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Short Forms, Big Impact: Brevity as a Tool in Research, Teaching, and Communication | Workshop: Affordances of Short Forms in Teaching Literature and Culture

This event is part of the workshop series "Short Forms, Big Impact: Brevity as a Tool in Research, Teaching, and Communication".

When

May 16, 2023 from 04:30 to 06:00 (Europe/Berlin / UTC200)

Where

GCSC (SR 109)

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Short forms are potent vehicles in didactic contexts: they can be used to quickly convey important information on a given topic, introduce new perspectives, stimulate critical reflection, prompt ad-hoc discussions, serve as textual basis for close readings and creative writing, and, if combined, constitute intertextual assemblages that are both comprehensive and manageable. Short forms are characterized by two overarching features: they are marked by a certain functional brevity, and in and through this brevity draw attention to their own aesthetic form.
In this workshop, we will introduce key concepts and didactic ideas how to use short forms in teaching literature and culture. The workshop will contain hands-on work with concrete examples of short forms in different media, so that the participants can grasp and test the pedagogical and didactic potential and affordances of short forms.

This summer semester, five short hands-on workshops will be dedicated to the topic of short forms in the study of culture. Several aspects of academic training and practice, - especially with regard to academic communication, writing, and teaching, - will be examined to explore the ubiquity and affordances of short forms. Participants of the workshops will engage in conversation about concepts, didactic tools, and concrete ideas for using short forms in interdisciplinary academic contexts. The workshops can be attended independently of each other. Everyone interested is welcome!
This workshop series is part of the Erasmus+ Strategic Partnership "Short Forms Beyond Borders" (2020-2023), co-funded by the European Commission. 

// Dr. habil. Michael Basseler (GCSC), Prof. Dr. Kirsten von Hagen (JLU)

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