History of urban form: locating capitalism: producing early modern cities and objects
Master
In Maynard (USA)
Description
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Type
Master
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Location
Maynard (USA)
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Start date
Different dates available
What was the early modern economy like, and how did monetization impact artistic production, consumption, and the afterlife of objects? This seminar-format class explores major topics and themes concerning interconnections between early modern artistic and architectural creation and the economy. We will approach capitalism not as an inevitable system, but rather as a particular historical formation. Core course themes: commodification, production, and consumption, using case studies of the impact of the mercantile economy on chapels; palaces; prints and paintings, and their replication; and other material objects, including coins.
Facilities
Location
Start date
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Reviews
Subjects
- Production
- Architectural
Course programme
Seminars: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session
What was the early modern economy like, and how did monetization impact artistic production, consumption, and the afterlife of objects? This seminar-format class explores major topics and themes concerning interconnections between early modern artistic and architectural creation and the economy. One ambition is to study capitalism not as an inevitable system, but rather as a particular historical formation. We will begin by asking what defines the parameters of an early modern profit economy and discussing some of the major interpretive frameworks that historically have guided thoughts about capitalism in relation to late medieval and Renaissance architectural and art history. We then trace core themes: commodification, production, and consumption, using case studies that examine the impact of the mercantile economy on chapels; palaces; prints and paintings, and their replication; and other material objects, including coins. Our exploration of production looks at ways of organizing buying and selling, including questions concerning Europe’s corporate labor structure (the guild system) and patterns of patronage and sponsorship. We conclude the course by analyzing studies on pre- and early modern globalization and the relevance of world systems theory to the culture and time that we are studying. An array of topics falls under the rubric of this subject and they are organized to provoke conversation.
Requirements include attendance, completion of readings in advance of the class meeting for which a reading is assigned, a series of response papers, a final presentation and paper, and active class participation. Students are expected to read the texts outlined on the syllabus for each class meeting, and, on occasion, to have a solid knowledge of additional, supplementary readings.
Class Held At The Museum Of Fine Arts
Metal Technologies of Capitalism: Early Modern Numismatics, Monetization, and Money as Object
Meeting About Paper Topics This Week
The Non-mechanized Copy: Questions of Originality
Final Presentations
Final Papers Due For MARCHs and SMARCHs
Final Papers Due For non-MARCHs and non-SMARCHs
No Discussion Leader assigned; no response papers
The Early Modern Economy: A Case for World Systems and Globalization?
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History of urban form: locating capitalism: producing early modern cities and objects