Spring 2022
Meeting:
MW 12:30pm - 2:20pm / SAV 169
SLN:
19728
Section Type:
Lecture
Instructor:
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):
Convener: Guntis Šmidchens, guntiss@uw.edu
[pdf copy of syllabus. Please follow this Canvas website for updates]
This seminar interrogates the role of cultural institutions and the arts in shaping public discourse, in two general contexts:
- The "canon" of Scandinavian (including Baltic) literature studies:
- classic works of Scandinavian literature that engage social institutions such as monarchy and the state, marriage and gender hierarchies, etc., both supporting and challenging them;
- and the academic institutions that frame and shape a "canon":
-
- departmental reading lists (like the one that appears below); university administrations; libraries; conferences; peer-reviewed journals; book reviews; etc.
Reading List
- Roosevelt Montás, Rescuing Socrates: How the Great Books Changed My Life and Why They Matter for a New Generation (Princeton University Press 2021)
- Selected articles about academic institutions, TBA.
- Sigrid Undset, Kristin Lavransdatter I: The Wreath
- Henrik Ibsen, A Doll's House and Other Plays
- Elias Lönnrot, The Kalevala
- Tõnu Õnnepalu, Border State
- Johannes Jensen, Fall of the King [Link to e-book]
- Žemaitė, Marriage for Love
- Rainis, Fire and Night
- Selected folktales in Kvideland Sehmsdorf, eds, All the World's Reward [Link to e-book]
General reference:
- UW Department of Scandinavian Studies M.A. Reading List, Literature Short List
-
Definitions of "Institution" and "Social Structure", in Scott, J. (2014). A dictionary of sociology (Fourth ed., Oxford paperback reference). Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Link to e-book]
- Rossel, S. (1982). History of Scandinavian Literature, 1870-1980 (Nordic series ; v. 5). Minneapolis: Univ Of Minnesota Press. [Link to e-book]
- Violeta Kelertas, Introduction, Baltic Postcolonialism. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2006. [Link to e-book]
- Marianne Stecher-Hansen, "Introduction" (2004). Danish writers from the Reformation to decadence, 1550-1900 (Dictionary of literary biography ; v. 300). Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale. ? [Link to e-book]
- and/or other canonic histories of literature in your language (or country) of specialization.
Asssignments (to be updated soon)
- Contribute to class discussions about assigned readings
- Write an essay about a book we're reading, and its place in the literary canon; or a book which we are not reading, which should be in the canon! (mindful that we wish to have a single, feasible M.A. reading list)
- Lurk (and/or present a paper) at an academic conference (any one or all of the following!), to study how literary and other academic canons are created and reinforced.
- Scandinavian Department graduate students conference presentations dry-run on April 8, 2022, 12:30-3:30, Allen Auditorium;
- REECAS-NW, April 7-9, 2022 [Conference website]
- Society for Advancement of Scandinavian Study, April 27-30, 2022 [Conference website]
- Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies, May 26-29, 2022. [Conference website]
Catalog Description:
Cultural, educational, governmental, or social institutions significant to the Nordic and Baltic region; or, practices and methods of research on institutions; or, representation of the institution in literature and film. Role of cultural institutions and the arts in shaping public discourse. Offered: AWSp.
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
October 9, 2024 - 9:25 am