1620 - Aesthetics
Course information
Title
Aesthetics
Course number
1620.24
Academic year
2024-2025
ECTS
10.00
Level
Bachelor
Faculties
Educations
Prerequisites
Upper secondary school leaving certificate or comparable qualification.
Language of instruction
The course is taught in Faroese. The written material is mainly in English but some text is in Scandinavian and Faroese.
Registration
Single course students apply by sending an application form to umsokn@setur.fo
Beginning date
Thursday, February 6, 2025
End date
Thursday, May 15, 2025
Academic content
Purpose
The course provides an introduction to aesthetics as a subject and as a tool for analysing art. Students gain knowledge about key theories and concepts in aesthetics and develop their ability to explore philosophical questions about art through discussion and critical thinking.
Learning outcomes
By the end of the course, students should be able to: - explicate main concepts and movements in the history of aesthetics - analyse and identify strengths and weaknesses of important aesthetic theories - draw their own conclusions about these theories use aesthetics as a tool for thinking about art and artistic disciplines from a philosophical perspective
Content
Readings are drawn from a selection of primary texts which have been of decisive importance in the history of aesthetics. Topics to be covered include the most important attempts to define art as well as the question whether it is at all possible to define art. Is there any common denominator which characterises all art, or do the various artistic disciplines have their own core which pulls them in separate directions? We will also ask what artistic value is and what reasons it is possible to have for saying that one work of art is better than another. Do some individuals have especially good aesthetic taste which makes them more capable of distinguishing between good and bad art that others, or is aesthetic taste merely an indication of the class to which one belongs? Finally, we will also examine the relationship between artist and viewer/listener/reader. Does the artist always determine the meaning of the artwork or does the audience have as much of a say on what a work means and how it is to be interpreted?
Learning and teaching approaches
Teaching takes place 3 hours a week for one semester. Lessons are organised in the form of classroom teaching with lectures, student presentations, discussions, conversations and exercises.
Assessment
Assessment method
Combined: oral exam based on an examination portfolio.
Examination (internal/external)
External
Grading scale
7-scale
Exam date/dates
Admission of Portfolio 22nd May 2025 Oral exam 3rd June 2025
Deadline for withdrawal from exam
Thursday, February 6, 2025
Academic responsibility and teachers
Academic responsibility
Jens Dam Ziska
Teachers
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