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Description:
With a specific focus on orientalist traditions in architecture,
art, and scholarship, this seminar examines how politics and
ideology inform the construction and reproduction of knowledge.
During the semester we will explore selected historical cases
of cross-cultural encounters between Europe and the "Orient"
from Antiquity to the present. We will analyze particular
events, texts, projects, and images which have been influential
in shaping European representations of the "Orient." We will
also investigate how opposing and revisionist "Orientals"
similarly appropriate culture and history in the making of
national identities.
The discussions will be informed by the recent literature
in cultural criticism and the growing interest in hybrid identities
and multiculturalism which challenge both the traditional
orientalist and the nationalist counter-orientalist narratives.
The objective of the seminar is to help the participants gain
a historically grounded awareness of the complexities of cultural
identities, always contesting the representations that claim
to define them.
The course includes weekly reading and writing assignments
and requires active participation in discussions. A research
paper is to be first presented in class and then submitted
at the end of the term. Topics should be decided in consultation
with the instructors by the end of the third week of the semester.
A short abstract and preliminary bibliography should be submitted
by the fourth week. The required texts are available at the
Coop and area bookshops. All other readings will be available
on reserve in Rotch.
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