Literatūras ‘zelta fonda’ bibliotēka internetā

Letonika.lv – pazīstama ar savām interneta vārdnīcām – ir atklājusi jaunu interneta bibliotēku, proti, Latviešu literatūras zelta fondu. Šobrīd bibliotēkā atradīsit informāciju par 16 latviešu klasiķiem un viņu darbus: dzeju, lugas, stāstus, noveles un citu žanru sacerējumus. Publicētie darbi aptver lielu daļu latviešu literatūras no pašas sākotnes līdz pirmās Latvijas valsts laikā tapušajiem. Tie ir izturējuši laika pārbaudi, un joprojām ir iekļauti un tiek lasīti pamatskolas un vidusskolas literatūras programmās.

Darbus var meklēt pēc autora, žanra vai darba nosaukuma. Lasīšanas ērtumam uz ekrāna ir izveidots īpašs lasīšanas logs un grāmatzīmes ievietošanas iespēja. Darbojas pilnteksta meklēšana un ātrā atrasto vārdu iezīmēšanas/pārlūkošanas iespēja.

Šī zelta fonda bibliotēka gan ir vēl papildināšanas stadijā. Letonika gaida no lasītājiem atsauksmes, ieteikumus un kritiku – kas patīk vai nepatīk, ir vai nav ērti. Un pats galvenais: ko lasītāji vēlētos lasīt šajā bibliotēkā. Ieteikumus sūtīt uz e-pastu letonika@tilde.lv.

Literatūras zelta fonda bibliotekas atrodama Letonikas mājas lapā www.letonika.lv, uzklikšņinot uz “Literatūra”.

University of Washington offers language study fellowships

Incoming and current graduate and professional students from all departments and schools may apply for Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowships from the University of Washington. The deadline for the current and coming academic years has already passed, but this a unique opportunity to consider for the future.

Incoming and current master’s and doctoral students, who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents, and plan to study a modern foreign language, in combination with area or international studies or international aspects of professional fields, are eligible for academic year awards from the University of Washington. Summer fellowships are granted to those who will be engaged in intensive foreign language study in the U.S. or abroad.

The 2009-10 FLAS award languages cover a broad spectrum: Arabic, Bengali, Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, Bulgarian, Burmese, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Filipino/Tagalog, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian/Malay, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Kirghiz, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Tajik, Thai, Turkish, Uighur, Urdu, Uzbek and Vietnamese.

FLAS fellowships are funded by the U.S. Department of Education through eight National Resource Centers located in the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington: Canada, East Asia, Global (International) Studies, Middle East, Russia/East Europe/Central Asia (REECAS/Ellison), South Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Europe.

Summer 2009 awards provide tuition up to USD 4,000, plus a living allowance of USD 2,500. Travel awards up to USD 1,000 are available with summer awards only. Academic year 2009-10 fellowships grant tuition up to USD 12,000, plus a stipend of USD 15,000. Graduate appointee health insurance is paid out of the tuition amount.

Students may assemble the information needed to apply by downloading materials from jsis.washington.edu.

For further informatin, contact the FLAS coordinator, Mary Ann Curtis, at +1 (206) 616-8679 or macurtis@u.washington.edu.

BALSSI intensive language courses set for July-August at UW-Madison

The Center for Russia, East Europe and Central Asia (CREECA) and the Department of Scandinavian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison will host the Baltic Studies Summer Institute (BALSSI) in the summer of 2009 (June 15-Aug. 7).

Elementary Estonian, Latvian, and Lithuanian language courses will be offered, as well as lectures (in English) on Baltic history and culture and a rich program of cultural events related to the Baltic countries.

Information and application materials are available on the BALSSI Web site: www.creeca.wisc.edu/balssi. The application deadline is April 13.

BALSSI is sponsored by a consortium of 12 U.S. universities and receives additional support from the Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies. For further information about BALSSI 2009, contact Nancy Heingartner, BALSSI program coordinator, balssi@creeca.wisc.edu, +1 (608) 262-3379.

Professor and BALSSI Director Thomas DuBois said he is hoping to begin a Baltic Studies program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, similar to the one already in place at the University of Washington-Seattle. For further information, contact DuBois at tadubois@facstaff.wisc.edu.