Students may select courses in English, French or both according to language ability and placement tests. Students must place into the advanced level to enroll in Sorbonne lecture courses. Recommended semester credits are in parentheses. Quarter students should reduce total credits by one-third. Courses taught in French with the same course content as the English equivalent have an “F” after the course number.
Cours de Civilisation Française de la Sorbonne
Several courses are organized and taught by Cours de Civilisation Française instructors exclusively for AIFS students. Beginning and lower intermediate students should choose courses taught in English during the first semester in Paris. Advanced students in both semesters and full year students in the second semester should choose courses taught in French (see listings). These classes should not be confused with the regular Cours de Civilisation Française lecture series.
A minimum of 10 students is needed to confirm a course (classes usually have about 15 students). Each seminar meets 30 hours per semester plus 15 hours of directed study outside class. (These are 60 minute classes for 30 contact hours, equivalent to 36 hours of 50 minute classes.) All levels of French language (cours pratique) meet considerably more hours—140 contact hours of 60 minute classes.
Beginning and intermediate students must take the cours pratique in French and a seminar in French or English given by the Sorbonne each semester. They should also plan to take two additional courses or seminars each semester. Full year students whose level of French is sufficient by the second semester will be encouraged to enroll in advanced courses. Advanced students must take one seminar in French the second semester.
French language courses for all foreign students
| Fall and Spring Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 101 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Elementary French I |
| Course Description: | |
| First year cours pratique in French grammar and writing practice for beginners and students with up to two years of college French. An average of 12 hours per week for 12 weeks including phonetics lab. Placement is by test. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 151 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Elementary French II |
| Course Description: | |
| This course reviews basic grammar and further studies the foundations of the French language. Many complex grammar points are considered, giving students a solid background in the language. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 201 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Intermediate French |
| Course Description: | |
| An average of 12 hours a week for 12 weeks including phonetics lab. Vocabulary, grammar, composition and textual analysis. Placement is by test, regardless of previous study. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 301 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Advanced French I |
| Course Description: | |
| Meets for 12 hours a week. Vocabulary, grammar, composition and textual analysis. Placement is by test, regardless of previous study. Taken in conjunction with a phonetics class. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 401 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Advanced French II |
| Course Description: | |
| Meets for 12 hours a week. Perfecting techniques already learned and acquiring a more sophisticated written and spoken style. Taken in conjunction with a phonetics class. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 307 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Certificat de Français Professionnel |
| Course Description: | |
| This course is described in detail at the end of this chapter. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 407 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Diplôme de Français des Affairs-1er degré |
| Course Description: | |
| This course is described in detail at the end of this chapter. | |
Seminars in English for AIFS students
| Fall Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | FA/History 313 |
| Course Title: | French Civilization |
| Course Description: | |
| Major historical, artistic and literary trends and the relationships of artistic and literary works to the social, political and economic evolution of the French state. Art and society in Roman Gaul through the 10th century. Development of the French nation in medieval France. Renaissance artistic and literary developments concluding with 17th century. Recommended for students not yet at the advanced level. Continues spring semester as Fine Arts/History 314. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 319 |
| Course Title: | Paris: Its Architecture and History |
| Course Description: | |
| Growth patterns of the city from Roman times to the present, stressing history of art and architecture. Takes students around the city. Students must pay entrance fees. Recommended for first semester students below the advanced level. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 305 |
| Course Title: | French Literature in Translation |
| Course Description: | |
| Studies 17th and 18th century literature in the fall semester, and 19th and 20th century literature in the spring. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Philosophy 360 |
| Course Title: | Studies in French Philosophy |
| Course Description: | |
| Through detailed readings, students analyze authors who have made significant contributions to western philosophy. Authors are placed in their historical, cultural and philosophical context. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Pol Sci/Lit 360 |
| Course Title: | Franco-American Relations from Lafayette to today |
| Course Description: | |
| This course traces the history of the close intellectual and political relationship between France and the U.S. from American Independence to the present day. Works by Benjamin Franklin, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein and other writers and statesmen who lived in Paris are considered, as well as writings by Lafayette and de Tocqueville’s Study of American Democracy. This course visits Parisian locations described in the writings of some of these American authors | |
| Spring Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Cultural Studies/Literature 316 |
| Course Title: | Literature, Cinema and the Paris Landscape |
| Course Description: | |
| Throughout Paris, students encounter "lieux de mémoire," places that recall on commemorative plaques strands of national memory, or retain and communicate more discretely the memory of important historical and social events. Using the tools of cultural studies, students gain insight into the relationships between literary works (including Victor Hugo’s "Les Misérables" and Dumas’ "La Reine Margot") and their cultural context; between text and image. Students also make site visits to the Picpus cemetery and retrace the footsteps of Aragon and Walter Benjamin. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | FA/History 314 |
| Course Title: | French Civilization |
| Course Description: | |
| French society and artistic movements in the tumultuous 18th century and political and artistic changes in the 19th century. Study of 20th century developments. Recommended for students entering spring semester not yet at the advanced level. Full year students are encouraged to enroll in Fine Arts 314F, which covers the same material but is taught in French. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 319 |
| Course Title: | Paris: Its Architecture and History |
| Course Description: | |
| Growth patterns of the city from Roman times to the present, stressing history of art and architecture. Takes students around the city. Students must pay entrance fees. Recommended for first semester students below the advanced level. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 306 |
| Course Title: | French Literature in Translation |
| Course Description: | |
| Studies 17th and 18th century literature in the fall semester, and 19th and 20th century literature in the spring. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Philosophy 360 |
| Course Title: | Studies in French Philosophy |
| Course Description: | |
| Through detailed readings, students analyze authors who have made significant contributions to western philosophy. Authors are placed in their historical, cultural and philosophical context. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Pol Sci/Lit 360 |
| Course Title: | Franco-American Relations from Lafayette to today |
| Course Description: | |
| This course traces the history of the close intellectual and political relationship between France and the U.S. from American Independence to the present day. Works by Benjamin Franklin, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein and other writers and statesmen who lived in Paris are considered, as well as writings by Lafayette and de Tocqueville’s Study of American Democracy. This course visits Parisian locations described in the writings of some of these American authors. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Sociology 360 |
| Course Title: | Multiculturalism and Modern France |
| Course Description: | |
| This course concentrates on the multiculturalism of modern France, studying the historical background and contemporary reality of the various components of French society today. | |
Seminars in French for AIFS students
These electives are organized and taught by instructors of the Cours de Civilisation Française exclusively for AIFS students. A minimum of 10 students is needed to confirm a course. Advanced level participants are required to elect at least one each semester.
| Fall Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | FA/Hist/French 313F |
| Course Title: | Civilisation Française (French Civilization) |
| Course Description: | |
| This course is the same course as Fine Arts 313/History 313 but is taught in French. Recommended for all fall semester advanced level students. Continues in the spring semester as Fine Arts/ History/ French 314F. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 319F |
| Course Title: | Paris: Son Architecture, Son Histoire (Paris: Its Architecture and History) |
| Course Description: | |
| This is the same as Fine Arts 319 but taught in French. Recommended for advanced and full year students in the spring. Enrollment is limited. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 328 |
| Course Title: | La Peinture Française aux 17ème et 18ème Siècles (French Painting in the 17th and 18th Centuries) |
| Course Description: | |
| Survey of French painting from Fouquet to Quentin La Tour. Regular museum visits, including the Louvre. Students pay museum entrance fees. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Sociology 311 |
| Course Title: | La Société Française (French Society) |
| Course Description: | |
| France through its social and political life, its inhabitants and culture. Geographic, historic and demographic factors as well as social institutions such as the family, education, religion and the legal system. Contemporary social and economic problems. | |
| Spring Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | FA/Hist/French 314F |
| Course Title: | Civilisation Française (French Civilization) |
| Course Description: | |
| This course is the same as Fine Arts 314/History 314 but is taught in French. Recommended for all advanced and full year students, but not for students entering the program in the spring semester below the advanced level (they should choose Fine Arts 314 in English). | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 319F |
| Course Title: | Paris: Son Architecture, Son Histoire (Paris: Its Architecture and History) |
| Course Description: | |
| This is the same as Fine Arts 319 but taught in French. Recommended for advanced and full year students in the spring. Enrollment is limited. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 329 |
| Course Title: | Impressionnisme: Ses Antécédents, Ses Suites (Impressionism: Its Antecedents and What Followed) |
| Course Description: | |
| The development of the Impressionist movement from such precursors as Corot and Courbet to Monet and Renoir, ending with post-Impressionists Van Gogh and Gauguin. Students pay museum entrance fees. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 310 |
| Course Title: | Le Roman et la Poésie aux 19ème et 20ème Siècles (19th and 20th Century French Novels and Poetry) |
| Course Description: | |
| Development of modern French literature through the analysis of 19th and 20th century prose and poetry. Poetry and the novel are explored through the major ideas of romanticism, realism, surrealism, symbolism and existentialism. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Sociology 311 |
| Course Title: | La Société Française (French Society) |
| Course Description: | |
| France through its social and political life, its inhabitants and culture. Geographic, historic and demographic factors as well as social institutions such as the family, education, religion and the legal system. Contemporary social and economic problems. | |
Honors courses
Students at the advanced level of French and with a GPA of 3.0 or above may take the following courses in the Honors Program. Students must be aware that their French level is determined by the Sorbonne French test placement result, regardless of the number of semesters of French study previously completed. Student placement is the sole responsibility of the Sorbonne, and AIFS cannot overrule the Sorbonne’s decisions concerning placements and grades. These courses are not open to quarter students. Language classes meet for 12 hours a week, lecture classes meet for 24 hours per semester. Program is subject to change at short notice.
| Honors level courses for advanced language students | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Advanced Independent Study 450 fall/spring (2) |
| Course Title: | Honors Research Seminar in French Studies |
| Course Description: | |
| Students placed in Advanced French I or II have a preliminary meeting with a professor to choose a research topic (in French) on a subject related to French civilization (history, art, literature). This course will have monthly tutorial supervision. Each student must write a research paper (15,000 to 20,000 words) in French. The final grade is determined by the supervising Sorbonne Director of Research. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 301 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Advanced French I |
| Course Description: | |
| Meets for 12 hours a week. Vocabulary, grammar, composition and textual analysis. Placement is by test, regardless of previous study. Taken in conjunction with a phonetics class. The Honors Program also includes an optional course of independent study. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 401 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Advanced French II |
| Course Description: | |
| Meets for 12 hours a week. Perfecting techniques already learned and acquiring a more sophisticated written and spoken style. Taken in conjunction with a phonetics class. The Honors Program also includes an optional course of independent study. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 307/French 407 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Certificat de Français Professionnel or Diplôme de Français des Affaires-1er degré |
| Course Description: | |
| See 'Special Courses' below for details. | |
Lecture courses in advanced level French for foreign students:
Please note these courses are not open to quarter students and are subject to change at short notice.
| Fall Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Econ/Geog 401 |
| Course Title: | Géographie Economique et Sociale de la France(Economic and Social Problems in France) |
| Course Description: | |
| The structure of the French economy—industry, management, labor relations, economic institutions, imports/exports and related topics. Current problems, alternatives and solutions, as well as implications on other aspects of French national life. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 411 |
| Course Title: | Histoire de l’Art Français (French Art History) |
| Course Description: | |
| Movements and individual artists and the development of painting, architecture and sculpture in France. The first semester covers the art of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The second semester covers modern French art from the academics to cubism. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 411 |
| Course Title: | Littérature et Civilisation Française de la Renaissance et de l’Age Classique (Renaissance and Classical Literature and Civilization) |
| Course Description: | |
| Literature forms and their principal exponents. A cross-disciplinary perspective is taken so as to examine literature as a product of its social and historical contexts. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 415 |
| Course Title: | Littérature Française du 18ème Siècle (18th Century French Literature) |
| Course Description: | |
| French literature from the classic period to the Siècle des Lumières with attention to Montesquieu, Marivaux, Voltaire, Diderot and Rousseau. The pre-romanticists and the development of the novel. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Philosophy 411 |
| Course Title: | Histoire des Idées en France (History of Ideas in France) |
| Course Description: | |
| During the fall semester, French tradition in thought from the Middle Ages to the 18th century. Spring semester covers the Revolution to the present. Individual thinkers and their works are outlined. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Politics 409 |
| Course Title: | Approche de l’Actualité en France (Political and Economic Problems in Today’s France) |
| Course Description: | |
| Analysis of France’s economic and social policy. Domestic policy and France’s relationship with other European countries and the third world. French diplomacy, economic growth, unemployment, political parties, immigration, education and culture. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Politics 411 |
| Course Title: | La France et l’Europe (France and Europe) |
| Course Description: | |
| France is one of the founder states of Europe. In order to study and understand the political, social or economic situation of France, it is necessary to study the country as member of the European Union. This course has three aims: to gain knowledge of Europe, its functions and institutions; to analyse the position of France within Europe; and finally, to review its outstanding issues and forthcoming prospects. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Sociology 411 |
| Course Title: | La Société Française (French Society) |
| Course Description: | |
| French society has experienced social, political, economic and cultural upheaval for centuries. Fall semester studies the ancien régime to the Revolution; spring semester examines aspects of these crises and their effect on daily life. | |
| Spring Semester | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Econ/Geog 402 |
| Course Title: | Vie Economique et Sociale des Régions Françaises (Economic and Social Life of the French Regions) |
| Course Description: | |
| A continuation of 401, emphasis is on regional problems. Development and state aid are among topics. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 412 |
| Course Title: | Histoire de l’Art Français (French Art History) |
| Course Description: | |
| Movements and individual artists and the development of painting, architecture and sculpture in France. The first semester covers the art of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The second semester covers modern French art from the academics to cubism. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 414 |
| Course Title: | Les courant artistiques en France au 19éme et 20éme siècle (19th and 20th Century Artistic Currents in France) |
| Course Description: | |
| This course covers the innovation brought to visual arts by the different avant-garde movements of the 19th century. The courses will focus predominantly on painting although major sculptures and the links between architecture and industry will also be covered. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 414 |
| Course Title: | Littérature Française du 19ème Siècle (19th Century French Literature) |
| Course Description: | |
| Major works and writers of the 19th century from Chateaubriand to Mallarmé. Different genres: drama, poetry and the novel. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 416 |
| Course Title: | Littérature Française du 20ème Siècle (20th Century French Literature) |
| Course Description: | |
| The naturalist movement in the novel, symbolism as a new kind of poetry, Claudel and idealism, André Gide, Proust and the social, psychological and moral implications of La Recherche and the novels and plays of Jean Giraudoux. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | History 408 |
| Course Title: | Paris (Paris) |
| Course Description: | |
| The aim of this course is to illustrate how each period of time has contributed to the scenery of Paris. This chronological study is divided into five parts: origins; medieval period; “modern time”; 19th century; and 20th century. The course includes study of people and areas of the city (Montmartre, Montparnasse, public parks and gardens, les Halles and Hector Guimard.) | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Philosophy 412 |
| Course Title: | Histoire des Idées en France (History of Ideas in France) |
| Course Description: | |
| During the fall semester, French tradition in thought from the Middle Ages to the 18th century. Spring semester covers the Revolution to the present. Individual thinkers and their works are outlined. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Politics 404 |
| Course Title: | La politique en France (Politics in France) |
| Course Description: | |
| This class focuses on the emergence and development of dominating ideas in the intellectual, social and political life of France, from late 18th-20th century. Since the 18th century, French intellectuals were trying to give birth to a “new man” or “new society” and a “new kind of happiness”, not only for the French but also for the whole world. This course describes major periods in the birth of modern France and perhaps of modernity itself. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Politics 410 |
| Course Title: | Approche de l’Actualité en France (Political and Economic Problems in Today’s France) |
| Course Description: | |
| Analysis of France’s economic and social policy. Domestic policy and France’s relationship with other European countries and the third world. French diplomacy, economic growth, unemployment, political parties, immigration, education and culture. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Sociology 412 |
| Course Title: | La Société Française (French Society) |
| Course Description: | |
| French society has experienced social, political, economic and cultural upheaval for centuries. Fall semester studies the ancien régime to the Revolution; spring semester examines aspects of these crises and their effect on daily life. | |
Courses available at other institutions in Paris
Académie de Port Royal
The University of London Institute in Paris
Ecole Supérieure des Arts et Techniques de la Mode
Schola Cantorum
Students may take one or two courses at these institutions. Except in special circumstances, a minimum of 10 is needed for a course. Students receive transcripts or certificates authenticating work completed.
These institutions vary in accreditation status. The Académie de Port Royal is an art school not of university status in France. Students wishing to transfer credit for Port Royal courses should check with their home institutions. The University of London Institute in Paris is a joint institute of both the University of London and the Université de Paris and, therefore, enjoys university status. The Schola Cantorum is a private music school in Paris. Ecole Supérieure des Arts et Techniques de la Mode (ESMOD International) is a division of the Institut Supérieur Européen de la Mode (ISEM), which is affiliated with Université Lumière Lyon 2. Students should confirm with home institutions whether transfer credit is allowed from private educational institutions.
| Académie de Port Royal | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 301 fall/spring (1-4) |
| Course Title: | Art in Studio ($500 supplement) |
| Course Description: | |
| Painting, drawing, sketching. The amount of credit granted depends on the work produced and hours spent at the Académie. Two sessions of three hours per week or three sessions of two hours. Students must pay a supplement in Paris of $500 per session. | |
| The University of London Institute in Paris | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 293 fall/spring (3) |
| Course Title: | Impressionism and Its Origins |
| Course Description: | |
| The French Impressionist movement, its origins, major exponents and derivative tendencies in modern art. Taught in English, it meets 30 hours (60 minute classes). Students pay museum entrance fees. Enrollment is limited. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 306 spring only (3) |
| Course Title: | Introduction to French Cinema |
| Course Description: | |
| Survey of French cinema from the poetic realism of the 1930s to the present. Although the course is taught in English, a good oral comprehension of French is required as film showings are in French. It meets 35 hours (60 minute classes). Enrollment is limited. | |
| Ecole Supérieure des Arts et Techniques de la Mode (ESMOD) | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Fine Arts 205 fall/spring (3) |
| Course Title: | Fashion Merchandising |
| Course Description: | |
| This course takes a multidimensional approach to fashion merchandising by combining studies in business fundamentals with fashion theory, from both a theoretical and practical perspective. | |
| Schola Cantorum | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Music 307 fall/spring (1-4) |
| Course Title: | Instrument Study |
| Course Description: | |
| May be taken only with consent of the Resident Director. Placement is by examination, except for beginners. Instruction in French is at the student’s expense. Credit granted depends on the work produced and hours spent at the Schola. Instruments (except piano) are not provided. | |
Special Courses
A special program organized jointly by the Sorbonne and the Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie de Paris is available in Paris for Business Administration students at the advanced levels of French who wish, as a part of their major, to do advanced studies in France. Admission is contingent on a written placement test.
The program is especially valuable for students specializing in any aspect of international commerce or economics and who already have strong background in the French language. Students take courses leading to the Certificat de Français Professionnel or the Diplôme de Français des Affaires-1er degré.
The program of study combines intensive language courses (cours pratiques) with additional study in business French. (It is not possible to take only the business courses). These courses are cours pratiques which replace the standard cours pratiques required of all students. Students are also required to take a Sorbonne seminar in French as part of the program in Paris.
Examinations leading to the Certificat and the Diplôme are given by both the Sorbonne and the Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie de Paris. Students must take both sets of exams to receive the qualification and will receive certificates from both of these prestigious institutions. The Sorbonne exam grade goes on the transcript, but the Chambre de Commerce exam grade does not. The Chambre de Commerce charges an exam fee of approximately $150 (at the student's expense).
If the Chamber of Commerce exam is held after the end of the regular semester, students are responsible for their own housing during that time.
French 307/French 407 fall/spring (9)
Certificat de Français Professionnel or Diplôme de Français des Affaires-1er degré
Practical study of the French language (six hours per week) and phonetics (20 hours per semester) with study of French business terminology (four hours per week). Students wishing to enroll for these one semester courses must be in Advanced French II or Advanced French I. During the fall semester, the Chambre de Commerce exam is held in January, so fall quarter students enrolled in this course cannot take it.
The Cours de Civilisation Française de la Sorbonne also organizes two university level courses of study leading to the Diplôme de Français des Affaires 2ème Degré or the Diplôme Supérieur d'Etudes de Civilisation Française.
French 408 fall/spring (9)
Diplôme de Français des Affaires-2ème Degré
Students must be seniors or graduate students and pass the entrance exam given for the Section Universitaire (annual or semestrial). Emphasis is on the theory of French economics and commerce and practical applications in the French business world. It is for students with university-level French. This option is not open to fall quarter students.
| Sorbonne Only | |
| Course Code and Credits: | French 409 fall/spring (9) |
| Course Title: | Diplôme Supérieur d’Etudes de Civilisation Française (Option Littéraire) |
| Course Description: | |
| Students must be seniors or graduate students and pass the entrance exam given for the Section Pré-universitaire (annual or semestrial). This section includes practical courses as well as lectures and literary seminars, and is also open to teachers. Transcripts are issued by the Cours de Civilisation Française de la Sorbonne. This option is not open to fall quarter students. | |
| Non-credit courses | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Non-credit (-) |
| Course Title: | French Cuisine |
| Course Description: | |
| Basic techniques and regional variety of French cuisine. Taught in a Parisian apartment where dishes are prepared and sampled by students. Recipes are provided. Fee of approximately $250 for the three, 2-hour sessions must be paid on arrival. Taught in English. Held only if a minimum of six students enroll. | |
| Course Code and Credits: | Non-credit (-) |
| Course Title: | Wine Science and Appreciation |
| Course Description: | |
| This is a 10 week program that explores in depth the cultural, historical and marketing aspects of the French wine tradition. It covers the wine-making process, the extensive wine laws, and the importance of French wines world-wide. Students analyse wine through tasting sessions. The course is held 2 hours each week and is taught by a teacher at the Institut Européen de Management International. Students must pay a supplement of $450 for this course on arrival in Paris. A minimum enrollment of 12 students is required for this course. | |
