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Graduate Proseminar
Thursday: 2:00-5:00pm
This seminar is intended to introduce graduate students to a range of critical perspectives, theoretical issues, and methodologies that constitute the practice of art history. The seminar is not intended to be a comprehensive survey of the history of the discipline. The selected topics and readings are in no way entirely inclusive of present-day practitioners and their respective fields. Once we have set aside the disclaimers and apologies, the seminar can pursue an archaeology of the discipline with an eye to the useful and the latent. While good art historical work generously draws on the theory and methodology of other disciplines, the seminar will attempt to understand the discipline’s particular (if not peculiar) history, accretions, inheritances and possibilities. The structure of the course will be shaped by some of the following keywords or issues: sign (persistence, (dis)continuity, misrecognition and afterlife or revival), change (structure and transformation), object, materiality, reception, context, archive, and agency (biography and authorship). Stress will be placed on close reading of illustrated texts, which entails attention to the visual evidence as well as the rhetorical strategies of the writers. The Proseminar is required of first-year PhD students in History of Art; it is open to graduate students in other programs by permission of the instructor.