Architectural Studies 365 - Making Memorials

Fall
2016
01
4.00
Heidi Gilpin
W 02:00PM-05:00PM
Amherst College
ARCH-365-01-1617F
CONV 209
hgilpin@amherst.edu
GERM-365-01,ARCH-365-01,EUST-365-01

(Offered as GERM 365, ARCH 365, and EUST 365.) This is a course about what happens to difficult memories: memories that are intensely personal, but made public, memories that belong to communities, but which become ideologically possessed by history, politics, or the media. How are memories processed into memorials? What constitutes a memorial? What gets included or excluded? How is memory performed in cultural objects, spaces, and institutions? What is the relationship between the politics of representation and memory? Who owns memory? Who is authorized to convey it? How does memory function? This course will explore the spaces in which memories are “preserved” and experienced. Our attention will focus on the transformation of private and public memories in works of architecture, performance, literature, and the visual arts, primarily in Germany, Europe, and the United States. Preference given to German majors and European Studies majors, as well as to students interested in architecture/design, performance, the visual arts, interactive installation and/or the environment. Conducted in English, with German majors required to do a substantial portion of the reading in German.


Limited to 20 students. Fall semester. Professor Gilpin.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.