Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
The Art of Revolution
Term
2024A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1180401
Course number integer
1180
Meeting times
MW 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Meeting location
BENN 231
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Ricardo Bracho
Jennifer Lyn Sternad Ponce De Leon
Jennifer Lyn Sternad Ponce De Leon
Description
“Art is not a mirror held up to reality, but a hammer with which to shape it.” Bertolt Brecht
This course offers an international and multidisciplinary tour of revolutionary art from the 20th and 21st centuries, including cinema, literature, visual art, theater, and performance art. It focuses on art practices that have emerged from and contributed to Left political movements, including socialist movements, struggles for national liberation from colonial and imperialist domination, and movements for sexual liberation and against racism and sexism. Particular attention will be given to thinkers and movements from the Global South and to experimental art practices. Students will learn about the cultural politics of revolutionary movements and will gain skills in analyzing a wide array of art forms. The course will also introduce crucial theories and debates about relationships between aesthetics and politics, the role of artists and other intellectuals in political struggle, and the way the culture industries attempt to control what artists make and who it reaches. Students will develop and present their own creative project as part of the course assignments. No previous knowledge of these topics or experience in making art is required.
This course offers an international and multidisciplinary tour of revolutionary art from the 20th and 21st centuries, including cinema, literature, visual art, theater, and performance art. It focuses on art practices that have emerged from and contributed to Left political movements, including socialist movements, struggles for national liberation from colonial and imperialist domination, and movements for sexual liberation and against racism and sexism. Particular attention will be given to thinkers and movements from the Global South and to experimental art practices. Students will learn about the cultural politics of revolutionary movements and will gain skills in analyzing a wide array of art forms. The course will also introduce crucial theories and debates about relationships between aesthetics and politics, the role of artists and other intellectuals in political struggle, and the way the culture industries attempt to control what artists make and who it reaches. Students will develop and present their own creative project as part of the course assignments. No previous knowledge of these topics or experience in making art is required.
Course number only
1180
Cross listings
CIMS1280401, ENGL1180401, GSWS1180401, LALS1180401, THAR1180401
Use local description
Yes