This course provides students with a venue for reflecting on the different interpretive methods employed in the humanities. It surveys the origins, development and transformation of humanistic research methods and situates them within their shifting historical contexts. In particular, by examining the ‘art of interpretation’ known as hermeneutics, the course equips students with a methodological language for communicating their specific purposes as humanistic researchers. It considers the answers that different interpretive traditions have offered to problems of meaning, objectivity, subjectivity and distance, all while developing reflexivity and methodological awareness. A set of core readings introduces students to theological, rationalist, romantic, modern, postmodern and posthuman traditions of interpretation, and supplementary readings selected by students themselves allow them to customise the course to the own research needs. Key themes include language and meaning, dialogue and conversation, text and translation, self and narrative, truth and relativism, history and historicity, politics and critique, dialogue and conversation, text and translation, being and metaphysics. Students become familiar with key humanistic thinkers and are challenged to consider the implications of longstanding methodological debates to their own doctoral projects.
Learning outcome
Knowledge
The student will gain knowledge of:
The different interpretive methods employed in the humanities
The historical origins, development and transformation of hermeneutics
Current methodological debates in the humanities
The ethical challenges inherent to the different varieties of interpretation, as well as their social and political consequences.
Skills
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
Articulate their research methods by reference to the different varieties of interpretation
Account reflexively for their methodological decisions
Critically evaluate the ethical, social and political consequences of adopting any one
methodological approach, including their own.
Engage in academic discourse regarding the nature, purposes and procedures of
humanistic inquiry.
General competence
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
Reflect critically on methodological conventions found in different fields of the
humanities
Identify and evaluate intellectual, cultural, ethical and political presuppositions behind different methodological approaches in the humanities.
Forkunnskapskrav
Ingen
Exam
Form of assessment
Weight
Duration
Marks
Aid
Exam system
Withdrawal deadline
Exam date
Oral presentation and essay
1/1
Passed / Not Passed
—
—
—
Oral presentation and essay, wt. 1/1 Mark: Pass/Fail
Vilkår for å gå opp til eksamen/vurdering
Active participation 75%
Active participation in lectures and seminars, at least 75% participation.
The course will be held as lectures and seminars with discussions. A detailed timetable will be made available to course participants in advance of the seminar.
Åpent for
This course is for PhD candidates in the Faculty of Arts and Education and the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Stavanger. PhD candidates in programs at cooperating research institutions may also participate in the course.
Emneevaluering
There must be an early dialogue between the course supervisor, the student union representative and the students. The purpose is feedback from the students for changes and adjustments in the course for the current semester.In addition, a digital subject evaluation must be carried out at least every three years. Its purpose is to gather the students experiences with the course.
Litteratur
E-book The Routledge companion to hermeneutics Gander, Hans-Helmuth,; Malpas, Jeff., London ; New York :; London ; New York :, Routledge, 1 online resource (753 pages), 2015., isbn:1-315-77185-3; 1-317-67664-5, Students can purchase printed book from the university bookshop.
The course description is retrieved from FS (Felles studentsystem). Version 1