The RGSS Food Festival was a wonderful success, bringing together students, faculty, and staff for an afternoon of fun, community, and cultural appreciation.
The GW Department of Romance, German and Slavic Studies (RGSS) offers dozens of undergraduate courses each semester, with the majority of classes taught in the target language. The department also hosts events for the university community that include symposia and language instruction seminars, as well as lectures from visiting scholars and poets.
RGSS faculty have published books on a broad range of topics, such as a study on book production and female authorship in 16th-century France; an encyclopedia of Russian film; textbooks for teaching in French, Russian and Spanish; and much more. Our faculty have also received numerous awards for their research and teaching, including the International Dublin Literary Award and GW’s Honey W. Nashman Award for Faculty Engagement. And our alumni have used their language and literature skills for professional advancement in the fields of government, education, business, diplomacy, law, and the nonprofit world.
The basic RGSS language courses employ innovative pedagogical approaches to language learning. Once the student has completed the basic language sequence (either at GW or through previous language studies validated by a placement exam or by AP credit), a range of courses are available for advanced language study, including topics in pronunciation, business and commercial vocabulary and journalistic style. Czech, Polish and Ukrainian courses have been offered at the basic and intermediate level when there is sufficient demand.
The department offers a wide variety of courses in literature, culture and film. Introductory courses in French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish literature are regularly offered, as well as other courses dedicated to specific periods, authors or special topics.
Culture courses introduce students to the historical and social settings in which the literature of a given culture or country developed.
The RGSS Food Festival was a wonderful success, bringing together students, faculty, and staff for an afternoon of fun, community, and cultural appreciation.
In Memoriam: Galina Olegovna Shatalina
GW's RGSS Department remembers professor Galina Olegovna Shatalina, and we are grateful for her long contributions to teaching and service in the department.
María José de la Fuente's new textbook is a first-of-its-kind digital guide for college students of Spanish, covering issues such as climate change, inequality, resource management, and migration.
Dance Embodies the Meaning of Mexico
An award-winning book by GW professor of Latin American literature and culture Manuel Cuellar recounts the importance of dance to the country’s identity.
How I Got the Job: Connecting with the World
GW senior international affairs major and French minor Oliver Haddow will begin his multi-year Peace Corps appointment in Senegal shortly after Commencement.
Pandemic Lit: Can Classics Teach COVID Lessons?
For her Pandemics in Italian Literature class, Lynn Westwater scoured classic...
Voices of Genocide Echo from Rwanda
Professor Abdourahman Waberi — acclaimed author, poet and RGSLL assistant...