The Faculty of Humanities, Charles University (Czech: Fakulta humanitních studií Univerzity Karlovy) is a faculty of Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic. Located in Libeň, Prague 8, the faculty has about 220 internal employers[2] and 3250 students.[1]
The Faculty of Humanities is the youngest faculty of Charles University. Founded as the Institute for Liberal Education (Czech: Institut základů vzdělanosti) in 1994, the faculty gained full academic autonomy in 2000.
In 2013, Czech President Miloš Zeman refused to approve the professorship of anthropologist Martin C. Putna at the faculty for Putna's involvement in Prague Gay Pride in 2011.[6][7] After numerous protests from academic and broader circles, Zeman capitulated. Putna was appointed by the Minister of Education Petr Fiala in June 2013.[8]
For undergraduates, the faculty offers a BA program in Liberal Arts and Humanities (Studium humanitní vzdělanosti). This program corresponds to the concept of liberal education. The student must achieve 60 ECTS credits in each year; they can freely choose lectures, seminars, etc. from the offer of the FHS and other faculties of Charles University. In addition, during the course of study, each student must pass three comprehensive exams in philosophy, history, and social sciences (anthropology, sociology, psychology, and economics), translate a professional text from the chosen foreign language (English, German, or French) and defend a bachelor's thesis.[19]
For doctoral students, the faculty offers three- or four-year PhD programs in Applied Ethics, Historical Sociology, German and French Philosophy (taught in German and French), General Anthropology, Semiotics and Philosophy of Communication, Social Ecology, Europäische Kulturzeitgeschichte (taught in German), Civic Society Studies, etc.[23]
Facilities
The IZV was located in the building of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Legerová street. At the same time as the faculty was founded in 2000, it moved to the new building of the Charles University in U Kříže 8, Jinonice, Prague 5, with two separate facilities, one in Hůrka district, Prague 13, and another at Máchova street 7, Prague 2. The faculty moved to a new building in Libeň, Prague 8 in 2020.[24][25] The new building won a national architecture award in 2021.[26]
Two research and educational institutions are operating within the Faculty of Humanities: the Research Center for Personality Development and Ethnicity, the Rehabilitation Institute for the Visually Impaired, and the Cabinet for Civic Democratic Education. Its three-floor library is located beneath the university building on Jan Palach Square by Staroměstská metro station.[27]
Departments
Departments of Faculty of Humanities, Charles University
^Kovalcsik, Katalin. "The music of the Roma in Hungary." In Romani Music at the Turn of the Millennium. Proceedings of the Ethnomusicological Conference. Praha: Studio Production 'Saga'& Faculty of Humanities, Charles University, pp. 85-98. 2003.
^Otčenášek, Jaroslav. "Rumyana Greorgieva, Bulhaři v Čechách, imigrační proces a společenská integrace v současné době. FHS UK, Praha 2011, 177 s.-." Český lid: Etnologický časopis 100, no. 4 (2013): 500-501.
^Morávková, Naděžda. "VANĚK, Miroslav-HOUDA, Přemysl-MÜCKE, Pavel (eds.). Deset let na cestě. Orální historie na Sovinci 2002-2011. Praha: Fakulta humanitních studií. Univerzity Karlovy, 2011. ISBN 978-80-87398-12-8." (2012).
^"Bachelor's Program". Faculty of Humanities, Charles University. Retrieved 2022-11-16.
^"Root". Philosophies allemande et française, Faculty of Humanities, Charles University. Retrieved 2022-11-16.