维也纳大学2023寒假项目.pdf
The Discovery of Modernity – Vienna around 1900 © Gebhard Sengmüller univie: winter school for Cultural Historical Studies 3- 17 February 2023, Vienna, Austria Organisation The univie: winter school for Cultural Historical Studies takes place in Vienna, the capital of the former Habsburg Monarchy (and of Austria today) where traces of the outstanding culture of the late 19th and the beginning of the 20th century are still visible. The two-week program combines first-class academic courses with an extensive social and cultural program. Vienna’s rich cultural heritage, especially the museums, will lead to a thorough understanding of the impact of the fin-de-siècle on the modernisation of Europe. This unique program consists of high-level lectures in the morning and guided excursions to the city of Vienna and to various museums (the Museum for Applied Arts, the Leopold Museum, the Sigmund Freud Museum, and the Viennese State Opera) in the afternoon. Outside the framework of classes, Vienna offers plenty of opportunities to explore additional museums and sights such as the St. Stephan’s Cathedral, the Imperial Palace, and the Treasury. © Barbara Mair © SHS The academic course environment encourages intercultural and social exchange and favours mutual understanding within the international student population. Participants thus broaden their horizon, meet colleagues from different fields of study, make friends for life and build connections for their future professional careers. Courses The univie: winter school offers six courses comprising 4 ECTS credits per course (corresponding to 32 contact hours). Each contact hour consists of 45 minutes of classroom teaching. In the course of the two-week program, students can attend two courses and obtain up to 8 ECTS credits. The winter program courses offer a well-structured introduction to one of the most fascinating periods of Austria’s intellectual history in a short time. The culture of the fin-de-siècle is one of the highlights in the history of the Habsburg Monarchy. The preparatory seminar Introduction to Fin-de-Siècle Vienna on the first weekend provides students with the basic knowledge needed for their selected courses. The seminar is a prerequisite to attend the following courses. Students can select one course from the courses offered in the early morning and a second from the courses offered in the late morning. The courses provide them with a deep insight into the society and culture of this fascinating period. 8:30-10:30 • Design and Identity in Vienna around 1900 • Society, Politics, and Daily Life in Vienna around 1900 • Vienna’s Literature around 1900 and its Cinematic Reception 11:00-13:00 • Art and Visual Culture at the turn of the Century • Music and Musical Culture in Vienna around 1900 • Society and Psychoanalysis in Sigmund Freud’s Vienna © Gebhard Sengmüller © SHS Successful participants will receive a transcript of the University of Vienna. Application & fees The application deadline is on 30 November 2022. Applicants have to submit the following documents: 1. Application form 2. Statement of purpose 3. Transcript of record 4. Official proof of proficiency level in English 5. Two passport-size portrait photos 6. Copy of passport 7. Deposit of € 300 Please send your application documents to the following address: Innovationszentrum Universität Wien GmbH – Sommerhochschule Campus of the University of Vienna Alser Strasse 4/Hof 1/Tuer 1.16 1090 Vienna Austria The program fees amount to € 1,325 and include registration, tuition, and all planned excursions. The participants are responsible for any additional costs for board and lodging as well as travel arrangements. External students have to pay an additional fee of € 21.20 to be admitted to the University of Vienna as non-degree program students and to enjoy insurance coverage (general accident and liability insurance). © Franz Pfluegl © SHS Please transfer your payment to: Innovationszentrum Universität Wien GmbH – Sommerhochschule Bank: Bank Austria BIC: BKAUATWW IBAN: AT57 1100 0002 8224 0100 Stefan Gasch Lecturer in musicology, University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna; main fields of research: sacred music of the Early Modern Era, Philology and Source Studies, Music and Peace / War, Aesthetics around 1900. Eveline List Historian, economist and psychologist; professor of Cultural History at the Department of History, University of Vienna; psychoanalyst in private practice; training analyst of the International Psychoanalytical Association. Johann Georg Lughofer Assoc. Prof. of German Literature at the Department of German Studies of the University of Ljubljana; regularly teaching at the University of Vienna and at the University of Innsbruck as a visiting professor. Monika Schwärzler-Brodesser Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Vienna; former head of the Department of Art with an Emphasis in Visual Culture at Webster Vienna Private University; research areas: art and media theory, photography, visual culture. Elana Shapira Cultural and design historian; lecturer in Design History and Theory at the University of Applied Arts Vienna; specialist in the study of Viennese modernism and has widely published and lectured on the subject. Karl Vocelka Retired professor of History, former head of the Department of History, University of Vienna; elected president of the Institut für die Erforschung der Frühen Neuzeit; guest lecturer in numerous American programs in Vienna. Innovationszentrum Universität Wien GmbH Sommerhochschule Campus of the University of Vienna Alser Strasse 4, Hof 1, Tuer 1.16 1090 Vienna, Austria T +43-1- 4277-24131 E sommerhochschule@univie.ac.at Karl Vocelka Academic Director of the univie: winter school for Cultural Historical Studies Franz-Stefan Meissel Director of the Sommerhochschule Verena Bauer and Lauren Wagner Program Coordinators shs.univie.ac.at/winter-school