2021 Spring COMLIT 298 001 IND 001

Spring 2021

COMLIT 298 001 - IND 001

Special Study

Beauty

Victoria Kahn, Niklaus E Largier

Jan 19, 2021 - May 07, 2021
Tu
03:00 pm - 05:59 pm
Class #:17419
Units:1to4

Instruction Mode: Pending Review

Offered through Comparative Literature

Current Enrollment

Total Open Seats: 6
Enrolled: 4
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 10
Waitlist Max: 5
No Reserved Seats

Hours & Workload

3 to 12 hours of outside work hours, and 0 hours of student-initiated educational activity.

Other classes by Victoria Kahn

Other classes by Niklaus E Largier

Course Catalog Description

Primarily for students engaged in preliminary exploration of a restricted field, involving the writing of a report. May not be substituted for available seminars.

Class Description

Beauty: a topic both ubiquitous and perplexing. This Townsend Center Collaborative Research Seminar approaches beauty from multiple disciplines and through a wide variety of materials: literature, the visual and performative arts, aesthetic theory, philosophy, and religion. Our aim is to investigate the value and function that has been assigned to beauty in different humanist contexts, to explore possible bases of commonality and influence, and to consider whether beauty has or should be a key critical term for contemporary scholarship. In the first half of the term, the faculty seminar members will lead sessions related to their research expertise. Topics will be drawn from readings in Plato, Kant, Tibetan Buddhism, Bach, Japanese photography, novelistic aesthetics, and others. In the second half of the term, seminar sessions will be split between invited outside speakers, whose work takes up the problem of beauty or of aesthetics more generally, and the graduate student seminar members, who will collaboratively design their own seminar sessions on topics of their choice. Participating outside speakers include Rob Marks, Richard Moran, Jane Newman, Alex Rehding, and David Shulman. Hannah Ginsborg will also join us for a session. Requirements: Regular attendance and reading; the collaborative design and leadership of one seminar session; a final essay. Application: This seminar is open to graduate students in any year of the Ph.D. program. To apply, please submit a paragraph that describes why you are interested in joining the seminar and a list of courses that you have taken (at Berkeley or elsewhere) that might relate to the work of the seminar. If you have other experience that is relevant, feel free to list that as well. Please email these materials to any one of the participating faculty by December 1, 2020. A draft syllabus can be requested by emailing a participating faculty member. Accepted students enroll for the course through the 298 Independent Study option offered through the home departments of participating faculty.

Rules & Requirements

Repeat Rules

Reserved Seats

Current Enrollment

No Reserved Seats

Textbooks & Materials

See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.

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