An introduction to music theory
This unit provides an introduction to music theory pitched at a level equivalent to Grades 1-3 of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music theory exams. The material will provide you with an understanding of such basic building blocks of music notation as music staves, clefs, rhythmic and pitch values, rhythmic metre and time signatures. You can test your understanding as you proceed by completing simple multiple-choice questions.
After studying this unit you should have:
After studying this unit you should have:
Making sense of art history
In this unit you’ll explore art
history. Look around you, it’s likely that wherever you are you’ll be
able to see some images, it’s also likely that many of these image will
be intended to have some sort of effect on you. Here you will be
exploring the power of images via a study of contemporary art from the
1980s onwards. Taking the time to look beyond the immediate appearance
of an art work to consider what the artist might be trying to say can be
immensely rewarding.
Studying this unit will:
- enable you to develop your ability to identify the effects of art works;
- introduce you to a range of artistic techniques, such as the use of colour, composition and medium;
- enable you to explore the relationship between effects and techniques in a range of art works;
- enable you to explore some of the factors involved in interpreting meaning;
- enable you to explore the significance of context in informing the interpretation of art works;
- enable you to further develop your study skills.
Schubert's Lieder: Settings of Goethe's Poems
This unit looks at the short poems in
German that were set to music by Franz Schubert (1797–1828) for a single
voice with piano, a genre known as ‘Lieder’ (the German for ‘songs’).
Once they became widely known, Schubert's Lieder influenced generations
of songwriters up to the present day.This unit then discusses a
selection of Schubert's settings of Goethe's poems, and recordings of
all of them are provided. You can find the poems, in German with
parallel translations into English and the music scores of four of the
song settings, on the unit home page. You are not expected to be able to
read the music, but even if you are not very familiar with musical
notation, you may well find the scores useful in identifying what is
happening in the songs.
By the end of your work on this unit you should:
- have learned about Schubert's place as a composer in early nineteenth-century Vienna;
- have learned about the place of Schubert in the history of German song and the development of Romanticism;
- be able to follow the words of songs by Schubert while listening to a recording, using parallel German and English texts;
- be able to comment on the relationship between words and music in Schubert's song settings.
This unit explores the Holocaust, as
the destruction of European Jewry is commonly known. The mass killing
represented by the Holocaust raises many questions concerning the
development of European civilisation during the twentieth century. This
unit, therefore, covers essential ground if you wish to understand this
development.
By the end of this unit you should have:
- a perception of the enormity of the events under discussion;
- a recognition of the kinds of ideas and incidents which may have prompted them;
- an awareness of the historical arguments surrounding the Holocaust;
- an awareness of the relationship between the Holocaust and the war.
Accounts of Caravaggio's life are
filled with suggestions of murder and intrigue. But does knowing more
about this dark artist's experiences help us to interpret his art? Or
does understanding his motivations cloud their true meaning? This unit
explores the biographical monograph, one of the most common forms of art
history writing.
By the end of this unit you should be able to:
- analyse the pros and cons of the biographical monograph in art history;
- examine the strengths and weaknesses of the biographical monograph in relation to other kinds of art history writing
What is art? What is visual culture?
How have they changed through history? This unit explores the
fundamental issues raised by the study of western art and visual culture
over the last millennium. It moves from discussing the role of the
artist and the functions of art during the medieval and Renaissance
periods to considering the concept and practice of art in the era of the
academies before finally addressing the question of modern art and the
impact of globalisation.
After studying this unit, you will be able to:
- understand the changing perceptions and definitions of art across history
- understand the relationship between ‘art’ and visual culture
- understand the global dimension of art and how it has changed over time
- understand the significance of notions of ‘function’ and ‘autonomy’ for art history
- understand the role of patronage, institutions and the wider historical context in shaping art
- understand some of the major developments in western artistic practice since the Middle Ages.
While recognising the shadows cast by
two world wars (one concluded and one imminent) over European society
during the 1920s and 1930s, this unit demonstrates how a number of
specific features indicate that the interwar period was a distinctive
and important moment of modernity in the twentieth century, from the
rise of the metropolis and the emergence of new forms of mass media, to
the changing lifestyles of women and the increasingly interventionist
approaches to managing the health and welfare of modern populations.
After studying this unit, you will be able to:
- understand the terms ‘modernisation’, ‘modernity’ and ‘modernism’ and the ways in which they relate to each other, as well as know about the experience of modernity in interwar Europe
- understand the main historical debates about society and culture in interwar Europe, in particular a sense of the patterns of change and continuity, and the extent to which any change can be attributed to the First World War
- interpret visual sources, use data in tables to construct arguments, and summarise historiographical review articles.
What is imagination and can philosophy
define it in any meaningful way? This unit will introduce you to some of
the possible answers to these questions and will examine why philosophy
has sometimes found it difficult to approach imagination. It will then
go on to examine the relationship that imagination has to imagery and
supposition, charting where these concepts overlap with imagination and
where they diverge.
By the end of this unit you should:
- be able to discuss basic philosophical questions concerning the imagination;
- have enhanced your ability to understand problems concerning the imagination and to discuss them in a philosophical way.