FRE246H1 - Introduction to French Literary Analysis
Course: FRE246H1 (Introduction to French Literary Analysis) in FRE department at University of Toronto.
Credit Hours: 36 • Academic Level: second-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 2 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 7 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 17 advanced courses for further study
Interdisciplinary Requirements: Prerequisites span 2 different departments
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the FRE curriculum at University of Toronto, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by FRE246H1
- FRE438H1 - Advanced Topics in Francophone Literatures
- FRE304H1 - Contemporary French Women's Prose Fiction
- FRE310H1 - Relations between Text and Other Media
- FRE441H1 - Advanced Topics in French Literature
- FRE446H1 - Advanced Studies in Literary Theory
- FRE410H1 - Advanced Topics in Quebec Literature
- FRE443H1 - Advanced Topics: Authors
- FRE318H1 - Medieval French Literature
- FRE320H1 - French Literature of Classicism and Enlightenment
- FRE324H1 - French Literature in the Time of Revolutions and Industrialization
- FRE326H1 - Contemporary French Literature
- FRE332H1 - Francophone Literatures
- FRE334H1 - Francophone Cinema
- FRE336H1 - Postcolonialism: Francophone Literatures
- FRE345H1 - Literary Genres
- FRE314H1 - Quebec and French-Canadian Literature
- FRE319H1 - Laughter and Thought in French Renaissance Literature
Academic Planning at University of Toronto
Students planning FRE246H1 at University of Toronto should complete 2 prerequisites before enrollment.
Course Sequence: This course requires a 7-level prerequisite chain, requiring careful multi-semester planning for optimal progression.
Future Pathways: Completing FRE246H1 enables enrollment in 17 advanced courses for further study
This second-year course at University of Toronto integrates into structured degree pathways for FRE programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.