| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • You already know Dokkio is an AI-powered assistant to organize & manage your digital files & messages. Very soon, Dokkio will support Outlook as well as One Drive. Check it out today!

View
 

Required Texts

Page history last edited by Alan Liu 8 years, 12 months ago

 

Required Books

 

Purchase the following three books at the UCEN Bookstore or elsewhere:

 

  • Lee T. Lemon and Marion J. Reis, ed. and trans.,
    Russian Formalist Criticism: Four Essays
    University of Nebraska Press, 2012
    ISBN-10: 080323998X
    ISBN-13: 978-0803239982

 

  • Roland Barthes.
    S/Z
    trans.. Richard Miller; Hill & Wang, 1975
    ISBN-10: 0374521670
    ISBN-13: 978-0374521677

 

  • Michel Foucault,
    Madness and Civilization
    Vintage Books, 1988
    ISBN-10: 067972110X
    ISBN-13: 978-0679721109

 

Online Readings

 

All other readings are online (linked from the course Schedule page).  Because so many readings are online (an increasingly prevalent trend in college courses), students will need to develop a method or workflow for themselves that optimizes their ability to study the materials.  By Class 3, therefore, students are required to demonstrate in class that they have the means to save, organize, and annotate copies of online materials according to one of the methods described below.   (On that date, bring to class on your laptop or other digital device at least one copy of an assigned reading that you have highlighted or otherwise annotated in some way.  If you do not own a laptop, tablet, or other digital device, then bring a printed copy of one assigned reading.)

 

Methods for Studying Online Materials:

While everyone has their own personal preferences and technical preferences, the following are some suggested options for handling online materials:

 

  1. Printing.  UCSB students have 100 pages of free printing at selected computer labs on-campus each quarter.  Computer Lab Info: https://it.ucsb.edu/services/labs/open-access-labs
  2. Annotating PDF's on a laptop or desktop computer.  Some of the online readings in the course are Adobe Acrobat "PDF" files.  An excellent way to read PDF's is to use the highlighting, commenting, bookmarking, and other annotation features in the free Adobe Acrobat Reader program (or another PDF reader program) to mark up documents as you study them, then save your annotated copy of the document locally or in a "cloud" service like Dropbox, Google Drive, etc..  The latest version of the Acrobate Reader program may be downloaded here. (Handy guide to annotating and commenting using Acrobat Reader).
  3. Annotating PDF's on a tablet computer.  If you own a tablet computer such as an iPad, download an app like Adobe Reader, iAnnotate, PDF Reader, PDF Expert, or another PDF-capable documents reader that will allow you to annotate documents as your read.  Many of these apps also synchronize with cloud storage services such as Dropbox so that you can keep your annotated documents in a central location accessible to both your tablet and your laptop or other computer.
  4. Converting Web pages into PDF's. For assigned readings that are Web pages (HTML pages), you can download extensions for your browser such as Save as PDF and Web 2 PDF that will convert most Web pages to PDF files that you can save.  (The exceptions are password-protected Web pages or some pages that for a variety of reasons do not convert well into PDF's.)  You can also use an online convert-to-PDF service like PdfCrowd.
  5. Annotating Web pages without turning them into PDF's. A variety of programs and browser plug-ins exist that allow you to highlight, draw, comment, and otherwise annotate Web sites and retain the marked-up copy of the page.  Some of these programs are described here.
  6. Storing and Organizing Your Annotated Readings. You should have a location on your computer or in a cloud service such as Dropbox where you store in organized fashion the materials from the Internet that you have downloaded and annotated.  For example, create a single folder where you store your readings under file names such as: "McGann, Jerome (2002), Literary Scholarship in the Digital Age.pdf"

 

 

 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.