TTEASK017U Introduction to Søren Kierkegaard
Volume 2013/2014
Content
A study of the
works of Copenhagen’s most radical author, Søren Kierkegaard
(1813-1855). Kierkegaard’s entire authorship is centered around the
existential project that every human being is confronted with: to
become oneself and none other than oneself. And as he sees it,
becoming oneself does not happen passively and is never achieved
once and for all, but rather requires constant effort. He often
describes this project as one of taking responsibility for
“choosing,” “gaining,” or “finding oneself.”
This course examines his witty, humorous, but also deeply earnest exploration of the psychology of self identity. And Kierkegaard’s thoughts about the struggle for personhood take us through perhaps unexpected territories: beginning with the breakdown of culture-specific ethnic and religious categories that have traditionally defined the self, he speaks of the culturally destructive power of Socratic irony, the art of seduction, beauty and boredom, religious culture and politics, religious demands that conflict with ethical duty, chronic sicknesses of the soul, the look of the Other, the struggle to see with the eye of faith, the joy of being embodied here and now, and finally, love.
We will remain especially attentive to the ways in which Kierkegaard’s thought is critical of inherited ethnic and cultural definitions of self, and why he nonetheless considers human relationships to be absolutely essential to understanding oneself and one’s obligations to other human beings.
The course will be reading intensive as we explore some of Kierkegaard’s central works including The Concept of Irony, Either/Or, The Sickness Unto Death and a handful of his edifying discourses
Forelæsninger og diskussioner foregår på engelsk, men man må gerne læse Kierkegaards tekster på originalsproget og aflevere opgaver på dansk.
This course examines his witty, humorous, but also deeply earnest exploration of the psychology of self identity. And Kierkegaard’s thoughts about the struggle for personhood take us through perhaps unexpected territories: beginning with the breakdown of culture-specific ethnic and religious categories that have traditionally defined the self, he speaks of the culturally destructive power of Socratic irony, the art of seduction, beauty and boredom, religious culture and politics, religious demands that conflict with ethical duty, chronic sicknesses of the soul, the look of the Other, the struggle to see with the eye of faith, the joy of being embodied here and now, and finally, love.
We will remain especially attentive to the ways in which Kierkegaard’s thought is critical of inherited ethnic and cultural definitions of self, and why he nonetheless considers human relationships to be absolutely essential to understanding oneself and one’s obligations to other human beings.
The course will be reading intensive as we explore some of Kierkegaard’s central works including The Concept of Irony, Either/Or, The Sickness Unto Death and a handful of his edifying discourses
Forelæsninger og diskussioner foregår på engelsk, men man må gerne læse Kierkegaards tekster på originalsproget og aflevere opgaver på dansk.
Teaching and learning methods
Class
Instruction
Workload
- Category
- Hours
- Class Instruction
- 28
- Course Preparation
- 272
- Exam Preparation
- 120
- Total
- 420
Exam
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Written assignmenta) active participation (minimum presence: 75% of all lectures); b) course literature: 1200-1500 pages; c) sub-mission of term paper (12-15 pages, based on 500-750 pages of approved literature). Evaluation is given by the teacher (Passed/Failed).
- Marking scale
- passed/not passed
- Exam period
- Winther 2013/2014 Summer 2014
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- TTEASK017U
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterBachelor choice,Full Degree Master choice
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Spring And Autumn
- Schedule
- -
Note that the course will take place in both Autumn 2013 and Spring 2014
Autumn 2013:
First day: Monday, August 26, 2013
Mondays and Thursdays 13-15 hrs.
Auditorium 1 (Week 35: Aud 2)
Spring 2014:
Mondays and Thursdays 13-15 hrs.
Room: Auditorium 1
NB: First day
Spring 2014:
SE OPSLAG:
Contact: Kent Brian Söderquist
(kbs@sk.ku.dk) - Continuing and further education
- Price
- Further information - Open University link
- Study board
- Study board of Theology
Contracting department
- Theology
Course responsibles
- Kent Brian Soderquist (kbs@sk.ku.dk)
Søren Kierkegaard Research Centre
Lecturers
Kent Brian Söderquist, kbs@sk.ku.dk
Saved on the
19-01-2014