Search Results
Your search for courses · during 24SP · tagged with DGAH Cross Disc Collabortn · returned 5 results
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ARCN 222 Experimental Archaeology and Experiential History 6 credits
This course offers an experiential approach to crafts, technologies, and other material practices in premodern societies. Through hands-on activities and collaborations with local craftspeople, farmers, and other experts, this course will examine and test a variety of hypotheses about how people in the past lived their lives. How did prehistoric people produce stone tools, pottery, and metal? How did ancient Greeks and Romans feed and clothe themselves? How did medieval Europeans build their homes and bury their dead? Students will answer these questions and more by actively participating in a range of experimental archaeology and experiential history projects. Lab required.
- Spring 2024
- Science with Lab
- One previous Archaeology pertinent course
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ARCN 222.00 Spring 2024
- Faculty:Austin Mason 🏫 👤
- Size:24
- M, WAnderson Hall 121 1:50pm-3:00pm
- THAnderson Hall 122 1:15pm-5:00pm
- FAnderson Hall 121 2:20pm-3:20pm
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ARTS 252 Metalsmithing: Ancient Techniques, New Technologies 6 credits
This course focuses on lost wax casting, 3D modeling and printing, and stone setting as methods to create jewelry and small sculptural objects in bronze and silver. Specific instruction will be given in the proper use of tools, torches, and other equipment, wax carving, and general metalsmithing techniques. Through the use of 3D modeling software and 3D printing, new technologies will expedite traditional processes allowing for a broad range of metalworking possibilities.
- Spring 2024
- Arts Practice
- Studio Arts 151
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ARTS 252.00 Spring 2024
- Faculty:Danny Saathoff 🏫 👤
- Size:11
- T, THBoliou 044 9:00am-11:30am
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DGAH 264 Visualizing the Ancient City 6 credits
What makes a city, well, a city? This course examines urban society across different regions of the ancient world from the 2nd millennium BCE to 1st millennium CE. Taking a comparative approach to examples from the Mediterranean, Near East, Mesoamerica and China, we will reconstruct social, political, and topographic histories of urban space from a kaleidoscope of sources that include archaeological excavations, art & architecture, inscriptions, and literature. We will approach this source material using digital methods such as 3D modeling, GIS mapping, and digital storytelling to reconstruct both the physical environments and lived experiences of past cities.
- Spring 2024
- Humanistic Inquiry
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ENGL 265 News Stories 6 credits
This journalism course explores the process of moving from event to news story. Students will study and write different forms of journalism (including news, reviews, features, interviews, investigative pieces, and images), critique one another’s writing, work in teams with community partners, and revise their pieces to produce a final portfolio of professional work.
- Spring 2024
- Arts Practice Writing Requirement
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ENGL 265.00 Spring 2024
- Faculty:Susan Jaret McKinstry 🏫 👤
- Size:15
- Grading:S/CR/NC
- M, WWeitz Center 133 1:50pm-3:00pm
- FWeitz Center 133 2:20pm-3:20pm
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HIST 238 The Viking World 6 credits
In the popular imagination, Vikings are horn-helmeted, blood-thirsty pirates who raped and pillaged their way across medieval Europe. But the Norse did much more than loot, rape, and pillage; they cowed kings and fought for emperors, explored uncharted waters and settled the North Atlantic, and established new trade routes that revived European urban life. In this course, we will separate fact from fiction by critically examining primary source documents alongside archaeological, linguistic and place-name evidence. Students will share their insights with each other and the world through two major collaborative digital humanities projects over the course of the term.
- Spring 2024
- Humanistic Inquiry International Studies
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HIST 238.00 Spring 2024
- Faculty:Austin Mason 🏫 👤
- Size:25
- M, WLanguage & Dining Center 104 11:10am-12:20pm
- FLanguage & Dining Center 104 12:00pm-1:00pm