Offers the opportunity to participate in programming interdisciplinary curatorial praxis, arts events, exhibitions, performances, lectures, and film screenings. Students are exposed to UCSC alumni and faculty members' research through visiting class lectures. Students learn basic protocol for arts programming and critical arts writing, and are required to create their own participatory curatorial project at Porter College. (Formerly course 100.)
General Education Code
PR-E
We live in a world permeated with photographic images, but do we really notice photographs? Do we understand how they work and what they mean? Do we know how to read them? Now that our phones and cameras have merged, we might also say that we live in a world that is forever inviting, imploring us to take photos; we might say we live in a world in which it is almost impossible not to take photos. Are we all photographers now? Do we choose to take photographs or has photography, in a sense, chosen us?
General Education Code
IM
Students learn about women's engagement with early movie culture, conduct their own historical research, and collaborate on building a web site that brings this knowledge to a public audience. (Formerly course 130A.)
General Education Code
IM
This performance-based course explores Shakespeare's clowns, jesters, and fools (the characters as well as the performers who originated them). Examines the comic traditions from which Shakespeare drew his inspiration, and considers how Shakespeare's work continues to influence contemporary comedy practices. No experience with Shakespeare or performance is necessary. (Formerly course 130C.)
Instructor
Patricia Gallagher
General Education Code
PR-C
Focuses on long-form (acting) improvisation, building participants' knowledge and skills through practical and theoretical readings, by viewing relevant performances, and by improvising in class and in small groups outside class. Participants perform in a final public showing.
General Education Code
PR-C
For practitioners of acting improvisation, this course deepens participants' knowledge and skills through practical and theoretical readings, by viewing performances, and by improvising in class and in small groups outside class. Participants perform in a final public showing. (Formerly course 180I.)
General Education Code
PR-C
Rehearsal of the principal vocal parts of an opera in preparation for a full production. Consideration of the dramatic aspects of each role and the interrelationships of the characters. (Formerly course 121C.)
The practice of music in a particular area of the world at an advanced level. Students learn the music of one world area or culture over the quarter and study the associated cultural background. Enrollment limited. (Formerly course 121.)
Investigates how science fiction's utopic and/or dystopic projections give insights about equality, democracy, justice, and difference at the same time they register contemporary anxieties about community, kinship, war, viruses, genetic engineering, robotics, surveillance, and environmental degradation.
General Education Code
TA
Investigates form as it guides poetic utterance. Students complete texts to fit forms including broadsides, pamphlets, and books. Composition is guided by production methods, from holographic texts to letterpress and digital composition. (Formerly course 130B.)
General Education Code
PR-C
Introduces Shakespeare's works, focusing on representative examples drawn from the range of genres in which he wrote; poetry, comedy, history, tragedy, and tragicomedy. (Formerly course 161.)
Instructor
The Staff, Sean Keilen
General Education Code
TA
Teaches the construction and history of handmade books as artistic expression. Coursework covers a variety of structures, the analysis of book content, and the integration of design and concept. Covers the generation of content; explorations in typography; and folded, glued, and stitched structures.
General Education Code
PR-C
Interrogates the relationship between freedom and race in our current political moment by looking to historical and theoretical models that inform the present. Considers how race operates in legal, scientific, and visual discourses to shape individual and collective freedoms.
Instructor
Veronika Zablotsky, Bristol Cave-LaCoste, Alexandra Moore
General Education Code
ER
Explores indigenous American relationships with other-than-human nature. Studies prehistoric through contemporary beliefs and practices. Emphasis on North America but may also include attention to Central or South American cultures' relationships with nature. Features films, writings, and artwork by indigenous American people. (Formerly course 165.)
General Education Code
PE-E
Critically interrogates the multiple meanings of data and democracy. Students examine case studies on the mobilization and framing of democracy in particular moments. Students also analyze concerns and opportunities provided by data management and archival practices of evidence and cataloging.
General Education Code
PE-T
Teaching of a lower-division seminar by an upper-division student under faculty supervision. (See course 42.)
Field Study
Provides a combination of theoretical background and hands-on experience in literary magazine editing and publishing. Students collaborate to produce a special Santa Cruz issue of Stone Soup, the for kids, by kids journal founded at Porter College. Enrollment is by permission of the instructor. Enrollment is restricted to sophomore, junior, and senior Porter college members majoring in art; art and design: games and playable media; art history; the history of art and visual culture; literature; or film and digital media.
General Education Code
PR-E
A program of independent study arranged between a group of students and a faculty instructor.
Ind Field Study
Tutorial
Individual projects carried out under the supervision of a Porter faculty member. Students submit petition to sponsoring agency.