VISCR-6200-1: Strategies for Visual & Critical Studies
Fall 2022
- Subject: Graduate Visual and Critical Studies
- Type: Seminar
- Delivery Mode: In-Person
- Level: Graduate
- Campus: San Francisco
- Course Dates: August 31, 2022 — December 13, 2022
- Meetings: Mon 12:00-03:00PM, 195 De Haro - 101
- Instructor: Victor Vargas
- Units: 3.0
- Enrolled: 7/6 Closed
Description:
This course surveys key texts, concepts, and theoretical approaches that influence the study of visual culture and the production of visual criticism. It offers an opportunity for students to engage in these conversations, while gaining the ability to use theoretical resources in their own work. Much of our course will be devoted to learning the languages of critical analysis and determining how theory intersects with the visual and critical arenas. The course is by design interdisciplinary, drawing upon the theoretical advances made in fields as diverse as philosophy, linguistics, art history, psychoanalysis, and literary studies. Given the abstract nature of our readings, one of our challenges will be to determine how, if at all, these texts actually facilitate a discussion of the visual. The guiding thesis of this course is that the visual is situated within larger fields of cultural production, which require carefully defined strategies to make explicit their ontological, epistemological, historical, and political assumptions.
Strategies for Visual & Critical Studies will help students acquire certain essential skills. It will outfit students with methods of critical analysis while enabling them to refine their written and verbal communication skills. It will help students to develop an ethical perspective on contemporary visual culture and thereby deepen visual literacy. The course facilitates collaboration across the disciplines and promotes creativity in critique and communication.
Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:
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