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Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World — Eric Rabkin

Started by zakk, 20-04-2012, 13:45:47

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zakk

Koga zanima, besplatan online kurs fantastike:

https://www.coursera.org/course/fantasysf

About the Course
Fantasy is a key term both in psychology and in the art and artifice of humanity.  The things we make, including our stories, reflect, serve, and often shape our needs and desires.  We see this everywhere from fairy tale to kiddie lit to myth; from "Cinderella" to Alice in Wonderland to Superman; from building a fort as a child to building ideal, planned cities as whole societies.  Fantasy in ways both entertaining and practical serves our persistent needs and desires and illuminates the human mind. Fantasy expresses itself in many ways, from the comfort we feel in the godlike powers of a fairy godmother to the seductive unease we feel confronting Dracula.  From a practical viewpoint, of all the fictional forms that fantasy takes, science fiction, from Frankenstein to Avatar, is the most important in our modern world because it is the only kind that explicitly recognizes the profound ways in which science and technology, those key products of the human mind, shape not only our world but our very hopes and fears.  This course will explore Fantasy in general and Science Fiction in specific both as art and as insights into ourselves and our world.
This course comprises ten units.  Each will include a significant reading, typically a novel or a selection of shorter works.  I will offer video discussions of each of the readings and also of more general topics in art and psychology that those readings help illuminate.  Each unit will include online quizzes and ask you to write a brief essay offering your own insights into the reading.  All the readings except Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles and Ursula K. LeGuin's The Left Hand of Darkness will be available online at no charge.

About the Instructor



Eric S. Rabkin is Arthur F. Thurnau Professor, Professor of English Language and Literature, and Professor of Art and Design at the University of Michigan.  He has won numerous teaching awards, including the Golden Apple awarded annually by the students to the outstanding teacher at the University of Michigan.  His research publications include the first English-language theoretical discussion of fantasy and the second of science fiction.  He has won the Science Fiction Research Association's Pilgrim Award for lifetime contributions to science fiction criticism.

Why shouldn't things be largely absurd, futile, and transitory? They are so, and we are so, and they and we go very well together.

Gaff

Hvala Zakk.

Samo da dodam da Eric S. Rabkin ima seriju predavanja: Masterpieces of the Imaginative Mind - Literature's Most Fantastic Works (audio i video). Ne iznosi neke ne znam kakve nove ideje ali se može pogledati bez strepnje da se neće naučiti/saznati išta novo.
Sum, ergo cogito, ergo dubito.