Course syllabus autumn 2022
        
    
        Course syllabus autumn 2022
    
    Title
            Locations of Culture - History and Place
        Swedish title
            Kulturens rum - Historia och platser
        Course code
            KK681A
        Credits
            7.5 credits
        Grading scale
            UA / Excellent (A), Very Good (B), Good (C), Satisfactory (D), Pass (E) or Fail (U)
        Language of instruction
            English
        Decision-making body
            Faculty of Culture and Society
        Syllabus approval date
            2021-09-15
        Syllabus valid from
            2022-08-29
        Entry requirements
            General entry requirements + English 6
Bachelor's degree (180 credits) or equivalent in social sciences, humanities or arts. 
General eligibility + the equivalent of Swedish higher secondary school English 6.
Level
    Advanced level
            Main field
            Cultural Studies
        Progression level
            
                A1N 
            
        Progression level in relation to degree requirements
        The course is included in the main field of Cultural Studies and can be included in the degree requirements for a Master's degree in Cultural Studies.
        Course objectives
        The aim of this course is for students to apply theoretical knowledge by focusing on the embodied experiences of “place”, “location”, and “positioning” as integral to cultural negotiations of history.
Course contents
        Territories, borders, and their transgressions are growing preoccupations, and have created frictions in the domain of cultural production. The “site” (a city, a community, a geo-political entity, the data cloud) has a determining role in shaping how questions are posed, when and which bodies interact, what and how things are done. This course uses theory to explore specific geographic situations and case studies where culture is the arena for ongoing negotiations of power. Students are encouraged to investigate and experience cultural phenomena in public spaces, as well as to engage with storytellers, guides, and keepers of memory.
Learning outcomes
        On completion of the course the student will be able to:
- demonstrate an in-depth understanding of how different voices contribute to culture and memory in public space
- demonstrate the ability to analyse cultural phenomena
- demonstrate the ability to orally present research findings
- consider and/or apply ethical perspectives to cultural encounters in public space
- demonstrate the ability to critically reflect over one’s own role and position as a researcher
Learning activities
        Lectures, seminars with invited guests, workshops, city walks/excursions.
Assessment
        One presentation where all learning outcomes will be assessed.
Course literature
            - Atkinson, David, Peter Jackson, David Sibley, and Neil Washbourne. Cultural Geography: A Critical Dictionary of Key Concepts. London: I.B. Tauris & Co, 2010.
- Szeman, Imre, and Timothy Kaposy (eds). Cultural Theory: An Anthology. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. Print.
- Verdecchia, Guillermo. Fronteras Americanas: (American Borders).Burnaby, BC: Talon Books, 1997.
- Yusoff, Kathryn. A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None. Minneapolis, MN : University of Minnesota Press, 2018.
Supplementary articles, literature and other media will be provided.
Course evaluation
        The University provides all students who are participating in, or have completed, a course to express their experiences and views on the course through a course evaluation which is organized at the end of the course. The university will collate the course evaluations and provide information about their results and any actions prompted by them. The results shall be made available to the students. (HF 1:14).
Interim rules
        When a course is no longer given, or the contents have been radically changed, the student has the right to re-take the examination, which will be given twice during a one year period, according to the syllabus which was valid at the time of registration.
Additional information
        The syllabus is a translation of a Swedish source text.