Session: July
UBC Departments: English Language and Literatures
Course descriptions
Making Books, Making Media, Making Publics
Considers the emergence and evolution of “(the) public(s),” as an assemblage of readers, audiences, and citizens, in Anglo-American politics, from the turn of the eighteenth century to the present. Students will read short excerpts from works of political philosophy, literary history, journalism, and poetry that examine and engage the significance, nature, and history of publics. Students will investigate scholarly claims about the relationship between writing, reading, books, media and the empowerment of citizens by learning, engaging in, and critically reflecting on practices of media making: the design, typsetting and printing, illustration and binding of a text of their own making, in analogue and digital modes.
History of the English Language
In this course we trace the development of the English language from an unimportant local dialect on the outskirts of the European settlement area to a vibrant global language that has diversified into numerous independent standards today. We will explore the various forms of the language as it has been adapted to fit changing needs, from its Proto-Indo-European origins, to the coming of the language to the British Isles, its near obliteration in Middle English times and its comeback in the Renaissance period. We will focus on the language’s role in the following colonial paradigm and reflect on what makes Canadian English today. In other words, we’re dealing with 5000 years of language history, 1500 under the name “English”, to explain how we got where we are today.
Contact us
If you have questions about courses in the Arts Vancouver Summer Program, email Emily Chou, International Summer Program Coordinator, at arts.vsp@ubc.ca.