian of the Oriental collections and as lecturer in Semitic philology until 1906 when he returned to Tbingen. Four years later he was succeeded by another German scholar, Rudolph Brnnow who was Professor of Semitic Philology. After Brnnow's death in 1917, the teaching of Semitics declined, and the development of Sanskrit and Indo-European philology began auspiciously under Harold H. Bender

31. Electronic Journals - Middle (Near) Eastern - African Literature
Journal of arabic literature (3/99 ; excluding most recent 6 Journal of Biblicalliterature (3/79 - ) Ac.Search Journal of near eastern Studies (10/93 - ) Ac
http://www.library.unr.edu/ejournals/subject/english/mideast.html
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Electronic Journals - Middle (Near) Eastern - African Literature

32. HJG: Periodicals Directory: Geographical Index: Near And Middle East
Journal of Ancient near eastern Religions. Journal of arabic and Islamic Studies.Journal of arabic literature. The Journal of eastern Christian Studies.
http://www.history-journals.de/journals/hjg-region-nme.html
WWW-Virtual Library The History Journals Guide
by Stefan Blaschke - Periodicals Directory -
The History Index Home Complete Index Electronical Index Chronological Index ... Announcements Geographical Index Near and Middle East Discussion Lists Directory: Geographical Index: Near and Middle East Contact Search
  • Al- Abhath : journal of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, American University of Beirut
  • Achaemenid History. Proceedings of the Achaemenid History Workshops
  • Altorientalische Forschungen
  • American Schools of Oriental Research Newsletter
  • Ancient Near Eastern Studies. An Annual published by the School of Fine Arts, Classical Studies and Archaeology, University of Melbourne
  • Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy
  • Arabic and Middle Eastern Literatures
  • Arabica
  • Archiv
  • Baghdader Mitteilungen
  • Biblical Archaeologist. Perspectives on the Ancient World from Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean
  • BRISMES Newsletter
  • British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies
  • Bulletin - British Society for Middle Eastern Studies
  • Bulletin of Regional Cooperation in the Middle East
  • Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
  • Bulletin of the Association for the Study of Travel in Egypt ant the Near East. Notes and Queries

33. The Poetics Of Anti-Colonialism In The Arabic
N. Kadhim, Ph.D. (1998) in near eastern Languages and Cultures, Indiana UniversityBloomington, teaches arabic Language and literature at Dartmouth College.
http://www.brill.nl/product.asp?ID=11529

34. Untitled.html
The major with a concentration in arabic or Hebrew courses (ie, linguistics or literature)beyond first in elective courses in ancient near eastern, Judaic, or
http://www.langlab.wayne.edu/NearEast/BARequire.html

Bachelor of Arts - Degree Programs
This department offers programs and courses of instruction which acquaint students with the languages and civilizations of the modern Middle East as well as the classical traditions of that locale. In addition to reading texts in the original languages, the student may elect courses from a wide range of offerings for which no language other than English is required. A student who wishes to major in the Department should plan a program with the departmental advisor as soon as possible after entering the University. Each program is arranged individually to combine the most varied advantages consistent with the student's interests and purposes.
Undergraduate Course List
Bachelor of Arts Degrees Admission Requirements for this program are satisfied by the general requirements for undergraduate admission to the University; Degree Requirements: Candidates for the bachelor's degree must complete 120 credits in course work including satisfaction of the College of Liberal Arts Group Requirements and the University Education Requirements, as well as the major requirements of one of the following major degree programs. All course work must be completed in accordance with the academic procedures of the University and the College governing undergraduate scholarship and degree respectively. Requirements Near Eastern Languages Near Eastern Studies Minor Requirements Near Eastern Languages: A major in Near Eastern languages consist of : (a) a concentration in either Arabic or Hebrew; or (b) joint study of both languages.

35. Untitled Document
No knowledge of arabic required. Survey of historical constitution and theoreticalstructure of arabic. (Y). 590. (T). Return. near eastern literature (NE). 570.
http://www.langlab.wayne.edu/NearEast/Gradcourses.html

Graduate Courses
The following courses, numbered 500-999, are offered for graduate credits. Courses numbered 500-999 which are offered for undergraduate credit only may be found in the undergraduate bulletin, as well as other undergraduate courses (numbered 090-499). Courses in the following, list numbered 500-699 may be taken for undergraduate credits unless specifically restricted to graduate students as indicated by individual course limitations.
Arabic
Hebrew Near Eastern Literature ARABIC (ARB 501. Medieval Arabic Texts. Cr. 3 Prereq: ARB 201 or consent of instructor. Reading and translation of Arabic Medieval texts. (Y) 514. Readings in Modern Arabic Literature. Cr. 3 Prereq: Knowledge of Arabic above ARB 202. Advanced readings in modern Standard Arabic. (Y) 521. Arabic Sociolinguistics. (LIN 521). Cr. 3 No knowledge of Arabic required. Arabic dialectology: Arabic as a minority language in contact. Theories and techniques developed outside Arabic, and their applicability to Arabic situations. (F) 523. Structure of Arabic. (LIN 523). Cr. 3

36. Near/Mid Eastern Literature
near/Mid eastern literature The purpose of this course frame of reference in thenear (and Middle Iranian (Persian), Israeli, and arabic (including selections
http://www.mccneb.edu/intercultural/nearlit.htm
Back to International/Intercultural Education Projects Near/Mid Eastern Literature mpaul@metropo.mccneb.edu

37. SOAS: Courses / Degrees
to arabic culture literatures of the near and Middle arabic literature in translation1 and arabic literature in translation 2 Course in Middle eastern art and
http://www.soas.ac.uk/studying/courseinfo.cfm?courseinfoid=164

38. SOAS: Staff
Professor Sabry Hafez Modern arabic literature, drama and film studies; comparativeliterature. J. David Hawkins Anatolian and Ancient near eastern Studies,
http://www.soas.ac.uk/staff/staff.cfm?deptid=5

39. International Studies: Near/Middle Eastern Track
Ten hours of advanced arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Turkish other Middle eastern languageor literature courses (not near eastern Languages Cultures, 344, The Middle
http://nelc.ohio-state.edu/programs/affiliated_undergraduate.htm
NELC Affiliated Degree Programs
International Studies:
Near/Middle Eastern Track: Major Minor Certificate
Major Program
A student specializing in the Middle East gains familiarity with one of the most critical and complex areas in the world and a suitable background for employment in government, international business and many other fields. Core Courses International Studies Introduction to the Modern Middle East International Studies Contemporary Issues in the Middle East History Religion and Politics in the Islamic World International Studies (choose one): International Studies Conceptual Approaches to International Studies International Studies Selected Problems in International Studies International Studies Capstone in Current World Affairs Literature (choose one): Arabic Arabic Modern Arabic Literature in Translation Hebrew Ancient Hebrew Literature in Translation Hebrew Hebrew Modern Hebrew Literature in Translation Persian Persian Culture Persian Persian Literature in Translation Turkish Turkish Culture Turkish Turkish Sufism Turkish Turkish Literature in Translation Language Requirement Ten hours of advanced Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Turkish, or other Middle Eastern language or literature courses (not in translation) beyond the Colleges of Arts and Sciences' foreign language requirement.

40. Department Of Near Eastern Languages And Cultures, Faculty & Staff Page College
near eastern Languages and Cultures Faculty People Page. General Background Dr.Zeidan specializes in modern arabic and Hebrew literature, as well as
http://nelc.ohio-state.edu/people/person.cfm?ID=196

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