Description of Individual Course Units
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Offered By |
Graduate School of Natural and Applied Sciences |
Level of Course Unit |
Third Cycle Programmes (Doctorate Degree) |
Course Coordinator |
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR DENIZ BALIK |
Offered to |
Architectural Design |
Course Objective |
This course is an in-depth examination of theoretical and critical interdisciplinary approaches to the discourse of architecture from 1960 until today, focusing on seminal texts on poststructuralist theory and its intersection with architectural theory. The course tackles poststructuralism as a reflection on the condition of postmodernity, challenging the notions of essential causes of determinacy and arguing for relativism, binary opposition, or conditional knowledge. The course provides a framework for critical inquiry into poststructuralism with excursions into postmodernity, continental philosophy, and structuralist theory. For each topic, the course will start with the close reading of essential philosophical debates and then move through architecture s engagement with it. |
Learning Outcomes of the Course Unit |
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Mode of Delivery |
Face -to- Face |
Prerequisites and Co-requisites |
None |
Recomended Optional Programme Components |
None |
Course Contents |
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Recomended or Required Reading |
The following are essential background references. Additional weekly readings are listed in the course schedule. |
Planned Learning Activities and Teaching Methods |
Lecture, discussion, close analysis of texts, individual research, written assignment |
Assessment Methods |
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Further Notes About Assessment Methods |
This course comprises of lectures by the tutor and discussion sessions by students. It requires intense involvement on the part of students. It is primarily structured around close readings. Students are expected to engage in all assigned readings critically before the appropriate class. They are advised to keep notes of thoughts, comments, and questions that occur while reading, and to come to class prepared to share these notes. As homework, they are expected to prepare questions that derive from weekly readings in advance for open debates in class. They are expected to submit a research proposal (including problem statement / research question and a preliminary / tentative bibliography) as mid-term exam, for which the students are given feedback by the tutor as to how to proceed in the research. They are expected to develop the proposal as a final research paper, delving deeply into the issues raised directly by the readings and class discussions, yet bringing in new material. |
Assessment Criteria |
HOMEWORK-PRESENTATION |
Language of Instruction |
English |
Course Policies and Rules |
To be announced. |
Contact Details for the Lecturer(s) |
deniz.balik@deu.edu.tr |
Office Hours |
Will be announced. |
Work Placement(s) |
None |
Workload Calculation |
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Contribution of Learning Outcomes to Programme Outcomes |
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