Computer showing media in progress.
Language skills
required, minimum level of B2
Programme length
1 og ½ years.
Study mode
Face-to-face learning
Application status
International students:
Students with Icelandic or Nordic citizenship:
Overview

  • Do you want an education that will be an asset in many different careers?
  • Are you interested in communications and how to present information?
  • Would you like a varied programme that can be tailored to suit your interests?
  • Do you want a practical programme?

This is an MA programme at the University of Iceland which prepares students to work in communications of all kinds.

The programme is open to anyone who has completed a BA degree or equivalent qualification with a first class grade (7.25). There is a 30 ECTS micro-credential programme in the same subject which also considers employment experience.

Most applicants have completed an undergraduate degree in the humanities or social sciences, but the programme is also open to students with backgrounds in other subjects. Individual courses are also open to students on other graduate programmes, as the programme frequently overlaps with other disciplines.

Programme structure

This is a 90 ECTS MA programme, including a 30 ECTS final project. The programme can be completed in one and a half years of full-time study.

Students choose between the following specialisations:

  • Applied studies in culture and communication
  • Innovation and communication
  • Digital communication

Organisation of teaching

Subject to the approval of the programme coordinator, students are allowed to complete up to 20 ECTS through elective courses at the BA or MA level in other subjects or at other universities that have partnership agreements with UI, as long as the courses align with the learning objectives for applied studies in culture and communication. Students will earn 6 ECTS for BA courses rather than 10 ECTS, since higher academic standards are expected for Master’s students.

This programme is taught in Icelandic but reading material may be in English.

Main objectives

The programme aims to provide students with:

  • knowledge of different areas of culture and communication and skills in a specific field or fields.
  • knowledge and understanding of methods and theories concerning culture and communication, innovation and entrepreneurship.
  • the skills required to take a reasoned position on controversial issues in culture and communication.
  • critical thinking skills and the ability to explain their views.

BA or equivalent with a first class grade (7,25)

An MA degree in Applied Studies in Culture and Communication shall require at least 90 ECTS of which the final project accounts for 30.
It is permitted to complete maximum 10 ECTS in internship. Subject to the approval of the supervisory teacher of the study programme, students are allowed to complete up to 20 ECTS through elective courses, which cover objectives of applied studies in culture and communication and are M-courses or courses at the Master's level in other subjects or in other universities with which contracts have been made.

Mandatory courses in each specialisation are as follows:

Applied Studies in Culture and Communication 

  • HMM122F Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images 10e
  • HMM242F Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication 10e
  • HMM123F Innovation and Venture Development 10e
  • HMM240F Culture and Cultural Communication 10e
  • HMM431L Final project 30e

Innovation and communication 

  • HMM123F Innovation and Venture Development  10e
  • HMM241F Digital and Social Innovation 10e
  • HMM240F Culture and Cultural Communication 10e
  • HMM431L Final project 30e
    Restrictive electives:
  • HMM122F Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images 10e
    or
  • HMM242F Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication 10e

Digital communication

  • HMM122F Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images 10e
  • HMM242F Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication 10e
  • HMM120F Fundamentals in Web Communications 10e
  • HMM240F Culture and Cultural Communication 10e
  • HMM431L Final project 30e

The following documents must accompany an application for this programme:
  • CV
  • Statement of purpose
  • Reference 1, Name and email
  • Reference 2, Name and email
  • Certified copies of diplomas and transcripts

Further information on supporting documents can be found here

Programme structure

Check below to see how the programme is structured.

Year unspecified | Fall
Fundamentals in Web Communications (HMM120F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images (HMM122F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Analysis of texts and images
  2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
  3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Innovation and Venture Development (HMM123F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Humanities (FOR709F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The aim of the course is to provide students with a more comprehensive and deeper insight into the different theoretical approaches within the humanities. In the course, the main theories that have influenced theoretical discussion in the humanities over the last decades will be presented and discussed, and the students are taught how to apply them in their own research.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Museums as a learning environment (SAF016F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

One of the main purposes of Icelandic museums is to preserve the country's cultural and natural heritage for future generations. Furthermore, to encourage increased knowledge of this heritage and understanding of its connections to the outside world. According to Icelandic museum laws, museums are expected to "enhance people's quality of life" by fostering an understanding of the development and status of culture, art, nature, and/or science. Therefore, museums and museum education can impact society, groups, and individuals. Museology plays a key role in this context and is the main subject of this course.

Students will be introduced to theoretical approaches aimed at supporting diverse and impactful educational practices related to archaeology, art, natural sciences, cultural heritage, and other museum subjects. Attention will be given to the different target audiences of museum education, the role of visitors within museums, spatial considerations, text production, multimedia, interactivity, and more.

This is a distance-learning course divided into three modules. Each module includes short lectures by the instructor reflecting on the course material, guest lectures (delivered digitally), and supplementary materials. Over the semester, three in-person and/or Zoom sessions will be held, where students will receive lectures from museum professionals and work on an educational project in collaboration with a museum in Reykjavík. The project will be developed based on students’ academic interests, under the supervision of the instructor and with support from museum staff.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Heritage (ÞJÓ506M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Studies and Social Critique (MFR701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course reviews cultural studies on the whole and focuses on its value as a radical form of social and cultural criticism. Texts of key authors from the 19th Century and until recent years are discussed with the very concept of culture as a central issue and the question of its meaning for critical reflexion on society, history and contemporaneity. The interpellation of cultural criticism and the study of culture is scrutinized and the way in which this relationship is central for cultural studies. This conflict, which can be felt in older and recent texts has for the last decades been a fertile ground for the humanities in general and characterizes their connection to cultural politics. Concepts such as ideology, power, hegemony, gender and discourse play a central role in the discussion.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
The Cold War: Art, culture and literature (HMM703F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Radio production and podcasting (HMM235F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Fall
Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work (MFR715M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games (SAF301M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

 Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Art and History: The formation of Artworlds (LIS709F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Applied folklore (ÞJÓ304M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Writing and Editing (ÍSL101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural and Digital Innovation (HMM241F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication (HMM242F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
  2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
  3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

The course is not taught remotely.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Food and culture (NÆR613M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Art Criticism and Curation (LIS805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Culture and Dissent (MFR703M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course deals with interconnections between political radicalism, culture, tradition and power. We will focus on contemporary representations of dissent in particular, look at the discourse of democracy and cultural difference, reactions to and criticism of protest in the Western political tradition and dissent in more repressive political systems. The role of intellectuals and writers will be explored as well as the function of artistic expression and design in transforming cultural and social environments. We will also discuss media and social media discourse in connection with an attempt to understand the various and sometimes contradictory objectives of public institutions. A few points of conflict will be discussed that to some extent expose fundamental conflicts in liberal democratic societies such as questions about the wisdom and ignorance of publics, reactions to climate change, inequality and extreme poverty. Finally corruption and power will be discussed as well as social and cultural expression, the possibilities and limitations of freedom of speech, the use and abuse of information, disinformation, secrecy, fake and “fake news”.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Editing and design of printing tools (RÚT803F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An introduction to the collaboration and division of work between an editor and a graphic designer in the creation of printed work with emphasis on the importance of typography. Students will gain insight into the basis of typography and preparation for print as well as learning about the graphic designer's tools in context with principal kinds of print. The course will include readings and discourse on the influence of graphic design on legibility and understanding, as well as discourse on quality, usefulness, aesthetics and practicality in graphic design.

The student will present and hand in a written analysis on a printed good of their own choice and are also encouraged to actively participate in discussions in class. The final project consists of creating your own publishing project and communicating ideas on its editing graphically and in writing.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Publication - RÚT (RÚT805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course students in Practical Editorship and Theory of Publication work with creative writing students in preparing texts for publication, both in printed and digital form. The product of the course will be a text that has been prepared for publication.

Five students of Practical Editorship and Theory of Publication will be accepted; first come, first served.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Museums and Society: The Circus of Death? (SAF603M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. 

Work format

Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Creative Documentary (HMM220F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Culture and Cultural Communication (HMM240F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Art Criticism and Curation (LIS805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Professional works: Case study analysis (SAF011F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
The Art Object: Life and Material (LIS808M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Trouble in the Arts (LIS429M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Fall
Innovation and Venture Development (HMM123F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images (HMM122F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Analysis of texts and images
  2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
  3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Fundamentals in Web Communications (HMM120F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Human Computer Interaction (TÖL502M)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Usually taught every second year.

The objective of the course is to allow students to examine more closely than is done in the introductory course Graphical User Interface Programming  HBV201G specific factors of HCI. The factors covered are user interface design using prototyping, programming of smart devices and users‘ acceptability of the software. There will be emphasis on different techniques and tools to develop prototypes. Also, on the design of user interfaces and native programming for smart phones or pads. The development process will be aimed at ensuring accessibility and acceptability of users. Students work on small projects individually, or on larger projects in groups. 

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Journalism 1 (BLF110F)
Free elective course within the programme
8 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The aim of course is to introduce to students the journalistic profession with an emphasis on reporting and producing news for different media.  Main concepts and methods in newswriting are discussed, such as news values, news gathering and news construction. Students will be trained in writing in a focused, accurate and articulate manner.  Students will get a basic training in using social media to gather and distribute content.

Assignments. Students write news stories and articles for the study program´s online news site, and at times for other news media.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Digital Media (BLF314F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course focuses on digital media from multiple perspectives, with an emphasis on social media. It looks at digital and social media in an historical context and how it has influenced professional media, consumers and users. In the first half main theories will be discussed and explained. In the latter examples of the main features of digital and social media will be explored. It´s relation to traditional media, it´s business model, rules and regulation regarding social media, as well as influences on public debate and peoples private life.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Information Retrieval and Digital dissemination (UPP215F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course is built on two interwoven pillars: information retrieval and digital dissemination. On the one hand, it addresses how to access, evaluate, and utilize information in a dynamic environment, with special emphasis on using artificial intelligence to refine searches and process text. On the other hand, the focus is on digital communication and strategy, where the use of social media for knowledge dissemination is at the forefront. The objective is for students to acquire comprehensive skills in finding reliable information and communicating it to diverse groups in a clear and responsible manner.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
E Business and Digital marketing (VIÐ195F)
Free elective course within the programme
7,5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The digital environment is radically changing the possibilities of marketing communication and how business is conducted. Digital technology has opened countless possibilities in marketing, business implementation has undergone tremendous changes and significant innovation and business model development has taken place.

The course will cover the development and impact of digital technology on  marketing measures and business practices, how digital technology can be used to support other ways of marketing and how it will shape future marketing policies within a global environment. Special emphasis is placed on new opportunities in direct marketing and to increase customer loyalty. Furthermore, the opportunities offered by digital technology to improve work processes as well as to increase efficiency and effectiveness in operations are discussed.

strategy, value chain impact, digital marketing, business relationship management, customer experience, service design and business transformation will be discussed.

Students will gain an understanding of the role and importance of digital marketing in various type of operations, such as private companies, public activities, and voluntary organizations. The course will furthermore cover contemporary issues such as security, website design, globalization, analysis of return on investment and changing consumer lifestyles.

Great emphasis is placed on active participation of students in the course. This is not a technical course, but the emphasis is on students gaining insight into choosing the most suitable digital technology and media to increase competitiveness.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Course taught in period II
Year unspecified | Fall
The Cold War: Art, culture and literature (HMM703F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Radio production and podcasting (HMM235F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Fall
Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work (MFR715M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games (SAF301M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

 Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Art and History: The formation of Artworlds (LIS709F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Applied folklore (ÞJÓ304M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Writing and Editing (ÍSL101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural and Digital Innovation (HMM241F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication (HMM242F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
  2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
  3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

The course is not taught remotely.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Editing and design of printing tools (RÚT803F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An introduction to the collaboration and division of work between an editor and a graphic designer in the creation of printed work with emphasis on the importance of typography. Students will gain insight into the basis of typography and preparation for print as well as learning about the graphic designer's tools in context with principal kinds of print. The course will include readings and discourse on the influence of graphic design on legibility and understanding, as well as discourse on quality, usefulness, aesthetics and practicality in graphic design.

The student will present and hand in a written analysis on a printed good of their own choice and are also encouraged to actively participate in discussions in class. The final project consists of creating your own publishing project and communicating ideas on its editing graphically and in writing.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Web Management and Information Architecture (UPP110F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course aims to provide insight into information architecture and the fundamentals of web management. Emphasis is placed on information architecture, including site structure, navigation systems, naming systems, labeling, and user information behavior. Methodologies for organizing information on websites are discussed, along with considerations for meeting user needs. The course also addresses other aspects of web management, such as needs analysis, user testing, and accessibility.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Creative Documentary (HMM220F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Culture and Cultural Communication (HMM240F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Art Criticism and Curation (LIS805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Professional works: Case study analysis (SAF011F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
The Art Object: Life and Material (LIS808M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Trouble in the Arts (LIS429M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Fall
Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images (HMM122F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Analysis of texts and images
  2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
  3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Fundamentals in Web Communications (HMM120F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Innovation and Venture Development (HMM123F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Management of Innovation (VIÐ307F)
Free elective course within the programme
7,5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course provides students with insight into the management of innovation, whether involving product, technology, or service development. The nature of innovation, its processes, and its role in corporate management and strategy are examined, along with how to create an environment that fosters creativity and effective innovation outcomes. Students are introduced to the main theories in innovation management and analyse the components of the innovation process and their interconnections. The course also offers an overview of public funding schemes available for innovation projects. The course is based on practical case work as well as research on innovation environments and innovation management.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Attendance required in class
Course taught in period I
Year unspecified | Fall
Theories in Humanities (FOR709F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The aim of the course is to provide students with a more comprehensive and deeper insight into the different theoretical approaches within the humanities. In the course, the main theories that have influenced theoretical discussion in the humanities over the last decades will be presented and discussed, and the students are taught how to apply them in their own research.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Globalization (MAN095F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

 The course is taught in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Cultural Studies and Social Critique (MFR701F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course reviews cultural studies on the whole and focuses on its value as a radical form of social and cultural criticism. Texts of key authors from the 19th Century and until recent years are discussed with the very concept of culture as a central issue and the question of its meaning for critical reflexion on society, history and contemporaneity. The interpellation of cultural criticism and the study of culture is scrutinized and the way in which this relationship is central for cultural studies. This conflict, which can be felt in older and recent texts has for the last decades been a fertile ground for the humanities in general and characterizes their connection to cultural politics. Concepts such as ideology, power, hegemony, gender and discourse play a central role in the discussion.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Leadership and Communication (VIÐ182F)
Free elective course within the programme
7,5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the foreground throughout the course is the role of the manager, at all levels of the hierarchy, its nature and its challenges. Human resource issues and communication are the focus area and connected to all of the course topics and assignments. The leadership role of the manager is examined; particularly in relation to general human resource management and the management of employees through reform projects and radical changes. Leadership is also examined in relation to successful teamwork and approaches to managing and solving conflicts and challenging human resource issues.

The main objective of the course is that the students gain knowledge of the meaning of the key concepts and a solid understanding of the theoretical principles, methods, and options that the manager can employ in order to successfully fulfil his/her role. Diverse teaching methods are used to encourage the interest, interaction, and participation of students.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Course taught in period I
Year unspecified | Fall
E Business and Digital marketing (VIÐ195F)
Free elective course within the programme
7,5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The digital environment is radically changing the possibilities of marketing communication and how business is conducted. Digital technology has opened countless possibilities in marketing, business implementation has undergone tremendous changes and significant innovation and business model development has taken place.

The course will cover the development and impact of digital technology on  marketing measures and business practices, how digital technology can be used to support other ways of marketing and how it will shape future marketing policies within a global environment. Special emphasis is placed on new opportunities in direct marketing and to increase customer loyalty. Furthermore, the opportunities offered by digital technology to improve work processes as well as to increase efficiency and effectiveness in operations are discussed.

strategy, value chain impact, digital marketing, business relationship management, customer experience, service design and business transformation will be discussed.

Students will gain an understanding of the role and importance of digital marketing in various type of operations, such as private companies, public activities, and voluntary organizations. The course will furthermore cover contemporary issues such as security, website design, globalization, analysis of return on investment and changing consumer lifestyles.

Great emphasis is placed on active participation of students in the course. This is not a technical course, but the emphasis is on students gaining insight into choosing the most suitable digital technology and media to increase competitiveness.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Course taught in period II
Year unspecified | Fall
The Cold War: Art, culture and literature (HMM703F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Fall
Radio production and podcasting (HMM235F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Fall
Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work (MFR715M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games (SAF301M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

 Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Art and History: The formation of Artworlds (LIS709F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Fall
Applied folklore (ÞJÓ304M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to quantitative research (FMÞ001F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Introduction to Qualitative Research (FMÞ103F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Writing and Editing (ÍSL101F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication (HMM242F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

  1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
  2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
  3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

The course is not taught remotely.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Cultural and Digital Innovation (HMM241F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Vernacular Culture and the Aesthetics of Everyday Life (ÞJÓ212F)
Free elective course within the programme
15 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course examines the folkloristic/ethnological perspective on culture and society with an emphasis on everyday life - the prose of the world. The history of the discipline is engaged with in a critical fashion in the context of neighboring fields and together students and teacher will examine where the field is headed in the 21st century. Central concepts will be investigated, including cultural difference and diversity, nationality, gender, the popular, tradition, group, authorship, globalization, pluralism, the eleventh hour, hegemony, heritage, and cultural ownership.

The goal is to understand how people create their everyday lives and how they invest their daily environs with meaning, how people make their own history under circumstances not of their own choosing, whether in the peasant society of previous centuries or in contemporary urban society. This course is for graduate students, but it is also open to advanced undergraduates in their last year of study.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Art Criticism and Curation (LIS805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Public Management (OSS202F)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course reviews the literature on organizational theory and behavior with an emphasis on its application in the public sector. The course includes discussion on leadership, organizational culture, teamwork, organizational structure and change, decision making processes, strategic planning and performance management systems.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Dwellings, Disneylands and Deserts: Ethnology of Place (ÞJÓ446M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The objective of the course is to explore how people relate to places in different ways. A variety of places - from private homes to airports, from city-centres to wastelands, form summer resorts to places of worship - will be explored in terms of affect and meaning, accumulated by passing though and dwelling as well as socio-political constructions. What creates and maintains place attachment? How do people relate differently to a place of their youth and place of destination? What constitutes a sense of belonging to a place? How do refugees, migrant workers and other migrants relate to new places and new landscapes and how do they maintain or sever ties to their place of origin. What role does experience, affect, memory, aesthetics, identification and sense of history play in who can claim a place and how? How do social structures, political objectives and conceptual understandings of place condition the meaning and sense of place for individuals and communities?

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Creative Documentary (HMM220F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Culture and Cultural Communication (HMM240F)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Art Criticism and Curation (LIS805F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Professional works: Case study analysis (SAF011F)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

Language of instruction: Icelandic/English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Introduction into Curating (SAF019F)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Distance learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
The Art Object: Life and Material (LIS808M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Gender Trouble in the Arts (LIS429M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Spring 1
Visual Methodologies (FMÞ001M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM013F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Internship (HMM014F)
Restricted elective course, conditions apply
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Year unspecified | Summer
Final project (HMM431L)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • HMM120F
    Fundamentals in Web Communications
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

    The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

    Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM122F
    Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

    In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Analysis of texts and images
    2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
    3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM123F
    Innovation and Venture Development
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

    The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

    The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FOR709F
    Theories in Humanities
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of the course is to provide students with a more comprehensive and deeper insight into the different theoretical approaches within the humanities. In the course, the main theories that have influenced theoretical discussion in the humanities over the last decades will be presented and discussed, and the students are taught how to apply them in their own research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • SAF016F
    Museums as a learning environment
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    One of the main purposes of Icelandic museums is to preserve the country's cultural and natural heritage for future generations. Furthermore, to encourage increased knowledge of this heritage and understanding of its connections to the outside world. According to Icelandic museum laws, museums are expected to "enhance people's quality of life" by fostering an understanding of the development and status of culture, art, nature, and/or science. Therefore, museums and museum education can impact society, groups, and individuals. Museology plays a key role in this context and is the main subject of this course.

    Students will be introduced to theoretical approaches aimed at supporting diverse and impactful educational practices related to archaeology, art, natural sciences, cultural heritage, and other museum subjects. Attention will be given to the different target audiences of museum education, the role of visitors within museums, spatial considerations, text production, multimedia, interactivity, and more.

    This is a distance-learning course divided into three modules. Each module includes short lectures by the instructor reflecting on the course material, guest lectures (delivered digitally), and supplementary materials. Over the semester, three in-person and/or Zoom sessions will be held, where students will receive lectures from museum professionals and work on an educational project in collaboration with a museum in Reykjavík. The project will be developed based on students’ academic interests, under the supervision of the instructor and with support from museum staff.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ506M
    Cultural Heritage
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    What is cultural heritage and what purpose does it serve? Why does it always seem to be endangered? How does it tie together the past and the present? What's it got to do with the nation and the state? Historical consciousness? Globalization? Capitalism? Politics? The course will seek to answer these questions with reference to new research in folklore, ethnology, anthropology, art history, sociology, museology, history and archaeology and with a view to understanding what is going on in this expanding field of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • MFR701F
    Cultural Studies and Social Critique
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course reviews cultural studies on the whole and focuses on its value as a radical form of social and cultural criticism. Texts of key authors from the 19th Century and until recent years are discussed with the very concept of culture as a central issue and the question of its meaning for critical reflexion on society, history and contemporaneity. The interpellation of cultural criticism and the study of culture is scrutinized and the way in which this relationship is central for cultural studies. This conflict, which can be felt in older and recent texts has for the last decades been a fertile ground for the humanities in general and characterizes their connection to cultural politics. Concepts such as ideology, power, hegemony, gender and discourse play a central role in the discussion.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM703F
    The Cold War: Art, culture and literature
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM235F
    Radio production and podcasting
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • MFR715M
    Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF301M
    Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

    This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

     Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS709F
    Art and History: The formation of Artworlds
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ304M
    Applied folklore
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

    The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍSL101F
    Writing and Editing
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

    This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • HMM241F
    Cultural and Digital Innovation
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

    Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM242F
    Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

    The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
    2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
    3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

    The course is not taught remotely.

    Prerequisites
  • NÆR613M
    Food and culture
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Everybody need to eat; food connects nature to culture, culture to industry, the public to the private, the local to the global, the home to the workplace, the past to the present and one person to another in relationships that organize and transcend the axes of class, gender, ethnicity, race and age. The study of food demonstrates that food is always laden with meaning that exceeds its nutritional value and that this meaning is central to understanding the relationship between food and people, one of the more important relationships we have with the world. Food habits thus reveal our views, values and aestethics, and food shapes our existence, bodies, memories, society, economy and ethics.

    In the course we will explore what people eat, how, when, with whom and why. Doing so provides us with valuable insights regarding gender and generations, food safety and health, sustainability and human rights, class and cultural diversity, sense and sensibility, technology and food production, food and diet trends, food traditions and cultural heritage, emotions and microbes, friendship and family dynamics.

    In the course we explore the relationship between food production and consumption in the 21st century with specific emphasis on public health, ethical consumption and sustainability.

    Food and culture is an interdisciplinary course taught in cooperation between the Department of Folkloristics/Ethnology and Museum Studies and the Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition.

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • LIS805F
    Art Criticism and Curation
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MFR703M
    Culture and Dissent
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course deals with interconnections between political radicalism, culture, tradition and power. We will focus on contemporary representations of dissent in particular, look at the discourse of democracy and cultural difference, reactions to and criticism of protest in the Western political tradition and dissent in more repressive political systems. The role of intellectuals and writers will be explored as well as the function of artistic expression and design in transforming cultural and social environments. We will also discuss media and social media discourse in connection with an attempt to understand the various and sometimes contradictory objectives of public institutions. A few points of conflict will be discussed that to some extent expose fundamental conflicts in liberal democratic societies such as questions about the wisdom and ignorance of publics, reactions to climate change, inequality and extreme poverty. Finally corruption and power will be discussed as well as social and cultural expression, the possibilities and limitations of freedom of speech, the use and abuse of information, disinformation, secrecy, fake and “fake news”.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • RÚT803F
    Editing and design of printing tools
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An introduction to the collaboration and division of work between an editor and a graphic designer in the creation of printed work with emphasis on the importance of typography. Students will gain insight into the basis of typography and preparation for print as well as learning about the graphic designer's tools in context with principal kinds of print. The course will include readings and discourse on the influence of graphic design on legibility and understanding, as well as discourse on quality, usefulness, aesthetics and practicality in graphic design.

    The student will present and hand in a written analysis on a printed good of their own choice and are also encouraged to actively participate in discussions in class. The final project consists of creating your own publishing project and communicating ideas on its editing graphically and in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • RÚT805F
    Publication - RÚT
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course students in Practical Editorship and Theory of Publication work with creative writing students in preparing texts for publication, both in printed and digital form. The product of the course will be a text that has been prepared for publication.

    Five students of Practical Editorship and Theory of Publication will be accepted; first come, first served.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF603M
    Museums and Society: The Circus of Death?
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The societal role of museums will be discussed from several angles: economic, political, cultural, social and last but not least in an international context. Examples of topics that will be discussed in the course are the role of museums in building the concept of the nation; the legal environment of museums; how museums are run; the status and role of the main museums; museums owned and run by local authorities and other museums; the financing of museums, and the policies of authorities regarding museums. Both national and foreign examples will be taken. 

    Work format

    Teaching will take the form of lectures and discussions.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM220F
    Creative Documentary
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM240F
    Culture and Cultural Communication
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • LIS805F
    Art Criticism and Curation
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF011F
    Professional works: Case study analysis
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

    Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

    In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

    The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

    Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS808M
    The Art Object: Life and Material
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS429M
    Gender Trouble in the Arts
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Summer
  • HMM013F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • HMM123F
    Innovation and Venture Development hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

    The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

    The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM122F
    Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

    In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Analysis of texts and images
    2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
    3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM120F
    Fundamentals in Web Communications hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

    The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

    Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • TÖL502M
    Human Computer Interaction hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Usually taught every second year.

    The objective of the course is to allow students to examine more closely than is done in the introductory course Graphical User Interface Programming  HBV201G specific factors of HCI. The factors covered are user interface design using prototyping, programming of smart devices and users‘ acceptability of the software. There will be emphasis on different techniques and tools to develop prototypes. Also, on the design of user interfaces and native programming for smart phones or pads. The development process will be aimed at ensuring accessibility and acceptability of users. Students work on small projects individually, or on larger projects in groups. 

    Face-to-face learning
    The course is taught if the specified conditions are met
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    BLF110F
    Journalism 1 hide
    Elective course
    8
    Free elective course within the programme
    8 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of course is to introduce to students the journalistic profession with an emphasis on reporting and producing news for different media.  Main concepts and methods in newswriting are discussed, such as news values, news gathering and news construction. Students will be trained in writing in a focused, accurate and articulate manner.  Students will get a basic training in using social media to gather and distribute content.

    Assignments. Students write news stories and articles for the study program´s online news site, and at times for other news media.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    BLF314F
    Digital Media hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course focuses on digital media from multiple perspectives, with an emphasis on social media. It looks at digital and social media in an historical context and how it has influenced professional media, consumers and users. In the first half main theories will be discussed and explained. In the latter examples of the main features of digital and social media will be explored. It´s relation to traditional media, it´s business model, rules and regulation regarding social media, as well as influences on public debate and peoples private life.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • UPP215F
    Information Retrieval and Digital dissemination hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is built on two interwoven pillars: information retrieval and digital dissemination. On the one hand, it addresses how to access, evaluate, and utilize information in a dynamic environment, with special emphasis on using artificial intelligence to refine searches and process text. On the other hand, the focus is on digital communication and strategy, where the use of social media for knowledge dissemination is at the forefront. The objective is for students to acquire comprehensive skills in finding reliable information and communicating it to diverse groups in a clear and responsible manner.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • VIÐ195F
    E Business and Digital marketing hide
    Elective course
    7,5
    Free elective course within the programme
    7,5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The digital environment is radically changing the possibilities of marketing communication and how business is conducted. Digital technology has opened countless possibilities in marketing, business implementation has undergone tremendous changes and significant innovation and business model development has taken place.

    The course will cover the development and impact of digital technology on  marketing measures and business practices, how digital technology can be used to support other ways of marketing and how it will shape future marketing policies within a global environment. Special emphasis is placed on new opportunities in direct marketing and to increase customer loyalty. Furthermore, the opportunities offered by digital technology to improve work processes as well as to increase efficiency and effectiveness in operations are discussed.

    strategy, value chain impact, digital marketing, business relationship management, customer experience, service design and business transformation will be discussed.

    Students will gain an understanding of the role and importance of digital marketing in various type of operations, such as private companies, public activities, and voluntary organizations. The course will furthermore cover contemporary issues such as security, website design, globalization, analysis of return on investment and changing consumer lifestyles.

    Great emphasis is placed on active participation of students in the course. This is not a technical course, but the emphasis is on students gaining insight into choosing the most suitable digital technology and media to increase competitiveness.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Course taught in period II
  • HMM703F
    The Cold War: Art, culture and literature hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM235F
    Radio production and podcasting hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • MFR715M
    Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF301M
    Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

    This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

     Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS709F
    Art and History: The formation of Artworlds hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ304M
    Applied folklore hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

    The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍSL101F
    Writing and Editing hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

    This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • HMM241F
    Cultural and Digital Innovation hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

    Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM242F
    Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

    The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
    2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
    3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

    The course is not taught remotely.

    Prerequisites
  • RÚT803F
    Editing and design of printing tools hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An introduction to the collaboration and division of work between an editor and a graphic designer in the creation of printed work with emphasis on the importance of typography. Students will gain insight into the basis of typography and preparation for print as well as learning about the graphic designer's tools in context with principal kinds of print. The course will include readings and discourse on the influence of graphic design on legibility and understanding, as well as discourse on quality, usefulness, aesthetics and practicality in graphic design.

    The student will present and hand in a written analysis on a printed good of their own choice and are also encouraged to actively participate in discussions in class. The final project consists of creating your own publishing project and communicating ideas on its editing graphically and in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • UPP110F
    Web Management and Information Architecture hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course aims to provide insight into information architecture and the fundamentals of web management. Emphasis is placed on information architecture, including site structure, navigation systems, naming systems, labeling, and user information behavior. Methodologies for organizing information on websites are discussed, along with considerations for meeting user needs. The course also addresses other aspects of web management, such as needs analysis, user testing, and accessibility.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM220F
    Creative Documentary hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM240F
    Culture and Cultural Communication hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • LIS805F
    Art Criticism and Curation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF011F
    Professional works: Case study analysis hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

    Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

    In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

    The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

    Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS808M
    The Art Object: Life and Material hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS429M
    Gender Trouble in the Arts hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Summer
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • HMM122F
    Communication channels I, documentaries, texts, images hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the courses Communication channels I and Communication channels II, the basics of methods for the dissemination of cultural material in the humanities and social sciences are presented. Communication channels I is in the fall semester, while Communication channels II is in the spring semester. 

    In Communication channels I, the students are working with a) text and images in the first half of the semester and b) short documentaries in the second half of the course. Each subject weighs 50% in the course. Concerning a) Students will receive training in article writing and discourse analysis on the one hand and use of images and image analysis on the other.  Concerning b) Students work on making short documentaries. It includes basic training in screenwriting, shooting and editing, and students work in groups on a documentary, according to a specific theme. 

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Analysis of texts and images
    2. An article with an image on a specific theme for publication, about 800 words.
    3. A group project where students work on a short documentary that is shown at the end of the course. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course. The course is not taught remotely.
    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM120F
    Fundamentals in Web Communications hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Constant technological development and emphasis on digital solutions has brought about frequent and numerous changes in the role of the webmaster. In this course, Efforts will be made to provide students with good insight into the main aspects of the webmaster's work. The writings of experts and scholars will be examined, and students will be introduced to the necessary tools and equipment. Professionals in the field will visit and share their experience with students.

    The job of a web editor is often integrated with general web management. Students get a good insight into web editing and writing for digital media. The main aspects that a webmaster / web editor needs to be able to master will be discussed, such as information architecture, writing for the web, presentation of images, fundamentals in web design, accessibility, usability, security, analytics, content management systems (CMS), and basic web interface technology.

    Students set up their own websites and use a CMS of their choice, e.g., WordPress or Wix, which are both available in free versions, and some of the assignments are submitted on there. In this way, students gain training in setting up a simple website. Particular attention is drawn to the fact that instruction in the use of the CMS is not part of the course. Those who have no or limited experience, in the use of CMS, are advised that YouTube has numerous videos where you can learn about the systems, from the basics to much more complex aspects that are expected in this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM123F
    Innovation and Venture Development hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course, students develop venture projects from ideation to product. Emphasis is placed on practical work on real-world issues where students apply user-centered methods, work with business models, and conduct diverse analyses and plans.

    The first part of the course will introduce design thinking and the basics of project management. The second part will be taught in collaboration with industrial engineering and business administration.

    The course is based on workshops and collaboration between students with different academic backgrounds. Emphasis is placed on critical analysis of opportunities for innovation and entrepreneurship, creative solution-seeking, and the development of ideas based on user needs. Students will be introduced to methods for testing and communicating ideas and solutions and will become familiar with the practical and societal impacts of innovation on a broad basis. The course is suitable for students who want to strengthen entrepreneurial thinking and learn to apply innovation methods, whether within organizations, operating companies, or as independent entrepreneurs.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • VIÐ307F
    Management of Innovation hide
    Elective course
    7,5
    Free elective course within the programme
    7,5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course provides students with insight into the management of innovation, whether involving product, technology, or service development. The nature of innovation, its processes, and its role in corporate management and strategy are examined, along with how to create an environment that fosters creativity and effective innovation outcomes. Students are introduced to the main theories in innovation management and analyse the components of the innovation process and their interconnections. The course also offers an overview of public funding schemes available for innovation projects. The course is based on practical case work as well as research on innovation environments and innovation management.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
    Course taught in period I
  • FOR709F
    Theories in Humanities hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of the course is to provide students with a more comprehensive and deeper insight into the different theoretical approaches within the humanities. In the course, the main theories that have influenced theoretical discussion in the humanities over the last decades will be presented and discussed, and the students are taught how to apply them in their own research.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MAN095F
    Globalization hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    New theories and studies on globalization and global processes are presented in the class. The course aims at giving a general overview of important themes related to globalization processes. Studies that shed light on the diverse economic, social and political aspects of global processes are furthermore examined. A critical examination of main concepts is an important aspect of the course but studies that show how people are agents/victims in globalized world are also presented.

    The teaching consists of lecture and class discussions. 

     The course is taught in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • MFR701F
    Cultural Studies and Social Critique hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course reviews cultural studies on the whole and focuses on its value as a radical form of social and cultural criticism. Texts of key authors from the 19th Century and until recent years are discussed with the very concept of culture as a central issue and the question of its meaning for critical reflexion on society, history and contemporaneity. The interpellation of cultural criticism and the study of culture is scrutinized and the way in which this relationship is central for cultural studies. This conflict, which can be felt in older and recent texts has for the last decades been a fertile ground for the humanities in general and characterizes their connection to cultural politics. Concepts such as ideology, power, hegemony, gender and discourse play a central role in the discussion.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • VIÐ182F
    Leadership and Communication hide
    Elective course
    7,5
    Free elective course within the programme
    7,5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the foreground throughout the course is the role of the manager, at all levels of the hierarchy, its nature and its challenges. Human resource issues and communication are the focus area and connected to all of the course topics and assignments. The leadership role of the manager is examined; particularly in relation to general human resource management and the management of employees through reform projects and radical changes. Leadership is also examined in relation to successful teamwork and approaches to managing and solving conflicts and challenging human resource issues.

    The main objective of the course is that the students gain knowledge of the meaning of the key concepts and a solid understanding of the theoretical principles, methods, and options that the manager can employ in order to successfully fulfil his/her role. Diverse teaching methods are used to encourage the interest, interaction, and participation of students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Course taught in period I
  • VIÐ195F
    E Business and Digital marketing hide
    Elective course
    7,5
    Free elective course within the programme
    7,5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The digital environment is radically changing the possibilities of marketing communication and how business is conducted. Digital technology has opened countless possibilities in marketing, business implementation has undergone tremendous changes and significant innovation and business model development has taken place.

    The course will cover the development and impact of digital technology on  marketing measures and business practices, how digital technology can be used to support other ways of marketing and how it will shape future marketing policies within a global environment. Special emphasis is placed on new opportunities in direct marketing and to increase customer loyalty. Furthermore, the opportunities offered by digital technology to improve work processes as well as to increase efficiency and effectiveness in operations are discussed.

    strategy, value chain impact, digital marketing, business relationship management, customer experience, service design and business transformation will be discussed.

    Students will gain an understanding of the role and importance of digital marketing in various type of operations, such as private companies, public activities, and voluntary organizations. The course will furthermore cover contemporary issues such as security, website design, globalization, analysis of return on investment and changing consumer lifestyles.

    Great emphasis is placed on active participation of students in the course. This is not a technical course, but the emphasis is on students gaining insight into choosing the most suitable digital technology and media to increase competitiveness.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Course taught in period II
  • HMM703F
    The Cold War: Art, culture and literature hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores the relationship between political and aesthetic discourse in Iceland during the era of the cultural Cold War, a global ideological struggle waged by the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, for the hearts and minds of populations around the world in the latter half of the 20th century. The course draws on interdisciplinary research on the Cold War, with a focus on the interplay between global influences and local conditions. This glocal approach allows for an examination of Icelandic agents in the Cold War not only as representatives of the two empires, the United States and the Soviet Union, but also based on their own cultural values and interests. A mixed methodology will be employed, incorporating theories and methods from the social sciences, as well as from art history, literary studies, and historiography. Special emphasis will be placed on the analysis of literary texts and artworks, while attention will also be given to the participation of Icelandic intellectuals and artists in international cultural activities. Students will explore how the Cold War has been addressed in recent years, both in academic contexts and in public dissemination through exhibitions, podcasts, and graphic novels.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM235F
    Radio production and podcasting hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is run in cooperation with the state radio station: RÚV - Rás 1. Discussion will take place into the presentation of radio/audio material, various examples being examined. Attention will be given to the nature of audio communication and the possibilities of audio communication in the present media environment. Attention is also paid to concept development, interview techniques, recording techniques, dramaturgy and editing, accentuating sustainability and self-reliance. All students will complete a final project involving the making of radio programmes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • MFR715M
    Theory of Creative AI: Analysing the Impact of AI on Creative Work hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the evolving relationship between artificial intelligence and creative practices, focusing on the artistic, philosophical, ethical, and socio-cultural dimensions of AI-driven creativity. Grounded in the humanities, with emphasis on creativity studies, the course will enable students to critically assess how generative AI is reshaping traditional notions of creativity, authorship, and artistic production. Having explored key definitions of creativity itself, the course covers key issues such as the automation of creative work, the implications of AI-generated content for intellectual property and copyright, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding cultural appropriation in the digital age. Students will engage with debates on the tension between industrial AI big-data-driven systems versus small-data approaches, examining the consequences for artistic innovation and originality. Through hands-on exercises and real-world case studies, students will explore a variety of creative works, study production platforms where AI technologies are used, and gain practical experience in the application of AI for creative purposes. The course integrates modern theories of creativity with critical analysis of AI, and it will challenge students to rethink the boundaries of human and machine creativity. Course assessment will be based on creative work diaries that students will keep during the course, active participation in class, as well as an oral presentation of a short, written piece.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF301M
    Striking Vikings: Vikings in modern culture, film, and video games hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Vikings are one of the most recognisable group of people from the past. Often seen as crazed berserker, with horned helmets, battle axes raised and ready, beautiful long hair billowing in the wind, they are thought of jumping out of longboats, running up the shore towards an unexpecting populace. This image crosses cultural barriers: Viking re-enactment societies exist in places with no actual Viking history. People proudly declare themselves Vikings as part of their identity and way of life. There is Viking metal, beers, foods, restaurants, and comic books. A further demonstration of the endurance of the Viking myth is the silver screen: The first Viking film came out in 1907 and are produced to this day. This, in turn, influences the use of Vikings in other areas, including the tourism sector, museum exhibitions, music industry, food and drink production and the video game industry.

    This course introduces the various uses of Vikings in society, starting with tracing the history of the modern, popular culture Vikings back to Victorian times, all the way to Iceland during, and after the economic crash 2008-2011. Students will be shown the various uses of Vikings in the cultural sector, discussing the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the Viking imagery and its uses in the present and past. Next, they will gain an insight into Vikings in films related to the image of Iceland. This raises the question: in which films do Vikings appear, and how are they portrayed? The aim is to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of Viking representations in Icelandic cinema, exploring how they have been depicted by Icelandic filmmakers as well as by international directors who have chosen to make films about and/or set in Iceland. Finally, Vikings in video games are explored, introducing how Old Norse literature migrates into gaming, and how the image of Vikings has altered and expanded within the gaming sphere.

     Learning Outcomes: Students – gain knowledge of the history of vikings as mediated through cultural artifacts and images – get a comprehensive overview of the mediation of the Viking image in the 20th century – are able to analyze and discuss the most prominent mediation practices and traditions in the 20th century – can analyze and situate historically the various mediated representations of vikings in contemporary culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS709F
    Art and History: The formation of Artworlds hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In recent decades, theoretical contexts of art historiography and art criticism have been thoroughly reexamined. New theories, new data and digital technologies have led to a drastic change in research questions and approaches. Critical concepts such as intersectionality, inclusion, sustainability, social activism, and environment have led to new methodologies and different perspectives. In this course, these approaches will be discussed though reading the latest research in the field of art and cultural history. Ideas about the global artworlds and its cultural and political connections will be examined in detail, a variety of topics will be discussed and dissected in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ304M
    Applied folklore hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course introduces the ways in which the fields and methods of folklore/ethnology are and may be put to use, how their application may help broaden and deepen public debates and positively affect society's self-understanding and self-fashioning. We discuss how folklore/ethnology may be put to use in tourism, museums, arts and various media. One area of focus is also the accessibility and uses of folklore collections. We explore, moreover, various scholarly and popular genres in which the conclusions of ethnological research (based on historical sources, interviews and other fieldwork methods) may be disseminated: exhibitions, festivals, events, articles, books, websites, radioshows or documentaries. Different means of reaching different groups of people will be discussed and moral, financial and political issues will be addressed.

    The course will partly be taught in intensive workshops, 3 days at the beginning of the semester in Reykjavík and 4 days during project week in Hólmavík in the Westfjords. Students will work on projects in applied ethnology/public folklore. There will be no final exam.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001F
    Introduction to quantitative research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The main subject of the course is quantitative methods and statistics used in social sciences. The focus will be on research design, sample methods and designing questionnaires. The statistical part will cover descriptive and inferential statistics. Special emphasis will be on factorial ANOVA and multiple regression. Students will get practical training in data analysis using jamovi. Students can use their own data.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ103F
    Introduction to Qualitative Research hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course’s objective is to introduce students to the diverse, academic criteria of qualitative research in social sciences and secondly that student’s gain experience in using qualitative methods. Furthermore, the course is practical in nature where each student works on an independent research assignment, which consists of designing and preparing a research project, collecting and analyzing data, and writing the main findings with guidance from the teacher. Research preparation, the creation of a research plan, data collection and analysis along with academic writing will be extensively covered during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍSL101F
    Writing and Editing hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Training in various aspects of the writing and editing of scientific texts. Various kinds of texts (non-fiction) examined and evaluated. Training in reviewing and commenting on scientific texts and in other aspects of editorial work. The main emphasis will be on the writing of articles, but other kinds of texts will also be considered, both shorter (conference abstracts, reviews) and longer (theses, books), as well as research proposals. Discussion of guidelines for the preparation of manuscripts. Types of plagiarism and how to avoid them and find them. Texts on different subjects will be used as examples, especially writings in linguistics, literature and history. The book Skrifaðu bæði skýrt og rétt will be used as a textbook (Höskuldur Þráinsson 2015).

    This course is open to students of many MA programmes in the School of Humanities, cf. the regulations of the individual subjects. Students in the MA programmes in Icelandic literature, Icelandic linguistics, Icelandic studies and Icelandic teaching can take the course as part of the MA course requirements in Icelandic literature or Icelandic linguistics. Students in the MA programme in Icelandic teaching can, however, not have this course as the only linguistics or literature course in their MA.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • HMM242F
    Communication channels II. Oral presentations, exhibitions, digital communication hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In the course Communication channels II during the spring semester the students work with the following communication methods: a) oral presentation and b) exhibitions of cultural and historical material. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects.

    The students will work with the basics of oral presentation and practice in smaller and larger groups. Basic issues regarding the organization of conferences and seminars and their management will also be reviewed and a conference is held where all students present their projects. Digital communication will also be integrated into this section. Following is a section about exhibitions with connection to digital communication. The basics of exhibitions and different ways of presentation will be discussed.  The basics of digital communication will be covered, what are the main channels, advantages and disadvantages, and what rules apply to the presentation of texts on the web.

    There are no exams in the course. Instead, students work on projects, individual and group projects. They are the following:

    1. Lecture at a conference and other projects in that context
    2. Exhibition analysis and a practical project in connection with exhibitions organized by the City History Museum (Borgarsögusafn)
    3. Digital communication will be integrated into both aspects. Emphasis is placed on common themes and group work in the course.

    The course is not taught remotely.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM241F
    Cultural and Digital Innovation hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores diverse manifestations of cultural innovation within the fields of culture and mediation, with a special emphasis on the impact and potential of digital technologies. Attention is given to the management and operation of organizations working in the cultural and creative sectors, and to how innovation can support cultural value, sustainability, and the development of new modes of mediation.

    Students are introduced to key theories and methods related to cultural management, creative thinking, and entrepreneurship in cultural contexts. The course examines the interrelations between culture, economy, and technology, and how cultural innovation can foster participation, new business models, and emerging forms of cultural communication and experience.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÞJÓ212F
    Vernacular Culture and the Aesthetics of Everyday Life hide
    Elective course
    15
    Free elective course within the programme
    15 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course examines the folkloristic/ethnological perspective on culture and society with an emphasis on everyday life - the prose of the world. The history of the discipline is engaged with in a critical fashion in the context of neighboring fields and together students and teacher will examine where the field is headed in the 21st century. Central concepts will be investigated, including cultural difference and diversity, nationality, gender, the popular, tradition, group, authorship, globalization, pluralism, the eleventh hour, hegemony, heritage, and cultural ownership.

    The goal is to understand how people create their everyday lives and how they invest their daily environs with meaning, how people make their own history under circumstances not of their own choosing, whether in the peasant society of previous centuries or in contemporary urban society. This course is for graduate students, but it is also open to advanced undergraduates in their last year of study.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS805F
    Art Criticism and Curation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • OSS202F
    Public Management hide
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course reviews the literature on organizational theory and behavior with an emphasis on its application in the public sector. The course includes discussion on leadership, organizational culture, teamwork, organizational structure and change, decision making processes, strategic planning and performance management systems.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÞJÓ446M
    Dwellings, Disneylands and Deserts: Ethnology of Place hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The objective of the course is to explore how people relate to places in different ways. A variety of places - from private homes to airports, from city-centres to wastelands, form summer resorts to places of worship - will be explored in terms of affect and meaning, accumulated by passing though and dwelling as well as socio-political constructions. What creates and maintains place attachment? How do people relate differently to a place of their youth and place of destination? What constitutes a sense of belonging to a place? How do refugees, migrant workers and other migrants relate to new places and new landscapes and how do they maintain or sever ties to their place of origin. What role does experience, affect, memory, aesthetics, identification and sense of history play in who can claim a place and how? How do social structures, political objectives and conceptual understandings of place condition the meaning and sense of place for individuals and communities?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM220F
    Creative Documentary hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The basic types of documentaries will be discussed as well as methods of documentary making, editing and cinematography. Emphasis will be put on practical projects and students will be required to make at least one documentary during the course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM240F
    Culture and Cultural Communication hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course critically engages with the concept of culture, addressing predominant conceptualizations while simultaneously exploring the role, conditions and influence of culture in the present. The objective is to generate a disciplined discussion on cultural heritage, cultural politics and policy, and cultural sustainability in conjunction with questions on the practicality of presenting and communicating expressions of culture. Attention is paid to the relationship between the cultural field and other social, political and economic aspects of society and how these enable and limit the communication and dissemination of cultural resources. Questions on how cultural heritage, traditions, collective memory, ideas on authenticity and identity generate the formation and reproduction of cultural constellations are dealt with as well as how conceptualizations such as ‘cultural capital’, ‘cultural hegemony’ and ‘authorized discourse on heritage’ can be employed to understand and analyze manifestations of culture.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • LIS805F
    Art Criticism and Curation hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course lays the foundation for the active work of curators for practical work in the field of art and museums. We work in an interdisciplinary and critical way with concepts and theories that relate to the work of curators in the field of contemporary art. Students work in teams and set up an exhibition in collaboration with art students or artists. Students will apply knowledge and methods to practical issues, work on preparation, design, text writing and preparation of promotional material in connection with an exhibition. The course is partly run in collaboration with the Master's program in art at the University of Iceland, and students will have the opportunity to collaborate with the University of Iceland Art Museum and other recognised art museums.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF011F
    Professional works: Case study analysis hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course examines professionalism, using case studies from museum work in Iceland, from a broad, interdisciplinary theoretical perspectives and debates. This course should therefore appeal to students from a variety of disciplines, including museology, archaeology, art studies, cultural studies, anthropology and folklore. The case studies are related to the variable works of museums, including management, organisation, collection, conservation, research and communication.

    Furthermore, methods of assessment will be considered, both from the angle of the museum visitor as well as self-appraisals of the museums themselves (approaches to - and processing of information). The subject of the case studies are variable, including administration, gender considerations, accessibility, conservation of archaeological artefacts, research into visual cultural heritage, freedom of expression, housing and building affairs, gifts to museums and more.

    In this course, experts and specialists (from Iceland and abroad), working in museum sector will give talks, sharing their knowledge and their experience. Students will choose one day over the semester, for a one day career day at a museum in Reykjavík, where a member of staff will tell them about the museum‘s main activities and demonstrate basic entry input in their electronic database. Students will work with the staff for the remainder of the day.

    The course is taught distance learning, with short, online lectures by teachers and guest-lecturers. It also includes three full day on-campus (or Zoom, should that be needed) lecture days, where students will visit museums around Reykjavík and listen to lectures from a variety of people. Attendance is required during the three day on-campus and Zoom days.

    Final grade is based on completing written assignments during the semester, attendance for full-day on-campus/zoom days and the career day.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    SAF019F
    Introduction into Curating hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Curating is a fast growing discipline within various types of museums, like art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums. In this course different approches to curating, exhibition making and exhibition design in such museums will be examined from critical perspectives, with emphasis on management, different narrative strategies, scripting and mediation. Past and present exhibitions of art museums, natural history museums and cultural history museums, in Iceland and abroad, will be critically addressed and analyzed.

    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS808M
    The Art Object: Life and Material hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Interdisciplinary reseach on material culture has expanded considerably in the last decades. Although art historians have, in some sense, always studied materiality, material culture, collecting and provenance, art history as a field has had limited part in academic discourse within material culture studies on human relationships to objects. In this course students are afforded a valuable opportunity to consider deeply art objects and their „lives“ within and outside of institutions: their manufacture, use, exchange, exhibition, conservation, classification and definition, as well as the values and ideas attached to them. Each week students are presented with one object  of study and receive training in various methods of researching, analyzing and interpreting art, through visual analysis, analysis of the material and make of objects, their categorization within the classification systems of museums and examination of provenance and exhibition history. Alongside this students will be introduced to theories of material culture studies and their intersection with the subjects and theories art history, such as insititutional critique and provenance. The course is run in collaboration with museums in the capital region of Iceland and is suitable for students of art history, visual art, history, archaeology, folkloristics and museum studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • LIS429M
    Gender Trouble in the Arts hide
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores artworks in the context of gender and discusses the theoretical basis of gender studies and its trans-disciplinary nature. It seeks to explore how ideas on gender influence artistic practice and discussion and writing on the fine arts. The representations and meanings of gender in language, society and culture are also analyzed with an emphasis on stereotypes and/or their deconstruction in the positions artists take in their work. The approach taken by feminists and queer theory is used to explore the role of gender in the works of artists who bend stereotypical images of femininity and masculinity and create upheaval in the dominant discourse and gender systems of the Western world. Studies on gender inequality and its diverse representations in the contemporary art world are introduced and discussed.

    Prerequisites
  • FMÞ001M
    Visual Methodologies hide
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The objective of this course is to gain methodological knowledge, understanding and practical skills to analyze images and visual data (photographs, films, drawings, advertisements, online media, etc.). We will discuss various methods of analysis of the visual content, consider visual databases and how to work with them. Students receive practical training in visual methodological studies and how to evaluate them. The course is based on practical assignments, where students prepare and design research proposals, collect data and how to analyze. The course is interdisciplinary and is suitable for students of humanities and social sciences, and other related fields.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Summer
  • HMM013F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    5
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM014F
    Internship hide
    Restricted elective course
    10
    Restricted elective course, conditions apply
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Internships on institutions/ organization, are available for students in Applied Studies of Culture and Communications. Students who wish to go on an internship are to contact the supervisor of the study program about the possibility of an internship. It should be noted that there is a limited supply of internships.

    Prerequisites
  • HMM431L
    Final project hide
    Mandatory (required) course
    0
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    .

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits

The timetable shown below is for the current academic year and is FOR REFERENCE ONLY.

Changes may occur for the autumn semester in August and September and for the spring semester in December and January. You will find your final timetable in Ugla when the studies start.

Note! This timetable is not suitable for planning your work schedule if you are a part-time employee.





Additional information

The University of Iceland collaborates with over 400 universities worldwide. This provides a unique opportunity to pursue part of your studies at an international university thus gaining added experience and fresh insight into your field of study.

Students generally have the opportunity to join an exchange programme, internship, or summer courses. However, exchanges are always subject to faculty approval.

Students have the opportunity to have courses evaluated as part of their studies at the University of Iceland, so their stay does not have to affect the duration of their studies.

The programme provides students with the foundation required for various careers in the public, private and nonprofit sectors.

An education in this area can open up opportunities in:

  • Exhibition design
  • Cultural journalism
  • Web communication
  • Event planning
  • Advertising and PR
  • Cultural tourism
  • Education and teaching

This list is not exhaustive.

There is no specific student organisation for this programme, but students can choose to join a student organisation that suits their specific interests.

Students also meet frequently in the Student Cellar.

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