IS 583

Spring 2023 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 2 OR 4 hours.

Variety of newly developed and advanced topics courses within the field of Book History, intended to augment the existing Information Sciences curricula.

Additional fees may apply. See Class Schedule. 2 or 4 graduate hours. No professional credit. May be repeated in the same or separate semesters to a maximum of 16 hours, if topics vary.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

IS 583 class schedule data for spring 2023
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
73029
Lecture-Discussion
BL
12:30PM -3:20PM
R
Location Pending
Cordell, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/17/23-05/03/23
Degree Notes:
ONL Info Science rate course.
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
BookLab: Print to Programming
Section Info:
"BookLab: Print to Programming" bridges book history, information sciences, and digital humanities to offer an applied history of new media from the hand-press period to the present. BookLab examines how practices of reading, writing, and publishing have interacted—thematically and materially—with contemporaneous technological innovations over the past 250 years. Booklab complements readings with hands-on critical making experiments using textual technologies from letterpress to computer programming. Graduate student questions may be sent to ischool-advising@illinois.edu. This course is held at the FabLab.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
Restricted to students in the Illinois Informatics Institute or Information Sciences department.
72621
Online
PBO
6:00PM -7:55PM
R
n.a.
Vincler, J
Part of Term:
B
Date Range:
03/13/23-05/03/23
Degree Notes:
ONL Info Science rate course.
Credit:
2 hours
Section Title:
Print Culture & Material Book
Section Info:
This course will explore the approximate 500 year history of the printed book in the West from Gutenberg to our digital contemporary with the aim of better understanding the shifting power and purpose of the printing press historically. We will read the work of book historians and bibliographers, examine the role of the printed book in specific epochs such as the Reformation and Scientific Revolution, and examine how print has been used for censorship and propaganda, as well as for the production of knowledge. Particular attention will be paid to the types of material books found in research libraries and university special collections. Graduate student questions may be sent to ischool-advising@illinois.edu
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
Restricted to students in the Illinois Informatics Institute or Information Sciences department.
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