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Foto: Matthias Friel

Sherlocks: Adaptations and Modes of Detection - Einzelansicht

Veranstaltungsart Seminar Veranstaltungsnummer
SWS 2 Semester SoSe 2020
Einrichtung Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik   Sprache englisch
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Belegungsfrist 20.04.2020 - 10.05.2020

Belegung über PULS
Gruppe 1:
     jetzt belegen / abmelden
    Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Lehrperson Ausfall-/Ausweichtermine Max. Teilnehmer/-innen
Einzeltermine anzeigen
Seminar Do 10:00 bis 12:00 wöchentlich 23.04.2020 bis 23.07.2020  1.09.1.15    
Kommentar

Please follow the "comment" link above for more information on comments, course readings, course requirements and grading.

Dear students, all courses will be taught as online courses with asynchronous access until further notice. Once you have signed on in PULS and have been admitted in PULS, your instructor will email you via PULS to let you know when and how to access the online material (moodle, etc.). Testatsleistungen (course requirements) may be subject to change. Students who cannot (yet) access PULS: Please email your instructor directly. It is possible that classes can be switched to classroom teaching (Präsenzlehre) at some point during the semester. If this happens, your instructor will let you know and classes will take place at the times originally scheduled.

Literatur

The Guinness Book of World Records cites Sherlock Holmes as the most portrayed literary character in film and television. This seminar will trace the shifting meanings of Sherlock through several media, including popular and fandom creations. It looks towards figures of detection, hermeneutics, and current theories of adaptation to query notions of authority and originality, and to contextualise, analyse and interpret an array of Sherlock figures.
 
This seminar will remain in online mode regardless of changes to official policy. This is to provide for those students who, for various reasons – exchange semesters, (urgent) care responsibilities, volunteer work, or otherwise – might not be able to attend seminars in Potsdam prior to the summer break. The course will involve some short, recorded lectures, but will mostly entail reading activities and sharing notes and ideas to facilitate a collaborative atmosphere of learning. The class will be asynchronous (you do not have to do the work at the specific time scheduled for this class). There will be options of submitting a longer term paper for those students who require 6 or more credit points.

Students should obtain access to Arthur Conan Doyles’ Sherlock Holmes short stories. These are out of copyright and should be freely available online, available second hand, or support your local book store by ordering an actual book, for instance, the Penguin complete Sherlock Holmes (ISBN: 9780141040288).

Leistungsnachweis more later

Strukturbaum
Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester SoSe 2020 , Aktuelles Semester: SoSe 2024