HHIK08743U Textile and Fashion in Theory and Practice through 3000 years
History
MA
Historical core area 2: Academic writing with focus on source
analysis (HHIK03741E) [Curriculum for Master´s Programme in
History, 2015-Curriculum]
MA-elective
Historical core area 2: Academic writing with focus on source
analysis (HHIK03741E) [Curriculum for the Master’s Minor in
History, 2015-Curriculum]
BA-elective
Module T5: Historical Project (HHIB10511E) [Curriculum for
Bachelor´s Elective Programme in History,
2013-Curriculum]
Textile and Fashion in Theory and Practice through 3000
Years
An interdisciplinary course of Archaeology, History, European
Ethnology and Fashion Studies at the Saxo Institute, University of
Copenhagen
Textiles and fashion are essential aspects of the human
condition. We dress, appear and communicate through fabrics and
other kinds of body adornments. However, over the course of time,
we have changed practices for production, mediation and the use of
textiles and fashion, as well as theories through which to conceive
fashion and textile. The TFTP summer school provides a survey of
the history of textile and fashion from prehistoric time to the
present in the geographical areas of Scandinavia, Europe and the
Middle East.
Focused on different historic and cultural theories, the course
further emphasizes the introduction of critical and analytical
approaches to understand the subject field and, in the wider
context, understanding the entanglement of fashion and textile in
constituting cultures and societies. The summer school course is
taught by excellent fashion and textile researchers and surveys the
interdisciplinary field of textiles and fashion from the Bronze Age
until today. In each module, there will be texts and course
material related to textiles and fashion, backed up with readings
of essential classical works of theory and methods. In this course,
students will be introduced to the analysis of textiles and textile
technology as well as how new scientific methods and theoretical
approaches can be applied to textile research and fashion studies.
Furthermore, emphasis is on the theories and practice of cultural
studies. The course will cover a wide chronological and geographic
area from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean, the Middle East and the
New World. The summer school is composed of six modules
interweaving the themes of textile techniques and craft, knitting
technology and history, new analytical tools from the sciences used
in the humanities and in textile research, and the interpretation
and multiple meanings of dress and fashion in society, as markers
of status, identity and power, or as gendered gifts.
Students must be prepared for a considerable amount of reading
before the course.
Course structure:
Science and the Humanities at a new crossroads:
Analytical tools for Organic Material Studies
There is now a wide variety of innovative scientific tools
available for the study of ancient and historical organic
materials. These draw on pioneering work in medicine and industry
to reveal new findings from archaeological evidence such as
garments and footwear. Raw materials including wool, hair, flax,
leather, bone, teeth and feathers are revealing revolutionary
insights for scholars working in the humanities. These also offer
new challenges for those developing scientific methods with
forensic applications in non-traditional arenas. This module
introduces these scientific techniques and explores how they are
applied to textiles and other organic materials in the fields of
archaeology, history, ethnology, anthropology and beyond. It looks
at how the technologies have evolved from their initial
applications to offer new perspectives in the humanities.
Tutors: Jane Malcolm-Davies, Christina Margariti
Activities: Lectures, problem-based learning workshops, analytical
work with microscopes and other digital tools
Early Modern Knitting in Europe: materials and
methods
The development of knitting was a key technological innovation for
which there is little published scientific evidence. This module
draws on a study of more than 100 knitted caps from the early
modern era in museum collections. Despite their diverse locations,
they have remarkable similarities in their materials and
manufacture which illustrate trade in knitted caps as consumer
goods in the emerging early modern European marketplace,
demonstrate how knitting created new fashions for men indicative of
rank and status, and facilitate theory on the cultural significance
of the hat as an essential male accessory.
Tutor: Jane Malcolm-Davies and guest lecturers
Activities: Lectures, problem-based learning workshops, knitting
techniques, analysis of early modern knitted material
Textiles in Antiquity (Egypt, Greece, Roman
world)
Tutors: Cecilie Brøns, Marie-Louise Nosch, Magdalena Öhrman, Elza
Yvanez, Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert
Activities: Lectures, assignments, tapestry experience, visit to
the National Museum of Denmark and the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek
Textile production and textile tools
In this module, students will gain insights into how the production
of textiles can be studied and interpreted in different societies
(for example, in Greece, Egypt, Scandinavia) and time periods
(ancient Greece, late antique Egypt and Early Medieval Europe).
They will also be introduced to textile technology via hands-on
practice.
Teachers: Eva Andersson Strand, Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert,
Magdalena Öhrmann
Activites: Experimental archaeology, Lejre visit, practical work
sessions.
Fashion, culture and identity
In this module, the students will learn about different theoretical
understandings of fashion and the history of fashion in the modern
and postmodern world. An interdisciplinary approach to the
contested field of fashion studies is emphasized. Students will
explore the various methods from semiotic readings to ethnographic
descriptions and interpretations. The aim of the module is for
students to develop critical, analytical thinking through fashion
as one approach to the study of culture and society.
Tutors: Marie Riegels Melchior, Jane Malcolm-Davies.
Activities: Micro-ethnographic field studies, representational
studies of fashion imagery, visit museums.
Course objectives (clarification of some of the
objectives stipulated in the curriculum):
After the course students will be able to:
• have knowledge and understanding of the historical dimension to
textile and fashion production, mediation and use
• have knowledge and understanding of the prevalent theories of
textile and fashion across disciplinary boundaries of archeology,
history, ethnology and fashion studies
• have knowledge of various types of important primary sources
about this history of textiles and fashion
• have knowledge of methods underlying the theories of the
above mentioned
• present skills in critical analysis and evaluation of conflicting
theories
• have a clear understanding of the methodologies and
difficulties of handling different types of sources, with varying
degrees of validity and quality
• have a technical and chronological overview of textile
techniques
• have a hands-on approach to various textile techniques
• have skills in written dissemination of the subject matter and
skills in formulating a thesis statement and expand it into an
original paper for your end-of-summer school written assignment
• have competences in acting in a cross-disciplinary environment on
the basis of the course teaching
---
Application:
The course is implemented only if a minimum of 20
students have registered and paid tuition fees by 1 May
2018
• Application deadline: 1 April 2018
- Second application deadline in case of available seats: 1 June
2018. Please note that applicants submitting their application
after 1 April 2018 may not be able to get accommodation
through the UCPH Housing Foundation.
• Application form:
see
http://ctr.hum.ku.dk/courses_activities_and_facilities/ctr_courses/summer-school/2018/textiles-and-dress/
• Payment due: mid-April 2018
• Course: 2-13 July 2018
• Deadline for submission of take-home assignment: 31 August
2018
For further information, please
contact:
Marie-Louise Nosch (academic content): nosch @ hum.ku.dk
Christian Thorup (admission and registration): chrthorup @
hum.ku.dk
Henrik Lerdam (exams/Curricula/Syllabus): lerdam @
hum.ku.dk
For questions concerning tuition fees, visa invitations and
accommodation in Copenhagen, please contact International
Admissions, The Faculty of Humanities: gueststudents@hum.ku.dk or
+45 40 47 11 97.
Tuition fees:
http://humanities.ku.dk/education/summer/#Tuition-fees
See
also: http://studies.ku.dk/summer/ and
http://humanities.ku.dk/education/summer/
- Category
- Hours
- Class Instruction
- 104
- Course Preparation
- 203
- Exam Preparation
- 81,5
- Total
- 388,5
The course is only implemented if a minimum of 20 students has signed up and paid tutition fee 1 of May 2018.
See above for information on registration or http://ctr.hum.ku.dk/courses_activities_and_facilities/ctr_courses/summer-school/2018/textiles-and-dress/
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Other
- Exam registration requirements
In Danish only:
Aktuelle studieordninger for Historie og Uddannelseshåndbog for Historie; Pensumbestemmelser for kandidatuddannelsen i Historie; Kronologiske spredningskrav for kandidatuddannelsen i Historie- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- External censorship
Criteria for exam assesment
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- HHIK08743U
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterBachelor choice,Full Degree Master choice
- Duration
- 1 block
- Placement
- Summer
- Schedule
- 2 - 13 July 2018 (all weekdays 9AM-7PM, room 12.0.35).
- Continuing and further education
- Study board
- Study Board of Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Contracting department
- SAXO-Institute - Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Humanities
Course Coordinators
- Marie Louise Bech Nosch (nosch@hum.ku.dk)
- Jane Anne Malcolm-Davies (jmalcolm-davies@hum.ku.dk)
- Marie Riegels Melchior (jcd470@ku.dk)
- Eva Birgitta Andersson Strand (evaandersson@hum.ku.dk)