Office of International Student Services Newsletter

Week of April 22, 2008

 Volume V, Number 27

In This Issue

· GMSA International Dinner
· Grill Menu for International Week

Important Information

· Information for F-1 & J-1 students completing studies in May 2008
· New OPT rules
·
OISS is hiring 2 great student workers!
· Fraud Alert: IRS does not send you e-mails

Upcoming Events

· April 24 - War Zone
· April 25- OPT Information Session on New Rules
· April 26 - International Dinner

Interesting Articles

· Preparing to go home-
To do list
 
·
Sustainability contest announced
· History 1100: Soccer in Contemporary Politics and Society

Contact Us
oiss@stthomas.edu

Phone: 651 962-6650
Fax: 651 962-6655
Office: 161 MHC
http://www.stthomas.edu/oiss

How to send us news

Does soccer (really) explain the world?
Come find out!

History 1100 Soccer in Contemporary World Politics and Society: “The Beautiful Game” in the Age of Globalization

Summer Term II: July 7-31 2008 4:30-6:20pm
Hamline Plan: I, S, G, O

Course Description:
This course explores contemporary world politics and society through the lens of international soccer. Soccer (or football as it is known outside of the U.S.) is the world’s most popular sport. It is the most widely watched and played game on earth, and it also holds the distinction of being the only sport to have ignited and ended armed clashes. For these reasons we will use soccer to examine different types of internal and external conflicts since 1945. The class is particularly interested in how various regimes have employed the sport to political ends. In addition, we will draw on soccer to analyze problems of gender, race, religion, and national identity. In order to investigate these issues we will look at case studies from across the globe, including, among others, Brazil, Cameroon, China, El Salvador, Iran, Scotland, and South Africa. Finally, the class concludes by asking to what extent soccer has fueled or ameliorated domestic and international tensions around the world.

Required Texts:
Bill Bulford, Amongst the Thugs (New York: Vintage, 1993)

Franklin Foer, How Soccer Explains the World: An [unlikely] theory of globalization (New York: Harper Collins, 2004)

Simon Kuper, Soccer Against the Enemy: How the world’s most popular sport starts and fuels revolutions and keeps dictators in power (New York: Nation Books, 2006)

Keith Robbins, The World Since 1945: A Concise History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002)



Register ASAP !