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Theory and Method in the Study of Architecture and Art, Fall 2002

 
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Type: Course Related Materials
Grade Level: Post-secondary
Author: Jones, Caroline A.
Subject: Arts
Institution Name: M.I.T.
Collection Name: MIT OpenCourseWare

Abstract: Studies theoretical and historiographical works pertaining to the fields of architecture and art. Members of seminar pursue work designed to examine their own presuppositions and methods. Open only to Ph.D. candidates and other advanced students. Required of HTC Ph.D. students. This seminar is open to graduate students, and is intended to offer a synoptic view of selected methodologies and thinkers in art history (with some implications for architecture). It is a writing-intensive class based on the premise that writing and editing are forms of critical thinking. The syllabus outlines the structure of the course and the readings and assignments for each week. The discipline of art history periodically surges into "crisis." The demise of formalism as a guiding tenet, or connoisseurial appreciation as a general guide, plunged the field into confusion during the 1970s when the battle raged over "social histories of art" or "revisionism;" in the late 1990s the debate was staged between "visual studies" versus "normative art history." The course takes this confusion as itself worthy of study, and seeks to make available some of the new methodologies that have emerged over the past two decades. The ultimate goal is to bring students closer to discovering their own individual methods and voices as writers of art historical prose. In broader terms, we will attempt to understand the historiography of visual art and images more broadly. Our efforts will be predicated on the conviction that art history can serve as a generative discipline for all humanistic disciplines, and even those that style themselves as "Bildwissenschaft" (or "image-science").

Details

Course Type: Full Course
Material Types: Homework and Assignments, Syllabi
Media Formats: Text/HTML, Downloadable docs
Language: English

Additional Information

Geographic Regional Relevance: All

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