Syllabus
UPDATED OCTOBER 5th
Contact information
Office: Honors Program (137 E 25th Street, Suite 306)
Email: elizabeth.bergman@baruch.cuny.edu
Office hours: Wednesdays 2:30–3:30 pm, by appointment only
Irene Meisel (Technology Fellow)
Email: imeisel@gc.cuny.edu
Class blog http://macaulay.cuny.edu/seminars/bergman09/
Course description
Seminar 1 introduces Macaulay Scholars to the arts in New York City and the Cultural Passport. During the semester, students attend theatrical, operatic, and musical performances, exhibitions of visual art, and other highlights of the current cultural season, and help to create the annual Snapshot of New York City. To enhance their appreciation of these experiences, students will investigate the social, historical, and aesthetic contexts of the cultural work being performed or exhibited. By writing about these and other examples of the visual, performing, and literary arts, students develop their analytic and communication skills.
Readings
The following are required and may be purchased at the Baruch bookstore.
Barthes, Camera lucida
Dostoevsky, Memoirs from the House of the Dead
Taylor, Learning to Look
Additional readings will be distributed in class or online. You are also required to read the Arts Section of the New York Times: skim selected stories during the week, and read the full coverage on the weekends.
Course requirements
Participation & Presentations 30%
Students are expected to attend all class meetings, on and off campus, as well as the cultural events listed on the syllabus. Only two unexcused absences will be allowed. In addition, students must use their Cultural Passports to attend at least three additional events (plays, galleries, museums, concerts, readings, etc.) during the semester.
Posting & commenting 30%
Students are required to post to their blogs at least twice per week and to participate in all discussions online as in class. In addition, students must write a blog post of approximately 300 words about each event they attend (required class events and individual visits).
Papers 40%
In addition to their less formal writing on blogs, students will author two longer papers of 5 to 7 pages each. One of these is to be revised and resubmitted as a final paper on the last day of class. Each paper will be worth 15%, the rewrite an additional 10%.
“Snapshot NYC”
On October 11, each student in Seminar 1: The Arts in New York City is required to take a picture that speaks to the theme “My Neighborhood.” I interpret this theme quite specifically: do not take a picture of your own neighborhood—not where you grew up, not where you have lived for a considerable time, not somewhere already completely familiar. Instead, take a picture of “your” neighborhood as you would construct or choose it, a place you imagine yourself feeling at home, where would wish to be, a place that speaks not to your past but your present and future. Your neighborhood should show the person you hope to become.
Tech Day
Every student must attend one of the following “Tech Day” sessions, held at Macaulay.
October 4 11 am or 4 pm
October 14 4 pm
October 17 2 pm
October 18 2 pm
Laptop Policy
Laptops may not be used in seminar, except in support of class presentations.
Academic integrity
Academic dishonesty is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Cheating, forgery, plagiarism and collusion in dishonest acts undermine the college's educational mission and the students' personal and intellectual growth. Baruch students are expected to bear individual responsibility for their work, to learn the rules and definitions that underlie the practice of academic integrity, and to uphold its ideals. Ignorance of the rules is not an acceptable excuse for disobeying them. Any student who attempts to compromise or devalue the academic process will be severely sanctioned.
Students are responsible for learning the definitions of plagiarism and cheating.
http://www.baruch.cuny.edu/academic/academic_honesty.html.
Sanctions for academic dishonesty will range from an F on the assignment to an F in the course.In addition, I am required by College policy to submit a report of suspected academic dishonesty to the Office of the Dean of Students. This report becomes part of your permanent file.
Syllabus SUBJECT TO CHANGE
August
31 West Side Story
reading: Negrón-Muntaner
September
2 exhibit: “Napoleon III and Paris”
reading: Rosenberg, “Turn Cramped Paris into the City of Light?” New York Times (online)
1:15 - Metropolitan Museum of Art (5th Avenue @ 82nd Street)
9 What is art?
tech topics 1 - blogging
14 Art in New York City
tech topics 1, continued - blogging
16 exhibit: John Wood, “Quiet Protest”
1 pm - International Center for Photography (6th Avenue @ 43rd Street)
21 photography 1
reading: Kraus, “Photography’s Discursive Spaces”
reading: Barthes, Camera lucida (Part I)
23 photography 2
reading: Barthes, Camera lucida (Part II)
24 6 pm - Common Event: Meet the Artist #3 @ MHC
25 6:30 pm - Dance Symposium @ City Center (free)
29 tech topic 2 - life online, netiquette, more on blogging
30 visit: Mishkin Gallery
1:00 - meet at Mishkin Gallery @ Baruch
8 pm - Fall for Dance @ City Center (130 W. 56th Street)
October
5 presentations: group 1 - Les Biches / group 2 - Mark Morris
reading: Acocella, “Music” from Mark Morris
7 dance
reading: Macaulay, “A Music-Dominated Landscape…” NY Times (online)
reading: Acocella, “Romeo, Romeo; Onward and Upward with the Arts,” The New Yorker (online) - HINT: try the Proquest Platinum Search or Academic Search Premiere
Paper 1 Due: photography
11 “Snapshot NYC”
12 no class
14 introduction to music: Taruskin, “The Poietic Fallacy”
presentations & critiques: snapshots
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 51–76
1:10 Jerrica
1:20 Fred
1:30 Whitney
1:40 Patrycja
1:50 Maxilia
19 presentations & critiques: snapshots
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 51–76
12:50 Alex
1:00 Jolene
1:10 Stephanie
1:20 Matthew
1:30 Hannah
1:40 Kevin
1:50 Natasha
20 5 pm - Reading by Joseph O’Connor (Newman Conference Center)
21 presentations & critiques: snapshots
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 51–76
12:50 Aimee
1:00 Ross
1:10 Bobby
1:20 Laura
1:30 Michelle
1:40 Sara
1:50 Deborah
26 speaker: Jeremy Geffen, Artistic Director at Carnegie Hall
reading: http://www.carnegiehall.org/chinafestival/events/13082.aspx
1 pm - Carnegie Hall (57th Street @ 7th Avenue)
7:30 pm - ACJW concert
28 music
reading: selections from Taruskin, Danger of Music
November
2 theater
reading: Heiner Müller, “A Letter to Robert Wilson”
reading: “A Conversation with Robert Wilson and Heiner Müller”
4 theater
reading: http://www.castillo.org/pdf/press/presspage1.pdf
reading: Kalb, “Müller as Proteus” from The Theater of Heiner Müller
5 6 pm - Common Event: Writers Reading @ MHC
9 theaterreviews in the NY Times
tech topic 3 - multimedia
10 8 pm - Quartett @ BAM
11 reviews of Quartett
Paper 2: due
12-15 view Demoiselles d’Avignon @ MOMA
16 modern art
reading: Greenberg, “Modernist Painting”
reading: Steinberg, “The Philosophical Brothel”
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 77–81
8 pm - Alexander String Quartet @ Baruch
18 MOMA tour
1 pm - Museum of Modern Art (11 W. 53rd St.)
19-22 - visit Metrotech Center in Brooklyn on your own or in groups
23 presentations: group 1 - Francis Cape, “On Main Street” and “Blue Piece”
Whitney, Michelle, Alex, Sara, Stephanie
group 2 - Tony Matelli, “Stray Dog”
Jolene, Jerrica, Matthew, Hannah
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 87–99
24 presentations: group 3 - James Angus, “Basketball Dropped…”
Kevin, Aimee, Maxi, Fred, Natasha
group 4 - Sara Greenberger Rafferty, “After Harry”
Patty, Ross, Laura, Deborah, Bobby
reading: Learning to Look, pp. 123–38
30 reading: House of the Dead
December
2 3 pm - Backstage Tour of the Met (Lincoln Center)
meet in the lobby of the Met (B’way between 62nd and 65th in Lincoln Center) and gather near the box office. Please bring as little as possible (e.g. no laptops, few bags, etc.)
8 pm - House of the Dead
6 5 pm - photography exhibition @ MHC
7 House of the Dead
9 revision due