Europa Środkowo- Wschodnia jako region pogranicza 480-SS1-3ESW1
Profile of studies: general
Form of studies: full-time
Type of course: optional
Field and discipline of science: social sciences, discipline – sociology
Year of study/semester: 3rd year / 1st semester (BA studies)
Prerequisites: none
Number of teaching hours by form of classes: 30 hours of classes.
Teaching methods: discussion based on academic literature, group work
ECTS credits: 3
Student workload balance: 81 hours, including:
Participation in lectures – 30 hours
Participation in classes – 30 hours
Consultations – 3 hours
Test preparation – 7 hours
Preparation for classes – 12 hours
Student workload related to the course:
Number of hours requiring direct instructor involvement: 63 (2.3 ECTS)
Number of hours not requiring direct instructor involvement: 19 (0.7 ECTS)
Koordynatorzy przedmiotu
Rodzaj przedmiotu
Efekty kształcenia
KP6_WG1 - Student knows and understands the definitions of the most important sociological terms connected with Central and Eastern Europe and can identify specific problems undertaken by sociology
KP6_UW8 - is able to identify social problems within Central and Eastern Europe and analyse, evaluate and propose solutions
KP6_KO1 - is determined to improve his/her social skills
KP6_KO2 - is open to work in a group, being able to assume various roles in it, sees the need for managing teams creatively
Kryteria oceniania
Conditions for admission to assessment: regular attendance and completion of assignments. Two absences per semester are allowed, with the requirement to make up missed classes during office hours within one month of the absence. Students are responsible for independently arranging make-up sessions during consultations. If a student is absent for more than 50% of classes without valid justification (medical note), they will not be allowed to take the final assessment, which results in failing the course.
Course credit is based on: Assessment of class activity and final test.
Any use of AI in coursework must be documented and discussed with the instructor.
Literatura
Timothy Garton Ash, Does Central Europe Exist? https://www.visegradgroup.eu/the-visegrad-book/ash-timothy-garton-does
Iván Berend, “What Is Central and Eastern Europe?”, European Journal of Social Theory, 8(4), 2005, s. 401–416.
Małgorzata Budyta-Budzyńska, Socjologia narodu i konfliktów etnicznych, Warszawa 2010.
Marta Cobel-Tokarska, Marcin Dębicki, Słowo i terytorium. Eseje o Europie Środkowej, Warszawa 2017.
Direct Democracy: The Eastern and Central European Experience, red. A. Auer, M. Bützer, Aldershot–Burlington–Singapur–Sydney 2001.
Bruno Dwerski, “Europa Środkowo-Wschodnia jako znamienny ‘martwy punkt’ na drodze z Zachodu na Wschód”, Rocznik Leszczyński, 15, 2015.
Milan Kundera, “Zachód porwany albo tragedia Europy Środkowej”, Zeszyty Literackie, 5, 1984.
A. Dubas, Widmo brunatnej Rosji. Ksenofobia na tle etnicznym – przejawy, przyczyny i prognozy, “Prace OSW”, nr 29, 2008.
Oskar Halecki, The Borderlands of Western Civilization. A History of East Central Europe, New York: Roland Press, 1952.
Mykoła Riabczuk, “Wschodniosłowiańska ‘umma’ a problem emancypacji: o ‘słabej’ tożsamości Ukraińców i Białorusinów”, [w:] Polska Wschodnia i orientalizm, red. Tomasz Zarycki, Warszawa 2013.
Andrzej Sadowski, “Pogranicze cywilizacyjne”, [w:] Studia nad granicami i pograniczami. Leksykon, red. Elżbieta Opiłowska et al., Warszawa 2020.
R. Okey, “Central Europe / Eastern Europe: Behind the Definitions”, Past & Present, nr 137, 1992.
Leszek Kołakowski, “Hope and Hopelessness”, Survey, 17(3), 1971.
J. Lewandowski, W. Goleman, Samoidentyfikacja mniejszości narodowych i religijnych w Europie Środkowo-Wschodniej, Lublin 1999.
Timothy Garton Ash, Timothy Snyder, “Ukraine: The Orange Revolution”, New York Review of Books, 28 kwietnia 2005, s. 28–32.
Piotr Wandycz, The Price of Freedom. A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the Present, London: Routledge, 2001.
Daniel Unowsky, “Staging Habsburg Patriotism”, [w:] Constructing Nationalities in East Central Europe, 2005.
Timothy Garton Ash, “The Pope in Poland”, [w:] The Uses of Adversity: Essays on the Fate of Central Europe, 1990.
Tomasz Zarycki, Ideologies of Eastness in Central and Eastern Europe, London–New York 2016, s. 152–174.
Robert Traba, “The Kresy as a Realm of Memory: The Long History of Persistence”, Herito. Culture & the Present, nr 3, 2012, s. 58–91.
B. Nikiforova, “Transforming Borders’ Functions in the Lithuanian-Polish-Belarusian Borderland”, Limes, 3, 2010.
Sagan et al., “The Local Border Traffic Zone Experiment as an Instrument of Cross-Border Integration: The Case of the Polish-Russian Borderland”, Geographia Polonica, nr 1, 2018, s. 95–112.
Sztompka, Piotr (2004) ‘From East-Europeans to Europeans: Shifting Collective Identities and Symbolic Boundaries in the New Europe”, European Review, 12.4: 481-496.
D. J. Timothy, “An Unlikely Tourist Destination?”, Boundary and Security Bulletin, nr 1, 2000, s. 57–65.
Więcej informacji
Dodatkowe informacje (np. o kalendarzu rejestracji, prowadzących zajęcia, lokalizacji i terminach zajęć) mogą być dostępne w serwisie USOSweb: