Cosmological Images 2022: Representing the Universe

This course will introduce the study of cosmograms: concrete objects which represent the universe as a whole. It will explore the aesthetics, politics, and pragmatics of representing the cosmos and knowledge about it, addressing religion, science, arts, and folk traditions. Students will be provided methods for studying such objects in action.

Tuesdays, 10-12

Online in January (planned for Lecture Room):
Meeting ID: 963 9861 3592



Islamic Authorities and Arabic Elements in the Renaissance 2021

This course aims to accustom students to using a wide range of primary materials to assess how one culture can understanding (or misunderstand) another. The student should gain a wider knowledge of Islam, a basic understanding of the Arabic alphabet and the structure of the Arabic language, an acquaintance with the texts in philosophy, medicine, mathematics and magic that were translated from Arabic into Latin, and a view on the reaction of Latin translators, theologians, philosophers, doctors and scientists to Arabic learning. The student will learn how a period in which Latin culture assimilated much Arabic material into mainstream learning was followed by a period in which Latin readers started to appreciate Arabic culture in its own right, and to explore its poetry, music and architecture. Above all the course shows how one culture can enrich another and how ideas and techniques can spread irrespective of religious and ethnic differences.