Welcome to Dr. Helene Høyrup, SLAIS Visiting Professor in Children’s Literature (All Students)

The School of Library, Archival and Information Studies is pleased to announce that Helene Høyrup, Ph.D., of the Royal School of Library and Information Science in Denmark, will be joining us as the inaugural Dodson Visiting Professor. She will be in the position from February to April 2013.

Dr. Høyrup is Associate Professor in children’s literature and digital literacy at RSLIS n Copenhagen. She is an international scholar in children’s literature studies and has published extensively in the field. She is particularly interested in the theoretical development of children’s literature scholarship, the interface between children’s literature, art and literature for adults, and the situation of children’s literature and its studies in different nations and regions. As part of her work on digital literacy, Dr. Høyrup has co-edited a research volume on “New Knowledge Media” and is currently co-editing a book on the philosophy of information and digital library functions (with Birger Hjørland and Hans Jørn Nielsen, RSLIS). Additionally, Dr. Høyrup is an international Hans Christian Andersen scholar and a partner in several Danish, Scandinavian and European research projects on children’s literature and canonicity, and on theories of informal learning with digital media.

During her term as a Visiting Professor at SLAIS, Dr. Høyrup will teach, interact, and mentor students studying children’s literature. In addition to teaching two one-credit classes over the term, she will give two university-wide colloquia and speak at a symposium on Maurice Sendak.

1. March 1

MACL Symposium on Maurice Sendak, Friday, March 1st, 3:30-6:30 pm, Dodson Room, Room 302, Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall, University of British Columbia. The symposium includes five speakers. Registration is full. Helene Høyrup: “Maurice Sendak’s Modernism for Children. A Celebration of the Signifier?”

2. March 6 — Dr. Hoyrup will be happy to answer questions regarding Danish libraries and literature for children at this talk.

Wednesday, March 6th, 5:00 to 6:00 pm, Lillooet Room, Room 301, Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall, University of British Columbia.

“The Cultural Construction of Literature for Youth in Denmark – An Insider’s Historical Reading”

It has been suggested that children’s literature is “an intersection of two powerful ideological positions: our ideas about childhood and our ideas about literature, ideas often conflicted beyond our knowing” (Lundin 2004: 147). In this talk I shall give an outline of the contextual history of children’s literature in Denmark. In the lack of literary canonization (or, as German researchers phrase this process: decanonization) Danish children’s literature became a cultural battlefield reflecting different agents’ views of childhood and of literature. My talk will give an outline of this contextual history from Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tales to the postmodern cross-generational aesthetics of today.

3. March 20

Wednesday, March 20th, 12:00 to 1:00 pm, Lillooet Room, Room 301, Level 3, Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, 1961 East Mall, University of British Columbia.

“Literature between Bookspace and New Literacy Space: Towards a Connective Ethnography of Children’s Literature and Digital Media”

How can the meeting between “old” and “new” media become a fruitful encounter?  In the 20th century children’s literature research developed into a theoretically reflexive investigation of the relation between children, childhood and texts.  It could be said to have undergone the linguistic “turn”, which has often been seen as a parallel to the emergence of digital media.

Digital media, however, challenge the paradigm of print culture and the theories developed under previous media ecologies.  The field of New Literacy has emerged as an interdisciplinary movement aiming at analyzing the processes and “texts” of the emerging digital knowledge system.  New Literacy, from a Cultural Studies point of view, can be defined as socially recognized ways of creating, communicating and negotiating meaningful content, as mediated by texts and embedded in d/Discourses (Knobel & Lankshear).  The mediation between media, text and user is here studied from primarily a socio-cultural perspective.

The concept of aesthetics, as developed in theories of play, hermeneutics, linguistics, literature and “everyday” aesthetics, seems oddly absent in New Literacy research.  With picture books as a case, my paper suggests that children’s literature studies and New Literacy research should be seen as a converging theoretical field. Whereas children’s literature research needs to strengthen its concepts of materiality and mediation, New Literacy research should develop its concept of “text” to also encompass the aesthetic and critical view of knowledge following the linguistic turn

This lecture is inspired by my research in the concept of knowledge media (with colleagues at RSLIS) and by the current planning of a research network on advanced literacy skills and textual competences in the new media age with participation from researchers in children’s literature and literacy from Sweden, England, Germany and Denmark.  The lecture will also connect its theoretical points to trends in the development of library services for children and young adults in Denmark (e.g. based on the governmental committee work “Fremtidens biblioteksbetjening af børn” [Future Library Services for Children], in which Helene was a research member).

 

Høyrup Children’s Literature Courses (one credit courses; there may still be student places in the courses for registration)

LIBR 522K: Children’s Literature in a New Literacy Perspective (1 credit). Taught by Helene Høyrup. Saturday February 23 [1:00-5:00 and 6:00-9:00] in IBLC 191 and Friday March 15 [9:00-12:00/1:00-5:00] in SCARF 201. In this course students will learn about a number of aesthetic and narrative developments in contemporary children’s literature and about theories of how the new media landscape and digital culture interact with our notions of children’s literature. http://www.slais.ubc.ca/courses/coursdes/libr/libr522k.htm

LIBR 522M: Children’s Literature, Canon Formation, and Canonicity (1 credit). Taught by Helene Høyrup. Saturday March 9 [9:00-12:00/1:00-5:00] and March 23 [9:00-12:00/1:00-5:00] in IBLC 191. In this course students will learn about theories and examples of canon formation and canonicity in relation to children’s literature. http://www.slais.ubc.ca/courses/coursdes/libr/libr522m.htm

SLAIS Summer Course Scheduled Modified (All Students)

There have been modifications to the two summer term SLAIS course timetables.  If you are planning on taking courses this summer please check the new versions:
http://www.slais.ubc.ca/courses/timetables/timetables.htm

If you have any questions please talk to your program chair.

The AUS Presents: Arts Last Lecture with Michaelle Jean (All Students)

The UBC Arts Last Lecture is back! This year, the Arts Undergraduate Society of UBC Vancouver is excited to welcome the Right Honourable Michaëlle Jean, former Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of Canada, current UNESCO Special Envoy for Haiti, and Co-President of the Michaëlle Jean Foundation as our speaker for the event.

When: Friday, March 1st 2013

Time: 8:00pm

Where: The Chan Centre for the Performing Arts at UBC

Open to: all UBC students, faculty, staff and general public

Mme. Jean will be talking about her foundation and UN work, with a Q & A at the end. We welcome you to join us in a thought-provoking discussion with Michaëlle Jean.

Ticket Prices:

Students: $13
UBC Faculty/Staff: $20
General Public: $25

For ticketing information, please visit aus.arts.ubc.ca/lastlecture

Questions? Contact Tanya Shum at aus.vpacademic@mail.arts.ubc.ca

Canadian Library Association Student Article Award (MLIS, Dual)

The contest is open to all students registered in, or recently graduated from, a Canadian library school, a library technician program, an information science program (including distance education programs), or faculty of education library program.

For more details, please see:

http://www.cla.ca/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Student_Article_Award&Template=/CM/HTMLDisplay.cfm&ContentID=12376

Graduate Research in a Day in Koerner Library February 19th (All Students)

Registration is now open for Discover, Gather, Create, Share – Graduate Research In A Day
at the UBC Library Research Commons in Koerner Library.

Date: Tuesday, February 19
Location: Koerner Library

Kick off Reading Week with a series of workshops designed to help you with all stages of the graduate student research
process from doing a Literature Review to Formatting Your Thesis according to FoGS guidelines, and all stages in between.

These events are free and lunch is included. Space is limited so register soon.

To view complete workshop listings and to register, visit:
http://elred.library.ubc.ca/libs/series/73

For more information, please visit the Research Commons website.

Canadian Library Association Student Article Award (All Students)

The contest is open to all students registered in, or recently graduated from, a Canadian library school, a library technician program, an information science program (including distance education programs), or faculty of education library program.

See http://www.cla.ca/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Student_Article_Award&Template=/CM/HTMLDisplay.cfm&ContentID=12376

Dissertation Successfully Defended (All Students)

The School of Library, Archival and Information Studies, The iSchool at The University of British Columbia, is pleased to announce the successful defense of the Ph.D. dissertation by student Evelyn Markwei on February 7. The title of her dissertation is: The Everyday Life Information Seeking Behaviour of Urban Homeless Youth.  The defence was held February 7. Evelyn will be conferred her doctorate at the May 24 Convocation ceremony at UBC.

Vancouver Selected to Host TED Talks Starting in 2014 (All Students)

Vancouver selected to host TED Talks starting in 2014 – The Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/vancouver-selected-to-host-ted-talks-starting-in-2014/article8167165/

Journal of Graduate Research in Young People’s Materials and Culture (MLIS, Dual, MACL)

Call for Papers: Journal of Graduate Research in Young People’s Materials and Culture (JGR)

Based at the University of British   Columbia the Journal of Graduate Research in Young People’s Materials and Culture (JGR) is a peer-reviewed open-access e-journal publishing graduate student research in the areas of children’s and young adult literature, childhood studies, and cultural studies related to children and young people.

We are currently selecting manuscripts for our winter 2013 issue. Papers on any children’s or young adult genres are welcome as are papers that discuss other children’s materials such as film, virtual texts, or graphic novels. Possible paper topics could include but are not limited to:

  • The child or young adult as explorer/explored, navigator/navigated
  • Navigating (or negotiating) identity, gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity or religion as a child or young adult in an adult world
  • Literary trends such as the history/future of children’s texts
  • Pathways of adaptation such as literary translations of texts to film, games, merchandise, graphic novels, or online spaces
  • Exploring place and spaces of childhood or adolescence
  • Cultural, physical, psychological, ideological, or literary restrictions and barriers to exploration and imagination
  • Childhood and adolescent development as it pertains to literature, new materials, other modalities
  • Children, young adults, and cross-cultural exposure

JGR accepts article submissions by current and recent graduate students relevant to the field of children’s and young adult literature and materials. All submissions will be peer reviewed. To ensure an objective peer review process please submit personally identifying content (such as your biographical sketch and contact information) as a separate document attached to your submission.

Submissions must be completed original manuscripts not submitted elsewhere, written in English, 5,000 – 8,000 words (including Endnotes and Works Cited), and should conform to the MLA Handbook, 7th edition. Please submit essays electronically along with a 150-word abstract and 50-word biographical sketch via Word attachments to jgr.submission@yahoo.ca or online through the OJS system at http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/ypmc/index.

Deadline for submissions is 15 February 2013. Publication is scheduled for late 2013.

For more information, visit the journal’s website at http://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/ypmc/index or contact the editors
Karen Taylor karen.taylor@alumni.ubc.ca or Robert Bittner rob1@sfu.ca.

Deadline for Janaury 2013 Registration (All Students)

Please be aware of the following deadline:

Friday, 8 February 2013

Most Term 2 courses and Distance Education Term C courses: Last day for change in registration and for withdrawal from most Winter Session Term 2 courses and Distance Education Term C courses with withdrawal standing of “W” recorded on a student’s academic record. Student Service Centre remains open for course withdrawals with a “W” standing. Refer to the Course Schedule for details on withdrawal date information specific to each course.

 

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