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 Undergraduate Course: Utopianism: Space, Place, and Order (LLLJ07013)
Course Outline
| School | Centre for Open Learning | College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |  
| Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 7 (Year 1 Undergraduate) | Availability | Not available to visiting students |  
| SCQF Credits | 10 | ECTS Credits | 5 |  
 
| Summary | This course is not available to University of Edinburgh matriculated students. This is a for-credit course offered by the Centre for Open Learning (COL); only students registered with COL should be enrolled. 
 This course will explore the important and significant role utopian political thought plays in the formation of society and its built environment. We will examine various utopian (and dystopian) writings to explore their relationship to contemporary societies' uses of spaces and places, specifically as a means to attain social order and stability.
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| Course description | Introduction: 1. Utopian political thought: History
 2. Four Time-Spaces
 3. Four Heterotopes
 
 Arcadia:
 1. Order in the Past
 2. Religious: The Garden of Eden
 3. Political: Locke and Hobbes' States of Nature and Civility
 
 Utopia:
 1. Order in the Present
 2. Ancient Times: Plato's Republic
 3. The Renaissance: Sir Thomas Moore
 4. The American West: Californian Utopian Communities
 
 Dystopia:
 1. Disorder in the Present
 2. Mediaeval Torments: Dante's Hell
 3. Brave New Worlds: Huxley and Orwell
 4. Feminist Malestream Monotonies
 
 Apocalyptia:
 1. Order in the Future
 2. Messianic: The Book of Revelations
 3. Earthly Delights: Diggers and Ranters
 4. Freedom of Labour: Marx
 
 Heterotopia I: Formatories:
 1. Order From Birth: Hetherington & Heterotopia
 2. Foucault on Orphanages & Schools
 3. Markus on Schools
 
 Heterotopia II: Factories:
 1. Order At Work
 2. Markus on Factories
 3. Adam Smith and Manufactories
 4. Robert Owen and New Lanark
 
 Heterotopia III: Reformatories
 1. Order from Correction
 2. Bentham on the Panopticon
 3. Markus & Foucault on Prisons
 4. Parks & Gyms
 
 Heterotopia IV: Informatories
 1. Order in Education
 2. Public squares, riots and libraries
 3. From Speakers Corners to the Internet and the Matrix (film)
 
 Review / Revision: Overview Lecture
 
 Unseen Assessment and Seen Assessment Workshop
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Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
| Pre-requisites |  | Co-requisites |  |  
| Prohibited Combinations |  | Other requirements | None |  
Course Delivery Information
| Not being delivered |  
Learning Outcomes 
| On completion of this course, the student will be able to: 
        Read and investigate utopian literature for themselves;Use the appropriate language and understand concepts such as 'heterotopia';Provide examples of various types of utopia and heterotopia;Relate 'purist' ideals to their compromised use in everyday settings;Think about buildings and cities in terms of underlying social relationships of power. |  
Reading List 
| Essential: Foucault, M., 1977. Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prison. London: Peregrine.
 Hetherington, K., 1997. The Badlands of Modernity: Heterotopia and Social Ordering. London: Routledge.
 Markus, T., 1993. Buildings & Power: Freedom & Control in the Origin of Modern Building Types. London: Routledge.
 More, T.,1516. Utopia. Copyright Free eBook.
 
 Recommended:
 Morton, A. L.,1952. The English Utopia. London: Lawrence & Wishart.
 
 Class handouts:
 Each week a 4-page Lecture Summary and/or Reading will be provided. Additional material will be available on CD-ROM or via email.
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Additional Information
| Graduate Attributes and Skills | Not entered |  
| Keywords | Not entered |  
Contacts 
| Course organiser | Mr Maximillian Jaede Tel:
 Email: v1mjaede@exseed.ed.ac.uk
 | Course secretary | Ms Kameliya Skerleva Tel: (0131 6)51 1855
 Email: Kameliya.Skerleva@ed.ac.uk
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