Courses
Start building your summer today by selecting from hundreds of Columbia courses from various topics of interest. Courses for Summer 2026 are now available, with new offerings being added throughout the winter into early spring.
Please note: listing your desired courses in your visiting application does not automatically register you for those courses, nor does it guarantee seat availability.
Key to Course Listings | Course Requirements
Course Options
Note:
If prior knowledge (not CU sequence of 1101/02) placement test needed.
Instructor
Irene Motyl
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 16:00-18:00
Tu 16:00-18:00
We 16:00-18:00
Th 16:00-18:00
Enrollment
0 of 15
Equivalent to ITAL V1101. Students will develop listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills in Italian and an understanding of Italian culture. Upon successful completion of this course, students should be able to provide basic information in Italian about themselves, their families, interests, likes and dislikes, and daily activities; participate in a simple conversation on everyday topics; to read edited texts on familiar topics; and produce Italian with basic grammatical accuracy and accurate pronunciation.
Instructor
Maria Luisa Gozzi
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 11:30-13:35
Tu 11:30-13:35
We 11:30-13:35
Th 11:30-13:35
Enrollment
2 of 15
Prerequisites: ITAL S1101, or the equivalent. Continues the work of ITAL 1101 and completes the study of elementary Italian. Students continue to develop communicative skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills). Upon successful completion of this course, students should be able to provide basic information in Italian about wants and needs, personal opinions and wishes, personal experiences, past activities, and daily routines; read simple texts on familiar matters of high frequency everyday or job-related language; draw on a repertoire of vocabulary and syntax sufficient for dealing with everyday situations.
Instructor
Patrizia Palumbo
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 11:30-13:35
Tu 11:30-13:35
We 11:30-13:35
Th 11:30-13:35
Enrollment
2 of 15
Instructor
Alessandra Saggin
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 11:30-13:35
Tu 11:30-13:35
We 11:30-13:35
Th 11:30-13:35
Enrollment
5 of 15
Instructor
Patrizia Palumbo
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 16:30-18:35
Tu 16:30-18:35
We 16:30-18:35
Th 16:30-18:35
Enrollment
4 of 15
Is the Qur’an translatable? Was the Qur’an translated? Are non Arabic-speaking Muslims allowed to translate the Qur’an? And what about non-Muslims? Did Muslims and non-Muslims collaborate in translating the text of the Qur’an into Latin and European vernaculars? This course focuses on the long history of the diffusion of the Qur’an, the Scripture of the Muslims, and one of the most important texts in the history of humanity. We will focus on reading and translation practices of the Qur’an in Europe and the Mediterranean, from the Middle Ages to the contemporary world. We will explore how European Muslims, such as Iberian moriscos, European Jews, as well as Orthodox, Protestants and Catholics read, copied, collected, translated and printed the Qur’an. We will also explore why the Qur’an was confuted, forbidden, burned and even eaten, drunk and worn along eight centuries of the history of Europe. This long excursus, based on a close reading of the Qur’an and on the discussion of the major themes this close reading proposes, will help us to understand the role of Islam and its revelation in the formation of European societies and cultures.
Instructor
Pier Mattia Tommasino
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
2 of 25
Equivalent to Latin 1101 and 1102. Covers all of Latin grammar and syntax in one term to prepare the student to enter Latin 1201 or 1202. This is an intensive course with substantial preparation time outside of class.
Instructor
Kristina Milnor
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 09:00-12:10
Tu 09:00-12:10
We 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
0 of 20
Equivalent to Latin 1101 and 1102. Covers all of Latin grammar and syntax in one term to prepare the student to enter Latin 1201 or 1202. This is an intensive course with substantial preparation time outside of class.
Instructor
Kristina Milnor
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 09:00-12:10
Tu 09:00-12:10
We 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
0 of 20
Instructor
Umberto Verdura
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 09:00-12:10
Tu 09:00-12:10
We 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
4 of 20
Instructor
Umberto Verdura
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 09:00-12:10
Tu 09:00-12:10
We 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
4 of 20
The purpose of this foundational course is to introduce Columbia undergraduate students, in the context of their Global Core curriculum, to the seminal field of critical theory. The historical domain of this course is within the last century and its geographical spectrum is global. European critical thinkers are included in this course but not privileged. Thinkers from Asia, Africa, Europe, North, South, and Latin America, are examined here in chronological order and in equal democratic footing with each other. This course as a result is decidedly cross-cultural, one step forward towards de-alienating critical thinkers from around the globe and the issues they address without pigeonholing them as something “other” or “different.” The course is designed and offered in the true spirit of the “Global Core.” The purpose of the course is to reach for the common denominator of serious critical thinking about the fate of our humanity and the health of our social relations in an increasingly fragile world—where the false binaries of “the West” and “the Rest” no longer hold. The roster of critical thinkers we will examine is by no means exhaustive but representative. Any number of other critical thinkers can be added to this roster but none of those we will examine can be excluded from them. The course is divided into thirteen successive weeks and for each week a number of seminal, original, and groundbreaking texts are identified. Each week we will examine selected passages from these texts. The course is designed as a lecture course, and my lectures are based on the totality of these texts but students will be assigned specific shorter passages to read.
Instructor
Hamid Dabashi
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Tu 09:00-12:10
Th 09:00-12:10
Enrollment
5 of 50
Corequisites: MDES UN1001. Discussion sections (TWO) to accompany the course MDES UN1001, Critical Theory: A Global Perspective.
Instructor
Modality
In-Person
Day/Time
Mo 11:10-12:00
We 11:10-12:00
Enrollment
3 of 15