Checking date: 28/04/2025 00:02:10


Course: 2025/2026

Construction, transmission and reception of culture
(18369)
Bachelor in Cultural Studies (Plan: 573 - Estudio: 364)


Coordinating teacher: CURNIS , MICHELE

Department assigned to the subject: Humanities: History, Geography and Art Department

Type: Compulsory
ECTS Credits: 6.0 ECTS

Course:
Semester:




Requirements (Subjects that are assumed to be known)
Course "Culture in its historical dimension".
Objectives
1. Understand that the study of the past constitutes an essential condition for the explanation and understanding of the present, and provides the best possible disposition to face the future. 2. Know the political, social and cultural reality of past times thanks to a comparative historical-critical method. 3. Know and understand the processes of political, social, economic and cultural change in the society of a certain period. 4. Develop the ability to identify, organize and analyze relevant information autonomously, critically and systematically about primary and secondary sources. 5. Develop the ability to debate and formulate critical reasoning. 6. Develop the ability to argue scientifically and historically for a cultural position regarding the problems of the past.
Learning Outcomes
K1: To know the principles and values of democracy and sustainable development, in particular, respect for human rights and fundamental rights, gender equality and non-discrimination, the principles of universal accessibility and climate change. K2: To know basic humanistic contents, oral and written expression, following ethical principles and completing a multidisciplinary training profile. K4: Analyze current cultural practices in relation to their historical contexts and institutional trajectories. K5: Understand the functioning of contemporary cultural systems and their main agents (institutions, policies, formats). K6: Distinguish basic approaches to cultural analysis from humanistic and social perspectives (sociological, historical, philosophical, anthropological). K8: Recognize global cultural diversity and the processes of interaction and cultural hybridization linked to globalization. S1: To plan and organize team work making the right decisions based on available information and gathering data in digital environments. S2: To use information interpreting relevant data avoiding plagiarism, and in accordance with the academic and professional conventions of the area of study, being able to assess the reliability and quality of such information S3: Apply critical reasoning to the interpretation of cultural phenomena, using appropriate terminology and basic analytical tools. S4: Communicate ideas and findings orally and in writing clearly, coherently, and appropriately for academic context. S5: Critically analyze cultural practices from an ethical perspective, recognizing cultural norms, values, and conflicts. S8: Use basic tools of visual representation and digital communication to present analysis or research findings. S9: Develop strategies for the preservation of cultural heritage and the social practices that sustain it. C2: Apply concepts, approaches, and methods of cultural analysis to the study of sociocultural phenomena from a critical and informed perspective. C4: Independently and creatively address problems and questions specific to the field of cultural studies, selecting and effectively combining acquired knowledge, skills, and resources.
Description of contents: programme
Once the historical-cultural process is understood (see the course "Culture in Its Historical Dimension"), it is essential to provide students with the appropriate analytical tools to critically study the conditions of cultural production, its formalization as a changing ideological foundation, and the mechanisms of selection, transmission, and reception throughout the various historical periods (particularly, as is the case in this course, the medieval millennium). In the Western world, classical culture has become the essential repository of knowledge for the training of elites. Thus, the cultural history of the West becomes a sequence of reinterpretations of the classical world that adapt to the aesthetic and political needs of each era, in a permanent dialectical relationship between past and present. The case of the Middle Ages is particularly interesting due to the always original nature of these reinterpretations, depending on the era and geographical latitude. Consequently, a degree in Cultural Studies requires not so much scholarly knowledge of the contents of a history of culture, but rather the foundations of the relationship between the past and the present to reveal the mechanisms of justification and legitimation of all types of authority (political, religious, and cultural). 1 - Transmission and reception of classical culture in medieval Europe: geopolitical aspects and worldview. 2 - Gender as a determining factor in political action. 3 - The encyclopedia as a mirror of the mental structure of the Middle Ages. 4 - The role of cathedral schools in cultural creation. 5 - The origin of universities. 6 - Metamorphosis of cultural education between the Middle Ages and Humanism. 7 - The Renaissance reinterpretation of the classical past. The case of the city. 8 - The material supports of culture: production, agents, media, promotion, dissemination, and consumption. Organic intellectuality, cultural referents, and power.
Learning activities and methodology
AF1. THEORETICAL-PRACTICAL CLASSES. These classes will present the knowledge students must acquire. Students will receive class notes and basic reference texts to facilitate class follow-up and subsequent work. Students will solve exercises and practice problems, and workshops and assessment tests will be held to acquire the necessary skills. For 6-credit subjects, 48 ¿¿hours will be allocated as a general rule, with 100% face-to-face attendance. AF2. TUTORING. Individualized (individual tutoring) or group (collective tutoring) assistance will be provided to students by the instructor. For 6-credit subjects, 4 hours will be allocated, with 100% face-to-face attendance. AF3. INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP WORK FOR STUDENTS. For 6-credit subjects, 98 hours will be allocated, with 0% face-to-face attendance. MD1. THEORY CLASS. In-class lectures by the professor, supported by computer and audiovisual media, develop the main concepts of the subject and provide materials and bibliography to complement student learning. MD2. PRACTICES. Resolution of practical cases, problems, etc. posed by the professor individually or in groups. MD3. TUTORING. Individualized (individual tutoring) or group (collective tutoring) assistance to students by the professor. For 6-credit courses, 4 hours will be allocated, with 100% face-to-face attendance.
Assessment System
  • % end-of-term-examination/test 50
  • % of continuous assessment (assigments, laboratory, practicals...) 50

Calendar of Continuous assessment


Extraordinary call: regulations
Basic Bibliography
  • Patricia Clare Ingham. The Medieval New: Ambivalence in an Age of Innovation. University of Pennsylvania Press. 2015
Recursos electrónicosElectronic Resources *
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The course syllabus may change due academic events or other reasons.