The course aims to provide tools for interpreting urban landscapes through the lens of day-night transitions, with a strong emphasis on laboratory practice and creative research.
Students will acquire knowledge of nocturnal ethnography, develop skills in creative research methodologies, and gain competence in analysing urban spaces across different times of day.
The course will foster critical awareness of how urban landscapes transform from sunset to dawn, considering cultural, social, political, and economic dynamics.
By the end of the course, you should be able to:
• Understand and apply qualitative and creative research methodologies to the study of cities.
• Analyse urban transitions and nocturnal phenomena from multiple perspectives – social, sensory, cultural, and visual.
• Develop your own field-based research practice, using observation, mapping, sketching, photography,or walking methodologies.
• Reflect critically on your research process and creative experimentation.
• Work collaboratively to produce a collective creative outcome that brings together your individual experiences and findings.
The final exam consists of an individual essay (70%) and a contribution to a collective artist’s book (30%). Students are required to write a paper of 1,500–2,000 words that analyzes the day-night transition in a chosen urban space, applying the methods and frameworks covered in the course. Subsequently, each student will individually rework elements from their essay into a single book page; these pages will then be assembled to create a collective research output.
Students will acquire knowledge of nocturnal ethnography, develop skills in creative research methodologies, and gain competence in analysing urban spaces across different times of day.
The course will foster critical awareness of how urban landscapes transform from sunset to dawn, considering cultural, social, political, and economic dynamics.
By the end of the course, you should be able to:
• Understand and apply qualitative and creative research methodologies to the study of cities.
• Analyse urban transitions and nocturnal phenomena from multiple perspectives – social, sensory, cultural, and visual.
• Develop your own field-based research practice, using observation, mapping, sketching, photography,or walking methodologies.
• Reflect critically on your research process and creative experimentation.
• Work collaboratively to produce a collective creative outcome that brings together your individual experiences and findings.
The final exam consists of an individual essay (70%) and a contribution to a collective artist’s book (30%). Students are required to write a paper of 1,500–2,000 words that analyzes the day-night transition in a chosen urban space, applying the methods and frameworks covered in the course. Subsequently, each student will individually rework elements from their essay into a single book page; these pages will then be assembled to create a collective research output.
Categoria A.A. 2025 - 2026 / Corsi di laurea magistrale / SCIENZE STORICHE
- Docente: Giuseppe Tomasella