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美国丹佛大学艺术人类学教学大纲

[日期:2010-04-13] 来源:  作者: [字体: ]

ART AND ANTHROPOLOGY

ANTH 3290

Winter Term 2007

4:00 – 5:50 MW

Professor: Christina Kreps Tel. 303-871-2688

Office: Sturm 109 ckreps@du.edu

Hours: 2-4 MW or by appointment

Course Description

The course introduces students to anthropological approaches to the study of art and visual culture. It focuses primarily on the arts of non-Western cultures, for example, those of Indonesia, Native North America, the Pacific islands, and Africa.

The first part of the course covers foundational work in the field, introducing key concepts as well as methods for viewing and understanding art from a cross-cultural/comparative perspective. We examine the relationships among art, technology and the environment, as well as the importance of form, function, style, meaning, and aesthetics in the study of art. The second part addresses issues of contemporary concern in art and anthropology, such as the influence of market forces and tourism on artistic traditions and cultural expressions; the intersection of art and identity, and the politics of cultural representation.

 

Objectives

  • to introduce students to key concepts, scholars and literature in the field
  • to introduce students to diverse art forms and styles
  • help students develop visual and observational skills
  • stimulate critical thinking on the role of art and cultural expression in society

Class Format

Class time will be primarily devoted to discussion of assigned readings, slide lectures, video presentations, guest speakers and visits to the DenverArt Museum. Students are responsible for completing the assigned readings prior to class, and are expected to come prepared to actively participate in class discussions.

Texts

Sally Price. 2001. Second Edition. Primitive Art in Civilized Places. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Howard Morphy and Morgan Perkins, eds. 2006. The Anthropology of Art. A Reader.London: Blackwell Publishing.

Eric Venbrux, Pamela Sheffield Rosi, and Robert Welsch, eds. 2006. Exploring World

Art. Long Grove, Illinois: Waveland Press, Inc.

Kathleen Adams. 2006. Art as Politics: Re-Crafting Identities, Tourism, and Power in Tana Toraja, Indonesia. Honolulu: University of Hawai’I Press.

Texts are available for purchase at the DU bookstore and on reserve at Penrose Library. Additional readings are on electronic reserve through Penrose Library website. Password is course number, ANTH 3290.

Course Requirements and Evaluation

Undergraduates

  • Take home, mid-term essay exam. Due 2/5 (25%)
  • Reading journal and notebook (guidelines provided) Due 3/12 (30%)
  • Comparative review of exhibitions at the DenverArt Museum and Denver Museum of Nature and Science (guidelines provided). Due 2/28. 20%.
  • Final, take-home essay exam. Due 3/16 (25%)

Graduates

  • take home mid-term essay exam. Due 2/5 (25%)
  • comparative review of exhibitions at the DenverArt Museum and Denver Museum of Nature and Science (guidelines provided). Due 2/28 (20%)
  • term research paper (15-20 pages). Research topic description and preliminary bibliography due 1/24. Final paper due 3/16. 45%
  • contribution to class (participating in and leading discussions, reading summaries, etc.) 15%

Assignments will not be accepted after due date unless prior arrangements have been made with instructor.

Final grades will be based on the following criteria:

  • contributions to and participation in class discussion
  • completion of and performance on assignments
  • quality of written work (content and style, i.e., grammar, punctuation, spelling, etc.)

Week I

Wednesday, 1/3

Course overview, introductions and preliminary discussion of visual culture. Watch and discuss John Berger’s classic film “Ways of Seeing”

Part I: Foundations

The Anthropology of Art: Form, Function, Style, Aesthetics, Meaning, and Context

Week II

Monday, 1/8

Reading

Dissanayake, E. 1999. (third edition) Homo Aestheticus. Where Art Comes From and Why? Preface pp. xi-xx, and Introduction, pp. 1-23 (on electronic reserve)

Brux, Rosi, and Welsch, Exploring World Art: An Introduction, pp. 1-37

Wednesday, 1/10

Reading

Wilfried van Damme. Anthropologies of Art: Three Approaches. In Exploring World Art, pp. 69-81

Morphy and Perkins. The Anthropology of Art: A Reflection on Its History and Contemporary Practice. In The Anthropology of Art. Pp. 1-32

Week III

Monday 1/15

Holiday in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

 

Wednesday 1/17

Slide lecture on Alaskan Native Arts and Crafts

Reading

Introduction to Part IV in The Anthropology of Art, pp323-325

Boas, Franz. Primitive Art. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 39-55

Lechtman, Heather. Style in Technology: Some Early Thoughts. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 270-280

Rosman, Abraham and Paula G. Rubel. Structural Patterning in Kwakiutl Art and Ritual. In Art and Anthropology, pp. 339-357

Week IV

Monday 1/22

Slide lecture on Dayak art and culture (Borneo)

Reading

Introduction to Part III in The Anthropology of Art, pp. 239-241

Coote, Jeremy. “Marvels of Everyday Vision”: The Anthropology of Aesthetics and the Cattle-Keeping Nilotes.” In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 281-283 (note: you do not need to read the entire chapter)

Morphy, Howard. From Dull to Brilliant. The Aesthetics of Spiritual Power among the Yolngu. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 303-320

Wednesday 1/24

Critique and Debate: “Primitivism,” and the Art/Artifact distinction

Reading

Introduction to Part II in The Anthropology of Art, pp. 125-128

Clifford, James. Histories of the Tribal and the Modern, in The Anthropology of Art, pp. 150-166

Vogel, Susan. Introduction to Art/Artifact: African Art in Anthropological Collections. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 209-218

Graduate students read and summarize for class: Clifford, James. 1988. On Collecting Art and Culture. In The Predicament of Culture. Twentieth Century Literature, Ethnography, and Art.Cambridge: HarvardUniversity Press. On electronic reserve.

Graduate student research paper topic and preliminary bibliography due

Week V

Monday 1/29

Reading: Price. Primitive Art in Civilized Places, pp.1-55

 

Wednesday 1/31

Reading: Sally Price. 2001. Primitive Art in Civilized Places, pp. 56-99, 127-133

 

Midterm take home essay questions distributed. Due Monday 2/5

Guidelines for exhibitions reviews distributed. Due on or before 2/28

Week VI

Part II: Contemporary Issues in Art and Anthropology. Market forces, tourism, art and identity, and the politics of cultural representation

Monday, 2/5

Reading

Introduction to Part V in The Anthropology of Art, pp. 409-411

Steiner, Christopher. The Art of the Trade: On the Creation of Value and Authenticity in the African Art Market. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 454-466

Stoller, Paul. Circuits of African Art/Paths of Wood. In Exploring World Art, pp. 87-107

 

Graduate students read: George Marcus and Fred Meyers. 1995. The Traffic in Art and Culture: An Introduction. In The Traffic in Art and Culture: Refiguring Art and Anthropology. George Marcus and Fred Meyers, eds. Berkeley: University of California Press. Pp. 1-51. On electronic reserve

 

Video: In and Out of Africa

Midterm due in class

Wednesday, 2/7

Reading: Nelson Graburn. Arts of the Fourth World. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 412-430

Silverman, Eric. High Art as Tourist Art: Tourist Art as High Art. In Exploring World Art, pp. 271-284

Video: Cannibal Tours

Week VII

Monday 2/12

Reading.

Adams, Kathleen. Art as Politics. Pp. 1-71

 

Wednesday 2/14

Reading

Adams, pp. 73-138, 166-192

 

Graduate students also read chapter 5, “Ceremonials, Monumental Displays, and Museumification,” pp. 139-166

Week VIII

Monday 2/19

Slide lecture on the AsmatMuseum for Culture and Progress (West Papua, Indonesia)

Reading

Stanley, Nick. Living with the Ancestors in an International Contemporary Art World. In Exploring World Art, pp. 343-355

 

Wednesday 2/21

Contemporary African and Papua New Guinea art

Reading

Rosi, Pamela. The Disputed Value of Contemporary Papua New Guinea Artists and Their Works. In Exploring World Art, pp. 245-269

 

VisitDenverArt Museum

 

Week IX

Monday 2/26

Contemporary Maori art

Reading

Thomas, Nicholas. A Second Reflection. Presence and Opposition in Contemporary Maori Art. In Exploring World Art, pp. 472-494

 

Guest speaker. Suzanne Macaulay, Associate Professor and Chair, Visual and Performing Arts, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

 

Wednesday 2/28

Contemporary Native American Art

Reading

Townsend-Gault, Charlotte. Kinds of Knowing. In The Anthropology of Art, pp. 520-543

Perkins, Morgan. Do We Still Have no Word for Art? In Exploring World Art, pp. 291-315

 

Visit Denver Art Museum to see Edgar Heap of Birds’ “Wheel”

 

Exhibition review due

 

Week X

Monday 3/5

Bunten, Alexis. Commodities of Authenticity. When Native People Consume Their Own Tourist Art. In Exploring World Art, pp. 317-336

 

Video: Carved from the Heart

 

Wednesday 3/7

Hermer, Carol. Curatorial Authority and Postmodern Representations of African Art, In Exploring World Art, pp. 357-370

Mithlo, Nancy Marie. Native American Art in a Global Context. In Exploring World Art, pp. 371-387

Welsch, Robert. The Authenticity of the Contemporary Art World. In Exploring World Art, pp. 389-398

 

Final take home exam questions handed out. Due 3/16

 

Week XI

Monday 3/12

Review and wrap up

 

Undergraduate reading journals due

Graduate student research papers due 3/16

 

Biographical Description

  1. My research, teaching, and applied work crosses a number of disciplines and concerns, including anthropology, museology, art, international cultural policy and development. I have been studying the museum as a cultural phenomenon and cross-cultural approaches to museums, curation, and heritage preservation for nearly twenty years. (See "Liberating Culture: Cross-cultural Perspectives on Museums, Curation and Heritage Preservation," 2003) Recently, I have been examining the role of museums in promoting and protecting intangible cultural heritage. In 2005, I was awarded a Rockefeller Humanities Fellowship through the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage to explore how indigenous curation and concepts of heritage preservation are examples of intangible cultural heritage, and thus, eligible to be protected under the 2003 Convention on the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage(see online article under "Theorizing Heritage"). Currently, I am exploring what I call "cultural humanitarianism," or the integration of cultural concerns into humanitarian aid and efforts. I am examining how cultural humnitarianism is being applied at the Museum Pusaka Nias, in the town of Genungsitoli on the island of Nias off the northwest coast of Sumatra. In March 2005, a 8.7. earthquake flattened much of Genungsitoli. Although severely damaged, much of the museum survived. Museum staff made an appeal for aid from the international museum community for reconstruction and the response has been remarkable. I'm looking at how culture is being conceptualized as a "basic need," and how emergency cultural aid is being conceptualized, managed, and reconciled with other "basic needs" for survival. In my teaching I foster a critical and comparative museology, coupled with reflexive practice. I see museum anthropology as applied anthropology. Museums are a venue for making anthropological insights and knowledge accessible and relevant to the public. Museums, as institutions of public culture, are a forum for exploring contemporary social issues and concerns. I emphasize the importance of civic engagement in our museum studies curriculum, on both local and global levels.
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* 匿名 发表于 2010/4/14 18:10:33
看看吧与我们的不同,我们强调什么大理论,无论什么课程都要所谓的“理论”,殊不知“他老人家”早就教导我们“实践出真知”,一定要多实践(田野),才能总结出自己的理论。
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* 匿名 发表于 2010/4/14 18:10:33
看看吧与我们的不同,我们强调什么大理论,无论什么课程都要所谓的“理论”,殊不知“他老人家”早就教导我们“实践出真知”,一定要多实践(田野),才能总结出自己的理论。