Admission requirements
Required:
- Social Theory in Everyday Life (for HD: CHS students)
Description
The COVID pandemic and BLM movement have recently impacted societies across the world. Both have an undeniable manifestation in cities and the urban experience: while the 1.5mt distance redefines the use of urban infrastructure, parks and public squares remained a beacon of hope and sociability during the pandemic. On its side, the BLM movement has shown how public spaces are clearly sites where the violence experienced by discriminated groups coexists with struggles for inclusion and the recognition of difference. Both, COVID and the BLM movement, serve as examples of the importance public spaces play to articulate social life.
Public spaces are a social form: they are concrete, in their physical and material capacity to shape the urban fabric (streets, squares, malls, museums, etc.). Public spaces are also symbolic, in as much as they invoke (and invite) a representation of ‘the public’ (as manifested in the figure of the citizen, the people, the demos) and struggles about it. From its original conceptualizations and manifestations in the Greek city-spaces to its contemporary expressions in the form of the smart or the green city, public spaces have influence in the development of urban life. This course investigates the various conceptual and empirical expressions of the public in space, and the spaces different publics take in the city. While examining the literature on this field, taking ques from various disciplines in the social science and humanities, we will critically look at the cities we inhabit as a laboratory to explore and understand the importance of public spaces in today’s society.
Course Objectives
This course aims for students to develop:
a theoretical interdisciplinary understanding about public space and its core component concepts (public and space), while also
developing the practical skills to identify, visualize and potentially intervene in contemporary public spaces.
In terms of content, upon completing the course you will:
be familiarized with scholarly debates about public spaces in disciplines such as anthropology, geography, philosophy and sociology;
identify key elements in the definition of public spaces that are of contemporary importance in terms of urban development and the policy rhetoric of social inclusion.
be able to critically think about public spaces and their practical and political implications, for the kinds of sociability we experience in contemporary cities.
In terms of skills, upon completing the course you will:
be able to elaborate and express a sound argumentative position regarding issues related to the course content;
learn to communicate this argumentative position in speaking, writing and visual forms;
develop skills to work with others (negotiation, adaptation, personal and collective response-ability) and present your findings in a compelling and persuasive manner.
Timetable
Timetables for courses offered at Leiden University College in 2020-2021 will be published on this page of the e-Prospectus.
Mode of instruction
This course will be taught primarily online, with the possibility to remotely facilitate/teach offline groups if the circumstances allow it.
Each class includes a lecturing component and a discussion of the assigned session material led by the students. Discussion leaders are responsible of kicking the discussion and make connections to concrete case-studies. All students are expected to actively participate and take part in the class proceedings.
Assessment Method
Participation: 15%
Two critical photo-notes: 30% (15% each)
Case-studies group work: 25%
Final essay: 30%
Reading list
A reading list is designed and available to all students prior the beginning of the course via MS Teams/BrightSpace.
Registration
Courses offered at Leiden University College (LUC) are usually only open to LUC students and LUC exchange students. Leiden University students who participate in one of the university’s Honours tracks or programmes may register for one LUC course, if availability permits. Registration is coordinated by the Education Coordinator, course.administration@luc.leidenuniv.nl.
Contact
Dr. Daniela Vicherat Mattar, d.a.vicherat.mattar@luc.leidenuniv.nl
Remarks
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