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Portuguese Fall 2026

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PORT 1110 Beginning Intensive Portuguese with Lilian Feitosa

MWF 11:00pm-11:50pm; 12:00pm - 12:50pm

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PORT 2050 Intensive Portuguese with Lilian Feitosa

MWF 1:00pm-1:50pm

Portuguese 2050 is an accelerated Portuguese language and culture course that condenses two semesters (PORT 1110 and PORT 2120) into one. PORT 2050 is designed specifically for UVA undergraduate and graduate students who already possess an advanced level of fluency in one of the Romance languages. The pedagogical approach to PORT 2050 is both proficiency-oriented and task-based and the class will be conducted completely in Portuguese.

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POTR 4270 Becoming Brazil with Eli Carter

TR 2:00pm-3:15pm

This seminar offers a broad overview of Brazilian history and culture from 1500 to the present. Through interdisciplinary readings, film screenings and class discussions, students will explore the sociopolitical and cultural formation of South America’s largest and most populous country

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Language

K'iche' Fall 2026

Undergraduate Courses

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KICH 1010 Introduction to K'iche' II with Esther Poveda Moreno

TuTh 04:00PM-05:15PM

This class is an introduction to the Nahualá dialect of K’iche’, a Maya language spoken in the western Highlands of Guatemala.  With about one million speakers, K’iche’ is one of the major indigenous languages in the Americas. This class aims to make the students competent in basic conversation and to introduce students to Highland Maya culture of Guatemala.

Virtual classroom:  The class is taught at Vanderbilt, but a new partnership with Duke, Vanderbilt, and UVa(link is external) allows students at consortium schools to study three important, less commonly taught languages: Haitian Creole, Maya K’iche’, and Tibetan. This is a virtual classroom, and it will be taught through the zoom platform.

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KICH 2010 Intermediate K'iche' II with Esther Poveda Moreno

TuTh 02:00PM-03:15PM

Class description: This class combines formal language instructions with the discussion of topics relevant to the K’iche’ culture and language in Guatemala. The goal and focus of this semester are on advanced grammar, learning to adapt speech to various environments and speech genres, examining oral histories and an introduction to a variety of written K’iche’ texts with a focus on contemporary texts. The class will incorporate exercises strengthening listening-comprehension, reading, and composition.

To achieve this goal students are expected to study and work on their own

Virtual classroom: The class is taught at Vanderbilt, but a new partnership with Duke, Vanderbilt, and UVa(link is external) allows students at consortium schools to study three important, less commonly taught languages: Haitian Creole, Maya K’iche’, and Tibetan. This is a virtual classroom, and it will be taught through the zoom platform.

K'iche' at UVA and Vanderbilt (https://iwl.virginia.edu/language/kiche)

Language

Italian Fall 2026

Undergraduate Courses

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ITAL 1010 Elementary Italian I with Francesca Calamita, Nicole Bonino & Stella Mattioli

MoWeFr 9:00am - 9:50am; 10:00am - 10:50am; 11:00am-11:50am

TuTh 12:30pm - 1:45pm; 2:00pm - 3:15pm

Elementary Italian I is the first class in the four-course sequence that is necessary to complete the world language requirement. In this course, students will learn basic survival skills to assist them when they travel to Italy, however they will also learn to describe people and places, ask questions, narrate in the present and simple past tenses, as well as write short texts describing themselves, their families, and their impressions of Italy. Students will also develop their ability to understand spoken Italian by listening to songs, commercials, and movie clips, and they will begin reading advertisements, song lyrics, and some poems. Elementary Italian I is taught with inclusive language to show how Italian has been evolving alongside Italy’s society. On that note, students of Elementary Italian will also have many occasions to learn more about life in contemporary Italy as they study the country’s language. 

Taught in Italian.

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ITAL 1020 Elementary Italian II with Francesca Calamita 

TuTh 3:30pm - 4:45pm

Elementary Italian II is the second class in the four-course sequence that is necessary to complete the world language requirement. In this course, students will learn to narrate in all tenses of the indicative, express opinions, make hypotheses, and give orders. They will improve their writing skills by producing a number of original texts, including discussion posts, poems, comics, and short articles. Students will also develop their ability to understand spoken Italian by listening to songs, commercials, and movie clips, and they will read and study lyrics, newspaper headlines, poems, and some short stories. Students of Elementary Italian II will also have many occasions to learn more about life in contemporary Italy including the nation’s media, literature, and politics as they study the country’s language.

Taught in Italian.

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ITAL 2010 Intermediate Italian I with Sarah Annunziato & Stell Mattioli 

MoWeFr 12:00pm - 12:50pm 

TuTh 9:30am - 10:45am; 2:00pm - 3:15pm 

ITAL 2010 Intermediate Italian I is the third class in the four-course sequence which fulfills the language requirement. Students will further develop their listening, speaking, reading and writing skills as well as deepen their cultural literacy in Italian. You will accomplish these goals with the guidance of your professor, through review of grammar, short readings, compositions, and listening and speaking activities. Students will also have the opportunity to listen to songs, comment on works of art, watch commercials and short films, read newspaper articles and literary excerpts, and meet natives of Italy in your quest to become more confident and competent users of the Italian language and its culture. 

Taught in Italian.

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ITAL 2020 Intermediate Italian II with Francesca Calamita 

TuTh 3:30 - 4:45pm

ITAL 2020 Intermediate Italian II is the fourth class in the four-course sequence which fulfills the language requirement. In this course, students will further develop their listening, speaking, reading and writing skills as well as deepen their cultural literacy in Italian. You will accomplish these goals with the guidance of your instructor, through review of grammar, short readings, compositions, and listening and speaking activities. Students will also have the opportunity to listen to songs, comment on works of art, watch commercials and short films, read and write newspaper articles, discuss short literary works, and analyze how the Italian language reflects the movement towards gender parity, as well as meet natives of Italy in your quest to become more confident and competent users of the Italian language.

Taught in Italian

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ITAL 3010 Mastering Italian Language & Culture with Sarah Annunziato  

TuTh 3:30pm - 4:45pm 

Mastering Italian Language and Culture I (ITAL 3010) is the first of two courses that are required to complete either a major or a minor in Italian Studies.  Students of this class will enhance their mastery of the five skills essential to learning a world language (speaking, listening, reading, writing, and cultural competency) by applying them to various real-world settings such as: dialogues, presentations, informal conversations, debates, interviews with native speakers, and book clubs, among other possibilities. We will accomplish these goals through viewing and discussing contemporary Italian cinema and television. Our course will examine films from 21st-century Italy to give students a glimpse of present-day Italian society, while placing particular emphasis on further development of conversational and writing skills. Films to include: Benvenuti al sud, Il rosso e il blu, Il ragazzo invisibile, Corpo Celeste, Terraferma, La mafia uccide solo d’estate, Io e lei, Noi e la Giulia, Scusate se esisto, and Quo vado.

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ITAL 3559 Travels in Italy: History, Culture, & Ecology with Enrico Cesaretti  

TuTh 11:00pm - 12:15pm

This course deals with the way that Italy has been perceived, imagined, and represented by those who have contributed to shaping the myth of the “Beautiful Country,” from the illustrious “Grand Tourists” and travelers of the 18th-century to today’s writers, visitors, artists, and local residents.  We will explore this topic by examining some famous and less well-known urban and rural landscapes in different Italian regions through the lenses of literature, art, film, and ecology. Counts towards the major and minor in Italian Studies. 

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ITAL 4820 Italian Pop Culture from the 1960s to the Present with Enrico Cesaretti 

TuTh 12:30pm - 1:45pm 

This course examines the cultural and socio-political transformations that took place in Italy during its recent history. By discussing different cultural artifacts (films, essays, literature), we shall ultimately try to answer the following questions: does Italy still have space for works that resist populist and consumer culture? What are the ethical and political consequences of Italy’s present cultural condition? Is there an Italian identity? Counts towards the major and minor in Italian Studies and does not require the purchase of any materials.

Taught in English

Language

Spanish Fall 2026

Undergraduate and Graduate Courses

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SPAN 1010 Elementary Spanish l with Daniel Colon

MoWeFr 8:00am-8:50am; 9:00am - 9:50am, 10:00 - 10:50am

This course, designed for students with no prior experience in Spanish, develops listening, speaking, reading and writing skills through engagement with oral and written texts in Spanish and interactive projects. Enables students to perform linguistic tasks that allow them to communicate in highly predictable everyday situations (e.g. expressing basic personal information and needs).

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SPAN 1060 Accelerated Elementary Spanish with Matthew Street

MoWeFr 9:00am - 9:50am; 10:00am - 10:50am; 11:00am - 11:50am; 12:00pm - 12:50pm

This course develops listening, speaking, reading and writing skills through engagement with oral and written texts in Spanish and interactive projects. It covers the material from SPAN 1010-1020 in an accelerated one-semester format, enabling students to perform linguistic tasks that allow them to communicate in common everyday situations (e.g., greeting, narrating, describing, ordering, comparing and contrasting).

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SPAN 2010 Intermediate Spanish with Esperanza Górriz Jarque, Sara Young, Kate Neff, Lauren Mehfoud, Andres Henao

MoWeFr 9:00am - 9:50am; 10:00am - 10:50am; 12:00pm - 12:50pm; 1:00am - 1:50am; 2:00pm - 2:50pm; 3:00pm - 3:50pm

TuTh 8:00am - 9:15am; 9:30am - 10:45am; 12:30pm - 1:45pm; 2:00pm - 3:15pm; 3:30pm - 4:45pm; 6:30pm - 7:45pm 

This course further develops listening, speaking, reading and writing skills through engagement with authentic, culturally rich oral and written texts in Spanish. Enables students to perform linguistic tasks that allow them to communicate in everyday situations (e.g., narrating present and past activities and expressing desires and requests), and to express personal meaning by creating with the language.

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SPAN 2020 Advanced Intermediate Spanish with Jennifer Barlow, Germain Badang, David Florez-Murillo, Kate Neff, Tammy Hertel, Jennifer Hogg, Filadelfia Soto, Francis Whitfill

MoWeFr 9:00am - 9:50am; 10:00am - 10:50am; 11:00am - 11:50am; 12:00pm - 12:50pm; 1:00pm - 1:50pm; 2:00pm - 2:50pm; 3:00pm - 3:50pm

TuTh 8:00am - 9:15am; 9:30-10:45am; 11:00am - 12:15pm; 12:30pm - 1:45pm; 2:00pm - 3:15pm; 3:30pm - 4:45pm; 5:00pm - 6:15pm; 6:30pm - 7:45pm

This course further develops listening, speaking, reading and writing skills through engagement with authentic, culturally rich oral and written texts in Spanish. Enables students to perform linguistic tasks that allow them to communicate in everyday situations with some complications (e.g., describing present, past and future activities, expressing opinions, and persuading), and to express personal meaning by creating with the language. Completion of this course fulfills the College of Arts and Sciences World Language Requirement.

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SPAN 3000 The Sounds of Spanish with Joel Rini

TuTh 3:30pm - 4:45pm

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SPAN 3010 Finding Your Voice in Spanish with Tammy Hertel, Esther Poveda Moreno, Ricardo Padrón, Ciara Raczyk, Patricio Soto

MoWeFr 8:00am - 8:50am; 9:00am - 9:50am; 11:00am - 11:50am

TuTh 8:00am - 9:15am; 9:30 - 10:45am; 12:30pm - 1:45pm

Imagine the incredible sense of achievement and empowerment you’ll feel when you confidently express yourself in another language! In SPAN 3010, you will explore your evolving proficiency in Spanish by engaging with and creating three cultural texts: a brief memoir, a news story, and a film review. Through examining selected examples of these text types in Spanish, you will grasp the rationale behind specific writing techniques, stylistic choices, and linguistic structures within each genre and their impact on the construction of meaning. You will ultimately acquire a personalized toolkit of linguistic and stylistic devices for crafting your texts. This course treats reading, listening, speaking, and writing not merely as isolated linguistic skills but as interconnected methods for building effective communication. As a participant in this course, you will establish personal learning objectives, enhance your conversational skills in Spanish, assemble a portfolio of your written work, and engage actively with our writing community through discussions, peer evaluations, recitals, and various interactive activities.

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SPAN 3015 Spanish for Heritage Learners with Maria Esparza Rodriguez

MoWeFr 1:00pm - 1:50pm

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SPAN 3030 Cultural Conversations with Nicole Bonino

MoWeFri 11:00am - 11:50am 

Ready to take your Spanish-speaking skills to the next level? This interactive course is designed to help you develop fluency through dynamic discussions, creative projects, and real-world engagement. Explore the cultures of Spain, Latin America, and the Caribbean through film, art, and performance. Enhance your speaking skills through interactions with guest speakers and generative AI platforms. To express yourself confidently in Spanish while immersing yourself in the richness of the Spanish-speaking world, you will engage in both individual and collaborative projects aimed at refining your spoken and written Spanish, preparing you for academic and professional settings.

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SPAN 3040 Business Spanish with Maria Esparza Rodriguez

MoWeFri 10:00am - 10:50am; 11:00am - 11:50am

This is an intermediate level course in which students read, research, discuss, debate and write in Spanish about recent themes that are relevant to commercial and economic contexts in the Spanish-speaking world. It is a language class that focusses on Spanish in professional settings; no previous academic or practical experience in commerce is required.

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SPAN 3050 Spanish for Medical Professionals with Alicia López Operé 

TuTh 11:00am - 12:15pm

Spanish for Medical Professions, is a recommended course for students that want to have a career in the health professions, and also for those who need to interact with Spanish-speaking people in hospitals, clinics and similar spaces. The course has been designed to develop linguistic competency as well as cultural competency in the health context. The emphasis is put on the real use of the language and the understanding of cultural differences among Spanish-speaking countries and the United States, and Latino patients in the United States. The course has a background theme on contemplative practices. 

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SPAN 3060 Writing-Social Justice & Change with Esther Poveda

TuTh 9:30am - 10:45am

Have you ever wondered what kinds of change could you enact with more proficient Spanish writing skills? SPAN 3060 is an advanced, community-based language learning course that offers you the chance to enhance your advanced writing skills in Spanish. In this course, we will discuss selected works by prominent Latin American authors and podcaster who have used writing and as a tool for social justice and change. We will also engage in in-person and remote conversations with guest speakers. Finally, you will participate in a community project with the Equity Center’s Youth Power program Starr Hill Pathways. This program creates a system of support for local youth from historically marginalized communities, while building a pathway for admission to the University of Virginia or the college and career that best meets their needs.

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SPAN 3200 Intro Hispanic Linguistics with Lorena Albert Ferrando

MoWe 2:00pm - 3:15pm 

The course objective is to provide an introduction into the core areas of linguistic analysis using Spanish as the test case. During the semester, we will cover several areas including: the sounds of Spanish (phonetics and phonology), word formation (morphology), sentence structure (syntax), meaning of words, phrases, sentences, and larger chunks of discourse, also in social context (semantics and pragmatics), history of the Spanish language, regional and social variation (dialectology and sociolinguistics), and language acquisition.

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SPAN 3300 Texts and Interpretations with Nicole Bonino, Nieves Garcia Prados, Fernando Riva, Alicia Lopez-Opere, Robert Sanchis

MoWeFr 10:00am - 10:50am; 11:00am - 11:50am; 3:00pm - 3:50pm

TuTh 11:00am - 12:15pm; 12:30pm - 1:45pm

This intermediate level course introduces the student of Spanish to the fundamentals of reading and understanding various genres, and to practice discussing, analyzing, and writing about them in an academic register in Spanish. It draws on texts and materials from both Spain and Latin America, and builds students’ specialized vocabulary. All work for the class, including reading, discussion, and writing, is done in Spanish. SPAN 3300 is a prerequisite for the survey courses. 

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SPAN 3400 Spain: From Kingdom to Empire (1200-1700) with Fernando Riva

TuTh 9:30am - 10:45am

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SPAN 3410 Perspectives on Modern Spain (1800 to the Present) with Kelly Moore

TuTh 11:00am - 12:15pm

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SPAN 3420 Politics and Power in the Early Americas (1492-1850) with Fernando Operé 

 MoWe 5:00pm - 6:15pm

This course is devoted to the earliest literature written about the Americas, from the arrival of Christopher Columbus to the independence of Latin America. The first texts were mainly chronicles and diaries written by travelers, soldiers, and religious figures. These works are of great historical and literary interest and today often seem close to works of fantasy. Among them are the fascinating accounts of Christopher Columbus’s first voyage, Hernán Cortés’s encounter with the Aztec world in Mexico (Tenochtitlan), Francisco Pizarro’s expeditions in Peru (Cusco), and the adventures—or failures—of many explorers throughout the new continent, such as Cabeza de Vaca and Hernando de Soto. The course also includes early Baroque literature in the Americas, with figures such as Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, as well as the travel writings of scientists who came to the continent to describe its flora, fauna, and geography, including Alexander von Humboldt and Charles Darwin.

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SPAN 3430 Contemporary Latin American Voices (1800 to the present) with Carlos Velazco Fernandez 

MoWeFr 1:00pm - 1:50pm

This course offers a survey of Latin American literature, inviting students to engage with the sociocultural context in which it has evolved from 1800 to the present. As we delve into a variety of short stories, poems, novels, essays, diaries, letters, and autobiographies, we will uncover how the region’s diverse cultures, peoples, and significant historical events have shaped its literary landscape. You will have the chance to express your thoughts and feelings through critical and creative reflection exercises, developing essential skills, such as close reading, debate, and informed and thoughtful writing in Spanish. Upon completing the seminar, you will have a rich interpretive appreciation of Latin America’s diverse literary tradition from the nineteenth century to the present.

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SPAN 3559 New Course with Fernando Valverde 

TuTh​ 5:00pm - 6:15pm 

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SPAN 4040 Translation Spanish to English​ with Erica Cobb & Nieves García Prados​  

MoWeFr 1:00pm - 1:50pm

TuTh 11:00am - 12:15pm; 12:30 - 1:45pm 

"Lost & Found in Translation" offers an introduction to the "art" of translation, both in practice and theory. Throughout the semester students participate in a series of workshops, collaborating on translations of texts of different genres, from multiple time periods and countries through in-depth readings and discussions, translation activities from Spanish to English and vice versa. This is a dynamic, interactive, inter-disciplinary course. Prerequisites: SPAN 3300, and highly recommended one/two survey(s) of literature and culture (SPAN 3400-3430). For Spanish majors we advise both surveys to be taken before SPAN 4040 (or simultaneously) since surveys cannot be taken during the 4th year.

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SPAN 4500 Special Topics Seminar: Malas mujeres: The Unruly Women of Spanish Realism with Kelly Moore

TuTh 12:30pm - 1:45pm 

This course survey the Spanish realist novel with a special emphasis on the genre's deviant subjects.

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SPAN 4530 Special Topics Seminar: Language and Power in the Making of a Discipline with Lorena Albert Ferrando 

MoWe 3:30pm - 4:45pm 

This course examines the role of institutions, associations and organizations in the configuration of Spanish Studies as a field defined by language as its distinctive trait. Focusing on bodies such as the Royal Academy of Spain, AATSP, Instituto Cervantes, and Sigma Delta Pi, the course examines how linguistic knowledge is produced, authorized, and regulated, and how power, ideology and prestige shape the institutional life of Spanish.

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SPAN 4530 Special Topics Seminar: The Global Spanish Language with Omar Mendoza Velazquez 

TuTh 5:00pm - 6:15pm

Linguistic study of the principal areas in which Spanish is or has been spoken as a native language across time periods (Spain, the Americas, Flanders, Naples, Philippines, Equatorial New Guinea, among others). The distribution of 'world Spanishes' is analyzed both synchronically (at a single point in time) as well as diachronically (historically).

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SPAN 4615 Spanish Cinema with Samuel Amago

TuTh 3:30p - 4:45pm

A cultural history of Spanish cinema from 1950 to 1980. We will cover the basics of film analysis and explore how popular cinema in Spain reflected and refracted the social and political tensions of the country’s dictatorship and transition to democracy. Every week, students will view a feature-length film and complete readings in Spanish. Class discussions and assignments will be in Spanish. 

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SPAN 4711 1492 and the Aftermath with Fernando Opere 

MoWe 2:00pm - 3:15pm

This course intends to acquaint the student with the history and culture of two important countries in Latin America: Argentina and Mexico. We will begin with pre-Columbian cultures, the historical and social evolution from colonial era, the independent period, and national period up to the present. The second part of the course will be devoted to study cultural and social themes: identity, race and ethnicity; city and countryside; migration; artistic and musical production; economic fluctuations; religion and its various manifestations; and violence and resistance among others. 

The methodology consists of a systematic comparison of these two countries in the most important aspects of their history, culture, and development. 

Language
Cartas de amor con Profesora Mirabal
March 18, 2026
5:00 PM - 6:00 PM
LatinX Center - Newcomb Hall Level 3
More Info about Cartas de amor con Profesora Mirabal
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