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Modern Languages

Mission

To open up new vistas on what it can mean to be human.

Educated people spend their lives trying to grow in political, social and intellectual freedom. One kind of intellectual freedom requires us to break away from the notion that our native language is the most natural and apt means of expressing the full range of human experience. An education can start with the discovery that all words are purely conventional devices. They are nonetheless tools that stir emotions, articulate ideas, and establish relationships with others. Learning a foreign language contributes to our education by providing an intimate exercise in cultural and linguistic concepts that open up new vistas on what it can mean to be human. Furthermore, foreign-language courses allow entry into the subjectivity of the target language on its own cultural and linguistic grounds, thus making possible a different and more profound redefinition of our own culture.

Our basic courses offer the opportunity to start acquiring the skills and knowledge necessary for the eventual mastery of a foreign language. The Department emphasizes the use of a foreign language in most of its courses because it believes that students can best appreciate a foreign culture from within its own mode of expression.

With a view toward career opportunities, the Department encourages integrating foreign language study with a variety of other academic areas, such as history, philosophy, international studies, environmental studies, biology, economics, political science, and English. Courses in cultural studies and literature, aside from their intrinsic worth, also present multiple perspectives on other cultures and various areas of intellectual experience.

A student wishing to spend a summer, a semester, or a year abroad with programs approved by Denison should consult members of the Department and the Office of Off-Campus Studies (see Off Campus Programs). Opportunities for students to improve their command of the language are provided on the campus by the language tables, foreign films, club meetings, field trips, and similar activities sponsored by the Department.

Language and Culture House

The 2008-2009 academic year will mark the first for the Language and Culture House.  Housed in Kappa Sigma this exciting, immersion environment will enable first year students to interact in the language or languages of their choice while still living in close proximity to other first year students on North Quad.  Please click on the links below to access the Language and Culture House brochure and application.

The 2008-2009 academic year will mark the first for the Language and Culture House.  Housed in Kappa Sigma this exciting, immersion environment will enable first year students to interact in the language or languages of their choice while still living in close proximity to other first year students on North Quad.  Please click on the links below to access the Language and Culture House brochure and application.

Language and Culture House Brochure [pdf]

Language and Culture House Application [pdf]