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THE UNIVERSITY of EDINBURGHDEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2006/2007
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Urban Cultures (U03229)? Credit Points : 20 ? SCQF Level : 10 ? Acronym : GEO-3-URBCULT This course offers undergraduate students an introduction to cultural geographical approaches to the city. The course considers a range of empirical examples and theoretical questions relevant to understanding modern cities and contemporary urban experiences. Through the example of the city, students will become familiar with some key themes in contemporary cultural geography, such as consumption, difference, representation, memory and materiality. More specifically, their cultural geographical encounter with the city will examine the following themes: cities and modernity; utopianism and its others; cities of spectacle; cities and difference; cultures of urban activism; and spectral cities. The material will be delivered drawing on key thinkers in urban studies (past and present), examples from a number of First and Third World cities, a plethora of urban experiences (from walking, to graffiti, to hauntings), as well as a range of representational media (academic texts, scientific diagrams, documentary and journalistic writings, films, music and literature). Entry Requirements? This course is not accepting further student enrolments. ?
Special Arrangements for Entry : Requests for registration must be made by email to Shiela.Wilson@ed.ac.uk Subject AreasHome subject areaDelivery Information? Normal year taken : 3rd year ? Delivery Period : Semester 2 (Blocks 3-4) ? Contact Teaching Time : 2 hour(s) per week for 10 weeks First Class Information
All of the following classes
Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes
Students who complete this course will:
- Understand the distinctive theoretical and methodological approach of cultural geography - Understand what is meant by modernity and the role 'the city' plays in understandings of modernity - Understand a range of urban experiences and the ways they have been theorised and researched - Understand the recursive relationship between how we theorise and represent the city and how the city is known and experienced - Understand a range of radical and non-normative engagements with urban space - Understand the way the concept of 'culture' is used in urban theory and planning, past and present - Develop skills in reading and synthesising key urban texts and relating them to other relevant literatures - Develop skills in the oral and written presentation of ideas Assessment Information
Class assessment: As specified in course handbook
Degree assessment: One two-hour examination (2 questions) AND one essay (2000 words) Exam times
Contact and Further InformationThe Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries. Course Secretary Miss Shiela Wilson Course Organiser Dr Jane Jacobs School Website : http://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/ College Website : http://www.scieng.ed.ac.uk/ |
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