PHIL 7014 The Image of Thought: Art, Film and Philosophy
Credit Points 10
Legacy Code 102584
Coordinator Alex Ling Opens in new window
Description Working on the assumption that art is capable of exploring philosophical issues in its own right, the subject considers how various arts from poetry to contemporary film help shape our understanding of things like metaphysics, epistemology, ethics and morality.
School Humanities & Comm Arts
Discipline Philosophy
Student Contribution Band HECS Band 4 10cp
Level Postgraduate Coursework Level 7 subject
Restrictions
Students must be enrolled in a postgraduate program.
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate a critical understanding of the relationship between art and philosophy;
- Analyse and evaluate a broad range of artistic and philosophical texts;
- Communicate the relevance of modern art and culture to a range of philosophical concepts and practices (and vice versa);
- Develop and apply theoretical approaches and research practices to investigate philosophical problems.
Subject Content
The subject focuses on the ways in which art ? and in particular film and the visual arts ? impacts on philosophy. Examples of subject content include:
The Image of Thought: Art Before Philosophy
Lost in Translation: Letter or Image?
Aesthetics versus Inaesthetics
Being: One or Multiple?
Poetics and Epistemology
The Metaphysics of Film
Visualising Ethics and Morality
The Thought of Images: Art as Philosophy
Assessment
The following table summarises the standard assessment tasks for this subject. Please note this is a guide only. Assessment tasks are regularly updated, where there is a difference your Learning Guide takes precedence.
Type | Length | Percent | Threshold | Individual/Group Task |
---|---|---|---|---|
Seminar presentation | 5-10 min presentation and 500 word paper | 15 | N | Individual |
Minor essay | 1,000 words | 25 | N | Individual |
Major (research) essay | 3,000 words | 60 | N | Individual |
Prescribed Texts
- The Prescribed Text is a Subject Reader which will be constructed prior to semester commencing. The subject is built around individual papers/chapters, hence the use of the Subject Reader and absence of further �eessential texts�f.
Teaching Periods