Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module, students should be able to demonstrate the following:
• a working knowledge of queer visual cultures from the 18th century until the present
• a familiarity with and understanding of a range of set texts and critical and theoretical sources relevant to the course
• an ability to identify historic and contemporary trends in queer artistic production
• an understanding of the treatment of queerness as a social and political category
• an ability to form a critical argument in relation to queer artistic production
• a knowledge of historical and contemporary verbiage and terminology in reference to queer issues and identities
• an ability to approach the discipline of art history from a critical queer perspective
Indicative Module Content:
Intro: What is queer art?
Art and same-sex desire before the 19th century
The Modernist Queer (late 19th and early 20th century)
Queer Abstraction
Lesbian Art
Visual Cultures of HIV/AIDS Activism
Queer Cultures of the Waterfront
Queer Art and Censorship
Queer Black Art
Queer Art from Poland
Queer Art from Ireland
Trans and Genderqueer Art
Porn, Fetish, and BDSM Aesthetic