SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS

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SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS Voyage: Fall 2013 Discipline: Architecture ARCH 2500-101: Sacred Places Division: Lower Faculty Name: Phoebe Crisman Pre-requisites: none COURSE DESCRIPTION This introductory course employs a global comparative perspective to study sacred buildings, cities and landscapes, with a focus on the rich diversity of places encountered during our voyage. We will examine the formal, spatial, structural, aesthetic and symbolic aspects of each building and consider how it reflects the rituals in that culture. The study of different religious, cultural, technological and political developments will bring light to the overall conception, significance and use of the architecture in context. By directly experiencing specific sacred spaces in port, students will learn to effectively evaluate the design intentions and their ultimate realization. COURSE OBJECTIVES Encourage a deeper analysis of the major sacred sites that students will encounter on the voyage. Sites marked with a * are UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Gain a sound understanding of sacred architecture as an expression of both secular culture and faith in the world s wisdom traditions. Understand the relationship between the perceptions of certain forms, spaces and design features and the concept of sacredness. Develop skills to understand physical form and space and communicate those perceptions in verbal and written expression. REQUIRED TEXTBOOK AUTHOR: Spiro Kostof TITLE: A History of Architecture: Settings and Rituals PUBLISHER: Oxford University Press ISBN #: 9780195083798 DATE/EDITION: 1995, 2 nd ed. 1

TOPICAL OUTLINE OF COURSE (B day, 10:50 12:05) B1- Aug 27: Architecture as a Reflection of Culture Kostof, Spiro. The Study of What We Build, A History of Architecture (AHA): 3-19. Assignment: One-paragraph description of a sacred place that you have experienced. Due 9/2. St. Petersburg: August 29-September 1 B2- Sept 2: The Sacred and the Profane Lascaux Caves,* Stonehenge,* Avebury,* Grange Stone Circle. Eliade, Mircea. Sacred Space & Making the World Sacred, The Sacred and the Profane: 20-65. Kostof. The Cave and the Sky: Stone Age Europe, 21-27, 37-41. B3- Sept 4: Global Comparisons around 12 Course Themes: Space Time Matter Gravity Light Silence Dwelling Room Ritual Memory Landscape Place McCarter, R. and J. Pallasmaa. Architecture as Experience, Understanding Architecture: 4-7 Esposito, John, et.al. Origins, Geography of Religion: 17-69. Hamburg: September 5-8 B4- Sept 10: Case Study Antwerp Cathedral and the Gothic Expression of Christian Faith St. Denis Abbey church choir (1144), Notre-Dame de Paris* (1163-1345), Chartres Cathedral* (1194-1260), St. Patrick s Cathedral, Dublin (1191-1270), Amien Cathedral* (1220), Salisbury Cathedral (1220-58), (Cathedral of Our Lady* Antwerp (1352) Kostof. The French Manner, 323-347. ANTWERP FIELD LAB: September 12 (description below course outline) Antwerp: September 12-14 / Le Havre: September 15-16 B5- Sept 17: SPACE: Volumetric Complexity and Spatial Qualities Kostof. The Renaissance 403-413, Palladio in Town and Country 476-483, The Workshop of St. Peter s 500-509. B6- Sept 19: TIME: Is Architecture Frozen Music? Kostof. The Roman Baroque 511-526. Dublin: September 20-23 B7- Sept 25: Case Study Mezquita de Córdoba and the Mosques and Gardens of Islam Mezquita/Cathedral* Córdoba (785), Alhambra* Granada (889), Mosque of Ahmad Ibn Ţūlūn* Cairo (879), Süleymaniye Mosque* Istanbul (1557), Taj Mahal* Agra (1648) Kostof. The Empire of Muhammed 284-293, A Turkish Renaissance 453-468. Clark, Emma. The Art of the Islamic Garden, History, Symbolism and the Quran, 22-35. Lisbon: Sept 27-28 / transit / Cadiz: Sept 30-October 1 2

October 2: Study Day/Conferences Casablanca: October 3-6 B8- Oct 7: RITUAL + MEMORY: Pyramids, Temples and Obelisks Kostof. The Architecture of Ancient Egypt, 67-89. B9- Oct 9: MATTER: Material and Form Kostof. The Greek Temple, Polis and Acropolis, 115-159. October 10: Study day B10- Oct 12: GRAVITY: Arches, Domes and other Gravity-Defying Acts Kostof. Rome: Caput Mundi, and The World at Large: Roman Concurrences, 191-223, Hagia Sophia, 263-267. B11- Oct 14: Case Study The Rock, Hewn and Mud Architecture of Africa Rock-Hewn Churches* Lalibela, Ethiopia (13 th c); Larabanga Mosque, Ghana; Great Mosque* Djenne, Mali (1906); Forts and Castles* Ghana (1482-1786) Blier, Suzanne, et.al. Butabu: Adobe Architecture of West Africa. Takoradi and Tema: October 15-18 October 19: Study day B12- Oct 21: LANDSCAPE: Magic Mountains and Inaccessible Islands Bernbaum, Edwin. Sacred Mountains of the World, Introduction, xiii-xxiii. Shackley, Myra. Potential Futures for Robben Island: Shrine, Museum, or Theme Park, International Journal of Heritage Studies, V.7, Issue 4, 355-363. October 23: Study day B13- Oct 24: PLACE: Courts and Gardens Moore, Charles, et.al. The Genius of the Place, The Poetics of Gardens: 1-10. Hayakawa, Masao. The Essence of the Japanese Garden, The Garden Art of Japan: 9-15. Cape Town: October 26-30 October 31: Study day B14- Nov 1: LIGHT + SILENCE: Technology as Problem and Opportunity Kostof. Architectural Art and the Landscape of Industry, 571-603. B15- Nov 3: DWELLING + ROOM: Supporting Human Inhabitation Kostof. The Trials of Modernism / Architecture & the State / Ends of Modernism, 669-742. 3

November 4: Study day B16- Nov 6: EXAM November 8: Study day B17- Nov 9: Case Study Mesoamerican Pyramids and Temples Kostof. A Continent Alone 233-241, Spain and the New World 433-442. B18- Nov 11: Case Study Spanish Colonial Towns and Churches Kostof. The Spanish Scene, A History of Architecture: 442-451. Low, Setha. Indigenous Architecture and the Spanish American Plaza in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean, American Anthropologist, V.97, N.4 (Dec., 1995): 748-762 Buenos Aires: November 12-16 November 17: Study day B19- Nov 18: Ritual at the Meeting of Land and Water Lencek, L. and Bosker, G. Beach: The History of Paradise on Earth: 1-24. Mitchell, George. Banaras: The City Revealed. Rio de Janeiro: November 20-22 November 23-24: In-Transit Salvador: November 25-27 B20- Nov 29: Utopian Cities + Symbolic Expressions: Brazilia, New Delhi + Washington Kostof. Architecture for a Nation, 617-633. Batista, Geraldo. Brasilia: Capital in the Hinterland, Planning 20thc Capital Cities, 164-181. B21- Dec 1: Student presentations December 2: Study day B22- Dec 4: Student presentations B23- Dec 6: Concluding Discussion / Last day of Class December 7: Study day December 8: A Finals Havana: December 9-11 December 12: Study day December 13: B Finals 4

FIELD WORK FIELD LAB: Attendance and participation in the Field Lab is MANDATORY. Please do not book individual travel plans or a SAS sponsored trip on the day of our field lab. Investigating the Historic and Contemporary Sacred Places of Antwerp We will investigate sacred places amidst the rich mix of Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque and Contemporary architecture within Antwerp s city center. Our walking excursion will include both religious and non-religious places of cultural significance. We will study two significant spaces of civic gathering: the Grote Markt, an historic town square bounded with 16th- and 17th-century guild houses, and the Groenplaats, a tree and cafe-lined square that foregrounds the Cathedral of Our Lady (1352). We will study this excellent example of Northern Gothic architecture and visit two other churches of differing periods for comparison. The St. James s Church (1491-1656) is a Brabant Gothic-style church and the St. Charles Borromeo Church (1615-21) is Baroque and built for the Jesuit Order. In addition to these churches, we will explore the extraordinary Centraal Station main hall with its enormous dome and glass-covered train hall. During the industrial revolution, train stations, exhibition halls and other cultural venues replaced the predominance of the church in social life. Today public museums are a type of sacred place. We will examine the newly built Museum aan de Strom, or MAS, which is an iconic example of contemporary architecture in the restored old port area Het Eilandje. We will visit the museum s historical exhibits and travel along a massive glass façade from the ground to a ninth floor roof deck. Panoramic views of the city, the port and the river will help us to reflect on the history and ongoing physical transformation of the city and her sacred places. FIELD ASSIGNMENTS: Sacred Places Journal + Field Reports Sacred Places Journal: Students will incorporate shore experiences into the course curriculum by maintaining a semester-long Sacred Places Journal. They will compare and contrast diverse settings by documenting personal visits to sacred places during the voyage. Journals will be submitted during class on B24, graded and returned on B25. Journal grading rubric: course concepts applied, level of detail and insight, completeness of entries (one per port minimum). Field Report: Select two Sacred Places from your journal to examine in greater detail within each report. Compare and contrast these two places using text and images (photos and/or drawings) in a concise, four-page report that conveys your personal perceptions of the place in relation to course readings and lectures. Each report should include: o brief summary of the student s field notes o written analysis of relationships between readings and the student s experiences o photographic or drawn analysis o conclusions about ways in which the physical form and space of the city manifests the climate, geography, culture, commerce, aesthetics and technology of the place. Field reports grading rubric: course concepts applied, level of detail and insight, clarity of organization and effectiveness of illustrations. More details will be distributed in class. 5

METHODS OF EVALUATION / COURSE GRADING RUBRIC Sacred Places Journal... 20% Field Reports (2 at 20% each)... 40% Midterm Exam... 20% Class Attendance, Participation and Final Presentation (5 minutes)...20% Individual Participation and Contribution to Classroom Learning Each student is expected to attend class, fully engage with the readings, visual materials and lectures, and contribute to the learning of others. Please think of class participation as your responsibility to add energy and insight to our discussion and to share your perspectives. Course readings and sacred places may be interpreted in a variety of ways and students should formulate initial positions and questions to offer in the class discussion. RESERVE LIBRARY LIST AUTHOR: Francis D. Ching, Mark Jarzombek, Vikramaditya Prakash TITLE: A Global History of Architecture PUBLISHER: Wiley ISBN #: 0470402571 DATE/EDITION: 2 nd ed., 2011 AUTHORS: Caroline Humphrey and Piers Vitebsky TITLE: Sacred Architecture PUBLISHER: Thorsons / Harper Collins ISBN #: 9780007662401 DATE/EDITION: 2003 AUTHOR: Martin Gray TITLE: Sacred Earth: Places of Peace and Power PUBLISHER: Sterling ISBN #: 9780641929687 DATE/EDITION: 2007 AUTHORS: John Esposito, Susan Tyler Hitchcock, Desmond Tutu, et. al. TITLE: Geography of Religion: Where God Lives, Where Pilgrims Walk PUBLISHER: National Geographic Society ISBN #: 0792259106 DATE/EDITION: 2006 ADDITIONAL RESOURCES 1. Digital Camera, for documenting images for field reports. 2. Sketchbook: Moleskine Folio A4 Plain Notebook (12 x 8.5 ): if not available, one of similar size, plain paper without lines or grid, and flat-lying 3. Mechanical Pencil ideally 7mm lead size, HB weight and smooth white eraser 6

ELECTRONIC COURSE MATERIALS AUTHOR: Eliade, Mircea CHAPTER: Sacred Space and Making the World Sacred BOOK TITLE: The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion PUB/DATE: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1987 PAGES: 20-65 AUTHOR: Esposito, John, et. al. CHAPTER: Origins (Ch. 1) BOOK TITLE: Geography of Religion: Where God Lives, Where Pilgrims Walk PUB/DATE: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1987 PAGES: 17-69 AUTHOR: McCarter, Robert and Juhani Pallasmaa CHAPTER: Architecture as Experience BOOK TITLE: Understanding Architecture. A Primer on Architecture as Experience PUB/DATE: Phaidon, 2012 PAGES: 4-7 AUTHOR: Clark, Emma CHAPTER: History, Symbolism and the Quran BOOK TITLE: The Art of the Islamic Garden DATE: 2004 PAGES: 22-35 AUTHOR: Blier, Suzanne, et.al. BOOK TITLE: Butabu: Adobe Architecture of West Africa PUB/DATE: Princeton Architectural Press, 2003 AUTHOR: Bernbaum, Edwin CHAPTER: Introduction BOOK TITLE: Sacred Mountains of the World DATE: 1977 PAGES: xiii-xxiii AUTHOR: Shackley, Myra ARTICLE: Potential Futures for Robben Island: Shrine, JOURNAL: International Journal of Heritage Studies VOLUME: Vol. 7, Issue 4, 2001 PAGES: 355-363 AUTHOR: Moore, Charles, et. al. CHAPTER: The Genius of the Place (Ch. 1) BOOK TITLE: The Poetics of Gardens PUB/DATE: MIT Press, 1988 PAGES: 1-10 7

AUTHOR: Hayakawa, Masao. CHAPTER: The Essence of the Japanese Garden BOOK TITLE: The Garden Art of Japan PUB/DATE: Weatherhill,1973 PAGES: 9-15 AUTHOR: Bacon, Edmund CHAPTER: The Genius of the Place (Ch. 1) BOOK TITLE: Design of Cities PUB/DATE: MIT Press, 1988 PAGES: 93-119 AUTHOR: Low, Setha CHAPTER: Indigenous Architecture & the Spanish American Plaza in Mesoamerica JOURNAL: American Anthropologist, V.97, N.4, Dec. 1995 PAGES: 748-762 AUTHOR: Lencek, Lena and Gideon Bosker CHAPTER: Beach: The History of Paradise on Earth BOOK TITLE: No Man and the Sea (Ch. 1) DATE: 1998 PAGES: 1-24 AUTHOR: Mitchell, George BOOK TITLE: Banaras: The City Revealed DATE: 2006 PAGES: tba AUTHOR: Batista, Geraldo et al CHAPTER: Brasilia: A Capital in the Hinterland BOOK TITLE: Planning Twentieth Century Capital Cities (David Gordon, ed.) DATE: 2010 PAGES: 164-181 HONOR CODE Semester at Sea students enroll in an academic program administered by the University of Virginia, and thus bind themselves to the University s honor code. The code prohibits all acts of lying, cheating, and stealing. Please consult the Voyager s Handbook for further explanation of what constitutes an honor offense. Each written assignment for this course must be pledged by the student as follows: On my honor as a student, I pledge that I have neither given nor received aid on this assignment. The pledge must be signed, or, in the case of an electronic file, signed [signed]. 8