Privacy challenged in past, present and future: a multi-disciplinary approach
Everybody agrees that privacy is essential, but no authoritative definition exists. Notions of privacy and private concern the confrontation between the individual and his or her surroundings and the boundaries drawn in this context. Recent technological innovations have incited a general concern with privacy, but also narrowed our understanding. We associate privacy with data protection and consider it as a value that is relevant only for our age.
Privacy, however, has deep historical roots. When we study privacy across the gap between past and present, we gain a better sense of the rich and complex implications of the evasive term ‘private’ which is the opposite not only of ‘public’, but also of ‘professional’, ‘common’ and ‘evident’. A multi-perspectival view shows how notions of privacy past and present shape and are shaped by a broad range of societal factors.
This course will take a multidisciplinary approach to privacy past and present. The course will introduce the students to a broad array of approaches and analytical skills. It will teach them to examine how delineations of privacy permeate widely different dimensions of Western culture, while opening a view towards a global perspective and discussing if, where and how privacy can be protected in the future. Bridging the gap between past and present, the course introduces a new approach both to historical studies and to studies of contemporary culture and society.
Among the topics treated in the course are:
- Privacy and surveillance: from early modern Quartermasters to the tracking of digital footprints
- Privacy and citizen archives: from parish registers to DNA-registers
- Privacy in society: from potential societal threat to human right
- Privacy and the self: subjectivity past and present
- Architectural framing of private space: from communal alcoves to glass facades
- Politics and diplomacy between public and private: from princely mirrors to tweeting presidents
- Representing privacy: art, theater, literature
The students’ different backgrounds will be used as the point of departure for a global perspective on privacy.
The course aims at students interested in history, literature, media and communications, art history, law, philosophy, religion, theology, architecture and social science, though all disciplines are welcome. This course is open to 3rd and 4th year undergraduate students as well as first year graduate students. You must have completed 120 ECTS points before the summer course begins.
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