Course: History of Footwear 3

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Course title History of Footwear 3
Course code KAOB/MD7DB
Organizational form of instruction Seminary
Level of course Master
Year of study not specified
Semester Winter
Number of ECTS credits 2
Language of instruction Czech
Status of course unspecified
Form of instruction Face-to-face
Work placements This is not an internship
Recommended optional programme components None
Lecturer(s)
Course content
1. Traditional forms of footwear in the area of Eastern Europe (clogs, slippers, slippers, slippers) 2. European folk footwear for the festive costume (Hessian and wellington boots, shoes with a buckle) and its changes with regard to the customs of individual ethnic groups 3. Specific types of footwear from the region of Eastern Europe and the Balkans (Tsarouhi, Serbian Opinci, valenki, lapta, Ichigi wellies, Romanian shoes made from old tires) 4. Specific types of footwear from the region of Western Europe (the process of making shoes called Huarache and Alpargatas) 5. Traditional Dutch-style clogs, hand-made, extravagant clogs from the Ariege region and the Tyrolean Alps 6. Siberian fur footwear (material processing, footwear manufacturing process, decoration) 7. Fur footwear from Scandinavia and the Baltics (Sámi fur footwear, footwear made from plant materials, footwear with textile uppers) 8. Footwear from the Middle East (Kub-Kab oriental women's footwear - variations, decor, materials) 9. Footwear from the Middle East (Yezmeh, Cerik, Giweh, women's slippers with the Ichthyic symbol) 10. Footwear from the Central Asian region (slippers, slippers and wellies from the Crimea and the Caucasus) 11. Mongolian gutal shoes (materials, hand-made technology, decoration symbolism, history and legends) 12. Footwear from the era of the Chinese Empire (shoes for mandarins, slippers with embroidery, footwear made of plant materials) 13. Footwear from the era of the Chinese Empire (women's footwear with the so-called lotus foot, Manchu Huapandi footwear) Traditional forms of European footwear (clogs, studs, slippers, shoes and boots for folk costumes). Specific types of footwear from Spain, France, the Balkans, Scandinavia, Siberia and Russia (huarache shoes, tsarouhi, boots, boots). Siberian fur footwear (material processing, production process, decoration). Shoes from the Middle East (shoes such as Yezmeh, Cerik, Kub-Kab, Giweh and other forms).

Learning activities and teaching methods
  • Home preparation for classes - 26 hours per semester
  • Participation in classes - 26 hours per semester
learning outcomes
Knowledge
The student has knowledge of: - describe the traditional forms of footwear in the region of Eastern and Western Europe - describe fur footwear from the region of Siberia, Scandinavia and the Baltics - characterize the footwear of the Middle East, Central Asia and Mongolia - characterize footwear from the era of the Chinese Empire
The student has knowledge of: - describe the traditional forms of footwear in the region of Eastern and Western Europe - describe fur footwear from the region of Siberia, Scandinavia and the Baltics - characterize the footwear of the Middle East, Central Asia and Mongolia - characterize footwear from the era of the Chinese Empire
Skills
The student will be able to: - find your way around the inclusion of footwear from the given period - distinguish the purpose of footwear of the given period
The student will be able to: - find your way around the inclusion of footwear from the given period - distinguish the purpose of footwear of the given period
Recommended literature
  • Miroslava Štýbrová. Docela obyčejné boty - boty neobyčejně zvláštní. Zlín, 2017. ISBN 978-80-87130-42-1.
  • Miroslava Štýbrová. Tajemné čínské botky. Zlín, 2001.
  • Oakes, Jill E. Spirit of Siberia : traditional native life, clothing and footwear. Vancouver : Douglas & McIntyre, 1998. ISBN 1550546481.
  • Sonja Bata. Tradiční sibiřská obuv. Zlín, 1998.


Study plans that include the course
Faculty Study plan (Version) Category of Branch/Specialization Recommended year of study Recommended semester