Admission requirements
Not applicable
Description
Part 1
In this course lectures and seminars alternate:
A. LECTURES
The presentations will be given by the lecturers who are also involved in the seminars. After these presentations, you will take part in a group discussion on the presentation and on the text(s) which the lecturer has chosen. In the presentations and the group discussions, we will focus on the central question of our core course: what is the extent of the traditional distinction between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period? To answer this question, we focus on writers, artists, scientists, philosophers and rulers who lived between 500 and 1800. As such, we explore whether there really was a fracture around 1500 — traditionally seen as the peak of the Renaissance and the beginning of ‘modernity’. We will question this traditional periodization from a methodological and interdisciplinary perspective, looking at innovation in the Middle Ages and tradition in the Early Modern period.
B. SEMINARS
For the seminars, students can choose between a seminar in Medieval Studies or a seminar in Early Modern Studies:
Seminar Medieval Studies
The seminar that focuses on the Middle Ages continues on the theme of the ‘modernity’ of this period. We will look especially at medieval centers of innovation: the court, city and church/convent, taking as a lead Ronald Witt’s The Two Latin Cultures and the Foundation of Renaissance Humanism in Medieval Italy (Cambridge, 2012). This book traces the origins of Renaissance humanism in the long Italian tradition of two book cultures, religious and secular, associated with the Church and legal procedures in the widest sense. We will study changes and shifts in social structures, art, literature in Western Europe as a response to or confirmation of Witt’s thesis that the Renaissance humanism could only have emerged from late medieval (northern) Italy, because of the special circumstances in political, social and intellectual life.
This seminar continues the methodological and interdisciplinary approach of the lectures, by discussing texts or objects from a wide range of disciplines, and investigating the points of contact between the various cultures that are often studied in isolation. Each class will discuss (at least) one primary and one secondary source.
Seminar Early Modern Studies
Instead of highlighting the ‘modernity’ of this period, the seminar on Early Modernity will focus on the ‘traditional’ aspects, and ask how (and why) the many new developments in this period were actually based on and ‘anchored’ in Antiquity and the Middle Ages.
In order to do so we will characterize this period as a period of ‘collecting’: of texts, of objects, and of knowledge in general. We will examine the backgrounds of this quest; discuss how this accumulation of (traditional) knowledge called for new methods of knowledge management; and how it could lead to new insights in various (scientific) fields. At the same time, we will see how the renewed interest in the (ancient) past also shaped the arts and literature of this period, and how innovative features were often unintentional, and often framed in traditional terms.
This seminar continues the methodological and interdisciplinary approach of the lectures, by discussing texts or objects from a wide range of disciplines, and investigating the points of contact between the various cultures that are often studied in isolation. Each class will discuss (at least) one primary and one secondary source.
Course objectives
Knowledge
Students will become acquainted with the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period in Europe from the viewpoint of a wide range of disciplines. They will question what shifts are discernible between the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period and gain knowledge about the ‘traditional’ aspects of this period, that is the Early Modern fascination with the past.
Insight
Students will gain insight in the practices and challenges of interdisciplinary research, and the analysis of primary sources. They will also become acquainted with various modern approaches to the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period.
Skills
Students will be able to find and assess relevant scholarly literature, and use it to analyze and interpret primary sources from their own discipline. They will be able to understand these sources in an interdisciplinary context and to compare them with sources from other disciplines. They can use their knowledge, insight and skills in weekly assignments, discussions and a small research project of their own.
Timetable
See the timetable of Arts and Culture.
Mode of instruction
6x2 hours Lecture & response in group discussion
6x2 hours Seminar
Closing Presentations.
Attendance is compulsory. Students are allowed to miss a maximum of two seminars, provided they present a valid reason beforehand. Students who have missed more than two seminars will have to apply to the Examination Board of the MA Arts and Culture in order to obtain permission to further follow and complete the course.
Course Load
Total course load for the course 280 hours (10 EC)
Lectures
6x2 hours class: 12 hours
Reading primary and secondary literature: 72 hours
Seminar
6x2 hours class: 12 hours
Reading primary and secondary literature: 70 hours
Research Project: 52 hours
Attendance and presentation at symposium: 6 hours
Paper: 56 hours
Assessment method
Presentation: 30%
Research paper: 70% (Paper is the continuation of the presentation/poster pitch and the final closing work of the core course)
Weighing
The final mark for the course is established by determining the weighted average.
Resit
Re-examination via examination and/or paper
Deadlines
Please note that if you do not hand in your essay before the first deadline, your essay will be considered as the resit.
For the time tables exams 2018-2019 see; Timetable
Exam review
How and when an exam review will take place will be disclosed together with the publication of the exam results at the latest. If a student requests a review within 30 days after publication of the exam results, an exam review will have to be organized.
Blackboard
Blackboard will be used for providing the readings of the lectures, the visual presentations and instructions.
Literature
The literature will be announced via blackboard during the course.
Registration
Students are required to register for this course via uSis, the course registration system of Leiden University. General information about uSis is available in English and Dutch.
Contact
For questions regarding the lectures: Please contact Dr. S.P.M. (Stijn) Bussels
For questions regarding the seminar Medieval Studies: Please contact Dr. G. (Geert) Warnar
For questions regarding the seminar Early Modern Studies: Prof.dr. H.G.M. Jorink or Dr. S.T.M. de Beer
For more practical questions and information about the core course, please contact the secretarial office of the Arts and Culture Department, Huizinga Building, Doelensteeg 16, room 003. Tel. 071-5272 2687. E-mail osz-oa-huizinga@hum.leidenuniv.nl