ARTH 1141

ARTH 1141

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2015-2016.

Why do people care about art and history? And how do people use public displays of art for political purposes?  These questions will frame our investigations into "heritage policy," in which the arts' power to represent identities has become the center of intense international debates and controversies.  These issues affected propaganda in Nazi Germany and Sadaam Hussein's Iraq, encouraged tourism in "developing" countries that comodified historic sites, led Italy to accuse major American museums of supporting the theft of valuable antiquities and sparked violent conflicts between Cambodia and Thailand.  By critiquing scholarship, films and online media, students will engage with a range of rhetorical methods for creating convincing arguments, analyzing both textual and visual sources, and better understanding their relationship to their own "cultural heritage."

When Offered Fall.

Course Subfield (FWS)
Satisfies Requirement First-Year Writing Seminar.

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Syllabi: none
  •   FWS Session. 

  • 3 Credits Graded

  • 18207 ARTH 1141   SEM 101

  • For more information about First-year Writing Seminars, see the Knight Institute website at http://www.arts.cornell.edu/knight_institute