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AS 380.001 Painting and Poetry in China.
(3) (III.3)
Offered for ECB credit Fall 99 only.
Many Chinese paintings can be "read" as visual poetry. Every image resonates with centuries of poetic writing, where each poem addresses human issues of interest to most of us even today: poverty, childhood, the loss of loved ones, individual against the establishment, family fights, unrequited love, injustice Each of these topics was addressed in both the painting and the poetry of China. Teaching students to understand the human drama underlying such paintings and poems is one major goal of this course. As a pedagogical aid, we will read a fair amount of modern American poetry, especially by authors who refer to or admire the Chinese tradition, including Wendell Berry, Hayden Carruth, and Gary Snyder. At another level, the relationship of pictures to words is a more general art historical problem that occupied some of the finest minds in both Europe and China. The problem continues to generate new and insightful writings by contemporary students of these cultural traditions, and so we will sample some Chinese critical literature on painting and poetry as well as some more contemporary approaches to work/image issues. By the end of the course, students should have a store of analytical methods for relating pictures and poetry generally, but will also understand a good deal about how to read a Chinese painting. There will be a midterm, a final, and two short papers (roughly 7 pages). There is no prerequisite. Cost 2 WL 4 (Powers)
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