GLBL 499

Spring 2013 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 0 TO 4 hours.

Selected reading and research in Global Studies. See schedule for current topics.

3 undergraduate hours. 1 to 4 graduate hours. May be repeated, if topics vary, in the same or separate terms to a maximum of 6 undergraduate or 8 graduate hours. Prerequisite: GLBL 100 or six hours of global studies, anthropology, social geography, political science, sociology, or economics; consent of instructor.

Section Status updates every 10 minutes.
GLBL 499 class schedule data for spring 2013
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
55113
Lecture-Discussion
EK
6:00PM -8:20PM
M
359 Armory
Kolodziej, E
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/14/13-05/01/13
Special Approval:
Instructor Approval Required
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Governing the Global Society
Section Info:
This section is reserved for Graduate Students receiving a FLAS Fellowship from the Center for Global Studies. Governing the Global Society: Pursuing Order, Welfare, and Legitimacy This seminar advances three propositions: (1) there now exists a global society; (2) its governing institutions - the state, markets, and democracy - are flawed; and (3) absent their reform, the global society is at risk.
55562
Lecture-Discussion
M3
2:00PM -3:20PM
TR
1118 Foreign Languages Building
Malekin, B
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/14/13-05/01/13
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Childhood & Children's Lit
Section Info:
Childhood and Childrens Literature In this course we will explore the changing understanding of childhood and youth in Scandinavia, primarily Sweden, through childrens literature and classic accounts of childhood in fiction, film and related media. Works analyzed range from Hans-Christian Andersens fairy tales and Astrid Lindgrens world literature classic Pippi Longstocking to contemporary youth fiction and cinema. We will address questions about what constitutes children?s literature in Scandinavia and in a comparative context with the US; how childhood is construed in books self-described as children's literature as well as in adult-audience fiction and memoirs; and how representations of childhood correlate with evolving ideas about family formation, child-rearing, the welfare state, and education in twentieth- and twenty-first century Scandinavia. Course goals include gaining knowledge of important texts, concepts, genres, and narrative strategies in childrens and youth literature and understanding these in terms of social-historical contexts in Scandinavia and the US. The course will offer students a comparative context with which to gain a fuller understanding of Scandinavian childrens and youth culture in correlation to American educational and literary traditions, and will provide students with an opportunity to gain in-depth insight into a culture known internationally as a forerunner in childrens rights and education. This section for Undergraduate Students.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
55597
Lecture-Discussion
M4
2:00PM -3:20PM
TR
1118 Foreign Languages Building
Malekin, B
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/14/13-05/01/13
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Childhood & Children's Lit
Section Info:
Childhood and Children?s Literature In this course we will explore the changing understanding of childhood and youth in Scandinavia, primarily Sweden, through childrens literature and classic accounts of childhood in fiction, film and related media. Works analyzed range from Hans-Christian Andersens fairy tales and Astrid Lindgrens world literature classic Pippi Longstocking to contemporary youth fiction and cinema. We will address questions about what constitutes children?s literature in Scandinavia and in a comparative context with the US; how childhood is construed in books self-described as children's literature as well as in adult-audience fiction and memoirs; and how representations of childhood correlate with evolving ideas about family formation, child-rearing, the welfare state, and education in twentieth- and twenty-first century Scandinavia. Course goals include gaining knowledge of important texts, concepts, genres, and narrative strategies in childrens and youth literature and understanding these in terms of social-historical contexts in Scandinavia and the US. The course will offer students a comparative context with which to gain a fuller understanding of Scandinavian childrens and youth culture in correlation to American educational and literary traditions, and will provide students with an opportunity to gain in-depth insight into a culture known internationally as a forerunner in childrens rights and education. This section for Graduate Students.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
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