Thursday, December 6, 2012

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Weeks 14 & 15

Week 14 – November 26-30: Grimm Pictures: Fairy Tale Archetypes in Horror and Suspense Films 
Take Home Exam 2 is due by Thursday, November 29
Tuesday: Lecture: "Masters reloaded: Rammstein's "Sonne" and "Snow White" by the Brothers Grimm"
Wednesday: Film: “Silence of the Lambs” - Part 2
Thursday: Discussion of film, the Grimm’s tale and the reading
READ: Walter Rankin: “The Path of the Resistance,” in: Grimm Pictures Fairy Tale Archetypes in Horror and Suspense Films, pp. 17-39. On Blackboard under Course Documents.
Blog Entry 11: This is your final Blog. In this blog, please reread all blogs you have written and reflect about what you have done and learned in the semester. Blog is due by Sunday, December 2.
Friday: Boys & Girls Club Service Learning Project - All Groups MUST present today

Week 15 – December 3-7:
Tuesday: Group Presentations … Final Project is due.
Wednesday: Group Presentations … Final Project is due.
Thursday: Group Presentations/ Evaluations   Final Project is due.

Weeks 12 & 13


Week 12 – November 12-16: Rapunzel and Tangled
Monday:  Evening Film: “Tangled” by Walt Disney, 2010 (100 Min)
Tuesday:  Read: The Complete Fairy Tales, "Rapunzel,” pp. 42-45
Read: Lüthi: Chapter 8: Rapunzel, pp. 109-119
Wednesday:  Guest Speaker: Jim Mayola: Planning for Your Future: Part 2: “The CEO Database/Developing Your Action Plan” (CEO Office, Rouzer)
Thursday:   Review Session for Paper2 with Mary and Daniel
Friday:    Boys & Girls Club Service Learning Project
Blog Entry 10: Find a cartoon on-line with a Rapunzel motif and discuss the cartoon and compare it with either the original tale or the Disney film. Add a copy of the cartoon, name of cartoonist and the source (URL). Blog is due by Sunday, November 18.

Week 13 – November 19-23:  Exam 2
Tuesday:   Paper 2 is due on Tuesday
Film: Silence of the Lambs - Part 1
Wednesday  No Class – Thanksgiving Recess
Thursday:   No Class – Thanksgiving Recess

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Week 11 – November 5-9: Villains: Bluebeard & Robber Bridegroom


Tuesday: Read: The Complete Fairy Tales, "The Robber Bridegroom," pp. 141-145, "Fitcher's Bird," pp. 155-158, and Charles Perrault “Bluebeard” - On Blackboard under Course Documents.

Wednesday: Guest Speaker: Jim Mayola: Planning for Your Future: Part 2: “The CEO Database/Developing Your Action Plan” (CEO Office, Rouzer)
Optional: Evening Film: “Barbe Bleue,” (2009, 80 min)

Thursday: Discussion of Film and Tales
 
Report 16: Maria Tatar: “The Attractions of “Bluebeard”: The Origins and Fortunes of a Folktale,” in: Secrets beyond the Door, pp. 11-66 (many pictures). On Blackboard under Course Documents.
Friday: Boys & Girls Club Service Learning Project

Blog Entry 9: Reflect about the three versions of the story of “Bluebeard”. How are these tales similar or different? What is unique about them? Which one did (didn’t) you like the most? Why/ Why not?  Blog is due by Sunday, November 11.
Paper #2 is due by Tuesday November 13th.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Week 9 & 10: Boys & Girls Club


Week 9 – October 22–26:
Tuesday:               Boys & Girls Club Preparation
Wednesday:       Guest Speaker: Erin MacDougall, Counseling Services: “Strategies for Adjusting to College Life”
Thursday:             Boys & Girls Club Preparation
Friday:                    Boys & Girls Club Service Learning Project

Week 10 – October 29 – November 1:
Tuesday:               Boys & Girls Club Preparation
Wednesday:       Guest Speaker: Jessame Ferguson, Director, Hoover Library
Thursday:             Boys & Girls Club Preparation
Friday:                    Boys & Girls Club Service Learning Project

Week 8 - October 15-19: Fall Break – Beastly Bride(groom

Monday:                No Class - Fall Break
Tuesday:               No Class - Fall Break (German-American Day – Your help will be appreciated!)
Wednesday:       Guest Speaker: Jessame Ferguson, Director, Hoover Library 
Evening Film: “The Princess and the Frog,” Disney 2010 (98 min)
Thursday:             The Complete Fairy Tales, “The Frog King,” pp. 2-5
Report 13:
Bruno Bettelheim, "Little Red Riding Hood,” in: The Uses of Enchantment, pp. 166-183. On Blackboard / Course Documents
Report 15: Marina Warner, “Go! Be a Beast: Beauty and the Beast,” In: From the Beast to the Blonde. On Fairy Tales and Their Tellers, New York: The Noonday Press. 1994, pp. 298-318. On Blackboard under Course Documents.
Discussion of Film and Tale



Blog Entry 8: First read the story of “Cupid and Psyche” at http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/cupid.html, then write a comparison of this old Greek tale with that of the Brothers Grimm. Add two pictures to your blog, one from “The Frog King” and one for “Cupid and Psyche.” Blog is due by Sunday, October 21.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Week 7 – October 10-13: Exam 1 – Littel Red Riding Hood

Week 7 – October 8-12: Little Red Cap
Monday:                Review Session for Exam 1
Tuesday:               Read: The Complete Fairy Tales, "Little Red Cap" (93-96)
Report 12: Kast, Verena, “Little Red Cap. Favorite and Dreaded Folktales from Childhood,” In: Folktales as Therapy, pp. 1-26 On Blackboard under Course Documents.
Wednesday:       Lecture in Alumni Hall by the author of Delete
Evening Review for Exam 1
Thursday:             Exam 1: The test will cover all materials studied in the semester including all required readings and fairy tales. 
Blog Entry 7: Find a cartoon on-line with “Little Red Riding Hood” as a theme and write a reflection on that cartoon. What kind of cartoon is that (political, social)? How do you like it? Etc. Add a copy of the cartoon, name of cartoonist and the source (URL).  Blog is due by Wednesday, October 17.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Week 6 - October 1-5: Snow White, Socialism and Feminism

Tuesday: Snow White Continued
Report 9: Marcia Lieberman: “Some Day My Prince Will Come” On Blackboard under Course Documents.
Report 10: Verena Kast, “The Snow Queen. Motifs from Favorite and Dreaded Folktales of Childhood,” pp. 49-73 On Blackboard under Course Documents
Read: Anne Sexton, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” On Blackboard/ Course Documents
Report 11: Maria Tatar, “From Nags to Witches: Stepmothers and Other Ogres,” In: The Hard Facts of the Grimm’s Fairy Tales, pp. pp. 137-155. On Blackboard/ Course Documents

 
Wednesday: Guest Speaker: Sara Krome: Planning for Your Future, Part 1: "Choosing a Major/ Career Planning" (CEO Office/ Rouzer)

Thursday: Masters reloaded. The Brothers Grimm and Rammstein
Optional: Film: “DEFA Snow White” East German Production (60 minutes)
Blog Entry 6: Write a midterm reflection about your progress in the class. What have you accomplished in the class so far? Have you achieved your goals? How did you achieve them or not? What were the reasons for that? How much time did you spend studying and preparing for the class? What was the most/ least challenging part of the class? What parts of the class did you enjoy the most and why? Please explain, describe, be specific. Blog is due by Sunday, October 7. 

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Week 5 - September 24-28: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

Tuesday: Read: The Complete Fairy Tales, “Snow White,” pp. 181-188

Wednesday: Guest Speaker: Rose Falker, Director of International Programs
Evening Film: “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” Directed by Walt Disney, 1937 (84 minutes)

Thursday: Discussion of Film and Tale
Read: Jack Zipes, “Breaking the Disney Spell,” In: Fairy Tale as Myth. Pp. 72-95 On reserve-Hoover Library
Report 7: S. Gilbert and S. Gubar, “The Queen’s Looking Glass,” in The Madwoman in the Attic, pp. 36-44. On Blackboard under Course Documents or On reserve in Hoover Library
Report 8: Bruno Bettelheim, "The Jealous Queen in “Snow White” and the Myth of Oedipus” and “Snow White,” In: The Uses of Enchantment, pp. 194-215. On reserve in Hoover Library
Blog Entry 5: Compare the original tale by the Brothers Grimm with Disney’s film from 1937. Highlight a few differences and similarities. Why did Disney divert from the original version of the tale.  Blog is due by Sunday, September 30.
Paper is due by Tuesday, October 2.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Week 4 - September 17-21: Cinderella: Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover

Monday: PM Workshop in Hil Hall 108

Tuesday: The Complete Fairy Tales, “Cinderella,” pp. 79-84
Report 5: Bruno Bettelheim, “Cinderella,” In: The Uses of Enchantment, pp. 236-277. On reserve in Hoover Library
Evening Film: “Cinderella” by Walt Disney (71 minutes)
Wednesday: Guest Speaker: 
--> Josh Ambrose: Writing Cente

Thursday: Discussion of Film and Tale
Report 6: Jack Zipes, “The Triumph of the Underdog: Cinderella’s Legacy,” in: The Enchanted Screen. The Unknown History of Fairy Tale Films. New York: Routledge, 2011, pp.172-191. On Blackboard under Course Documents
Blog Entry 4: Cinderella is one of these so called “rise tales”, which features a narrative arc of “rags to riches through magic and marriage” (Ruth Bottigheimer). Write a reflection on this motif. Can someone reach success or riches with magic or marriage? How realistic is that? Blog is due by Sunday, September 23.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Week 3 - September 10-14: Hänsel & Gretel – The Child as a Hero


Tuesday: Read:  The Complete Fairy Tales, "Hansel and Gretel," pp. 53-58 and
"The Juniper Tree," pp. 158-166
Lüthi: Chapter 4: The Uses of Fairy Tales, pp. 59-70


Wednesday: Guest Speaker:  Dr. Henry Reiff, Dean of Graduate Studies “Time Management
Evening Film: “Hansel and Gretel” with Cloris Leachman. MGM 1987

Thursday: The Meaning of Hansel and Gretel
Report 3: Jack Zipes "The Rationalization of Abandonment and Abuse in fairy Tales: The Case of Hansel & Gretel" On Blackboard under Course Document

 Report 4: Bruno Bettelheim "Hansel and Gretel," In The Uses of Enchantment, pp. 159-166. On Reserve in the Library.
Blog Entry 3: Compare the original Grimm tale with the MGM version. What is different in the film? What is similar? Why did the movie directors make these changes? Blog is due by Sunday, September 16.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Week 2: Septemebr 3-7

Monday: No Classes – Labor Day

Tuesday: Form, Function and Structure of Fairy Tales
Read: The Complete Fairy Tales, “Brier Rose,” pp. 171-174
Lüthi: Once Upon a Time, Chapter 1, pp. 21-34
Report 1: Zipes, The Brothers Grimm, Chapter 9, pp. 207-229

Wednesday: Guest Speaker: Melanie Conley: “Academic Strategies and Study Skills”
Evening Film: Sleeping Beauty by Disney

Thursday: Discussion of Film and Tale - Folk and Fairy Tales, Myths and Legends
Read: Lüthi: Once Upon a Time, Chapters 2-3, pp. 35-57
Report 2: Bruno Bettelheim, “The Sleeping Beauty” In: The Uses of Enchantment, pp. 225-236. On reserve in Hoover Library.
Blog Entry 2: Develop a one-page working definition of a fairy tale based on class discussions, stories and other articles we have read in class.  Blog is due by Sunday, September 9.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Week 1 - August 27 – 31: Introduction

Tuesday: What is a fairy tale? What is a folk tale?

Wednesday: Once There Were Two Brothers Named Grimm
Read: Zipes, The Brothers Grimm, Chapter 1, pp. 1-23
Evening Film: ”Brothers Grimm” with Matt Damon

Thursday: Discussion of Film and Readings
Read: Zipes, The Brothers Grimm, Chapter 2, pp. 25-64
Blog Entry 1: Why did you choose this course as your FYS? What are you hoping to accomplish in the seminar? What is your favorite fairy tale? Why? Blog is due by Sunday, September 2.
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