Unsettling Things: Expanding Conversations in the Studies of the Material World
Academic thinking has always been in active dialogue
with changing social, cultural, and political contexts. Many current modes of
scholarly thought, which are employed broadly across disciplines, emerged
during the civil rights, social justice, and decolonization movements of the
past half century. This course mobilizes recent and current efforts to expand
academic perspectives as relevant to studies in decorative arts, design
history, and material culture—three interdisciplinary fields that have long
aimed to make the canon of traditional art history more inclusive. We will
examine three important, and often interrelated, modes of fostering diversity
in our fields: expanding topical contents and subjects for research;
foregrounding previously marginalized voices and scholars; and engaging with
existing or developing new approaches, theories, and methods that are widely
applicable in the humanities. The first half of the course introduces students
to broad foundational currents in social sciences and the humanities (such as
post-Marxism, post-structuralism, and post-colonialism) and critical fields
that both contributed to and emerged from them (including critical race theory;
African American studies; Indigenous and settler colonial studies; feminism,
gender studies, and intersectionality; queer theory; and disability theory).
The second half features topical and thematic units that bring these academic
perspectives to bear on both past and current cultural and material productions
(topics may include monuments and the politics of memory; race, cultural
property, and appropriation; global and alternative modernities/futurities;
efforts to decenter whiteness and to decolonize academia, archives, and
museums; oral history and empowering diverse voices; political ecology and
environmental justice). Weekly seminars will feature BGC faculty and fellows as
well as outside guests, and will be structured around short presentations,
dialogues, and conversations rather than lectures. Students will bring topics
to the table and contribute to conversations. Assignments will include in-class
presentations, literature reviews, and a project that applies the critical
tools and perspectives to students’ own research interests. Digital projects are welcome and can satisfy
the digital literacy requirement. 3 Credits.