Kultuuriteaduste ja kunstide doktorikooli talvekool
22.01.2012 kell 14.00 - 14.00
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22.–27. jaanuaril toimub ÌìÃÀÓ°ÊÓ Ãœlikoolis arvult teine
Kultuuriteaduste ja kunstide doktorikooli talvekool, sedakorda on
talvekooli teemaks "Gaze and Glance: Ways of Seeing in Culture".
Täpsem info (ingliskeelne) on kättesaadav
aadressilt http://gaze-and-glance.edu.ee/ või teate
allosast.Talvekooli toetab Euroopa Liit Euroopa Sotsiaalfondist.Lisainfo:
Eva Kruuse (telefon: 619 9538, e-post: evak@ehi.ee)Winter
School "Gaze and Glance: Ways of Seeing in Culture"Degree Course
sponsored by the Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts (GSCSA) and
the Centre of Excellence in Cultural Theory (CECT).The second Winter School
of the Estonian Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts focuses on the
topic that has a certain bearing on any branch of the humanities and social
sciences, however far from the visual their subject is. Because gazes and
glances (together with views, stares, peeks etc), our ways of looking at
the Other, are not just that, but simultaneously ways of structuring our
relationship with everything that we see and come into contact.
Constructing landscapes out of nature, or looking at pictures in a museum
in a correct way, or even building the events of our own lives into stories
that we want to tell others, all involve specific forms of gaze, which form
a part of our cultural competence – but which can, in addition to showing
us things (and people) how they should be for us, also make us not see
things (and people) that may actually be significant for us. Any method, or
even the most innocent and allegedly methodless approach to anything is
always conditioned by a specific gaze – and even the most trifling bits
of information that come to our notice evoke in us a specific glance.The
course is lead by scholars of diverse academic and cultural backgrounds,
including:Prof. W. J. T. Mitchell (University of Chicago)Prof. Donald
Sassoon (Queen Mary College, University of London)Prof. Gunther Kress
(Institute of Education, University of London)Prof. Martin Schulz
(Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste Karlsruhe)Dr. Joana Breidenbach
(independent scholar and journalist)Prof. Kenneth Olwig (Swedish University
of Agricultural Sciences)Dr. Kristin Marek (Institut für Kunstwissenschaft
und Medientheorie, Karlsruhe)Dr. Rupert Cox (The University of Manchester)
Kultuuriteaduste ja kunstide doktorikooli talvekool, sedakorda on
talvekooli teemaks "Gaze and Glance: Ways of Seeing in Culture".
Täpsem info (ingliskeelne) on kättesaadav
aadressilt http://gaze-and-glance.edu.ee/ või teate
allosast.Talvekooli toetab Euroopa Liit Euroopa Sotsiaalfondist.Lisainfo:
Eva Kruuse (telefon: 619 9538, e-post: evak@ehi.ee)Winter
School "Gaze and Glance: Ways of Seeing in Culture"Degree Course
sponsored by the Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts (GSCSA) and
the Centre of Excellence in Cultural Theory (CECT).The second Winter School
of the Estonian Graduate School of Culture Studies and Arts focuses on the
topic that has a certain bearing on any branch of the humanities and social
sciences, however far from the visual their subject is. Because gazes and
glances (together with views, stares, peeks etc), our ways of looking at
the Other, are not just that, but simultaneously ways of structuring our
relationship with everything that we see and come into contact.
Constructing landscapes out of nature, or looking at pictures in a museum
in a correct way, or even building the events of our own lives into stories
that we want to tell others, all involve specific forms of gaze, which form
a part of our cultural competence – but which can, in addition to showing
us things (and people) how they should be for us, also make us not see
things (and people) that may actually be significant for us. Any method, or
even the most innocent and allegedly methodless approach to anything is
always conditioned by a specific gaze – and even the most trifling bits
of information that come to our notice evoke in us a specific glance.The
course is lead by scholars of diverse academic and cultural backgrounds,
including:Prof. W. J. T. Mitchell (University of Chicago)Prof. Donald
Sassoon (Queen Mary College, University of London)Prof. Gunther Kress
(Institute of Education, University of London)Prof. Martin Schulz
(Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste Karlsruhe)Dr. Joana Breidenbach
(independent scholar and journalist)Prof. Kenneth Olwig (Swedish University
of Agricultural Sciences)Dr. Kristin Marek (Institut für Kunstwissenschaft
und Medientheorie, Karlsruhe)Dr. Rupert Cox (The University of Manchester)