2017 Fall HISTART R1B 004 LEC 004

2017 Fall

HISTART R1B 004 - LEC 004

Reading and Writing about Visual Experience

Reading and Writing about Visual Experience: Hyenas, Donkeys, and Dirty Diesels: Figures of Social Death in Children's Animation, Folktales, and World Art

Ivy Mills

Aug 23, 2017 - Dec 08, 2017
Mo, We
12:30 pm - 01:59 pm
Class #:15054
Units: 4

Offered through History of Art

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 0
Enrolled:
Waitlisted:
Capacity:
Waitlist Max:
No Reserved Seats

Hours & Workload

3 hours of instructor presentation of course materials per week, and 9 hours of outside work hours per week.

Other classes by Ivy Mills

Course Catalog Description

How do mechanisms of perception structure responses to visual art? What is at stake when words describe images? By means of intensive looking, thinking, speaking, and writing, this course introduces the student to a series of problems and issues in the description and analysis of works of art. Because the course is also an introduction to the historical study of art, it is intended for students with no previous course work in the field. Satisfies the second half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

Class Description

When artists working on the animated Disney film The Lion King came to study the spotted hyenas in UC Berkeley's research colony, scientists begged them to break with a transnational, millennia-long tradition that depicted hyenas as the most anti-social, anti-human species in the animal kingdom. In Africa and the West, hyenas have been represented as cowardly, dishonorable, deceitful, ugly, smelly, queer corpse-eaters and baby-snatchers. In some West African folk traditions, the hyena is the paradigmatic figure of social death: he can be banished, tortured, and killed with impunity, as he embodies a threat to the social and familial order, as well as to the physical integrity of bodies that deserve to live. The Lion King artists did not heed the scientists' pleas, and instead produced dastardly characters who would serve as foils to the noble lions. In this course, we will examine representations of figures who function as stand-ins for the socially dead in human communities - slaves, untouchables, outcasts, illegal aliens - especially in cultural products for children. How do these powerful representations normalize exclusion? How have anthropomorphic creatures (animals, trains, robots, aliens) been used to define the limits of the normative human, and to establish a boundary between a community's inside and outside? In addition to looking at works that reproduce the logic of exclusion, we will also consider those that mount a critique of this logic. As this is the second course in the Reading and Composition series, we will also focus on the acquisition of the skills required for researching and writing a 10- to- 12 page undergraduate term paper.

Rules & Requirements

Requisites

  • UC Entry Level Writing Requirement, English 1A, or equivalent. Previously passed an R_A course with a letter grade of C- or better. Previously passed an articulated R_A course with a letter grade of C- or better. Score a 4 on the Advanced Placement Exam in English Literature and Composition. Score a 4 or 5 on the Advanced Placement Exam in English Language and Composition. Score of 5, 6, or 7 on the International Baccalaureate Higher Level Examination in English.

Repeat Rules

Course is not repeatable for credit.

Requirements class fulfills

Second half of the Reading and Composition Requirement

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

No Reserved Seats

Textbooks & Materials

Textbook information is not available for Fall 2017.

Associated Sections

None