ARTH1912

ARTH 1912 - Truth and Lies: Comparing Theories of the Image (3 Cr.) Global Perspectives, Freshman Seminar

Art History (10953) TCLA - College of Liberal Arts

ARTH 1912 - Truth and Lies: Comparing Theories of the Image (3 Cr.) Global Perspectives, Freshman Seminar

Course description

What is an image? Is it what you see, or what your mind makes of it? Can an image be felt? Or heard? How is it that images produce emotions in their viewers such as fear, pity, or pleasure? If "seeing is believing" and "the camera never lies," why do some images appear truthful, while others are suspect? How do images make meaning, and how do we learn to read them? Is there a relationship between reading text and reading an image? Does reality exist prior to its representation, or is it constituted through representation?

This course will examine these questions comparatively in Western and South Asian aesthetic and philosophical traditions, from Plato's "Republic" to Bharata's "Natyasastra." We will study diverse media, from painting to photography to narrative fiction, and consider how the medium of representation relates to different forms of copying, imitation, and the production of knowledge. This course will equip students not only to theorize images of the past, but to read and interpret images that we interact with in nearly every moment of our daily lives.

Minimum credits

3

Maximum credits

3

Is this course repeatable?

No

Grading basis

A-F - A-F Grade Basis

Discussion

Requirements

001475

This course fulfills the following Liberal Education requirement(s)

Global Perspectives

Fulfills the writing intensive requirement?

No

Typically offered term(s)

Periodic Fall & Spring