Every semester, in addition to its many permanent electives, the Department of Social Science & Cultural Studies features a number of Special Topics (SS490) courses that are focused upon the current topics related to the current research interests of faculty or the result of our students suggesting subjects that they would like to explore more deeply. For Spring 2014, the selection of Special...
New Course for Spring 2014: Caitlin Cahill - "Social Justice & Participatory Action Research"
Caitlin Cahill 5:12 PM
Social Justice
&
Participatory Action Research
&
Participatory Action Research
SS 490-11
Wednesdays 2 – 4:50 PM
Wednesdays 2 – 4:50 PM
Caitlin Cahill
Department of Social Science And Cultural Studies
How do social research and arts practice play a role in the struggle for justice?
What is the role of the artist in civic life ?
Students will gain the skills and knowledge to integrate community-based research into their artistic practice, scholarship, and everyday life.
We will engage with the history, theory, methods and ethics of participatory and community-based research, learn how to work collaboratively and build community partnerships.
What is the role of the artist in civic life ?
Students will gain the skills and knowledge to integrate community-based research into their artistic practice, scholarship, and everyday life.
We will engage with the history, theory, methods and ethics of participatory and community-based research, learn how to work collaboratively and build community partnerships.
Spring 2014
Wednesdays 2 – 4:50 PM
Pratt Institute
Main Brooklyn Campus
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
For more information, please visit our official page
Pratt Institute Admissions
New course for Spring 2014: Caitlin Cahill - "Occupy! The Politics of Public Space..."
Caitlin Cahill 4:57 PM
Occupy!
The Politics of Public Space
&
The Right to the City
The Politics of Public Space
&
The Right to the City
SP 490 – 22 OR SP 490 – 25
Caitlin Cahill
Department of Social Science And Cultural Studies
Knowing that rights are not given, but won in the course of struggle, people around the world are putting their lives on the line to defend their right to public space.
But what’s so important about public space?
From Tahrir Square to our own Zucotti Park, mass protests raise critical questions about the relationships among public space, the state of democracy, and our political economy.
Students in this class will study private & public spaces in the city using various visual methods of documentation including photography & video.
Special Class Project:
Ethnographies of NYC subway stations
Ethnographies of NYC subway stations
will inform a national design competition!
Thursdays
Register Now!
Pratt Institute
Main Brooklyn Campus
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
For more information, please visit our official page
Pratt Institute Admissions
Position: Assistant Professor of Social and Political Theory, Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies, Pratt Institute
Announcement 10:26 AM Assistant Professor - Social and Political Theory (tenure track) Department of Social Science And Cultural Studies POSITION SUMMARY: The Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Pratt Institute invites applications for a full-time tenure-track faculty position, available Fall 2014. The successful applicant will have research and teaching expertise in central concepts of contemporary social...
Position: Assistant Professor of Environmental Justice, Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies, Pratt Institute
Announcement 11:18 AM Review of applications begins December 12. POSITION SUMMARY: The Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Pratt Institute invites applications for a full-time tenure-track faculty position, available Fall 2014. The successful applicant will be versed in ethnographic research methods and/or Participatory Action Research as well as the ethics of research with human subjects. We...
***POSTPONED*** SSCS Speakers Series presents: John Rajchman on "What is a Creative Act?" (Dec.3rd, 5pm)
Announcement 3:22 PM
***POSTPONED***
Department of Social Science & Cultural Studies
Department of Social Science & Cultural Studies
Fall 2013 Speakers Series
Presents
John Rajchman
Adjunct Professor of Theory and Criticism, 20th Century Art and Philosophy
Columbia University
Columbia University
"What is a Creative Act?"***POSTPONED***
John Rajchman is Adjunct Professor and Director of Modern Art M.A. Programs in the Department of Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University. He has previously taught at Princeton University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Collège International de Philosophie in Paris, and The Cooper Union, among others.
He is a Contributing Editor for Artforum and is on the board of Critical Space. Prof. Rajchman's works include: Michel Foucault: The Freedom of Philosophy (1985); Post-analytic Philosophy (1985) editor with Cornel West; Philosophical Events: Essays of the '80s (1991); Truth and Eros, Foucault, Lacan and the Question of Ethics (1991); The Identity in Question (1995) editor; Constructions (Writing Architecture) (1998); The Deleuze Connections (2000); Rendre la terre légère (2005); French Philosophy Since 1945: Problems, Concepts, Inventions (2011) editor with Etienne Balibar.
He is a Contributing Editor for Artforum and is on the board of Critical Space. Prof. Rajchman's works include: Michel Foucault: The Freedom of Philosophy (1985); Post-analytic Philosophy (1985) editor with Cornel West; Philosophical Events: Essays of the '80s (1991); Truth and Eros, Foucault, Lacan and the Question of Ethics (1991); The Identity in Question (1995) editor; Constructions (Writing Architecture) (1998); The Deleuze Connections (2000); Rendre la terre légère (2005); French Philosophy Since 1945: Problems, Concepts, Inventions (2011) editor with Etienne Balibar.
"If there exists a sort of potential connection with philosophy or theory in the ar ts, such that one can speak of a ‘non-philosophical understanding of philosophy’ in and through the arts, to which philosophy (and the teaching of philosophy) is addressed, it is because in philosophy itself there is an element of ‘un-learning’ what is given to us to know and see, a kind of ‘dis-identification’ with given ways of talking and seen, which supply our images and words with their ‘common sense’. To teach such ideas, in arts as in philosophy, providing for new for spaces in which they can be linked to one another, is thus not to ‘academize’ them – quite the contrary. In the issue of ‘institutionalizing’ ideas or research in art academies, in short, we need to include that element in having an idea, which takes us ‘outside’ academization to the fresh air of other ways of doing things. For in the case of what I’m calling ‘ideas’ (as already with Kant) to learn is never to imitate. It is more a matter of finding a way to place oneself in the peculiar situation and aesthetic state in relation to oneself and to others to invent in turn.
That is perhaps why, in an odd way, for me the question of - and in - contemporary art is that of thinking itself."
All Events Are Free And Open To The Public!
Pratt Institute
Main Brooklyn Campus
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
For more information, please visit our official page
Pratt Institute Admissions