ARTH 6400
Last Updated
- Schedule of Classes - December 9, 2024 7:39PM EST
- Course Catalog - December 9, 2024 7:07PM EST
Classes
ARTH 6400
Course Description
Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025.
This lecture introduces students to the multivalent attitudes towards and understandings of the body in early modern Europe, and how artmakers contributed and responded to these forces between 1400 and 1650. Bringing together the histories of art, science, and philosophy, as well as social, cultural, medical, and global history methodologies, this course explores how artworks and objects reveal the fluid cultural practices and societal norms of early modern Europe. Lecture topics will include the "rediscovery" of the classical bodily ideal; the influence of humoral theory and anatomical studies on artmaking; the interactions of art and the bodily senses; global encounters with non-European "monstrous" bodies, and the gendered, racialized, eroticized, divine, aging, and/or disabled body. Students will gain a nuanced comprehension of how early modern people saw and understood themselves and their bodies, in life, and in art.
When Offered Spring.
Regular Academic Session. Combined with: ARTH 3400
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Credits and Grading Basis
3 Credits Graded(Letter grades only)
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