Class Archives

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2020-2021

Course Manuals

Years 3–4

Under construction

Year 2

Course begins in April 2021. In the meantime, you can check our manual from last year.

 ˚˚˚ cL1CK ˚˚˚˚ h€r3 ˚˚˚˚

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Cultural Diversity

Year 4

CLASS ARCHIVE: https://cultural-diversity-class.hotglue.me/ 

Embodied Knowledge(s) Ideas are not something generated through distance but follow the thinking of Sara Ahmed (2017) in that they arise from our involvement in a world that can leave us feeling a variety of things from bewilderment, confusion, through to joy and happiness. The body “knows” things and how to do things and can enable us to work on our intuition, with our sense that something is not quite right as the starting point for thinking critically.

Chosen Family Archive--We've_Been_gay honey a research archive and intimate domestic performance by Jasmijn, Alice, and Anouk. "What began as an obscure and slightly lonely side-hobby, a desire to know that even the most banal everyday spaces and things can be Gay, and a longing to see what our Romance looks like — has now become a shared space for collecting and archiving mostly lesbian and queer herstory."
Traumedia, a video essay by STUDENT NAME REDACTED on the exploration of one's own personal traumas as projected on popular characters in film and television media. Part of the Our House, a group online archive and exhibition.

GIF from group research archive Our House by STUDENT NAMES REDACTED.

Without the bodily, we would not be able to organize ourselves in our environment. We would not know where/what we are, what/how we are learning or how we can communicate about our feelings, experiences and modes of being. Our bodies are continually in a process of becoming. With what lenses do we gaze on our bodies and those of others?

Year 3

https://p3culturaldiversity2020.hotglue.me/

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Powerplay

Year 4

CLASS ARCHIVE: https://www.poweroflistening.nl/

Decolonial Listening

Decolonial Listening can be the practice of humbling yourself in engaging with others and the world, in whatever form that takes. Humbling your own knowledge and self to make space for listening to one another, to what surrounds us. Listening in this way, we work towards a more ethical relationship to the world.

"The Other" by Kira Bolder (DBKV Fine Arts in Education), a project that explores depictions of Islam in Western media and the after-effect this has on the Muslim people in the Netherlands and people who are depicted as Muslims by others. 

We will meditate on how some knowledges and knowledges practices are imposed, acknowledging that there are dominant narratives and stories that impact and somehow take up space over others. Decolonial listening explores and attempts to unearth those knowledges that have been overlooked, silenced and disregarded.

"Back Stories" by Hanna Sterke (Advertising), a zine and research project on the impact of cancel culture on the publishing industry.
"The Act of Nonviolent Protest" by Joke van Driel (Graphic Design), a research project on nonviolent civil resistance and the consequences of the climate crisis for the Netherlands.

We will interrogate the power structures, their languages, and the relations built within them; the role of power in (re)producing violence, domination and marginalization. We will engage with theoretical ideas that disrupt or dismantle the infrastructure of power, concentrating on how various ways of listening are vital in accepting, rejecting, or refusing power.



Year 3


https://recordingviolence2020.hotglue.me/


LISTEN TO: Clara Harmssen Listening with the Surrounding
https://soundcloud.com/claraharmssen/listening-with-the-surrounding
A sound piece about breaking with the normative paradigm of humans as being separate from nature.
Al watan by Yusser Salih. "[It] is Arabic for the homeland, but it is also much more than that. The depth of the sentiment it carries is much stronger. [B]ecause the watan lies precisely in that place where pain and warmth meet. Longing is not separable from fleeing. Al watan is their burning house. It has no physical site. I enter the homeland through the stories of my father, through the stories of my grandmother, through these moments in which they reconstruct it for me and themselves. I enter through these moments in which they temporarily rebuild the house. The stories of my grandma mend my fractured experience of home."
Outdoor exhibition walking map by the class of Powerplay 3 2020-2021

New Earth

Year 4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpf2VVKll1Y
Documentation of online public presentation for String Figures, an exhibition of five projects connected  by Donna Haraway’s practice of string figuring: giving and receiving patterns, dropping threads, and failing but sometimes finding something that works.


THE (…) EARTH

Insert: Inhospitable, Vengeful, Uninhabitable, Violent, Traumatized, etc.

Capitalism is depleting the earth, causing climate change, polluting air, earth and water and is disrupting entire countries. Ever more companies are switching from linear to more circular business models; cities like to profile themselves as green and futureproof; and education is embracing ‘sustainability’ as a key topic.

Despite these admirable developments, adopting a sustainable lifestyle seems to be only in reach for the Western elite. Only the more affluent can afford to invest in solar panels, biological food and fair fashion. On a national as well as an international level the gap between the haves and have-nots is growing and more and more people are displaced due to climate change and related wars. It is clear that technology alone will not suffice. The incentives to really act long-term and put societal benefit before economic benefit, seem not to be pervasive enough throughout the current neoliberal free market economy.

How will we live amongst the capitalist ruins? What are the arts for living on a traumatized planet? How should we change our attitude towards nature? Are there better ways to co-habitate it with other non-human entities? We will focus on living in the wake of climate change as we transition to a new earth. We will unravel underlying power relations and learn to give form to future scenarios while rewriting the rules of the economic system. We will research social design as a political act, and develop new ways of producing/consuming in respect of different environmental, social and economic contexts.

Year 3

https://2021.mywdka.nl/WDKP31SPNE/ 

For WdKA and Hogeschool Rotterdam users only, not a public archive Powerplay4.png