The List of Weekend Seminars Offered in Spring 2009 Supervisor Dr A. Graff Dr S. Kuźma Dr Z. Kwiecień Dr A. Kondratowicz Dr J. Dubrow Dr E. Grzeszczyk Prof. dr D. Jones Prof. dr W. Glass Dr M. Gajda-Łaszewska Dr P. Frelik Dr M. Wiśniewski Catalog Number S 102 S 103 S 104 PL S 108 S 109 S 111 S 114 S 118 S 119 S 121 S 123 Available places 0 10 0 2 0 7 4 0 4 5 10 S102 Dr Agnieszka Graff American Literature and Culture. This seminar focuses on constructions of race and gender in the American literary tradition. For instance, we might examine selected works by African American writers, as well as critical debates concerning the construction of race in canonical works by White authors (such as Stowe, Twain, Melville or Faulkner). Thesis topics on a range of 19th and 20th century writers, as well as theoretical and cultural debates are welcome. The instructor’s interests include also the history of the women’s movement in the USA, debates within feminist theory, and selected areas of popular culture. S 103 Dr Sylwia Kuźma American Social and Cultural History The seminar deals with topics pertaining to broadly understood American social and cultural history, including such fields as women’s history, gender history, history of science, African-American history, history of sexuality. Other research projects may also be accepted. Preference is given to the 19th and 20th centuries. Interdisciplinary approach will be encouraged. S 104 PL Dr Zbigniew Kwiecień M.A. theses will deal chiefly with the various aspects of American diplomatic history. Preference is given to the period up to the 1950s but this does not exclude later decades. S 108 Dr Andrzej Kondratowicz Economic Issues Students with and without formal degrees in economics are welcome. Theses must concern the American economy, but can be comparative (e.g.: looking at small firms in the USA and the EU), as well as interdisciplinary (e.g.: the image of the American businessman in soap operas of the last 20 years). S 109 Dr Joshua Kjerulf Dubrow Sociological Perspectives on Contemporary American Culture This seminar focuses on cultural aspects of contemporary American society viewed from a sociological perspective. Topics that reflect instructor interests include: Sociological Conceptions of Culture; Political Culture after September 11, 2001; Issues in Inequality - Race and Ethnicity, Gender and Sexuality, Social Class and the American Elite, and Intersectionality; Sport and Society; and Religion and Community. M.A. theses concerning these and related topics are welcome, as are interdisciplinary approaches in theory and methods. While sociological inquires may take many forms, I encourage M.A. students to ask interesting and important questions, situated in social theory and that use appropriate methods. S 111 Dr Ewa Grzeszczyk American Society and Culture and Americanization of Polish Popular Culture This seminar focuses on the sociology of American culture, especially contemporary phenomena. The second area of study is the Americanization of contemporary Polish popular culture, which is visible in a number different areas such as: fashion, popular music, movies, different television genres based on American models, changes in university education, fast-food restaurants, food ways, the fashion of reading selfhelp books and undergoing therapy, fitness, corporate culture, advertising, shopping malls, multiplexes, cartoons, American holidays, the way the cities look, and finally the American influence on the Polish language. The seminar combines the cultural and the sociological approach; students are encouraged to use methods of qualitative sociology (e.g. interviews or participant observation). S 114 Prof. dr David Jones American Law, Business, and Foreign Policy The instructor’s research interests span the interface of American, European Union, and Chinese law, business and public administration including foreign policy, foreign trade policy, and international organizations. S 118 Prof. dr William Glass American Social History The instructor is most interested in topics in American social history from 1940 to the present, particularly how the themes of race, class, gender, and ethnicity have shaped the development of American society and culture. Additionally, similar topics from earlier in American history will be welcome. S 119 Dr Małgorzata Gajda-Łaszewska American Media and Society The seminar will focus on the research of American media as an institution both shaping and shaped by a variety of forces: commercial, political, cultural. Their evolution from local to global tools of communication and expression together with the issues of representation of different aspects of life will be the subject of our study. Media involvement in military conflicts and their role as promoters of America interests abroad are the areas of particular interest to the instructor, yet this does not restrict in any way a range of subjects for students’ projects. S 121 Dr Paweł Frelik American Visual Narrative In the late 20th century much of story-telling has become evacuated into visual media, the Hollywood and independent cinema constituting the best-established tradition. Next to it, however, a range of other practices has emerged in which the traditional elements of narrativity are combined with the so-called “new media.” The seminar will focus on texts, in which story-telling engages images – both static and moving. We will investigate the ways in which visual, verbal and other aspects co-exist and interact within such texts as well as the relationship between the form/production of such texts and the stories they tell. In most cases, the selected texts also engage various issues of American-ness and America – these, too, will be addressed during seminar discussions. The texts to be discussed include such narrative forms as codex-based fiction utilizing graphics, innovative layout and non-standard typography, comic books and graphic novels, electronic hypertexts/cybertexts, and videogames. Considering probable novelty of the material for many students, the first semester will be structured around “case studies” which will help familiarize seminar participants with the discourses of narrative forms and the strategies of dealing with such texts. The two subsequent semesters will be devoted to more detailed, close readings of American visual narratives as well as to the development of M.A. theses. Research topics from outside the seminar focus may also be accepted. Other possible areas include experimental/postmodern American fiction, so-called popular literatures, and literatures of the fantastic. No previous experience of graphic narratives, hypertexts and videogames is necessary but it needs to be remembered that texts in question may challenge preconceived notions of story-telling – open-mindedness and willingness to become acquainted with narratives forms burdened with certain general-public prejudice (as in “all comics are stupid” or “videogames are a waste of time”) is necessary. Basic computer literacy will also be an asset. S 123 Dr Mikołaj Wiśniewski American Literature & Ideology The seminar is offered to students interested in 19th and 20th century American literature, culture and history. Areas of study include: - 19th century American literature & its socio-political context - History of the U.S.: from the Founding Fathers to the 2008 Presidential Elections - American Thought & Ideology - Continental and American Modernism - Postmodernism - Contemporary American Literature.