Admission requirements
Familiarity with the history of (North) Korea;
Knowledge of Korean is helpful;
Interest in art & culture;
Open mind.
Description
North Korea intrigues. This fascination is a result of the fact that standard approaches fail to make much sense of North Korea. This seminar zooms in on North Korea as a propaganda state where culture is subordinate to the revolution and the leadership. Propaganda is not reduced here to political agitation only, but it is treated as part and parcel of cultural production in North Korea. This seminar analyses verbal and visual narratives in North Korean literature and film, public art, and posters and paintings. The seminar also looks at North Korea’s art theory and pays attention to the organisation of cultural production under party control.
Course objectives
Analytical skills: analysing visual materials;
Critical analysis: contextualised interpretation of North Korean cultural products;
Presentation skills: present a review of a North Korean artwork;
Collabartive skills: group presentations;
Debating skills: engage in critical discussions about North Korean artwork;
Heuristic skills: locate and critically evaluate source materials on North Korean art.
Timetable
Mode of instruction
Seminar
Course Load
seminar participation: 2hrs/week: 28hrs;
seminar preparation: 5hrs/week: 70hrs
writing assignments: 4× 1.5hrs: 6hrs
essay: 35hrs
Assessment method
4 assignments – critical review (1,000 words) of a North Korean cultural product (40%);
1 presentation (paper proposal) (10%);
1 final essay (4,500 words) (50%)
The final grade is the weighted average of all components. To pass the course students must receive an overall mark of 5.5 (=6) or higher and a passing grade for the paper assigment (5.5 or higher).
Resit: revised and expanded (6,000 words) version of the final paper to be handed in by February 1.
Blackboard
Blackboard will be intensively used.
Reading list
Reading list to be posted on Blackboard
Registration
Registration through uSis
Contact
Email: dhr.Dr.K.de.Ceuster