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Cinema for Russian Conversation, Volume 2
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Available to ship
Focus Item #: 01192
Author/Editor/Translator: Olga Kagan and Mara Kashper
ISBN: 978-1-58510-119-1
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Table of Contents
Description
Each of this
two-volume series presents seven films in historical order. Each chapter
focuses on one film and includes assignments ranging from Intermediate to
Advanced Plus proficiency according to the ACTFL guidelines.
Features
While the
books main purpose is to development conversation skills, each chapter includes
texts for reading comprehension and exercises that focus on the acquisition of
written skills and grammatical accuracy.
Market
The modular
structure allows instructors to select the films according to the student’s
interests and course goals, as textbooks or as supplemental materials for
classes at various levels.
You may purchase the films on Amazon.com by following the
links below
taken from the Table
of Contents
Zhestokiy romans - A
Cruel Romance
Rebro Adama - Adam’s
Rib
Kavkazskiy plennik - Prisoner
of the Mountains
Vor - The
Thief
Printsessa na bobakh - Princess and the Beans
Sirota kazanskaya - Sympathy Seeker or The Kazan Orphan
Est-Ouest - East-West
About the Authors
Olga Kagan is
coordinator of the undergraduate Russian Program at UCLA. She is the author and
co-author of numerous successful Russian textbooks, including the Focus edition
Lidiya Chukovskaya’s Sofia Petrovna.
Mara Kashper teaches
Russian at Barnard College/Columbia University and is the co-author of Lidiya
Chukovskaya’s Sofia Petrovna and another Focus title: Reading and
Speaking about Russian Newspapers.
Yuliya Morozova is a graduate student at the Department of Slavic Languages and
Literatures, UCLA.
Reviews
As language instructors, we have all used film in our classes to improve the
linguistic and cultural proficiency of our students. A few textbooks include
clips from Russian cinema with some exercises fro comprehension and discussion;
however, until now there has been no text which deals exclusively with film as
a language and culture acquisition tool. Cinema for Russian Conversation has
now filled this void with a two-volume series... The choice of films is
excellent: they are classics, dating from 1936-1979, seen and loved by Russian
audiences, and they include a variety of genres (musical comedy, fairy tale,
drama, comedy and melodrama).... the content of each exercise is varied so as
not to become repetitive. All the directions for the exercises are given in
clear and concise Russian (absolutely essential for students). The text is in
modular form so that one need not cover all the films in the order in which
they appear in the book. One could "pick and choose" the films to
coincide with the content and focus of the course.
Cinema for Russian Conversation is an excellent addition to available materials
for use in the classroom of a language, culture, film, or conversation course.
~Slavic and East European Journal, Volume 49,
#4, Winter 2005.
Additional Information
Click here for more information, including sample pages,
for this title. (pdfs of sample pages)
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Olga Kagan, Mara Kashper and Yuliya Morozova
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