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þ4 5 õ€ $ ~ Š " õ€ $ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ÷¤ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ 4 =à/Ð ÐB € Aboriginal Studies Ð Riawunna Centre for Aboriginal Education The Aboriginal Studies major aims to develop a sound understanding of Australian Aboriginal history, culture and society, encourage an understanding of the process of Aboriginal dispossession, and promote cross-cultural awareness of cultural diversity in Australian society. Traditional and contemporary Aboriginal societies are studied, strong emphasis is given to the issue of Aboriginal identity, and study materials generated by both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people are used. The Aboriginal experience in Tasmania is a major focus in second and third years, and in some units comparisons are made with indigenous societies in other parts of the world. Emphasis is also given to the development of a range of academic skills, including writing, research, critical analysis, oral presentations and problem-solving. All units are offered on-campus in Launceston and sufficient units to form a full major are available by distance education. Riawunna is also phasing in on-campus teaching in Hobart. In 1999, the first year program and four level 200/300 coursework units will be offered on campus in Hobart. Aboriginal Studies Ð Level 100 units Contemporary Indigenous Australia Unit enrolment code HAB102 Provides a detailed introduction to contemporary Aboriginal socioeconomic experience on mainland Australia during the final decades of the 20th century. Issues addressed include the extent of Aboriginal disadvantage; the experience of racism; some aspects of contemporary Aboriginal culture; child welfare issues, including the experience of the stolen generations; and health and education issues. All issues are examined within the context of indigenous self-determination. The unit highlights both Aboriginal disadvantage and Aboriginal achievement, and draws comparisons with Indigenous peoples in other parts of the world. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms T Harper ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures and 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) (dist.ed. 2x1-day study schools) ¥ÊassessÊ (int) short essay (10%), 1,500-word essay (40%), class participation (10%), exam (40%); (dist.ed) short essay (10%), 1,500-word essay (50%), exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ Unit reader. Courses: R3A Indigenous Australia to the 1950s Unit enrolment code HAB103 Offers a general survey of Indigenous history, society and culture from the earliest times until the 1950s.The unit is divided into two sections. The first section provides an introduction to Aboriginal culture and society before the British invasion. Archaeological and anthropological sources are used to make an historical study of indigenous spirituality, relations with the land, kinship systems and economy. The second section examines the dispossession of the Aboriginal peoples from 1788 until the 1950s. Topics include Aboriginal-explorer relations, colonial violence, Aboriginal resistance, and government policies including segregation and protection. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures and 1hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) (dist.ed. 2x1-day study schools) ¥ÊassessÊ (int) short essay (10%), 1,500-word essay (40%), class participation (10%), exam (40%); (dist.ed) short essay (10%), 1,500-word essay (50%), exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ Henry Reynolds, The Other Side of the Frontier,Ê Penguin, Melb, 1982 Unit Reader Courses: R3A Aboriginal Studies Ð Level 200/300 units Special Topic in Aboriginal Studies A Unit enrolment code HAB201/301 The Aboriginal Studies Special TopicÊ can be taken only with the approval of the Head of School. Approved students can enrol in both units (HAB201/301 and HAB202/302) to form a 25% unit. Normally each unit consists of a research project involving structured reading and writing on a topic agreed to by the individual student and a supervisor. Students are expected to employ the skills and conceptual knowledge acquired in earlier units to investigate an appropriate issue or topic in Aboriginal Studies. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken only with the approval of the Director of RiawunnaÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ HoS and Riawunna staff ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,500-word research paper (for those combining HAB201/301 and HAB202/302: 7,000-word research paper). Courses: R3A Special Topic in Aboriginal Studies B Unit enrolment code HAB202/302 See HAB201/301 above. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken only with the approval of the Director of RiawunnaÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ HoS and Riawunna staff ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,500-word research paper. Courses: R3A Cape Barren Island 1850Ð1950 Unit enrolment code HAB204/304 Explores relations between Aboriginal Islanders and Euro-Tasmanian society between 1850 and 1950. Topics for consideration include the evolution of Islander community structures, lifestyle, and economy; relevant legislation and government policy; relations between Aboriginal Islanders and CBI Reserve managers; the activities of Euro-Tasmanian missionaries on the Bass Strait Islands; expressions of scientific rascism in colonial Tasmania; the evolution of Islander activism and historical demands for land rights; and enforced and voluntary migrations from the Bass Strait Islands in the 1940s and 50s. The unit develops in students a working awareness of the idea of historical process, the ability to conceptualise historical data, the development of bias detection skills, and an understanding of issues in oral history. ¥ÊN.B. may be used in a History major; not offered in 1999Ê Contemporary Indigenous Tasmania Unit enrolment code HAB206/306 Explores Tasmanian Aboriginal identity, activism, and socio-economic experience since the 1970s. Issues addressed include Aboriginal socialisation processes; contemporary Tasmanian Aboriginal associations with the land; the process of Aboriginal identity construction; media representations of Aboriginal activism; contemporary attitudes to Aboriginal identity; institutional prejudice, especially relations with the legal system; the level of access to government services such as education, health, housing, and employment; the causes and concerns of Aborignal activism and the proliferation of Aboriginal political/community organisations; the impact of Aboriginal activism in both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Tasmania; and links with the influences of indigenous activism in other Australian states and elsewhere in the world. The unit makes extensive use of materials generated by Tasmanian Aborigines and includes lectures by visiting Tasmanian Aborigines. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE230/330; not offered in 1999Ê Indigenous Justice Issues Unit enrolment code HAB208/308 Engages students in a detailed study of Indigenous experience of Australian legal and justice systems, and of the historical interaction between Indigenous and Australian law. Contexts in which these themes are explored include the criminal justice system, Indigenous dispute settlement, child welfare and the stolen generations, land rights and native title, and indigenous ownership of intellectual and cultural property. Where appropriate, comparisons will be drawn with the experience of Indigenous people in other places. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks); dist.ed study schools tba ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB101 or HAB102 and HAB103 ¥ÊassessÊ (int) 2,000-word essay (40%), class participation (20%), exam (40%); (dist.ed) introductory paper (20%), 2,000-word essay (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Aboriginal Women Unit enrolment code HAB232/332 Provides students with an understanding of the roles, functions and status of women in past and present Aboriginal societies from Aboriginal womensÕ perspectives. Particular areas of study incorporate feminism and racism, gender politics, Aboriginal women and power, and Aboriginal women and social issues. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF261/361Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms T Harper ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB102 or HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF261/361 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (30%), 13-week journal (20%), tutorial participation (10%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Indigenous Life Histories Unit enrolment code HAB252/352 Pursues two related streams: an historical evidence stream, in which the focus in on historical and thematic analysis of selected 20th-century personal and community histories produced by Aboriginal writers; and an issues stream, in which several issues related to the production of Aboriginal history are examined. Students use selected themes to investigate the various depictions of Aboriginal experience presented in the texts. The selected texts focus on Western Australia and New South Wales, and involve comparison and contrast of Aboriginal experience in the east and west of the continent. The themes have been developed to reflect and access the central concerns of Aboriginal historians. They include living on the fringe, living place, growing up, gender, identity, and family and community. In the issues stream, topics include: Aboriginal history as the history of an oppressed indigenous minority; the relationship between traditional oral and modern Aboriginal history, and the use of oral methods in the production of contemporary histories; the role of the Aboriginal historian in Aboriginal history, culture and contemporary society; the contribution of Aboriginal historians and their work to constructions of contemporary Aboriginal identity; and the often controversial question of who is qualified to write Aboriginal history. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA282/382; not offered in 1999Ê Dynamics of Indigenous Cultures Unit enrolment code HAB253/353 Compares the extant cultures of four contemporary indigenous peoples. A particular focus will be the ethno-linguistic bases of culture. Four peoples to be studied will be drawn from Australian Aborigines; First Nations of North America; the Saami people of the Arctic; and the Karen people of Southeast Asia. This selection spans major racial groups and a diverse range of antiquity in order to examine origins and to compare and contrast the manner in which each group has experienced modernisation. ¥ÊN.B. may also be taken as HGA278/378Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Onsman, Mr L Wilson ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3x1hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB101 or HAB102 and HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA278/378 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word essay (10%), major 2,000-word essay (20%), class participation (30%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A History of the Indigenous Peoples of North America Unit enrolment code HAB254/354 Provides an introduction to the historical experiences of various indigenous peoples of North America, using both the work of nonindigenous historians and the writings of indigenous peoples. For a fuller description, see HTA275. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA275/365Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Dunning ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB101 or HAB102 and HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA275/375 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (40%), tutorial participation (20%). Courses: R3A Indigenous Tasmania to 1803 Unit enrolment code HAB255/355 Covers the period from the earliest times of Indigenous occupation until the British invasion in 1803. Primarily historical in its scope, the unit employs archaeological, geological, botanical and anthropological sources in an attempt to reconstruct the world of pre-invasion Aborigines. Issues considered include: the history of Aboriginal interactions with nature; the debate about the cultural status of Aboriginal society during the 10,000 year, post-ice age period of geographic isolation; British ideologies about colonisation and race; and relations between Aborigines and pre-invasion European sailors. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Breen ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly; dist.ed: 3x3-hr study schools in Ltn, Hbt and Brn ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB101 or HAB102 and HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAB211/311 ¥ÊassessÊ (int) 2,000-word essay (40%), class participation (20%), exam (40%); (dist.ed) introductory paper (20%), 2,000-word essay (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Indigenous Tasmania and Colonial Dispossession Unit enrolment code HAB256/356 Examines Aboriginal experience from the time of the British invasion until the 1870s. Issues explored include the British invasion of Aboriginal Tasmania; Aboriginal responses to British occupation, especially the nature of Aboriginal resistance; changing historical interpretations of the Black War; the role of GA Robinson and the conciliation process in the Aboriginal dispossession; and portrayals of Aborigines encountered by the colonists. Based in the discipline of history, the unit gives particular emphasis to the practice of historical research and writing. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Breen ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly; dist.ed: 3x3-hr study schools in Ltn, Hbt and Brn ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB101 or HAB102 and HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAB211/311 ¥ÊassessÊ (int) 2,000-word essay (40%), class participation (20%), exam (40%); (dist.ed) introductory paper (20%), 2,000-word essay (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Aboriginal Studies Reading Seminar Unit enrolment code HAB401 Currently, Riawunna does not offer an Honours program in Aboriginal Studies. However, students enrolled in honours programs in other disciplines may negotiate to include an Aboriginal Studies reading seminar as a 25% component of their honours program. In 1999 Riawunna will offer a reading seminar entitled Ritual and Belief in Aboriginal Desert Cultures.Ê Fur further information, please contact Dr Shayne Breen. Cultural Studies (Multi-disciplinary) Ð Schools of English and European Languages and Literatures, and Sociology and Social Work Coordinators: Mr E de la Fuente, Dr P Mead The aim of the major in Cultural Studies is to allow students to engage in a cross-disciplinary exploration of the cultural field drawing on a body of scholarship which belongs to Sociology, English and other disciplines that have engaged with and contributed to ÔTheoryÕ but which cannot successfully be studied within the confines of any single discipline. With the inclusion of the newly revised Literature & EnvironmentÊ unit (HAC209/309) and units cross-listed from Art History and Cultural Theory, the program extends its disciplinary range to include methods and perspectives from Geography, Environmental Studies, and Art Theory The direction of Cultural Studies is not so much interdisciplinary as anti-disciplinary or post-disciplinary, marked by a desire to foreground personal and social experience; a linking of the economic, the ethnographic and the political in an account of diverse modes of cultural production; a challenge to oppositions of high and popular, public and private, self and subject, global and local; a critique of theory and resistance to totalising narratives; an exploration of the problematic of social identity and cultural difference, and a focus on minorities and the marginal. Students wishing to complete a major in Cultural Studies must take units with a combined weighting of 25% at the 100 level and 75% at the 200 and 300 levels (i.e. passes in any six units at 12.5% chosen from the list of Cultural Studies options following). Note: As the 100 level requirements for the major in cultural studies have been amended, students enrolled before 1999 can progress through the major according to the pre-1999 course structure. This means that students enrolled prior to 1999 can take HAC101 as HAC201/301 (i.e. as a 200/300 level unit). Please note: as these units are also constituents of majors in other disciplines they may not be counted twice as constituents of two different disciplines. Students who have already done any of these units (which may have been coded and named differently), or who are enrolled in any of these units as part of another discipline, must choose other units to make up their Cultural Studies percentages. Full details of mutual exclusions are given in the unit details which follow. Continuing students are advised to consult the BA schedule in the ÔCourse detailsÕ section of this Handbook for details of the structure of the various majors and the requirements for the BA. Listed below are the Cultural Studies units offered in 1999, and the requirements for the completion of the major in Cultural Studies. Unit title weight sem campus code 100 level Choose two units: Cultural Studies: an Introduction 12.5% [2] [H] HAC101 and one of: Introduction to Visual Studies 1 12.5% [1] [L] FFA100 Introduction to Visual Studies 2 12.5% [2] [L] FFA101 Introduction to Art and Design Theory 1A 12.5% [1] [H] FST101 Introduction to Art and Design Theory 1B 12.5% [2] [H] FST102 English 1A 12.5% [1] [H] HEA103 English 1B 12.5% [2] [H] HEA104 Sociology A 12.5% [1] [HLBd] HGA101 Sociology B 12.5% [2] [HLBd] HGA102 200/300 levels Choose 6 units (at least two from List 1 and two from List 2) List 1 Cultural Studies: an Introduction 12.5% [2] [H] HAC201/301 Critical Theory 12.5% [1] [H] HAC204/304 The Legend of King Arthur 12.5% [2] [H] HAC205/305 Popular Fiction: Texts and Audiences 12.5% [2] [H] HAC247/347 Crossing Text, Music and Image 12.5% [1] [H] HAC248/348 Power, Pleasure and Perversion 12.5% [1] [H] HAC249/349 List 2 Change and Order in Contemporary Society 12.5% [2] [H] HAC345 Science, Technology & Contemporary Society 12.5% [1] [H] HAC223/323 Sociology of Music 12.5% [1] [H] HAC232/332 Sport, Leisure and Tourism 12.5% [1] [H] HAC228/328 Sociology of Nature 12.5% [2] [H] HAC243/343 List 3 Politics, Literature and Film 12.5% [2] [H] HAC244/344 Postmodernism and Visual Culture 12.5% [1] [H] HAC250/350 Heresy and Inquisition in Medieval Europe AD 1100Ð1500 12.5% [2] [H] HAC253/353 Cultural Encounters in the Eighteenth Century 12.5% [1] [H] HAC254/354 Australian Art of the 1970s and 1980s 12.5% [1] [H] HAC255/355 Picturing the Wilderness 12.5% [2] [H] HAC258/358 Contemporary Craft and Design 12.5% [2] [H] HAC259/359 Art as a Way of Life: Romantics, Rebels, Academics and Aesthetes 12.5% [2] [H] HAC270/370 Spells of Enchantment: Fairy Tale and Fable in Recent Cinema 12.5% [2] [H] HAC271/371 Has the World Gone Mad? Surrealist Art Between the Wars 12.5% [2] [H] HAC272/372 Ensemble 1 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC260/360 Ensemble 2 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC261/361 Performance for Composers 1 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC262/362 Performance for Composers 2 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC263/363 Performance for Composers 3 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC264/364 Music Theory 1 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC265/365 Aural and Listening 1 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC266/366 Music Technology 1 12.5% [fy] [H] HAC267/367 The Body in Art 12.5% [1] [L] HAC285/385 Landscape and Issues of Postcolonialism in Australian Art 12.5% [2] [L] HAC286/386 Research Seminar 25%/12.5% [fy1/2] [L] HAC287/387 The Arts & Cultural Context 1 12.5% [fy] [L] HAC290/390 Drama 1 25% [fy] [L] HAC291/391 Musicology 12.5% [fy] [L] HAC294/394 Performing Arts Elective 1 12.5% [1/2] [L] HAC295/395 Performing Arts Elective 2 12.5% [1/2] [L] HAC296/396 Performing Arts Elective 3 12.5% [1/2]or [fy] [L] HAC297/397 Level 100 unit Cultural Studies: an Introduction Unit enrolment code HAC101 In order to provide as broad an introduction as possible to the very diverse field of cultural studies, this unit will be issues-based, but institution-focused. For a fuller description, see HEA274. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA274/374 or FST250/350Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC201/301, HEA274/374, FST250/350 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ Cunningham S and Turner G (eds), The Media in Australia: Industries, Texts, AudiencesÊ Frow J and Morris M (eds), Australian Cultural Studies: A Reader.Ê Courses: R3A Level 200/300 units Art and Design Theory 2/3 Unit enrolment code HAC200/300 Explores a range of theoretical issues confronting visual artists and designers in the postwar period (1940Ð1970) and investigates the relationship between modernist art theory and practice. For fuller description, see FST200. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof JH Holmes ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST200/300 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500-word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Cultural Studies: an Introduction Unit enrolment code HAC201/301 In order to provide as broad an introduction as possible to the very diverse field of cultural studies, this unit will be issues-based, but institution-focused. For a fuller description, see HEA274. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA274/374 or FST250/350Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC101, HEA274/374, FST250/350 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Critical Theory Unit enrolment code HAC204/304 Provides an introductory survey of 20th-century literary theory and criticism, including Marxism, the Frankfurt School, semiotics, structuralism, deconstruction, psychoanalysis, feminism, New Historicism, postcolonialism, Queer theory, post-foundational ethics and cultural policy. For a fuller description, see HEA260. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA260/360 or FST251/351Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð alternating 2-hr and 3-hr seminars weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA260/360, FST251/351 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (60%), take-home exam (40%). Courses: R3A The Legend of King Arthur Unit enrolment code HAC205/305 An introduction to the legend in medieval literature and beyondfocusing on Sir Thomas MaloryÕs Le Morte DÕArthur.Ê For a fuller description, see HEA277. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA277/377 or FST261/361Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð alternating 2-hr and 3-hr seminars weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA277/377, FST261/361 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), take-home exam (60%). Courses: R3A Literature and Environment Unit enrolment code HAC209/309 Provides a study of contemporary fiction, poetry and non-fiction within the literary/historical framework of Romantic concepts of Nature, the discipline of environmental studies and the theory and practice of Green social thought. For a fuller description, see HEA265. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA265/365 or KGA272/372 or KGN265/365 or FST255/355; not offered in 1999Ê Science, Technology & Contemporary Society Unit enrolment code HAC223/323 Provides an understanding of the main dimensions of the relations between science, technology and society, and an overview of the development of the sociology of science and technology. For a fuller description, see HGA220. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA220/320 or FST260/360Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B White ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA220/320, FST260/360 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2,000-word assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Popular Culture and the Mass Media Unit enrolment code HAC225/325 Reviews sociological conceptions of culture, considers variants of Ômass culture theoryÕ and seeks to identify major forms of contemporary popular culture. For a fuller description, see HGA225. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA225/325 or FST259/395; not offered in 1999Ê Sport, Leisure and Tourism Unit enrolment code HAC228/328 Investigates the prominent positions that sport, leisure and tourism occupy in contemporary society. For a fuller description, see HGA251. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA251/351 or KGN251/351 or FST265/365Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Franklin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA251/351, KKGN251/351, FST265/365 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A Cultures and Societies of Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HAC229/329 Examines similarities and divergences of social organisation, culture and experience among peoples of Southeast Asia. For a fuller description, see HGA254. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA254/354 or HMA217/317; may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Cook ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC229/329, HMA217/317 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment or test (10%), major assignment (40%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A Sociology of Music Unit enrolment code HAC232/332 Explores the social construction of music in modern western societies. The starting point for the unit is the tradition of the sociology of music Ð including such authors as Weber, Adorno, Becker Ð but also considered are anthropological, semiological and philosophical analyses of music. For a fuller description, see HGA276. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA276/376 or FST267/367Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr E de la Fuente ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA276/376, FST267/367 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A Sociology of Nature Unit enrolment code HAC243/343 Introduces students to the sociology of nature and provides a solid understanding of human relations with the natural world. For a fuller description, see HGA261. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA261/361 or KGN261/361 or FST266/366Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr AS Franklin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA261/361, KGN261/361, FST266/366 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Politics, Literature and Film Unit enrolment code HAC244/344 A dominant understanding in the teaching of politics contends that political understanding is reeducible to scientific method. By contrast, this unit seeks to examine politics as an art, the art of government, and more precisely, the role that particular modes of discourse have constituted that art. For a fuller description, see HSA204. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA201/301 or FST257/357Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok, Dr DM Jones ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA204/304, FST257/357 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial presentation (10%), 500 to 1,000-word review of text (15%), 2,200-word essay (25%), exam (50%). Courses: R3A National Shakespeare Unit enrolment code HAC246/346 Provides a study of some contexts of Shakespearean drama and theatrical practices in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, as well as the literary, cultural and critical traditions that ShakespeareÕs work inaugurated in Britain in later centuries and in other national and political contexts, eg. the US, Australia and India. For a fuller description, see HEA262. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA262/362 or FST256/356; not offered in 1999Ê Popular Fiction: Texts and Audiences Unit enrolment code HAC247/347 Through a close reading of a number of different popular fiction texts such as the horror story, the Mills & Boon romance, the crime story as well as science fiction and fantasy, this unit will try to determine what the key characteristics of the various popular fiction genres. For a fuller description, see HEA267. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA267/367 or FST258/358Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA267/367, FST258/358 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Crossing Text, Music and Image Unit enrolment code HAC248/348 Investigates interconnections and interactions between literary texts, music and visual art with particular focus on literature at the turn of the 20th century. For a fuller description, see HEA256. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA256/356 or FST252/352Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E McMahon ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA256/356 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Power, Pleasure and Perversion Unit enrolment code HAC249/349 Investigates the way the categories of power, pleasure and perversion have been deployed as hermeneutic devices in the latter half of the 20th century. For a fuller description, see HEA254. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA254/354 or HAF226/326 or FST264/364Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA254/354, HAF226/326, FST264/364 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Postmodernism and Visual Culture Unit enrolment code HAC250/350 Looks at recent widespread questioning of the value of the project of high art, a challenge which is central to what has become known as the postmodern sensibility. For a fuller description, see FST203. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr L Negrin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA254/354, FST203/303 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000 word tutorial essay (40%), 2 hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Fashioning the Body Unit enrolment code HAC251/351 Focuses on the body as a site of cultural transformation. For a fuller description, see FST207. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FST207/307 or HAF212/312; not offered in 1999Ê Feminist Aesthetics Unit enrolment code HAC252/352 Examines the impact which feminism has had on contemporary art theory and practice. For a fuller description, see FST209. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FST209/309 or HAF211/311; not offered in 1999Ê Heresy and Inquisition in Medieval Europe AD 1100Ð1500 Unit enrolment code HAC253/353 Traces the growth of heretical movements in Europe, and explores the development of the Inquisition Ð the most notorious means by which orthodox belief was asserted. For a fuller description, see HTA225. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA225/325 or FST263/363Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Cassidy, Prof MJ Bennett ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA225/325, FST263/363 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A Cultural Encounters in the Eighteenth Century Unit enrolment code HAC254/354 Issues of historical method, explanation and interpretation are explored through two 18th-century case studies of cultural imperialism, and associated cultural interaction. For a fuller description, see HTA219. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA219/319 or FST253/353Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RG Ely ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lecture-seminar weekly, 1-hr lecture fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA219/319, FST253/353 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000-word essays (35%), tutorial-seminar participation (15%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Australian Art of the 1970s and 1980s Unit enrolment code HAC255/355 Covers certain key survey exhibitions of the period. For a fuller description, see FST201. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof JH Holmes ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST201 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500-word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Cinema Unit enrolment code HAC256/356 Looks at artistic form and production techniques of cinema and applies the knowledge gained to the experience of looking at feature films in order to understand what those films are saying and how they say it. For a fuller description, see FST202. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr EJ Colless ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly; regular film screenings (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST202 ¥ÊassessÊ film treatment, script and ÔstoryboardÕ presentation of between 1,500-2,000 words; a critical 500 to 1,000-word evaluation of a feature film study during the term. Courses: R3A Performance Unit enrolment code HAC257/357 Introduces the critical theories and techniques of performance art. For a fuller description, see FST204. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Picturing the Wilderness Unit enrolment code HAC258/358 Looks at the history and theory of landscape art with particular emphasis being given to the ways in which artists have worked with wilderness and natural environment themes. For a fuller description, see FST205. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof JH Holmes ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST205 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500-word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Contemporary Craft and Design Unit enrolment code HAC259/359 Looks at ideas and influences which have shaped craft and design practice in Australia in the post-war period and places it in the context of contemporary international craft and design. For a fuller description, see FST206. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST206/306 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500-word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Ensemble 1 Unit enrolment code HAC260/360 Provides experience in the rehearsal and performance of music for various instrumental and/or vocal ensembles. For a fuller description, see FCE100 Ensemble Study. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCE100 or FST280/380Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr C Wojtowicz (Coordinator), other staff, depending on ensemble ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð rehearsals, tutorials and performances up to 6 hrs facilitated time weekly throughout the year (hrs for any specific ensemble activity may vary) ¥Êm/exclÊ FCE100, FST280/380 ¥ÊassessÊ an average of 4 performances or presentations a year (or equivalent group activities) (50%); lecturerÕs report (50%). A combined result is given. Students must pass both components. Courses: R3A Ensemble 2 Unit enrolment code HAC261/361 Has the same broad objectives as FCE100. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCE200 or FST281/381Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr C Wojtowicz (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð rehearsals, tutorials and performances up to 6 hrs facilitated time weekly throughout the year (hrs for any specific ensemble activity may vary) ¥Êm/exclÊ FCE200, FST281/381 ¥ÊassessÊ as for FCE100, HAC261/361. Courses: R3A Performance for Composers 1 Unit enrolment code HAC262/362 Provides practical performance experience and training for students whose principal study is composition. Students select an area of study from the instrumental or vocal range offered for Principal Study as available. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCC150 or FST282/382Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ various ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð individual tuition and master classes equiv 13 hrs over the year ¥ÊcoreqÊ FCC100 ¥Êm/exclÊ FCC150, FST282/382 ¥ÊassessÊ lecturerÕs report (20%); 15-min practical tests at the end of each sem (40% each). Courses: R3A Performance for Composers 2 Unit enrolment code HAC263/363 Provides practical performance experience and training for students whose principal study is composition. Students select an area of study from the instrumental or vocal range offered for Principal Study as available. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCC250 or FST283/383Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ various ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð individual tuition and master classes equiv 13 hrs over the year ¥ÊcoreqÊ FCC200 ¥Êm/exclÊ FCC250, FST283/383 ¥ÊassessÊ lecturerÕs report (20%); 15-min practical exam at end of sem 1 and 2 (40% ea). Courses: R3A Performance for Composers 3 Unit enrolment code HAC264/364 Provides practical performance experience and training for students whose principal study is composition. Students select an area of study from the instrumental or vocal range offered for Principal Study as available. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCC350 or FST284/384Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð individual tuition and master classes equiv 13 hrs over the year ¥ÊcoreqÊ FCC300 ¥Êm/exclÊ FCC350, FST284/384 ¥ÊassessÊ lecturerÕs report (20%), mid-year 15-min practical test (40%), end-of-year 15-min practical test (40%). Courses: R3A Music Theory 1 Unit enrolment code HAC265/365 Stimulates individual creativity in written music skills through an exploration of the basic structures underlying all music. Study of a wide range of materials leads to: an understanding of the skills involved in the composition of two- and three-part music theories of rhythm and texture; basic elements of harmonisation, including studies of plagal and authentic harmonic movement; modulation; and a discovery of the fundamentals of music theory and its relationship to sound and the analysis of functional harmony. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCT100 or FST285/385Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Grenfell, Mr R Marcellino ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (22 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FCT100, FST285/385 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments during the year (70%); end-of-year exam (30%). Courses: R3A Aural and Listening 1 Unit enrolment code HAC266/366 Is an introduction to sound as the basis for music through the use of various listening approaches and improvisation. For a fuller description, see FCL100. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCL100 or FST286/386Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Grenfell ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr Aural/Listening Workshop, 2x1-hr tutorials (1x1-hr for some groups) ¥Êm/exclÊ FCL100, FST286/386 ¥ÊassessÊ Aural tests during the year (35%), end-of-year viva voce exam in Aural (35%); Listening assignments at end of each sem (15% ea). Courses: R3A Music Technology 1 Unit enrolment code HAC267/367 Provides students, through compositional realisation and research, skills for exploring the technical and artistic potential of the electronic/digital medium. The unit is comprehensive and covers the following topics: sound synthesis/sampling, MIDI studio techniques, digital recording, tape composition, and interactive computer music. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FCB190 or HAC267/367Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 1.5 hrs weekly (22 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FSC190, HAC267/367 ¥ÊassessÊ class participation (10%), 2 projects (50%), exam in each sem (40%). Courses: R3A Art as a Way of Life: Romantics, Rebels, Academics and Aesthetes Unit enrolment code HAC270/370 Artists associated with movements such as romanticism, realism, impressionism, symbolism, aestheticism and post-impressionism are discussed. For a fuller description, see FST208. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof JH Holmes ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST208 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500-word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Spells of Enchantment: Fairy Tale and Fable in Recent Cinema Unit enrolment code HAC271/371 Looks at Ôspells of enchantmentÕ in post-war cinema. For a fuller description, see FST210. ¥ÊN.B. films subject to availabilityÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr EJ Colless ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly; regular film screenings (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST210 ¥ÊassessÊ submission of academic and practical work responding to exercises in narrative and role relevant to the screenings list. Courses: R3A Has the World Gone Mad? Surrealist Art Between the Wars Unit enrolment code HAC272/372 Looks at the large number of literary and theoretical documents associated with Surrealism as well as analysing SurrealismÕs direct impact in the various visual arts. For a fuller description, see FST211. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr Art Forum, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FST101, FST102 ¥Êm/exclÊ FST211 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay, tutorial presentation with associated 1,500word tutorial paper. Courses: R3A Fantasy Decor Unit enrolment code HAC273/373 Presents an overview of the most extreme examples of ÔdecorÕ, including the delirious rococo interiors of 18th-century Europe, the ruinously expensive 19th-century palaces built by BavariaÕs mad King Ludwig, and 20th-century dreamscapes like Disneyland and virtual fantasy worlds. For a fuller description, see FST212. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê A Brief History of 20th-Century Art Unit enrolment code HAC280/380 Addresses the history of European visual art from the early 20th century to the 1990s. For a fuller description, see FFA202. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Professional Practice Unit enrolment code HAC281/381 Equips artists with essential skills for their professional development within the arts industry. For a fuller description, see FFA233. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Gallery Studies Unit enrolment code HAC282/382 Teaches the full range of theoretical and practical skills required by curators in the development of exhibition proposals for traditional gallery spaces and alternative ways to present art and art events. For a fuller description, see FFA234. ¥ÊN.B. this unit is taught outside normal teaching hoursÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms G Greenwood ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 Ð 8-day intensive workshop, and weekend session ¥ÊprereqÊ FFA100 or 101 ¥Êm/exclÊ FFA234 ¥ÊassessÊ formal assignment (70%), participation in practical sessions (30%). Courses: R3A Wilderness and Natural Environment: Walls of Jerusalem and Dixons Kingdom Unit enrolment code HAC284/384 Introduces the history of ideas associated with the perception and representation of natural environment. For a fuller description, see FFA235. ¥ÊN.B. to be offered in the summer semester only; enrolment restrictions apply; may be taken as FFA235 or KGN253/353Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof VF McGrath; other staff may include Dr IA McLean, Ms C Berg, Mrs G Greenwood, Mr DW Hamilton, Mr G Leong, Ms P Mason, Prof CC Macknight, Dr D Huon, Dr CA Cranston, Prof AW Osborn ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð lecture, tutorial fieldwork ¥Êm/exclÊ FFA235, KGN253/353 ¥ÊassessÊ minor project (assessed at conclusion of field trip) (20%), major fieldfwork comp9onent (assessed on final day of exhibition) (80%). ¥ÊreqÊ a list of equipment, provisions and other materials will be provided at the commencement of the unit Courses: R3A The Body in Art Unit enrolment code HAC285/385 Analyses a major theme in Western art Ð the depiction of the body. For a fuller description, see FFA240. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I McLean ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FFA100 or 101 ¥Êm/exclÊ FFA240/340 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%), tutorial (30%), slide test (20%). Courses: R3A Landscape and Issues of Postcolonialism in Australian Art Unit enrolment code HAC286/386 Issues of contemporary cultural theory are applied to the analysis of Australian art. For a fuller description, see FFA241. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I McLean ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ FFA100 or 101 ¥Êm/exclÊ FFA241 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%), tutorial (30%), slide test (20%). Courses: R3A Research Seminar Unit enrolment code HAC287/387 Is a research-based unit by individual supervision. Students are required to develop a research plan for a topic relevant to arts practice. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr IA McLean (Coordinator) ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê25%/12.5% ¥Êfull year sem 1/2 ¥ÊprereqÊ FFA200, FFA201, FFA202, FFA233, FFA234, FFA240 or FFA241 ¥Êm/exclÊ FFA300/301 ¥ÊassessÊ full year: 6,000-word essay;Êsem: 3,500-word essay. Courses: R3A The Arts & Cultural Context 1 Unit enrolment code HAC290/390 Requires students to identify, discuss and compare principles and conventions underlying performances in theatre, music, visual art and film. For a fuller description, see FPC100. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPC100 or FFA290/390Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr M Edgar, Mr PR Hammond, Assoc Prof JE Lohrey, Dr S Kent ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPC100, FFA290/390 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorials, reviews of live performances and exhibitions, a seminar, and an exam. Courses: R3A Drama 1 Unit enrolment code HAC291/391 Develops an awareness, knowledge and appreciation of some representative works (plays) by Australian playwrights and those of classical Greece and Rome. For a fuller description, see FPB110. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPB110 or FFA291/391Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof JE Lohrey, Dr S Kent ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPB110, FFA290/391 ¥ÊassessÊ written work, participation in the presentation of selected pieces, and a written exam. Courses: R3A Musicology Unit enrolment code HAC294/394 Enables students to develop an overview of the many factors involved in the development of contemporary music. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPH201 or FFA294/394Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr MH Mumford, Mr JM Lade ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPH201, FFA294/394 ¥ÊassessÊ end-of-yr exam, listening tests and research projects. Courses: R3A Performing Arts Elective 1 Unit enrolment code HAC295/395 The Centre for Performing Arts offers students a variety of performing arts electives by negotiation with the Centre. Contact the Centre for details. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPS200 or FFA295/395Ê ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 Ð 4 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPS200, FFA295/395. Courses: R3A Performing Arts Elective 2 Unit enrolment code HAC296/396 The Centre for Performing Arts offers students a variety of performing arts electives by negotiation with the Centre. Contact the Centre for details. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPS201, FFA296/396Ê ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 Ð 4 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPS201, FFA296/396. Courses: R3A Performing Arts Elective 3 Unit enrolment code HAC297/397 The Centre for Performing Arts offers students a variety of performing arts electives by negotiation with the Centre. Contact the Centre for details. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FPS300, FFA297/397Ê ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 or full year Ð 4 hrs weekly (13 wks) or 2 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ FPS300, FFA297/397. Courses: R3A Change and Order in Contemporary Society Unit enrolment code HAC345 Examines the changes that have taken the advanced societies beyond the familiar structures of modern industrial society. For a fuller description, see HGA302. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA302 or FST262/362Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr E de la Fuente ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA302, HAC221/321, HAC232/332, HGA205/305, HGA257/357, FST262/362 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2,000-word assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A WomenÕs Studies (Multi-disciplinary) Ð School of Government Coordinator: Dr WL Kwok WomenÕs studies is an academic area of study in its own right as well as a complement to established disciplines. One of the central concerns of womenÕs studies units is the investigation of the ways in which people have constructed, and continue to construct, specific notions concerning the roles and functions of women and their relationship to the economic, political, social and intellectual structures of society. The prerequisite for all 200/300 level units is a pass in HAF101 and HAF102 or 25% at 100 level in any other discipline listed under Group 1 in the BA schedule. Students wishing to complete a major in WomenÕs Studies must take units with a combined weight of 75% at the 200 and 300 levels. At least 50% of units must be taken from Faculty of Arts units. The core unit (HAF215/315 Contemporary Feminist Thought: Themes, Issues and Conflicts) is required for students undertaking a major in WomenÕs Studies and may be taken at the 200 or 300 level. As some of the units also form part of studies in other disciplines, students who have already passed these units (which may have been named differently in the past), or who are enrolled in these units as part of another discipline, can choose other units to make up their WomenÕs Studies major. No units may be counted twice in an award. For full details on the study of WomenÕs Studies as a major or for Honours, please contact the Coordinator. Summary of WomenÕs Studies units Unit title weight sem campus code Units offered in semester 1 Gender and Power 12.5% [1] [H] HAF101 Language, Gender and Communication in Education 12.5% [1] [H] HAF206/306 Medieval Writing 12.5% [1] [H] HAF217/317 British Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) 12.5% [1] [H] HAF223/323 Power, Pleasure and Perversion 12.5% [1] [H] HAF226/326 Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives 12.5% [1] [H] HAF260/360 Gender Issues 12.5% [1] [H] HAF264/364 Units offered in semester 2 The Representation of Gender 12.5% [2] [H] HAF102 Philosophy of Feminism 12.5% [2] [H] HAF204/304 Gender, Literature and Education 12.5% [2] [H] HAF207/307 Education of Women and Girls 12.5% [2] [H] HAF208/308 The Politics of Gender, the Politics of Feminism 12.5% [2] [H] HAF210/310 Contemporary Feminist Thought: Themes, Issues and Conflicts 12.5% [2] [H] HAF215/315 American Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) 12.5% [2] [H] HAF224/324 Aboriginal Women 12.5% [2] [HL] HAF261/361 Gender and Nation 12.5% [2] [H] HAF262/362 Families, Households and the Lifecourse 12.5% [2] [HL] HAF263/363 Units not offered in 1999 Women, Power and Society 12.5% [na] [H] HAF201/301 Gender in European Thought 12.5% [na] [H] HAF203/303 Law, Gender and Power 12.5% [na] [H] HAF209/309 Feminist Aesthetics 12.5% [na] [H] HAF211/311 Fashioning the Body 12.5% [na] [H] HAF212/312 Women and Work in Australia 12.5% [na] [H] HAF214/314 Women and Medieval Writing 12.5% [na] [H] HAF216/316 Written Women: Gender in Roman Erotic Poetry 12.5% [na] [H] HAF222/322 Reading the Classics: Ovid and Chaucer 12.5% [na] [H] HAF225/325 WomenÕs Studies Ð Level 100 units Gender and Power Unit enrolment code HAF101 Explores gender power relationships in Australia by examining family, education, government, work, law and religion using philosophical, sociological, historical and political perspectives. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Lindley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam (40%), written work (50%), tutorial participation (10%). ¥ÊreqÊ Jackson S et al (eds), WomenÕs Studies: A Reader,Ê Harvester, NY, 1993. Courses: R3A The Representation of Gender Unit enrolment code HAF102 Explores gender power relationships in Australia by examining family, education, government, work, law and religion using philosophical, sociological, historical and political perspectives. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Lindley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam (40%), written work (50%), tutorial participation (10%). ¥ÊreqÊ Jacobus M et al (eds), Body Politics and the Discourse of Science,Ê Routledge, NY, 1990 Nochlin L, Women, Art and Power,Ê Thames & Hudson, Lond, 1994. Courses: R3A WomenÕs Studies Ð Level 200/300 units Women, Power and Society Unit enrolment code HAF201/301 Examines gender relations, with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. For a fuller description, see HGA227. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA227/327 or HGE223/323; not offered in 1999Ê Gender in European Thought Unit enrolment code HAF203/303 Examines European ideas and beliefs about gender and sexuality in the context of persecutions of women as witches and the policing of sexual preference. For a fuller description, see HTA205. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA205/305; not offered in 1999Ê Philosophy of Feminism Unit enrolment code HAF204/304 Employs feminist perspectives to examine critically such philosophic notions as reason, human nature, civil society, equality, nature and culture, and ethics to discern the role that gender plays in philosophical theory. For a fuller description, see HPA270. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HPA270/370Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 x 1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ pass in any 25% level 100 unit in the Faculty of Arts ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA270/370 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Language, Gender and Communication in Education Unit enrolment code HAF206/306 Develops participantsÕ awareness of gender issues embedded in language and the implications of these for learning, teaching and education. For a fuller description, see ESN771 (semester 1). ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms CJ Hiller ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ ESN771 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%). Courses: R3A Gender, Literature and Education Unit enrolment code HAF207/307 Studies changing views of the lives of women and men in the literature studied and the implications these views may have for the formulation of educational goals. For a fuller description, see ESN772 (semester 1). ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms CJ Hiller ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥Êm/exclÊ ESN772 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Education of Women and Girls Unit enrolment code HAF208/308 Reviews the recent research into women in western societies and the teaching and performance of girls in our classrooms. For a fuller description, see ESN773. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms CJ Hiller ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ ESN773 ¥ÊassessÊ written assignment (100%). Courses: R3A Law, Gender and Power Unit enrolment code HAF209/309 Addresses the way in which the law and legal and political institutions have constructed the social meaning of gender. For a fuller description, see BLA616 Sociology of Law. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê The Politics of Gender, the Politics of Feminism Unit enrolment code HAF210/310 Examines the ways in which gender has become a political issue. For a fuller description, see HSA213. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA213/313Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 workshop, 1 tutorial fortnightly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA213/313 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A Feminist Aesthetics Unit enrolment code HAF211/311 Examines the impact which feminism has had on contemporary art theory and practice. For a fuller description, see FST209. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FST209/309 or HAC252/352; not offered in 1999Ê Fashioning the Body Unit enrolment code HAF212/312 Focuses on the body as a site of cultural transformation. For a fuller description, see FST207. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as FST207/307 or HAC251/351; not offered in 1999Ê Women and Work in Australia Unit enrolment code HAF214/314 Examines the position of women in the workforce in Australia from a range of disciplinary perspectives. For a fuller description, see HSD225. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD225/355; not offered in 1999Ê Contemporary Feminist Thought: Themes, Issues and Conflicts Unit enrolment code HAF215/315 Provides an introduction to the themes, issues and conflicts in contemporary feminist thought. Particular attention is paid to the shift from the unifying themes in earlier feminist theorising to the destabilising influences of recent social theory upon feminism. The unit begins with some exemplary texts of earlier feminist theorising and identifies common themes such as universal sisterhood, patriarchal power and womenÕs oppression. It then moves from themes and issues to conflicts in feminism. These conflicts centre on a number of debates that include the category of ÔwomanÕ, the politics of difference, the basis of feminist knowledge, the conception of power, the stability of sexed identity and the future of identity politics. ¥ÊN.B. required unit for students undertaking a major in WomenÕs Studies. May be taken as HSA214/314. Students would find it advantageous to have successfully completed HAF210/310.Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 workshop, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA214/314 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A Women and Medieval Writing Unit enrolment code HAF216/316 Brings together a range of writings by and about women in the medieval period. For a fuller description, see HEA212. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA212/312; not offered in 1999Ê Medieval Writing Unit enrolment code HAF217/317 Offers students a program of reading Middle English and major writers from the late 14th and 15th centuries. For a fuller description, see HEA213. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA213/313Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr and 3-hr alternating seminars weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA213/313 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Written Women: Gender in Roman Erotic Poetry Unit enrolment code HAF222/322 Roman love elegy is the only genre of classical literature in which women play a central role by definition. For fuller description, see HTC222. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê British Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) Unit enrolment code HAF223/323 Focuses on 19th-century women writing in Britain, to investigate the tensions played out between the proper lady and the woman writer. For a fuller description, see HEA257. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA257/357Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Moore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr tutorial weekly, alternating 1-hr and 2-hr lectures weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA244/344, HHE221/321, HEA257/357 ¥ÊassessÊ seminar presentation (10%), 2,500Ð3,000word essay (50%), 2-hr seen exam (40%). Courses: R3A American Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) Unit enrolment code HAF224/324 Examines the work of women writing in the United States between the middle of the 19th century and the First World War. For a fuller description, see HEA258. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA258/358Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof L Frost ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr tutorial weekly, alternating 1-hr and 2-hr lectures weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA258/358 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr seen exam (40%). Courses: R3A Reading the Classics: Ovid and Chaucer Unit enrolment code HAF225/325 Examines the relations between two major authors of the western canon, classical Ovid and medieval Chaucer. For a fuller description, see HEA224. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA224/324 or HTC225/325; not offered in 1999Ê Power, Pleasure and Perversion Unit enrolment code HAF226/326 Investigates the way the categories of power, pleasure and perversion have been deployed as hermeneutic devices in the latter half of the 20th century. For a fuller description, see HEA254. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA254/354 or HAC249/349 or FST264/364Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lectures, 2-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC249/349, HEA254/354, FST264/364 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (20%), 3,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Unit enrolment code HAF260/360 Explores the historical and contemporary situation of Muslim women in the specific context of the interplay of religion and law in Islam, with special reference to the vast Muslim world of South and Southeast Asia. For a fuller description, see HTA223. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA223/323 or HMA244/344Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Roy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥ÊcoreqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA244/344, HTA223/323 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Aboriginal Women Unit enrolment code HAF261/361 Provides students with an understanding of the roles, functions and status of women in past and present Aboriginal societies from Aboriginal womensÕ perspectives. For a fuller description, see HAB232. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAB232/332Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms T Harper ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HAB102 or HAB103 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAB232/332 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (30%), 13-week journal (20%), tutorial participation (10%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Gender and Nation Unit enrolment code HAF262/362 (Hobart) Surveys 20th-century Australian writing. For a fuller description, see HEA289. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA289/389Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Moore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA289/389 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500-word review essay (20%), 2,500-word essay (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Families, Households and the Lifecourse Unit enrolment code HAF263/363 Examines family relations and patterns with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. For a fuller description, see HGA279. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE238/338 or HGA279/379Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Baxter ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE238/338, HGA279/379 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment (10%), major assignment (50%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Gender Issues Unit enrolment code HAF264/364 (Hobart) Examines both how gender is theorised, and the new developments in feminist epistemology and ethics deriving from current gender theory. For a fuller description, see HPA271. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HPA271/371 or FST254/354Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lecture weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or WomenÕs Studies ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA271/371, FST254/354 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word mid-term essay (50%), 3-day take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A (+OC) WomenÕs Studies Ð Honours units WomenÕs Studies 4 Ð Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HAF400/401 The WomenÕs Studies honours program is interdisciplinary. Because of the need to coordinate individual courses, students wishing to undertake the honours program must consult with the Coordinator of WomenÕs Studies at the end of 3rd year or the beginning of 4th year. The course consists of three components. 1. A core unit in WomenÕs Studies (20%). 2. A dissertion (HAF406) of 10,000Ð12,000 words on a topic approved by the Coordinator of WomenÕs Studies is supervised by academic staff of participating Schools of the WomenÕs Studies program and undertaken in those Schools (40%). The dissertation should normally be within the Faculty of Arts. 3. Further units taught by WomenÕs Studies specialists in participating Schools of the WomenÕs Studies program totalling no more than 40% of the course. It is also possible for students to elect units that are not taught as part of the honours program in WomenÕs Studies. These units are subject to approval by the Coordinator of WomenÕs Studies and by the Schools concerned. Students with distinction or above average in at least 50% of units taken in WomenÕs Studies are eligible for admission to honours. Students who do not meet the requirements above but who meet the Faculty minimum may seek special admission through the Coordinator of WomenÕs Studies. ¥ÊN.B. students should also note that all unit electives are subject to availability of teaching staff. The core unit and unit electives are set out belowÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ Major including HAF215/315 and Distinction (DN) or above in at least 50% of WomenÕs Studies units. Courses: R4A WomenÕs Studies: Contexts, Conflicts, Crisis? Unit enrolment code HAF405 Expands the themes and issues in feminist thought raised in the unit HAF215/315 Contemporary Feminist ThoughtÊ and applies them specifically to the context of WomenÕs Studies in the academy. In this seminar program, the role of WomenÕs Studies in challenging traditional disciplines is assessed. WomenÕs Studies emerged in the 1970s through hard-fought battles to add gender to the agenda. It is, and always has been, interdisciplinary in its approach, ranging across philosophy, social and political thought, literary and cultural criticism and sociological perspectives. But how successful have WomenÕs Studies programs been in dislodging phallocentric knowledge? Should WomenÕs Studies engage with discourses on sexuality in place of gender? This unit employs recent feminist work that uses psychoanalytic discourse, postmodern thought, postcolonial discourse and queer theory to pose new questions and new directions in WomenÕs Studies in the 1990s and beyond. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê20% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ written work totalling 7,000 words. ¥ÊreqÊ Butler J, Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity.Ê Hirsch M and Keller EF (eds), Conflicts in Feminism.Ê Mohanty CT et al (eds), Third World Women and the Politics of Identity.Ê Courses: R4A Women and Public Policy Unit enrolment code HAF411 Examines the way in which women as an interest group are increasingly involved in public policy issues, and provides Administration and WomenÕs Studies honours students with an understanding of the way in which womenÕs issues have been dealt with by governments in modern liberal democracies. In Australia the role of the state has been critical in policy change for women over the past twenty five years and the unit is designed to equip students with the necessary substantive and theoretical knowledge to analyse the changes. The intellectual basis of the unit is centred around a critical analysis of theories which attempt to explain the position of women in the public and private spheres. Many of these concepts have been developed in the USA, the UK and Germany and students are expected to compare the way in which womenÕs issues have been managed by government in these political systems and in Australia. (Government and Public Policy, School of Government) ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Theoretical Issues in Feminist Aesthetics Unit enrolment code HAF412 Examines such issues as whether it is possible to define a feminist aesthetics and how the difference between male and female spectatorship might be theorised through a course of supervised reading. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr L Negrin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê20% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ written work totalling 7,000 words. Courses: R4A Education and WomenÕs Careers Unit enrolment code HAF413 Critiques policies and practices in womenÕs education. Feminist and antifeminist theories about education are included. There is an emphasis placed on students analysing their own educational experiences and career opportunities. The relationship between gender and work is explored. There is an examination of the cultural ideologies that separate menÕs work from womenÕs work. Changing attitudes towards the role of women in society are examined. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms CJ Hiller ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê20% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ ESN774 ¥ÊassessÊ written work totalling 7,000 words. Courses: R4A Feminist Perspectives in Sociology Unit enrolment code HAF414 Is a course of supervised reading in an area of feminist sociology chosen by the student in consultation with an appropriate member of staff. The unit consists of regular meetings and discussions and is intended to cover a certain body of theoretically related literature comprehensively and critically. (Also offered as a reading course in Sociology) ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Julian, Dr N Cook ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê20% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2 pieces of written work totalling no more than 7,000 words. Courses: R4A Special Studies Unit enrolment code HAF415 From time to time, units that do not appear in the unit descriptions above may be offered as part of the WomenÕs Studies Honours program. These units will have a substantial content in the subject areas of WomenÕs Studies and/or gender, sexuality and feminist theory, and students may enrol in these units as Special Studies, subject to approval by the WomenÕs Studies course coordinator. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê20% ¥Êsem 1. Courses: R4A English Ð School of English and European Languages and Literatures The School offers a range of English (HEA) units at the Hobart, Launceston campuses and at the North West Centre. As part of the BA course of study, students may undertake individual English units (25% of English at 100 level is a prerequisite for all later-year units), or combine units towards a major or a double major in English. The English units are designed to provide a study of literary texts and cultural practices, authors, periods, and literatures, from the later medieval period to the present day. They include a substantial representation of English, American, Australian and African literatures, and also give students the opportunity to undertake work in related fields such as comparative literature, Cultural Studies, criticism and theory including postmodern and other postcolonial writing, drama, performance and film studies, creative writing and genre studies. The Faculty of Arts interdisciplinary programs in Cultural Studies and WomenÕs Studies, to which the School contributes, also offer complementary units to those in English and students may want to include a selection of these in their BA course of study. Select 200 and 300 level units offered by other areas are now cross-listed with English and may be included, up to an overall weight of 25%, as part of an English major or double major. Together with the various kinds of knowledge represented by the English units, they aim to produce students with a foundational training in close reading and critical thinking. The SchoolÕs teaching program also includes training in effective writing. StudentsÕ essays and classwork assignments receive detailed comment from staff, and this, together with other modes of work in written expression, assists students in developing their writing. The aim throughout is to expand studentsÕ understanding and control of the language in which imaginative literature, criticism and theory are written, and to develop skills in the close and informed reading of texts. These skills form the basis of work in all units. A Bachelor of Arts degree with English is an excellent and adaptable preparation for careers in education, journalism and the media, public service, publishing, librarianship, information management, and many other roles, public or private, in the communications and service industries. Students who are interested in using their English studies for teaching qualifications and who are considering applying for the BTeach are advised to consult the Faculty of EducationÕs information booklet The Bachelor of TeachingÊ or to contact the Education Faculty office on the Launceston campus. Pass course A major in English (100%), consists of 25% of English at 100 level and 75% (six 12.5% units) at 200 and 300 levels. Students must include a minimum of 25% (two 12.5% units) at 300 level. A double major in English (175%) consists of 25% of English at 100 level and 150% (twelve 12.5% units) at 200 and 300 levels. Students must include a minimum of 50% (four 12.5% units) at 300 level. English 4 (Honours) Requirements for entry to Honours (English 4) are: a major and a GradePoint Average of 6.5 or higher in 75% of English units at 200 and 300 levels. Students should contact the Honours Coordinator (Dr Elizabeth McMahon) for further information. Postgraduate Students who successfully complete the English 4 (Honours) year with a result of HU (Upper Second-class Honours) or above may apply to enrol in a postgraduate degree by research at the University. Students normally enrol in the MA degree program in the first instance and may then consider transferring to the PhD program. Interested students should consult the relevant section of the Research Higher Degrees Handbook.Ê Contact Dr Ian Buchanan, Postgraduate Coordinator, for further details. Changes to Regulations Students who entered the BA before 1 January 1998 will be governed by requirements for the major, double major and minor which applied up to and including 1997. Continuing students are advised to turn to page xx for details of the structure of the various majors and the requirements for the BA. Location and notices The School is situated on the top floor of the Humanities Building in Hobart and Level 1, B Block at the Launceston campus. The office of the Secretary of English and European Languages and Literatures, to whom enquiries should be directed in the first instance, is Hobart Room 557. The English notice boards are located to the left of the main entrance to the School. Please do not hesitate to contact the School in person or by telephone, (03) 6226 2347, if you have any questions about the information in this Handbook. Staff may be consulted during their office hours, as posted. Students are urged to check School notice boards for up-to-date information about reading lists and timetables. Cross-listed units Units with a weight of up to 25% from the following list can be counted towards a major in English. Unit title weight sem campus code Post-1945 German Film 12.5% [2] [H] HEG312 The German Film: More than One Hundred Years of German Cinema 12.5% [1] [H] HEG304 Greek and Roman Mythology 12.5% [2] [H] HTC223/323 Greek and Roman Epic 12.5% [na] [H] HTC210/310 Classical Tragedy: Euripides and Beyond 12.5% [1] [H] HTC213/313 Latin 1 25% [fy] [H] HTC215 Ensemble 1 12.5% [fy] [H] FCE100 Level 100 units Introduction to English: Australian Literature Unit enrolment code HEA101 (Launceston and Burnie) Students study Australian Literature in the genres of poetry, fiction, and drama. Though the focus is on individual texts rather than critical writings, students are expected to demonstrate a capacity to argue effectively by incorporating critical writings in their essays. The unit enables students to place Australian literature within a wider cultural context. It discusses literature as a reflection of and reaction to colonialist attitudes and turn-of-the-century nationalism. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CA Cranston ¥ÊLtn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000-word essays (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ all students A Guide to the Presentation of Assignments,Ê Univ Tas, Library Database Cudden JA (ed), The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory Darville H, The Hand that Signed the Paper Heseltine H (ed), The Penguin Book of Australian Verse Kiernan B (ed), The Portable Henry Lawson Williamson D, The Removalists Hibberd J, A Stretch of the Imagination internal students only Bird D (ed), Off the Air: The Radio Plays of Elizabeth JolleyÊ distance education students only Lawler R, Summer of the Seventeenth Doll White P, A Fringe of Leaves. Courses: R3A C3C Introduction to English: Poetry Unit enrolment code HEA102 (Launceston and Burnie) Considers the traditional Western conception of poetry as Ôverbal artÕ, or a heightened mode of discourse. Its focus is on Renaissance examples. The poetry will be situated within the historically specific circumstances of its production, such as Renaissance attitudes toward society, art and the world. Readings which accompany the various topics introduce matters of theoretical interest which lie within English but outside this unitÕs scope. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Shaw ¥ÊLtn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 500-word preliminary exercise (20%), 1,500-word essay (30%), 2-hr exam (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ all students A Guide to the Presentation of Assignments,Ê Univ Tas, Library Database Cudden JA (ed), The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory Jones E (ed), The New Oxford Book of Sixteenth-Century Verse MacLean H and Prescott A (eds), Edmund SpenserÕs Poetry Shakespeare, The Tragedy of King Lear. Courses: R3A C3C English 1A Unit enrolment code HEA103 (Hobart) Introduces students to tertiary level literary studies with an emphasis on textuality.Ê The work of close reading, critical thinking, writing practice and textual analysis is focused through the study of a selection of the following formal, historical and genre-based modules: Chaucer, Shakespeare, contemprary Australian writing, theory, poetry, modernism, narrative, reading images, drama, women writing and postcolonial fiction. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ a selection of in-print texts relevant to the study of modules in any given year. Courses: R3A C3C English 1B Unit enrolment code HEA104 (Hobart) Introduces students to tertiary level literary studies with an emphasis on reading practices.Ê The work of close reading, critical thinking, writing practice and textual analysis is focused through the study of a selection of the following formal, historical and genre-based modules: Chaucer, Shakespeare, contemporary Australian writing, theory, poetry, modernism, narrative, reading images, drama, women writing and postcolonial fiction. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ a selection of in-print texts relevant to the study of modules in any given year. Courses: R3A C3C Level 200/300 units Creative Writing A: poetry Unit enrolment code HEA201/301 (Hobart) This introductory unit in Creative Writing focuses on studentsÕ own writing with special emphasis on poetry. Students develop their own writing in response to a wide range of stimulus materials, including contributions from visiting writers. A folio of original work will be developed over the semester through study of unit materials, class discussions, workshop sessions and the regular submission of draft material. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E McMahon (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð alternating 2-hr and 3-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊassessÊ a folio of original writing of 5,000 words. Courses: R3A C3C Creative Writing B: fiction/non-fiction/script Unit enrolment code HEA202/302 (Hobart) Focuses on studentsÕ own writing, specifically in the genres of fiction, non-fiction and script writing. Students develop their own writing in response to a wide range of stimulus materials, including contributions from visiting writers. Each lecture will introduce strategies for writing and editing fiction ranging from avant-garde techniques and multimedia texts to the intersections between fictional and non-fictional writing. These techniques will be taken up and developed by students in the workshop sessions. Students will keep a journal of their weekly workshop preparation and responses to the set readings. They will also develop a major work of up to 4,000 words. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E McMahon ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr workshop weekly ¥ÊassessÊ journal (30%), major work of up to 4,000 words (70%). Courses: R3A C3C Writing Poetry and Short Fiction Unit enrolment code HEA203/303 (Launceston) Introduces resources and techniques for the production of work in the genres of poetry and short fiction including: examination of contemporary texts and experimental work in each genre; review of theoretical issues such as reader response theory; discussion of narrative and poetic devices. All of these will be studied in association with writing exercises and response by a student audience in workshop situations. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr seminar, 2x1-hr workshops fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA251/351, HEA201/301 ¥ÊassessÊ portfolio of work in both genres including a minimum of 2 short stories and 2 short sequences of poems (90%), viva based on the portfolio (10%). Courses: R3A C3C Women and Medieval Writing Unit enrolment code HEA212/312 (Hobart) Brings together a range of writings by and about women in the medieval period. These will include political, mystical, epistolary and domestic texts written by and sometimes about women. Most texts will come from the late medieval period but the unit will offer some transperiod examples including film. Students will also read critical texts as essential texts in order to understand the apparent absence and then reappearance of women as authors and subjects in medieval writing. Some attention will also be paid to the women scholars and critics who have written about this period. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF216/316; not offered in 1999Ê Medieval Writing Unit enrolment code HEA213/313 (Hobart) Offers a program of reading Middle English and major writers from the late 14th and 15th centuries. Students work through a basic reading of Middle English language through selected works of Geoffrey Chaucer, John Gower, John Mandeville, and a selection of women writers. Critical scholarship includes work currently produced in the fields of medieval literary criticism and critical theory including Cultural Studies and feminism. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF217/317Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr and 3-hr alternating seminars weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF217/317 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A C3C Shakespeare: Histories and Tragedies Unit enrolment code HEA222/322 (Hobart) Provides a study of select Shakespearean histories and tragedies which focus on the personalities and actions of renowned rulers at moments of great political change. The plays will be examined within the context of recent critical debates about the relationship between ShakespeareÕs stage and the Elizabethan and Jacobean world. Also considered are questions of genre, Renaissance historiography, performance history, and some of the ways in which ShakespeareÕs political dramas have been reworked to reflect new preoccupations and concerns. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Shakespeare: Comedy and Romance Unit enrolment code HEA223/323 (Hobart) Provides an introduction to Shakespearean comedy with an emphasis upon performance history, comic conventions and historic contexts. Comedies from different phases of ShakespeareÕs career will be considered with attention to the varying conceptions of gender, love, sexuality, and power contested within them. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Gaby ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly, 1-hr workshop fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Elizabethan and Jacobean Tragedy Unit enrolment code HEA225/325 (Hobart) During the Renaissance the native tradition of English tragedy reached a peak of popularity and achievement. Many playwrights besides Shakespeare essayed the art of tragedy, producing poetic dramas which are full of passion, action, and violence, but which also embody the questioning spirit of the age. This course focuses on major works by some of ShakespeareÕs contemporaries, paying particular attention to the contradictions and complexities of the tragic form. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Gaby ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly, 1-hr workshop fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Modern Drama Unit enrolment code HEA226/326 (Hobart) The advent of film and television has highlighted the artificiality of live theatre and made it seem, for many, a redundant mode of communication. In response modern drama has been preoccupied with articulating a new role for itself, focusing attention on its own rituals and the intensity of the actor/audience relationship, and drawing power from the contradictions of its form. This unit aims to introduce a range of provocative late 20th-century dramatic texts and to consider the kind of voice modern drama has developed. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Reading the Classics: Ovid and Chaucer Unit enrolment code HEA227/327 (Hobart) Examines the relations between two major authors of the western canon, classical Ovid and medieval Chaucer. In the case of Ovid, we will examine Heroides,Ê a collection of letters by mythological women to their lovers, and Metamorphoses,Ê a quasi-epic poem centrally concerned with sexual passion. In the case of Chaucer we will examine the Legend of Good Women,Ê ChaucerÕs legendary rollcall of virtuous women and immoral men, The Book of the Duchess,Ê ChaucerÕs elegy on the death of his patronÕs beautiful wife and The Canterbury Tales,Ê ChaucerÕs account of a group excursion to Canterbury and the stories told along the way. We will pay particular attention to specific relations between Ovid, Chaucer and their antecedents, intertextuality and the trope of translatio studii,Ê literary and historical contexts, questions of genre and the representation of sexual politics and desire. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF216/316 or HTC225/325; not offered in 1999Ê Poetry and Australian Modernity Unit enrolment code HEA251/351 (Hobart) Provides a study of Australian poetry from the early 20th century through to the contemporary moment. It focuses on a number of significant poets and the historical moments they have come to be associated with: Kenneth Slessor and the advent of Australian modernism in the 1920s (including ÔVoyagerÕ poetry); ÔErn Malley,Õ James McAuley, A.D. Hope and the cultural ferment of the 1940s; Judith Wright and the collapse of humanism in the 1950s and 60s; the ÔGeneration of 68Õ and the influence of the American model in Australian avant-garde writing; John Tranter, cinematism and the history of the 1960s; and the work of Lionel Fogarty and other Aboriginal poets in the 1980s and 90s. The unit investigates the history of modernism and postmodernism in Australia and is organised around broad theoretical questions such as poetry and politics, poetry and everyday life, poetry and non-lyric forms, poetry and cultural production, and poetry in relation to poetics. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê A Place in the Wilderness Unit enrolment code HEA252/352 (Hobart and Launceston) Whether they came in chains or free, whether as explorers, soldiers or settlers, the British arriving in AustraliaÕs colonies during the 19th century had to make for themselves a ÔplaceÕ under circumstances imagined as wilderness. This unit examines the narratives produced during the process of finding places for those who lived in colonial Australia, and analyses the cultural meanings circulating around representations of free, unfree, and indigenous peoples within the land marked ÔwildernessÕ. It asks how texts reflect and shape place, how they inter-text with actual places, and what role the wilderness as place plays in discourses constructing ÔAustraliaÕ during the colonial period. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KGN255/355Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof L Frost ¥ÊHbt, int dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr tutorials weekly, and alternating 1-hr and 2-hr lectures weekly for internal students; optional weekend study schools for dist.ed ¥Êm/exclÊ KGN255/355 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr seen exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C African Literature West and South Unit enrolment code HEA253/353 (Hobart and Launceston) Offers an introduction to modern texts in a variety of genres (novel, autobiography, poetry, drama and short stories) from modern West and South Africa. Post-colonial theory (including writing back, nationalism, hybridity, representation) will structure close reading of text and issues of contextualisation. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Power, Pleasure and Perversion Unit enrolment code HEA254/354 (Hobart) Investigates the way the categories of power, pleasure and perversion have been deployed as hermeneutic devices in the latter half of the 20th century. It will track the general dissolution of philosophies of certainty in the post-war period and the rise of philosophies of uncertainty (i.e. poststructuralism, postmodernism, postfeminism, postmarxism etc.). It will use literary texts as both examples of this shift, and as texts to be investigated using these three categories. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC249/349 or HAF226/326 or FST264/364Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lectures, 2-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC249/349, HAF226/326, FST264/364 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Confessional Poetry Unit enrolment code HEA255/355 (Hobart and Launceston) The intensely personal and controversial poetry termed ÔconfessionalÕ began with Robert LowellÕs Life StudiesÊ (1959). This unit maps the ÔconfessionalÕ terrain subsequently traversed by poets in England, the United States, and Australia. It raises questions about the use to which autobiographical material is being put in the construction of the poetic ÔIÕ. ¥ÊN.B. distance education onlyÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Shaw ¥Êdist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð optional 2-hr fortnightly tutorials; 2 optional weekend study schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA282/382, HHE231/331 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Crossing Text, Music and Image Unit enrolment code HEA256/356 (Hobart) Investigates interconnections and interactions between literary texts, music and visual art with particular focus on literature at the turn of the 20th century. It introduces students to an interdisciplinary approach to textual analysis in the context of a specific historical and cultural milieu. It will consider how literary texts incorporate and imitate visual art and music in both form and effect. It will also examine the ways in which this cross-over of artistic media has been deployed in the representation of decadence. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC248/348 or FST252/352Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E McMahon ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC248/348, FST252/352 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C British Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) Unit enrolment code HEA257/357 (Hobart) Focuses on 19th-century women writing in Britain, to investigate the tensions played out between the proper lady and the woman writer. It raises questions about the effect of gender on writing; about the ideologies within which women wrote and the influence of social and political change over the century; about the writerÕs relationship to such dominant aesthetics as the gothic, the sentimental, and the Romantic; and about the circumstances in which the writing was disseminated. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF223/323Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Moore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr tutorial weekly, alternating 1-hr and 2-hr lectures weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA244/344, HHE221/321, HAF223/323 ¥ÊassessÊ seminar presentation (10%), 2,500Ð3,000word essay (50%), 2-hr seen exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C American Women Writing (Nineteenth Century) Unit enrolment code HEA258/358 (Hobart) Examines the work of women writing in the United States between the middle of the 19th century and the First World War. It considers the literary strategies by which they negotiated the gender restrictions and stereotyping of their time, and asks how their specific circumstances (including class, education, marital status, race, and region) affected the public voice of their writing. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF224/324Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof L Frost ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr tutorial weekly, alternating 1-hr and 2-hr lectures weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF224/324 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr seen exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C African Literature Unit enrolment code HEA259/359 (Launceston) Examines how developments in form and content have led to the emergence of modern African literature as a distinctive body of writing. Work by black writers from West, East and Southern Africa is studied in relation to the following issues: the relationship between written and oral literature; literary form and politics; tribal cosmologies and belief systems; the response of black writers to the colonial novel; the influence of the Bible and the historical impact of Christianity. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Critical Theory Unit enrolment code HEA260/360 (Hobart) Surveys 20th-century literary theory and criticism (including Marxism, the Frankfurt School, semiotics, structuralism, deconstruction, psychoanalysis, feminism, and New Historicism). Particular questions for consideration are: what is a text? what is an author? what are the modes of interpretation and reading? how has the discipline English evolved over the course of the 20th century? how has the study of literary texts been transformed by considerations of politics and identity? Students are encouraged to exercise critical independence in their thinking and to develop their own critical strategies in response to their reading, and to develop their awareness of the importance of careful and wide-ranging scholarship. In relation to studentsÕ own writing, the unit also provides practical analyses of the forms, gestures and vocabularies of theoretical and critical writing. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC204/304 or FST251/351Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Mead ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC204/304, FST251/351 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C National Shakespeare Unit enrolment code HEA262/362 (Hobart) Provides a study of some contexts of Shakespearean drama and theatrical practices in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, as well as the literary, cultural and critical traditions that ShakespeareÕs work inaugurated in Britain in later centuries and in other national and political contexts, eg. the US, Australia and India. The work of the unit includes close readings of select Shakespeare plays, including their historical contexts and reception history, in relation to a critical knowledge of national, political and historical aspects of the institution ÔShakespeareÕ. This institutional aspect of Shakespeare is also studied through some latter-day fictional and filmic rewritings of Shakespearean narratives and characters. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC246/346 or FST256/356; not offered in 1999Ê Literature and Environment Unit enrolment code HEA265/365 (Hobart) Provides a study of contemporary fiction, poetry and non-fiction within the literary/historical framework of Romantic concepts of Nature, the discipline of environmental studies and the theory and practice of Green social thought. The works studied are generically varied and represent a variety of interactions between people, environments and writing, including: theories of nature, place and spatiality, tourism, wilderness, dystopian fiction, and political fiction. The focus of the unit is also on recent environmental and relevant critical theory, their relations to each other, and to the literary texts studied. A particular focus of the work in this unit is on local (Tasmanian) and national environmental issues and their relation to global environmental questions and to the politics of literary representation and environmental studies more generally. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA265/365 or HAC209/309 or KGN265/365 or FST255/355; not offered in 1999Ê Popular Fiction: Texts and Audiences Unit enrolment code HEA267/367 (Hobart) Through a close reading of a number of different popular fiction texts such as the horror story, the Mills & Boon romance, the crime story as well as science fiction and fantasy, this unit will, first of all, try to determine what the key characteristics of the various popular fiction genres are. Then, more speculatively, it will try to discover what it is that makes them popular. This will involve a consideration of the constitution of audiences, or Ôreading publicsÕ, and what it is that people get from literature. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC247/347, FST258/358Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC247/347, FST258/358 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C The Body in the Text: 20th Century Australian Fiction Unit enrolment code HEA269/369 (Launceston) Investigates the relationship between the anomalous body and its Australian context through various 20th-century Australian texts. It undertakes a critical inquiry into how the deformed or disabled body is used as a device within the text; it explores how these bodies are used as a literary ÔdeviceÕ: that is, a contrivance, a method of deception, or as an illuminator of the literary work. The unit explores the systematised imaginative artistic activity of symbolism and archetypal myths that are a part of the baggage of Ôphysical deviationÕ, and examines the Ôtextual deviationsÕ and conformities that either perpetuate, or challenge, negative stereotypes. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Cultural Studies: an Introduction Unit enrolment code HEA274/374 (Hobart) In order to provide as broad an introduction as possible to the incredibly diverse field of cultural studies, this unit will be issuesbased, but institution-focused. This means it will ask a variety of critical questions of some of the more visible and influential cultural institutions operating in society today. Primarily this will entail studying the many facets of what we loosely call, the media Ð i.e. film, television, radio, video, popular music and so on. But, as this unit will explore, all such institutions are themselves cross-cut and complicated by less tangible but no less powerful cultural forces such as capitalism, and nationalism, to name only two of many. As such, a complex view of the media will need to be developed. This unit will concentrate on Australian examples, while drawing on international research. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC101 or FST250/350Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2-hr seminar weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC101, FST250/350 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (20%), 3,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C The Legend of King Arthur Unit enrolment code HEA277/377 (Hobart) Provides an introduction to the legend in medieval literature and beyond focusing on Sir Thomas MaloryÕs Le Morte DÕArthur.Ê Students read other texts in the original and in translation, including Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.Ê Students also research the subsequent life of the Arthur story through the 19th century (TennysonÕs Idylls of the King) and contemporary versions such as the film Excalibur.Ê ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC205/305 or FST261/361Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð alternating 2-hr and 3-hr seminars weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC205/305, FST261/361 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), take-home exam (60%). Courses: R3A C3C ÕJust like in Thelma and LouiseÕ:Ê Feminism and Film Unit enrolment code HEA278/378 (Hobart) Introduces students to a genre of films influenced by contemporary feminism; some operations of film as cultural practice and the interaction between gender, representation and the consumption of film. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). Courses: R3A LA Noir: Film Noir and Hollywood Unit enrolment code HEA279/379 (Hobart) Introduces students to the formal conventions and narratives of the genre of film noir. Film noir is then used to examine theoretical and technical aspects of film study such as spectatorship and shot-by-shot analysis. Film noirÕs relation to Hollywood elucidates relations between film and one of the largest and longest-running film-producing industries. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). Courses: R3A Romantic Poetry Unit enrolment code HEA280/380 (Launceston, video-link to Burnie) Looks at the Romantic movement in terms of the reality and metaphor provided by the industrial action of the ÔframebreakersÕ; it looks at Blake as a possible custodian of the social conscience and WordsworthÕs reimagining of the Noble Savage. ColeridgeÕs poetry provides a discussion of art and the subconscious; while KeatsÕs poetry introduces the notion of disease as artistic inspiration. Students will also be introduced to some of the ÔinvisibleÕ women Romantic writers, such as Dorothy Wordsworth, Mary Lamb and Hannah More. The unit provides excellent theoretical groundwork for a study of the novel in 19th century. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CA Cranston ¥ÊLtn, int, Brn, by video-link, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA221/321, HEA278/378 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr unseen exam (40%). Courses: R3A The Novel in the Nineteenth Century Unit enrolment code HEA282/382 (Launceston, video-link to Burnie) Examines the attempted usurpation of the feminine in favour of science; form and function in DickensÕs work; the various discourses at work in Emily BronteÕs novel; through to HardyÕs novel, where students are introduced to early Feminist ideas, along with 20th-century pessimism as an ÔartÕ. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CA Cranston ¥ÊLtn, int, Brn by video-link, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly; dist.ed includes optional weekend study sessions ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA221/321, HEA278/378 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr unseen exam (40%). Courses: R3A Modernism in British Literature 1910Ð1930: Prose Fiction Unit enrolment code HEA283/383 (Launceston) Reviews and investigates the definition of Modernism as applied to a variety of poetic styles and texts produced in Britain between 1910 and 1930. Interaction is examined with innovations in 19thcentury prose, European visual arts, Chinese and Japanese poetry in the vernacular and in translation. The unit also reviews Modernism in relation to prose styles and texts, with work of DH Lawrence, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf providing a focus for study. Expatriation, social developments in late 19th and early 20th centuries, feminism, psychology, methods of production and publication, and colonialism all provide contexts for discussion. Formal developments include the stream-ofconsciousness novel and short fiction. ¥ÊN.B. study schools will be held in Launceston onlyÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek ¥ÊLtn, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEE211/311 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000-word analysis (15% ea), 2,500-word essay (20%), 3-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Modernism in British Literature: Poetry Unit enrolment code HEA284/384 (Launceston, video-link to Hobart and Burnie) Reviews and investigates the definition of Modernism as applied to a variety of poetic styles and texts produced in Britain between 1910 and 1930. Interaction is examined with innovations in 19th-century prose, European visual arts, Chinese and Japanese poetry in the vernacular and in translation. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, Brn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA211/311, HEA279/379/380 ¥ÊassessÊ seminar presentation with 1,000-word paper (20%), 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A National Fictions: American Writing 1850Ð1914 Unit enrolment code HEA285/385 (Hobart) Focusing on American prose and poetry from the 19th and early 20th centuries, the unit examines interactions between literary writing, literary history and discourses of nationhood. Areas of concern include: myths of national origin and destiny; the textual negotiation of issues of democracy and individualism, and the ways in which such negotiations are complicated by questions of gender, race and class; the representation of important cultural sites such as the frontier, the city and the plantation; the construction of ÔclassicÕ and marginal literatures. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Davidson ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Sexuality and the Subject in Fiction Unit enrolment code HEA286/386 (Hobart) Analyses the ways in which sexuality is represented in fiction and film. The texts selected for study span from BalzacÕs novella, SarrasineÊ Ðmuch later the subject of Roland BarthesÕ landmark critical study, S/ZÊ Ð to the 1993 film, Basic Instinct.Ê The unit will ask questions about the relationship between sexuality and gender and the construction of subjectivity. It will also examine the ways in which sexualised subjects are constructed by genre. These issues will be considered in view of what Michel Foucault termed the Ôdiscursive deployment of sexualityÕ from the 19th century to the present. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E McMahon ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Recent American Prose Unit enrolment code HEA287/387 (Hobart) Examines a variety of American fictional, autobiographical and journalistic prose works from the mid-1960s to the present in relation to generic, cultural and political developments. An ongoing concern is critical engagement with the concept of postmodernism. Other topics of discussion include: the articulation of racial, sexual and gendered subjectivities; contexts of the production and consumption of individual texts; tensions and connections between realism and experimentalism as modes of writing practice; the relations of contemporary genres to other media such as film, TV and hypertext. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Davidson ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Postmodern American Poetry Unit enrolment code HEA288/388 (Hobart) Surveys the important movements in poetry in North America since World War II: the Beats, the Black Mountain school, New York school, the Harlem and San Francisco Renaissances, through to the many strands of contemporary Language writing. Students study in depth the work of such important figures as William Burroughs, Allen Ginsburg, Bernadette Mayer, John Ashbery, and Lyn Hejinian. Other important documents in the history of postmodern American poetry, included in this study, are Donald AllenÕs 1960 anthology The New American Poetry,Ê the volume of poetics that accompanied that anthology and Paul HooverÕs Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology,Ê and the critical work of Marjorie Perloff. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Gender and Nation Unit enrolment code HEA289/389 (Hobart) Surveys 20th-century Australian writing, with a focus on gender and womenÕs writing, and in the context of recent developments in Australian and (post)colonial cultural history. Organised thematically, the unit is designed to foreground the tenuous and yet radical cultural authority offered to womenÕs cultural work in the nationalist project of white Australian literature. Notions of canon and nation formation, literary value, history, nature and landscape are all called into question through an analysis of the representation of gender, race, class, sexuality and nation in fictional and historical texts. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF262/362Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Moore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF262/362 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500-word review essay (20%), 2,500-word essay (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Writing Narrative Unit enrolment code HEA290/390 (Launceston) Is designed to heighten the studentÕs understanding of writing for an audience in relation to the following types of non-fiction narrative: biographical and autobiographical narrative; feature article for print and radio; review; short drama. Techniques used include: drafting, editing, research, marketing and submission. Regular workshops are used in conjunction with theoretical issues, including readerresponse theory. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA202/302 ¥ÊassessÊ submissions in 3 types of narrative nominated in end-of-sem portfolio (total length 4,000 words)(90%), endof-sem viva, based on discussion of two of the pieces submitted (10%). Courses: R3A The German Film: More than One Hundred Years of German Cinema Unit enrolment code HEA291/391 Provides an introduction to the narrative analysis of German films in a historical and socio-political context. For a fuller description, see HEG304. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEG304Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEG304 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,500-2,000-word essays (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Post-1945 German Film Unit enrolment code HEA292/392 Provides a narrative analysis of German films in an historical and sociopolitical context. For a fuller description, HEG312. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEG312Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HEG312 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,500-2,000-word essays (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Research Project Unit enrolment code HEA375 (Launceston) Involves structured reading and writing on a topic agreed on between the individual student and a supervisor and approved by the Head of School. Students are expected to employ the skills and conceptual knowledge acquired in earlier units to investigate an appropriate issue or topic. ¥ÊN.B. the HoSÕs approval is required for enrolment in this unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek, Dr CA Cranston, Dr N Shaw ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊassessÊ 7,000-word essay (100%); or alternatively, 3,500-word essay (50%), 3-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Research Project Unit enrolment code HEA376 (Launceston) One semester of HEA375. ¥ÊN.B. the HoSÕs approval is required for enrolment in this unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek, Dr CA Cranston, Dr N Shaw ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 ¥ÊprereqÊ at least 20% at level 200 in English or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 3,500-word essay (100%). Courses: R3A English (Honours) units Honours Prerequisites Requirements for entry to English 4 (Honours) are a major in English, and a Grade-Point Average of 6.5 or higher in 75% of English units at 200 and 300 levels. Students should contact the Honours Coordinator (Dr Elizabeth McMahon) for further information. The required unit (HEA411) and a selection of other units will be offered by video-link between Hobart and Launceston. Unit title weight sem campus code Honours Long Essay 40% [fy] HEA402 Research Methodology and Writing 15% [2] [HL] HEA411 plus three of the following units: Reading Theory 15% [1] [HL] HEA406 Postcolonial Narratives 15% [1] [HL] HEA412 Endangered Female Bodies in Colonial Space 15% [1] [HL] HEA415 Author for Special Study: David Foster 15% [1] [LH] HEA425 Language Writing 15% [na] [HL] HEA445 ShakespeareÕs Stage: The Play of Power 15% [1] [HL] HEA475 English 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HEA400/401 The Honours (English 4) course provides an opportunity for students to study a range of literary studies units at advanced level and to complete a substantial piece of research work. The course is designed to introduce students to the advanced study of ÔEnglishÕ and the many possibilities that currently fall under that disciplinary heading, and to provide opportunities for qualifying for postgraduate work in the field. The course comprises four units of coursework and a long essay. Intending students are asked to state by late December 1998 their preferences for three of the units offered in 1999. HEA411 Research Methodology and Writing is a compulsory Honours unit. Students are advised to consult the Fourth-Year (Honours) noticeboard for detailed reading lists for units. ¥ÊHbt ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, with Grade-Point Average of 6.5 or higher. Courses: R4A Honours Long Essay Unit enrolment code HEA402 Topic and supervisor to be nominated by the student in consultation with the School. ¥Ê40% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊassessÊ research essay of 12,500 words. Courses: R4A Reading Theory Unit enrolment code HEA406 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Examines in detail three major cultural and literary theoretical works by some of the leading names in the field, Fredric Jameson, Donna Haraway, and Jacques Derrida. The three books for study, though quite different in style and substance, are nevertheless linked by their interest in the future, and it is this utopian impulse that will serve to focus our investigation. In view of this, two SF novels are listed as useful preliminary reading. A feature of this unit will be the fact that we will read these books in their entirety. In this way it is hoped that a more concrete understanding of how long works are structured, argued and evidenced will be gained. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr I Buchanan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A Rereading Chaucer Unit enrolment code HEA410 Rereads the position of Chaucer within the literary canon through an examination of developments within Chaucer Studies during the last decade. Specific topics include: Chaucer and political discourses (New Historicism), the documents surrounding Cicely de Chaumpaigne (feminism), Queer Chaucer, ÔChaucer effectsÕ including film, anti-imperial Chaucer (Australian, the US and Heritage Chaucer in the UK). Texts may include The Canterbury TalesÕÊ Tales, including the film by Pier Paolo Pasolini, Troilus and Criseyde and Boece. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Research Methodology and Writing Unit enrolment code HEA411 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) This compulsory unit aims to develop studentsÕ research and writing skills to advanced levels, as is appropriate for fourth-year (Honours) work in literary studies. Each of the staff teaching Honours English will contribute to the teaching of the unit. The specific focus of work in the unit will be on bibliographical methodologies, the practices of critical writing, the stages of a research project, writing up the project and formatting the final draft. Students will be assessed in three main areas, each worth a third of the final result for this unit: an oral presentation about the field and methodology of the long essay; a written bibliographical task and draft research essay submissions. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Mead (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A Postcolonial Narratives Unit enrolment code HEA412 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Postcolonial writing has changed the way we read. Over the past forty years, literary and critical texts have challenged canons, transformed notions of form and genre, raised fundamental questions about language and readership. Postcolonialism has resituated readers in relation to contemporary and historical texts alike. Postcolonial theory developed concurrently with other theoretical projects, including poststructuralism, feminism, and Marxist criticism. This unit reviews connections between postcolonial theory and these developments. A working list of topics for discussion includes: language, representation, Ôwriting back,Õ colonial texts, oral literature, hybridity, gender, production and dissemination of texts. The unit investigates theoretical issues in relation to narratives written primarily in English, and relating to Africa, the Indian subcontinent and the Caribbean. Genres include autobiography, poetic narrative, short-story sequence, extended prose narrative, and the Ôrealistic novel.Õ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Peek (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A Endangered Female Bodies in Colonial Space Unit enrolment code HEA415 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Considers the figure of the endangered female body as it is represented in settler literature written in English. Framed by a study of the originating captivity narrative (with female as victim) and of transcripts from the Salem witchcraft hearings (with females as both victims and victimisers), the seminar considers the textualising of this figure within the power relations circulating through colonial texts, with a particular focus on Australia. ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof L Frost ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A Author for Special Study: David Foster Unit enrolment code HEA425 (Launceston, video-link to Hobart) Postman, rock musician, Korean Karati Black Belt, alchemist, PhD in Biochemistry, classicist, bushman, environmentalist, intellectual, David Foster canvasses the whole of Western literary tradition in a lifelong quest for the knowledge commanded by the Delphic oracle. For Australian novelist Foster, Ôknow[ing] thyselfÕ means knowing the place of human kind within the order of the universe. The unit analyses the multigeneric and multidisciplinary characteristics of FosterÕs fiction, highlighting his sustained meditation upon the questions Ôwhy write?Õ and Ôwhy read?Õ The six texts for study in 1999 are The Pure LandÊ (Ôstream of consciousnessÕ fiction), PlumbumÊ (satire), TestosteroÊ (tragi-comedy), The Adventures of Christian Rosy CrossÊ (allegory), The Glade within the GroveÊ (Ôpostmodernist epicÕ and pastoral elegy), and The Ballad of ErinungarahÊ (ballad). ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Shaw ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A Fictocriticism Unit enrolment code HEA435 Introduces students to developments within the discipline ÔEnglishÕ currently called Fictocriticism. Postmodern critical and creative work is moving rapidly away from, on the one hand, the traditional academic genres of essay, chapter and journal article and, on the other, the creative genres of fiction and poetry. A hybrid kind of writing, part critical, part theoretical, part creative, is proving influential in the reformulation of literary and cultural studies, not least for its recent exposure of what has always been the literariness of critical genres. This unit studies some of the influential work of cultural commentary that is currently being done by writers working outside and against disciplinary generic norms, and the crucial questions of subjectivity, objectivity, value and cultural politics they are facing. There is the opportunity for students to do fictocritical work for their assessment. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Language Writing Unit enrolment code HEA445 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) ÕLanguageÕ writing is a broad term to describe various genealogies and practices of recent and contemporary experimental writing, particularly in poetry and poetics. While the focus is mainly on North American writing of the Language school, broadly defined, the unit also includes study of experimental and aleatory forms of writing from the UK and Australia. The kinds of contemporary writing studied will include L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry, generically hybrid forms of poetry and poetics, aleatory writing (including forms influenced by computer and media technology), Ôwriting throughÕ the work of precursors, and critical readings. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê ShakespeareÕs Stage: The Play of Power Unit enrolment code HEA475 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Elizabethan and Jacobean players were largely excluded from earning a living within the boundaries of respectable London. Instead they entertained the city from its margins, with plays of remarkable violence, wit, and sensuality. Their theatre survived by reshaping narratives of the distant past or of exotic foreign locations, but the plays still engaged with the deepest conflicts and contradictions of their own time and place. Much recent work on Shakespeare and his contemporaries has been concerned with the difficult task of interpreting the relationship between the plays and the culture that produced them. This unit provides opportunities to test some of this work against a selection of Elizabethan and Jacobean histories, tragedies and comedies which depict dynamic power struggles within the family and the state. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Gaby (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê15% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay. Courses: R4A French Ð School of English and European Languages and Literatures Coordinator: Dr B Peeters Students who choose to study French are motivated not only by the practical benefits that fluency in French procures, but also by the educational benefits of studying a language situated at an interesting cultural and linguistic distance from English. French attracts many foreign-language students through its ability to give the learner another window on experience while providing a satisfying learning experience given its connections to English. Learning how educated French-speakers speak and write is also a valuable way of appreciating how oneÕs native language is constructed and therefore improving oneÕs ability to write clear discursive prose. Furthermore, the French language opens the door to a rich culture that spans from medieval texts to contemporary literature and cinema. The appeal of French culture, from Descartes to Foucault, from the Palais de VersaillesÊ to the Pyramide du Louvre,Ê from Voltaire to Simone de Beauvoir, from Couperin to Messiaen, from Ingres to Chagall, from the Sans-CulottesÊ to the ÔculotÕÊ of Jean-Paul Gautier, forms part of the culture of our fin-de-si•cleÊ and is a continually fascinating area of study. The French section offers a range of units to cater for students with no former knowledge of French to students who have completed secondary awards in French and want to continue their studies by concentrating on perfecting their language skills. Having gained a certain fluency in the language, students can go on to specialise in the study of French literature or linguistics at the 200 or 300 level. Our section aims towards approaching these disciplines as they are studied in Frenchspeaking countries and places an accent on contemporary approaches to language and text; Literature units, for example, focus on the development of studentsÕ ability to express themselves in French on literary topics; Linguistics units provide students with insights into the real functioning of the French language. Students who obtain high results in third year may continue their studies at fourth-year level with advanced language study and a research subject. The French section also offers the possibility of studying French at postgraduate level. Major in French for students enrolled in a Bachelor degree There are two entry-points, depending on the previous knowledge of enrolling students: Students who have studied French below Stage 4 or who have not previously studied the language should enrol in French 1 (HEF100). This unit, which has no prerequisite, is designed to bring students to a competence equivalent at least to TCE French Stage 4. Students who have been awarded an OA or an HA in TCE French Stage 4 (or an equivalent result in an equivalent program) should normally enrol in Oral and Written French 2 (HEF201) as well as in one additional level 200 unit. HEF201 is an advanced post-TCE course which places its main stress on the development of a sound command of the four language skills Ð listening, reading, speaking and writing. N.B. Students who have been awarded an SA in TCE French Stage 4 (or an equivalent result in an equivalent program) and, more generally, students who are not sure whether to enrol in HEF100 or HEF201 should consult the subject coordinator (Dr Bert Peeters). Transfers from HEF100 to HEF201 and vice versa are possible early in the year after consultation and on the strength of results achieved by the student. Route (a): 25% at 100 level; 37.5% at 200 level; 50% at 300 level Route (b): 37.5% at 200 level; 75% at 300 level (taken over not less than two years) Units offered in 1999 at levels 200 and 300 For those students wishing to continue their study of the language, there are various units which provide for advanced work in language, linguistics and literature. Unit title weight sem campus code Core units (all year-long) Oral and Written French 2 25% [fy] [H] HEF201 Oral and Written French 3 25% [fy] [H] HEF301 Oral and Written French 3B 25% [fy] [H] HEF302 Electives offered in 1999: Semester 1 Business French 12.5% [1] [H] HEF303 Twentieth Century French Theatre 12.5% [1] [H] HEF205/305 The French Novel (1750-1900) 12.5% [1] [H] HEF308/408 French Linguistics: Syntax A 12.5% [1] [H] HEF309/409 Semester 2 Trois textes, trois temps, trois regards: le Maghreb 12.5% [2] [H] HEF204/304 French Linguistics: Pragmatics 12.5% [2] [H] HEF206/306 The French Novel (1900Ð1950) 12.5% [2] [H] HEF307 N.B. Native speakers of French should consult the subject coordinator for information concerning a suitable course of study. Other students with some background in French, upon recommendation of the subject coordinator of the section, may be accepted into second or even third year French units. Degree students may not enrol in a lower and a higher level of the language concurrently and may not enrol in a lower level after they have passed a higher level of the same language. Double major (taken over 2 years) Students wishing to undertake a double major in French must consult with the convenor of the section at the earliest possible opportunity to insure availability of suitable units. They will be expected to take additional units at 200/300 levels to the value of 62.5%. Single units in the French program Students who wish to include French in a degree other than the BA and whose degree structure prevents them from taking a full major or minor may choose to concentrate on learning the language and further developing their linguistic competence. They should take (part of) the following sequence: HEF100, HEF201, HEF301, HEF302, HEF303. Unit title weight sem campus code French 1 25% [fy] [H] HEF100 Oral and Written French 2 25% [fy] [H] HEF201 Oral and Written French 3 25% [fy] [H] HEF301 Oral and Written French 3B 25% [fy] [H] HEF302 Business French 12.5% [1] [H] HEF303 French 4 (Honours) A distinction in HEF302 or a high distinction in HEF301 is required for entry, together with at least two distinctions in the proposed area of specialisation (literature or linguistics). Postgraduate Students who succesfully complete the French 4 (Honours) year with a result of HU (Upper Second-class Honours) or above may apply to enrol in a postgraduate degree by research at the University. Interested students should consult the subject coordinator. Diploma in Modern Languages (French) The French section also offers a Diploma in Modern Languages (French). This Diploma is for those with or without a previous degree who wish to upgrade their language competency. Students must consult subject coordinator (Dr Bert Peeters) before enrolling. They will need to have successfully completed HEF100 or TCE French Stage 4 (HA). The course consists of two or three years part time study and involves 50% at 200 level in French and 50% at 300 level in French. Changes to regulations Students who entered the BA before 1 January 1998 will be governed by requirements for the major, double major and minor which applied up to and including 1997. Continuing students are advised to turn to page xx for details of the structure of the various majors and the requirements for the BA. Location and notices The School is situated at the Hobart campus on the top floor of the Humanities Building. The office of the Secretary of English and European Languages and Literatures, to whom enquiries should be directed in the first instance, is (Hbt) Room 557. The French sectionÕs notice board is opposite Room 568. Please do not hesitate to contact the School in person or by telephone, (03) 6226 2347, if you have any questions about the information in this Handbook. Staff may be consulted during their office hours, as posted. Preparing for the course A good dictionary and reference grammar are indispensable. The following are recommended: Collins-Robert French Dictionary, or New Shorter French and English Dictionary SN Rosenberg et al, HarperÕs Grammar of French, or A Judge and FG Healey, A Reference Grammar of Modern French Also very useful are: Le Petit Robert Le Petit Larousse During the long vacation and the mid-year break, literature students should read as many of the prescribed texts as possible in a preliminary way in order to prepare for their more intensive study during semester time. Level 100 unit French 1 Unit enrolment code HEF100 Places its main stress on the development of a sound basic knowledge of the structure of the language and on practice in the four basic language skills bringing students to a degree of linguistic competence equivalent at least to TCE French Stage 4. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Hafez-Ergaut, Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð sem 1: 2x1-hr lectures, 2x1-hr tutorials, 1-hr language lab; sem 2: 2x1hr lectures, 2x1-hr tutorials, 1-hr oral/aural class ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (20%) 2-hr exam (mid-year, 20%), oral test (wk 26, 20%), 3-hr exam (end-of-year, 40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Level 200/300 units Oral and Written French 2 Unit enrolment code HEF201 Is an advanced post-TCE course which places its main emphasis on the development of a sound command of the four language skills of listening, reading, speaking and writing. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters, Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly + CALL ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF100 or TCE French Stage 4 (HA) ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (20%), 2 tests (week 14, 15%), 2-hr exam (mid-year, 20%), 2 tests (week 26, 15%), 3-hr exam (end-of-year, 30%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Trois textes, trois temps, trois regards: le Maghreb Unit enrolment code HEF204/304 The Maghreb plays an important role in the three texts studied in this unit. Despite this connection, there are many political, literary and philosophical issues that separate GideÕs LÕimmoralisteÊ (1902), CamusÕ LÕŽtrangerÊ (1942) and Ben JellounÕs La nuit sacrŽeÊ (1987). The unit will focus on each text as an independent literary work while also offering a comparative reading of the narratives and a study of the changing status of the Maghreb in relation to France over the 20th century. ¥ÊN.B. not available to students enrolled in HEF302Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Hafez-Ergaut ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF100 or TCE French Stage 4 (HA) ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial presentation + paper (20%), 1,200 to 1,500-word essay (30%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Twentieth Century French Theatre Unit enrolment code HEF205/305 Helps students of French to expand their ÔusefulÕ vocabulary and to improve their fluency in the language through participation in class readings of the plays. The unit offers an initiation into the stimulating world of 20th century French theatre, where brilliant stagecraft and fine psychological insight are used to raise fundamental human issues. ¥ÊN.B. not availabe to students enrolled in HEF302Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Hafez-Ergaut ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF100 or TCE French Stage 4 (HA) ¥ÊassessÊ test (10%), 1,200Ð1,500-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C French Linguistics: Pragmatics Unit enrolment code HEF206/306 Pragmatics, usually defined as the study of (culturally determined) rules and conventions underlying linguistic interaction between speakers, is a rapidly expanding field of scholarship. This unit aims to familiarise students with some of the main topics of interest in (cross-cultural) pragmatics, with illustrations drawn from French and from situations where native speakers of French and of (Australian) English encounter each other and engage in discourse using each otherÕs language. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF100 or TCE French Stage 4 (HA) ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (40%), 2hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Level 300 units Oral and Written French 3 Unit enrolment code HEF301 Builds on the competency achieved by students in HEF201, providing further training in selected topics in French grammar. The unit also includes two major assignments to test written comprehension skills, and composition on set topics. Oral skills are developed in tutorials. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters, Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF201 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (20%), 2x1,300-word essays (20%), written test (sem 1, 10%), 2 oral tests (30%), 3-hr exam (end-of-year, 20%). Courses: R1A R3A Oral and Written French 3B Unit enrolment code HEF302 Builds on the competency achieved by students in HEF301, providing advanced training in selected topics in French grammar and in translation. The unit also includes two major assignments to further test written comprehension skills, and composition on set topics. Oral skills continue to be developed in the tutorials. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters, Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF301 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (20%), 2x1,300-word essays (20%), written test (sem 1, 10%), 2 oral tests (30%), 3-hr exam (end-of-year, 20%). Courses: R1A R3A Business French Unit enrolment code HEF303 Enables students to read and understand articles and documents in French in the areas of business and commerce. Subjects covered will include French companies, employment, banking, taxation and business letters. Authentic French documents will be used. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF201 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (40%), 3-hr exam (60%). Courses: R1A R3A The French Novel (1900Ð1950) Unit enrolment code HEF307 Offers a detailed study of three Nobel-Prize winning 20th-century authors, Gide, Mauriac and Camus, who remain highly relevant to contemporary thinking. The unit raises issues such as the quest for authenticity, the oppressiveness of traditional structures and the call to involvement in the existential struggle. Each author is studied within his historical and cultural setting. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Hafez-Ergaut ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF201 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial presentation and paper (20%), 1,500-word essay (30%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A The French Novel (1750-1900) Unit enrolment code HEF308/408 Traces the development of the novel in France from the early ÔmŽmoires romancŽsÕ and the picaresque genre of the 1750s to the sparkling tales of Voltaire and the mingled realism and romanticism of Balzac and FlaubertÕs novelistic world. Classics of world literature such as CandideÊ and Madame BovaryÊ are analysed in detail. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Hafez-Ergaut ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF301 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial presentation and paper (20%), 1,500-word essay (30%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A R4A French Linguistics: Syntax A Unit enrolment code HEF309/409 The so-called artificial and/or arbitrary nature of the French past participle agreement rules has long been recognised. This unit attempts to provide an overview of discussions and treatments of the relevant rules by grammarians (starting from ClŽment Marot in the 16th century) and linguists, including a new formulation in which the notion of direct object no longer plays any role. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr seminars weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEF201 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R1A R3A R4A French Linguistics: Syntax B Unit enrolment code HEF310/410 Provides an overview of attempts to come to grips with ergativity in French. Ergative languages usually have different case endings for the first or primary argument (traditionally called the ÔsubjectÕ) of transitive and of intransitive verbs. According to a large number of contemporary linguists, traces of ergativity can, however, be found in non-ergative languages as well. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê French Linguistics: Semantics Unit enrolment code HEF311/411 Why do we say in French ÔJe veux quÕil vienneÕ but not ÔJe veux que je vienneÕ? Why do we say ÔSylvie est bleue des yeuxÕ but not ÔSylvie est bronzŽe de peauÕ? Differences such as these, which at first sight have nothing to do with meaning, but would appear to be purely idiosyncratic, will be examined, and it will be shown that there is an often ignored perspective in the scientific study of languages, which may be called Ôthe semantics of grammarÕ. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê French (Honours) units French 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HEF400/401 Intending students should consult with the French lecturers at the earliest opportunity for information on and guidance with the choice of units. Students normally take HEF402 and HEF403 (core) and, according to their area of specialisation, two of HEF405ÐHEF406/HEF409ÐHEF410 (see HEF309/409; HEF310/410 above) or HEF407Ð408 (see HEF308/408 above) ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters, Dr A Hafez-Ergaut ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0%, see value of individual units ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, and Distinction (DN) in at least 2 units relevant to the area of specialisation (linguistics or literature) and either an HD for HEF301 Oral and Written French 3,Ê DN for HEF302 Oral and Written French 3B.Ê Courses: R4A Oral and Written French 4 Unit enrolment code HEF402 Contains oral and translation work as prescribed for HEF302 Oral and Written French 3B. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters, Ms J Becker ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hours weekly ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments (20%), written test (sem 1, 20%), 2 oral tests (30%), 3-hr exam (end-of-year, 30%). Courses: R4A Thesis Unit enrolment code HEF403 Students prepare a dissertation of 40Ð60 pages, in French, on a topic to be determined in consultation with the lecturers (due by 1 November 1999). ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê50% ¥Êfull year. Courses: R4A French Linguistics: Phonology Unit enrolment code HEF405 Phonology is, or should be, the study of sounds from the viewpoint of their distinctive function or relevance for communication. The unit aims at teaching students the basic principles of one among many phonological theories, namely: functional phonology. It seeks to provide insights in the sound structure of French (including modern regional variation). ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), 2,500-word essay in French (30%), end-of-year 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R4A Special Topic in French Linguistics Unit enrolment code HEF406 Is a study of a topic in French linguistics of special interest to the student. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B Peeters ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay in French (40%), 2-hr exam (end-of-year, 60%). Courses: R4A Special Topic in French Literature Unit enrolment code HEF407 Is a study of a topic in French literature of special interest to the student. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê German Ð School of English and European Languages and Literatures Coordinator: Dr E Meidl The School offers a range of German (HEG) units which may be studied as individual units within the BA course, or as part of a major or a double major in German. Students from other faculties interested only in learning the language may enrol in the relevant language skills units and/or in Business German. Native speakers of German should consult the Convenor of the German section concerning a suitable course of study. Students with no knowledge of German find beginnersÕ German to be an enjoyable, manageable and satisfying experience. All the communicative skills of understanding, speaking, reading and writing are practised. German is very close to English. Both languages, German and English, are based on the same linguistic roots and principles. They share a wide range of concepts and vocabulary. Students who have studied German at school and successfully completed TCE German Stage 4 (HA) will be accepted into the second year German units. The German literature units are designed to provide a study of literary texts and cultural practices, authors, periods and literatures from the medieval period to the present day. They include German, Austrian and Swiss literatures and range from drama, poetry, novel to film studies. The film study units are cross-listed with the English major. In addition, units in Business German are offered for those students who wish to take advantage of the economic importance of the German language. There are scholarships available for study in Germany, and every year a good percentage of third year students are successful. There is also a work-experience arrangement with Germany, primarily intended for those students interested in Business German. A Bachelor of Arts degree with German is highly rated by many employers because of the combined skills it brings: literacy, communication skills, cultural awareness, analytical thinking and the ability to alter oneÕs perspective. The diplomatic service, foreign banking, community services, tourism, international law and medicine are areas where the knowledge of German is a definite bonus. Students who are interested in using their German studies for teaching qualifications and who are considering applying for the BTeach are advised to consult the Faculty of EducationÕs information booklet The Bachelor of TeachingÊ or to contact the Education Faculty office on the Launceston campus. The School of English and European Languages and Literatures at Hobart offers two undergraduate courses in German, a Major/Honours course and a Diploma. 1) Major/Honours in German for students enrolled in a Bachelor degree Notes: Degree students may not enrol in a lower and a higher level of the same language concurrently unless approval has been obtained from the Coordinator. Degree students may not enrol in a lower level after they have passed a higher level of the language. Major in German A major in German will be 112.5% Those wishing to proceed to a double major and/or Honours in German should discuss their program with the Coordinator of the German section. Students undertaking a major in German will take the core units and electives as follows: Route (a): 25% 100 level; a minimum of 37.5% at 200 level and a minimum of 50% at 300 level Route (b): a minimum of 37.5% at 200 level; 75% at 300 level (taken over at least two years) Double major A double major in German will be 175% Students undertaking a double major (taken over 2 years) will be required to take in addition to their major, a further 12.5% at 200 level and 50% at 300 level. 100 level HEG100 German 1 (worth 25%) is an intensive beginnersÕ unit (5 hours a week plus 1 hour CALL) designed to bring students to a degree of linguistic competence equivalent at least to TCE German Stage 4 (HA). It has no prerequisite. 200 and 300 levels For those students wishing to continue their studies of the language, there are various units which provide for advanced work in language, literature, and vocational units such as Basic and Advanced Business German. HEG201 and HEG203, presuppose the successful completion of (a) HEG100 or (b) TCE German Stage 4 (HA). The units concentrate on building competence in aural, oral, reading and writing skills, but also introduce students to some major contemporary writers through a detailed study of one or more of their shorter works, and to matters relevant to business dealings in and with German-speaking countries. HEG201 is a core unit. Students in doubt about whether to enrol in HEG100 or in the series HEG201-203 should consult the Convenor of the German section. Transfers are possible early in the year after consultation and on the strength of results achieved by the student. In order to complete the major, students choose an appropriate number of units from the series HEG301Ð312. HEG301 and HEG302 are core units. Upon completion, students will have reached an advanced level of competence in communicating (listening, speaking, reading, writing) in current German, and will have studied in depth major representative works of German literature from the eighteenth century to the present day, within the context of their cultural and socio-political background. German 4 (Honours) Requirements for entry to German 4 (Honours) are a major in German and a Grade Point Average (GPA) of 7 (Distinction) or higher in 75% of German units at 200 and 300 levels. Students should contact the Convenor of German (Dr Eva Meidl) for further information. Honours consists of highly advanced language work, a detailed study of major literary areas and linguistics. Students are also expected to undertake research for a thesis (in English or German) on a topic of their own choosing within the fields of German language teaching or German literature. Honours prepares students for successful study at a German university and a possible future career in Germanistik. Preparing for the course A good dictionary and reference grammar are indispensable. It is recommended that the following be purchased: Collins German-English/English-German Dictionary Duden Stilwšrterbuch M Durell, HammerÕs German Grammar and Usage,Ê 3rd edn. 2) Diploma in Modern Languages (German) The Diploma is designed for those with or without degrees who wish to upgrade their language competence. Students must consult the Coordinator of the German section before enrolling. They will need to have successfully completed HEG100 or TCE German Stage 4 (HA). The course consists of two or three years part-time study and involves 50% at 200 level in German, 50% at 300 level in German. Postgraduate Students who successfully complete the German 4 (Honours) year with a result of HU (Upper Second-class Honours) or above may apply to enrol in a postgraduate degree by research at the University. Interested students should consult the relevant section of the Handbook. Units offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code 100 level German 1 25% [fy] [H] HEG100 200 level German Language Skills 2 25% [fy] [H] HEG201 Basic Business German 12.5% [1] [H] HEG203 Introduction to Post-1945 German Literature 12.5% [2] [H] HEG213 300 level German Language Skills 3 25% [fy] [H] HEG301 German Language Skills 3B 25% [fy] [H] HEG302 The German Film: More than One Hundred Years of German Cinema 12.5% [1] [H] HEG304 Literature from Nietzsche to Brecht 12.5% [2] [H] HEG308 Poetry from Heine to Benn 12.5% [1] [H] HEG309 Post-1945 German Film 12.5% [2] [H] HEG312 Level 100 unit German 1 Unit enrolment code HEG100 Is an intensive beginnersÕ unit which aims to bring studentsÕ German language competence to a level at least equivalent to TCE stage 4. During the five contact hours the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing) are taught employing a communicative method and using some of the latest language teaching techniques such as CALL and language laboratory. CALL exercises are on a self-study basis. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms H Toledo ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5 hrs weekly plus 1hr CALL ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (40%), oral/aural exam (10%), 3-hr written exam (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ Di Donato et al, Deutsch: Na klar!Ê 2nd edn, (course book, workbook and lab manual). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Level 200/300 units German Language Skills 2 Unit enrolment code HEG201 Employs a communicative method and a thematic approach to bring students to an intermediate level of competence in contemporary German. It gives equal weight to all four macro-skills: listening, reading, speaking and writing. ¥ÊN.B. if there is sufficient demand, this unit will be offered by video-link to students on the Launceston campus and at the NW Centre (Burnie)Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG100 or TCE German Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (50%), 3-hr written exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Basic Business German Unit enrolment code HEG203 Concentrates on matters relevant to business dealings in and with Germanspeaking countries. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG100 or TCE German Stage 4 (HA) ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (50%), 2-hr written exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Introduction to Post-1945 German Literature Unit enrolment code HEG213 Beginning with the division of Germany after World War II, the unit traces the divergence of the two cultures through the study of representative works of literature. It continues with the main developments that distinguished East and West German society and then traces German literature up to unification. Students gain an enriched appreciation of modern German literature, including an historical understanding of the interrelationships between East and West German culture. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG100 or TCE German Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000word essays (40%), 2-hr written exam (60%). Courses: R1A R3A Level 300 units German Language Skills 3 Unit enrolment code HEG301 Is an advanced language unit which expands upon HMG201 and further deepens the studentsÕ German language competency. The four language skills are broadened and further training is provided in reading and aural comprehension, speaking and writing. Work with authentic material and videos supports this integrated approach to language learning. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (50%), 3-hr written exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A German Language Skills 3B Unit enrolment code HEG302 Is a highly advanced language unit at pre-honours level which concentrates on a broadening of lexis and a deepening of complex grammatical structures in German. At this level, the principal emphasis is placed on developing sophistication in the creative skills of speaking and writing. Translation from and into German is a specialist, vocational skill which this unit neither aims nor attempts to teach. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG301 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (50%), 3-hr written exam (50%). Courses: R1A R3A Advanced Business German 3B Unit enrolment code HEG303 Enables students to communicate at an advanced level in the specialised, commercial language of one of the worldÕs largest and strongest economies, Germany, and other GermanÐspeaking countries of considerable business significance, such as Switzerland and Austria. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê The German Film: More than One Hundred Years of German Cinema Unit enrolment code HEG304 Provides an introduction to the narrative analysis of German films in a historical and socio-political context. A selection of films from the expressionistic era at the beginning of the 20th century to the golden years of UFA, will be studied in depth. This unit is taught in English and is cross-listed with English. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA291/391Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ German students HEG201; no prereq for students from other Schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA291/391 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,500-2,000-word essays (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R1A R3A Medieval German Language and Literature Unit enrolment code HEG305/405 Begins with the Proto-Indo-European Languages and traces the development of the German language with regard to lexis and syntax from Old High German, Middle High German, New High German to contemporary German. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Poetry of the Goethezeit Unit enrolment code HEG306/406 Against the background of Enlightenment and Romantic thought, this unit provides a detailed insight into the ideas and techniques of the major German poets of the period. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Drama and Fiction from Realism to Naturalism Unit enrolment code HEG307 Describes the tensions of the VormŠrz (1814-1848) and traces the social and political events from the failed revolution in 1848 through the rise of Prussia and the formation of the German Empire in 1871, to the end of the 19th century. The literature of this period, which was influenced and shaped by these events is studied by discussing in depth realists such as BŸchner, Hebbel and Fontane and the later naturalist Gerhart Hauptmann. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Literature from Nietzsche to Brecht Unit enrolment code HEG308 Against the background of German history from the late 19th century to the Second World War, this unit provides a detailed insight into the work of four major German-speaking authors of the period. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr written exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R1A R3A Poetry from Heine to Benn Unit enrolment code HEG309 Provides, against the background of Realist and Modernist thought, a detailed insight into the ideas and techniques of the major German poets of the period. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr written exam in June (60%). Courses: R1A R3A Classical German Drama Unit enrolment code HEG310 Covers in detail the Ôgolden ageÕ of German literature, which begins with the works of ÔAufklŠrerÕ such as Lessing, continues with the works of the young Goethe, and ends with the late Austrian classicist Franz Grillparzer. During the period under study, far-reaching changes took place in social, literary and intellectual life, which profoundly influenced later European as well as German thought and literature. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê The Contemporary Novelle Unit enrolment code HEG311 Against the background of German history since the Second World War, this unit provides a detailed insight into the work of four major, contemporary, German-speaking writers through the study of a short novel by each. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Post-1945 German Film Unit enrolment code HEG312 Provides a narrative analysis of German films in an historical and sociopolitical context. The in-depth study of a selection of films from the German Democratic Republic, the German Federal Republic as well as films from the united Germany of today enable students to appreciate German cinema. The unit is taught in English and is cross-listed with English. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA292/392Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Meidl ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 5 hrs fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201, no prereq for students from other Schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HEA292/392 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,500Ð2,000-word essays (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R1A R3A German (Honours) units German 4 Ð Honours Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HEG400/401 Prerequisite: A major in German and distinctions in all 200/300 level core language units, and in a majority of the other 200/300 level units. Faculty prerequisites also apply. Students must take all of the units in the Honours series. [unit weight: 0%; see value of individual units.] ¥ÊHbt ¥ÊprereqÊ A major in German and distinctions in all 200/300 level core language units, and in a majority of the other 200/300 level units. Courses: R4A Language Skills Unit enrolment code HEG402 Is identical to HEG302; assessed at Honours level. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG301 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and tests (50%), 3-hr written exam (50%). Courses: R4A Thesis Unit enrolment code HEG404 Students prepare a thesis of 40Ð60 pages on a topic of their own choosing in the fields of German language teaching or literature. The thesis may be written in English or German and is to be submitted by 1 November 1999. With the permission of the School, Honours students may spend the mid-year vacation working on their thesis at a German university. Scholarships may be available to make this possible. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê50% ¥Êfull year. Courses: R4A Literature from Nietzsche to Brecht Unit enrolment code HEG408 Is identical to HEG308; assessed at Honours level. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr written exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R4A Poetry from Heine to Benn Unit enrolment code HEG409 Is identical to HEG309; assessed at Honours level. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr G Triffitt ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HEG201 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr written exam in June (60%). Courses: R4A Italian Ð School of English and European Languages and Literatures Coordinator: Dr T Flonta The Italian program is currently being taught out. Enrolments at the undergraduate level will be accepted in 1999 at fourth year level only. Italian 4 consists of highly advanced language work and a detailed study of major linguistics, civilisation and literary areas not covered by the normal major. Students are also expected to undertake research for a thesis in Italian on a topic of their own choosing within the fields of Italian language, literature or civilisation. Italian for music students Italian for Singers Unit enrolment code HEI200 (Hobart) Is a language unit for music students with no previous knowledge of Italian. The four language skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing) are taught, employing a communicative method. The unit places its main emphasis on the development of a sound basic knowledge of the structure of the language and on pronouncing the language with clarity and accuracy. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ execises and tests (50%), 3-hr end-of-yr exam (50%). Italian (Honours) units Italian 4 consists of highly advanced language work and a detailed study of major linguistics, civilisation and literary areas not covered by the normal major. Students are also expected to undertake research for a thesis in Italian on a topic of their own choosing within the fields of Italian language, literature or civilisation. Italian 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HEI400/401 Students who did not complete a double major in Italian should have taken at least one literature and/or civilisation unit at third year level. They should discuss with the convenor of the Italian section their choice of units at the beginning of third year. Three distinctions at third year level are required, and Faculty prerequisites apply. All units are compulsory. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% see individual units, (HEI400 totalling 100%, HEI401 totalling 50%) ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, including four units at 300 level, one of which should be HEI301 and satisfaction of the Faculty Grade-Point Average. Prospective students should note that the Italian discipline is being taught out and continuation of the honours program may not be possible. Courses: R4A Advanced Language Unit enrolment code HEI410 Consists of extensive reading and understanding of different registers of Italian. Intensive oral and written sessions give students the opportunity to improve considerably their language skills in most areas of general knowledge. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Flonta ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊassessÊ viva voce (50%), 3-hr written test (end-of-year 50%). Courses: R4A Italian Cinema of the Neorealism Unit enrolment code HEI413 Provides students with an understanding of the Neorealism as a cinematic experience and familiarises them with the works of some of the most talented film makers of the 20th century. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Flonta ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R4A Special Topic in Romance Linguistics Unit enrolment code HEI415 A linguistic topic concerning one or more Romance Languages is studied in depth. The topic will be chosen by the student after consultation with the lecturer responsible for the unit. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Flonta ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R4A Thesis Unit enrolment code HEI416 Students prepare a thesis of 40Ð60 pages in Italian or English on a topic of their own choosing in the fields of Italian language, literature or civilisation. The thesis is to be submitted by the end of second semester. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê50% ¥Êfull year. Courses: R4A Journalism and Mass Communications Ð interdisciplinary: School of English and European Languages and Literatures Coordinator: Prof L Frost This three-year major will be taught on the Hobart campus at at other sites in the city and will be available to students enrolled in other degree courses. Students completing a major in Journalism and Mass Communications will learn the craft of journalism in an environment that encourages critical thinking and the acquisition of knowledge. Students will be introduced to the technologies current in the fields of electronic and print journalism, and to the critical thinking about the implication of those technologies for the cultural sites within which they operate. As preparation for industry experience, they will receive a secure grounding in communication research methods and applications. By encouraging generic academic education as well as specialist technical learning, the course will prepare graduates both for current media positions and for those not yet invented. Graduates will be expected to be able to: ¥ communicate effectively ¥ organise and conduct research projects ¥ analyse modes of knowledge production ¥ understand complex interactions between media technologies, the context in which they operate, and the societal interests they serve ¥ develop a broad array of intellectual and practical capabilities ¥ articulate the interaction between theory and practice in journalism and media studies ¥ contribute to the development of areas of professional practice ¥ understand issues of gender, race, ethnicity and class, and the ethical issues of media practice in a differentiated and changing society. Course structure A major in Journalism and Mass Communications will comprise a minimum of 100% of units in Journalism (25%) at 100 level, plus 75% at 200 or 300 levels). Students will be able to take a double major weighted at 175% (25% at 100 level and 150% at 200 or 300 levels). In 1999, only the first year of units of the major will be offered. They are: Unit title weight sem campus code Communications 1A 12.5% [1] [H] HEJ101 Communications 1B 12.5% [2] [H] HEJ102 These two units will be the prerequisite for entry into the programÕs level 200 and 300 units. From the year 2000, the 200 and 300 level units will be introduced, including 25% of required units: Interviewing, Reporting and Writing (12.5%) Newspaper Journalism (12.5%) And at least 25% of practical units from the list below: Social and Political Research (see HGA203) (12.5%) Television Journalism (to be taught off campus) (12.5%) Radio Journalism (to be taught off campus) (12.5%) Periodicals Journalism and Electronic Publishing (12.5%) Creative Writing B: Fiction/Nonfiction/Script (see HEA202) (12.5%) Graphic Design (see FSG102) (12.5%) Photography (see FSH110) (12.5%) Video (see FSV150) (12.5%) And at least 12.5% theory units from the following list: Media and Politics in Australia (12.5%) Popular Culture and the Mass Media (see HGA225) (12.5%) Media Law (see BLA652) (12.5%) Media, Mass Communication and Information Technology Policy (12.5%) Chinese Media (12.5%) And other units to be added Level 100 units Communications 1A Unit enrolment code HEJ101 (Hobart) Introduces students to the study of contemporary meanings as they are produced and circulated in the mass media (including radio and television), the culture industries and on the internet. As part of learning to read widely and critically, students develop theoretical vocabularies and skills of visual analysis and cultural literacy. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). Courses: R3A Communications 1B Unit enrolment code HEJ102 (Hobart) Focuses on aspects of writing practice. The work of the unit complements and makes more specific and practical the introductory focus of Communications 1A.Ê Students are introduced to research methodologies and statistical analysis, computer production of writing, electronic publishing and editing, newspaper genres, audience and reader responses, and modes of writing (descriptive, narrative, expository, argumentative). ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (60%), end-of-sem exam (40%). Courses: R3A Sociology Ð School of Sociology and Social Work Sociology analyses the patterns of social life. It investigates the structures and cultures of different societies throughout the world and throughout history. Sociologists observe the everyday experiences of people in groups Ð gangs, students, hunters and collectors, business leaders Ð and try to explain them. They chart the trends that can help us to understand the dilemmas of modern life as we move into the twentyfirst century. Students of sociology are equipped with the tools to analyse and understand such issues as: marriage, divorce and the stability of the nuclear family; wealth and power in society; sexuality and the body; globalisation; childhood, adolescence and youth; racism and multiculturalism; health, illness and medical care; inequalities between classes, and between women and men; new technology and problems of unemployment; population growth and environmental degradation; popular culture and the mass media, including rock music, fashion, opera, the built environment, etc.; the new social movements Ð feminism, environmentalism, the peace movement, and gay rights; sport, leisure and tourism; deviant behaviour Ð drug use, criminality, sexual deviance and mental illness. The Sociology program attracts large numbers of students at all levels and in 1999 there will be 20 Sociology staff in the School, 14 based in Hobart and 6 based in Launceston. In Hobart there is also a large group of research postgraduate students who teach some tutorials and lab classes. Macintosh computer labs are available for student use and teaching on both campuses. An extensive resource materials collection and a qualitative research methods laboratory are housed in Hobart. Level 100 HGA101 plus HGA102 (in Hobart, Launceston, Burnie and by distance education) offer a general introduction to Sociology. They are suitable for students who want a general overview of modern society to supplement their studies in other social sciences and humanities disciplines. They also provide a foundation for students who may proceed further in Sociology and are (alternative) prerequisites for a major or double major in the discipline. HGA105 and HGA106 are a required part of the BSocSc course and offer an introduction to social science research methods. They are not an alternative to HGA101 and HGA102 as prerequisites for a major in Sociology. Level 200/300 Sociology units at levels 200 and 300 build on the 100 level units. All units are of one semester duration and weighted at 12.5% (a quarter of a full-time load for one semester). Sociology units are available in a BA major and double major sequence in both Hobart and Launceston. They are also available in a BSocSc major sequence in Applied Sociology in Launceston only. Most of the units offered in Launceston are also available by distance education. Students wishing to complete a major sequence in Sociology by distance education should contact the School in Launceston. Academic re-organisation has produced extensive changes to requirements for the major, double major and honours-entry. Sudents who have taken 200 level units towards a major or double-major in Sociology before 1997 should contact the School in Hobart or Launceston. A Bachelor of Arts (Honours (400 level) and MA or PhD degrees by research in Sociology are offered in Hobart and Launceston on a full-time or parttime basis. To find out more about Sociology programs enquire at: Room 418, Arts Building, phone (03) 6226 2338 (Hobart), or Room 006, Building O, phone (03) 6324 3946 (Launceston). First year (100 level) Coordinators: Dr R White (Hobart); Dr D Habibis (Launceston) Second and third year (levels 200/300) Coordinators: Dr B Tranton, Dr RD Julian (Hobart); Dr D Habibis (Launceston) Some sociology units will be available in semester 3 (Summer School) in Jan-Feb 1999. See the Faculty of Arts Summer School Handbook for details. A BA major in Sociology Hobart, Launceston and distance education (75% of Sociology units in total) consists of the following units. Unit title weight sem campus code Sociological Analysis of Modern Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA202 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HGA203/303 plus 4 additional HGA units, at least 2 of which must be taken at 300 level. Students are free to take more 200/300 level units in Sociology than they require to complete the major sequence, up to a maximum of 12 units and subject to other BA specifications. Students considering Honours in Sociology should note that 2 additional units are required for Honours entry: HGA302 and (either HGA204/304 or HGA230/330) Change and Order in Contemporary Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA302 Survey Research 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA204/304 Qualitative Research Methods 12.5% [2] [H] HGA230/330 Prerequisite: HGA100 or (HGA101 and HGA102) or (HWS101 and HWS102) or (HWS103 and HWS104). Students who have taken 200 level units towards a major in Sociology before 1997 should contact the School in Hobart or Launceston. Students who should check the 1997 BA specifications carefully to ensure that they are on track to gain the total percentage value of all units in all subjects that they will require to graduate. A BA double major in Sociology Hobart only (150% of Sociology units in total) consists of the following units. Unit title weight sem campus code Sociological Analysis of Modern Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA202 Change and Order in Contemporary Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA302 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HGA203/303 Either HGA204/304Êor HGA230/330 Survey Research 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA204/304 Qualitative Research Methods 12.5% [2] [H] HGA230/330 plus 8 additional HGA units, at least 4 of which must be taken at 300 level Launceston Sociology students must fulfill the same requirements; however, they are not required to have taken HGA230/330 Qualitative Research Methods.Ê This unit may be replaced with an alternative HGA unit. Prerequisite: HGA100 or (HGA101 and HGA102) or (HWS101 and HWS102) or (HWS103 and HWS104). Students who have taken 200 level units towards a double major in Sociology before 1997 should contact the School in Hobart or Launceston. These students should check the 1997 BA specifications carefully to ensure that they are on track to gain the total percentage value of all units in all subjects that they will require to graduate. Students may be able to take more 200/300 level units in Sociology than they require to complete the major sequence, subject to 1997 BA specifications. A BSocSc major in Applied Sociology Launceston only (100% of Sociology units in total) consists of the following units. Unit title weight sem campus code Survey Research 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA204/304 Sociology of Crime 12.5% [1] [Ld] HGA263/363 HGA270 Contact school for availability and details plus 4 additional HGA units. Prerequisite: HGA100 or (HGA101 and HGA102) or (HWS101 and HWS102) or (HWS103 and HWS104). Unit descriptions The following 200/300 level units will be offered in 1999 subject to staffing. Unit title weight sem campus code Semester 1 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HGA203/303 Population and Society 12.5% [1] [HL] HGA214/314 Science, Technology and Contemporary Society 12.5% [1] [H] HGA220/320 The Individual and Society 12.5% [1] [H] HGA221/321 Sport, Leisure and Tourism 12.5% [1] [H] HGA251/351 Sociology of Crime 12.5% [1] [Ld] HGA263/363 Work and Unemployment 12.5% [1] [H] HGA215/315 Semester 2 Sociological Analysis of Modern Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA202 Change and Order in Contemporary Society 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA302 Survey Research 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA204/304 Qualitative Research Methods 12.5% [2] [H] HGA230/330 Understanding Organisations 12.5% [2] [H] HGA236/336 Health Sociology 12.5% [2] [HL] HGA239/339 Sociology of Nature 12.5% [2] [H] HGA261/361 Cultures and Societies of Southeast Asia 12.5% [2] [H] HGA254/354 HGA270 Contact school for availability and details Some Sociology units will be available in semester 3 (Summer School) in Jan-Feb 1999. See the Faculty of Arts Summer School Handbook for details. Students should contact the School in Hobart or Launceston for up-to-date information. Students intending to re-enrol must check with the School before they do so. Full details of all units to be offered in 1999 will be available from the School at the time of re-enrolment. Students who are considering an honours degree in Sociology should bear in mind the prerequisites for honours when making their choice of units. Please note: most units are available at both 200 and 300 level, some units have prerequisites in addition to HGA101 and HGA102. Unless otherwise noted, essential texts are discussed in the first lecture of each unit. Sociology Ð Level 100 units Sociology A Unit enrolment code HGA101 Introduces students to central concepts and methods used by sociologists to study society. The unit comprises three modules of four weeks each and a final week of review. Each module seeks to develop understanding of contemprorary social processes with special reference to Australia. The modules cover the fundamentals of a sociological perspective by exploring central sociological concepts and ideas with a focus on: social structure, identity, socialisation, division of labour, and social class. The unit provides students with (1) an understanding of sociological concepts, models and methods; and (2) an ability to apply these to processes in modern societies with special reference to Australia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE101Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Julian, Dr R White (Hbt), Dr D Habibis, Ms KF Willis (Ltn) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA103, HGA104, HWS101, HWS102, HGA100, HGE101 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Sociology B Unit enrolment code HGA102 Introduces students to central concepts and methods used by sociologists to study society. Like HGA101, this unit develops an understanding of sociology by examining the major social institutions and processes, and sociological modes of inquiry. The unit consists of three modules each of four weeks duration and a final week of review. The modules explore central sociological concepts and ideas with a focus on: power, social control, status, ideology, and globalisation. The unit provides students with (1) an understanding of sociological concepts, models and methods; and (2) an ability to apply these to processes in modern societies with special reference to Australia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE102Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof Easthope, Dr D Ezzy, Dr R White (Hbt), Dr J Baxter, Ms GW Jones, Ms KF Willis (Ltn) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA103, HGA104, HWS101, HWS102, HGA100, HGE102 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Introduction to Social Research Methods A Unit enrolment code HGA105 (BSocSc only) Is a hands-on unit in which students undertake their own research project. The unit focuses on developing a research proposal, and verbal and written presentation of a research report based on this proposal. Students are introduced to a range of techniques for identifying appropriate sources of evidence, linking evidence to argument, and presenting data in graphical and tabular form. Attention is also given to the ethical issues associated with undertaking research. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures weekly ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (50%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3C Introduction to Social Research Methods B Unit enrolment code HGA106 (BSocSc only) Introduces students to a range of methods used in the social sciences for collecting and analysing qualitative and quantitative data. Students are shown how researchers gather data about social phenomena and human behaviour, look for patterns in these data, construct hypotheses to account for those patterns, and then test these explanations by further observation. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab/tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 5 exercises (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3C Society, Culture and Health Unit enrolment code HGA135 Introduces the sociology of health and illness. The unit develops an analysis of the ways in which socio-cultural factors and power relations in Australia affect experiences of health and illness. Using social constructs such as gender, class and ethnicity, the unit examines a range of issues such as occupational health, migrant health, Aboriginal health, unemployment, poverty and health, and disability. Current health issues are also explored with an emphasis on the allocation of resources, interest groups in health, professions in health and the ideas and values that underpin health policy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x500-word assignments (10% ea), 2x1,500 to 2,000-word assignments (20% ea), 2x2-hr exams (20% ea). Courses: H3D H3D H3D(D) H3D(E) Society, Culture and Health 1 Unit enrolment code HGA138 Introduces the sociology of health and illness, with an emphasis on the ways in which socio-cultural factors and power relations in Australia affect experiences of health and illness. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x500-word assignments (10% ea), 2x1,500 to 2,000-word assignments (20% ea), 2x2-hr exams (20% ea). Courses: H3D H3D H3D(D) H3D(E) Society, Culture and Health 2 Unit enrolment code HGA139 Explores current health issues, focusing on the allocation of resources, interest groups in health, professions in health and the ideas and values that underpin health policy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x500-word assignments (10% ea), 2x1,500 to 2,000-word assignments (20% ea), 2x2-hr exams (20% ea). Courses: H3D H3D H3D(D) H3D(E) Sociology Ð Level 200/300 units Sociological Analysis of Modern Society Unit enrolment code HGA202 Examines the sociological concepts, theoretical models and methods of inquiry that have been developed for the analysis of modern industrial societies. The development of concepts, models and methods in ÔclassicalÕ and more recent sociology is traced and linked to specific historical and contemporary cases, Australian where possible. The unit is focused on six topic-areas: change and stability, culture and values, inequality, self and interaction, social structure, solidarity and conflict. The unit will provide students with the following. (1) an understanding of the nature, development and variety of sociological concepts, models and methods.(2) an ability to apply sociological concepts models and methods to events and processes in modern industrial societies. ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof J Pakulski ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 1,000-word minor assignment or test (10%), 2,000-word major assignment (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Social and Political Research Unit enrolment code HGA203/303 Concerns the whys and hows of social research as practised in Sociology. An expertise in social research makes it possible to gather data about social phenomena and human behaviour, to look for patterns in them, to construct hypotheses to account for those patterns, and then to test these explanations by further observation. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA264/364, HGE302 or HSD203/303Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab/tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA264/364, HSD203/303, HGE302 ¥ÊassessÊ 5 exercises (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Survey Research Unit enrolment code HGA204/304 In the explosive growth of social science statistical methods, it is easy to forget that quantitative social research rests on logical foundations that cut across specific techniques. This unit teaches the Ôcausal logicÕ and basic statistical techniques used in survey analysis. The objectives are: to allow students to be more critical consumers of research findings in the mass media and in scholarly journals; to provide them with handson experience through laboratory exercises using a variety of techniques for quantitative data analysis; and to give them the opportunity to develop their own research hypotheses, identify relevant data and conduct data analysis to test them. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA265/365 or HSD204/304Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr BK Tranter, Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1 lecture and 2-hr lab weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HGA203/303 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA265/365, HSD204/304 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises (60%), final exam (30%), laboratory performance (10%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Population and Society Unit enrolment code HGA214/314 Examines the relationship between popluation and society. The contribution of social factors to the growth and composition of modern populations is discussed. The social consequences of changes to population size and compositon are reviewd. Consideration is given to teh changing nature of the Australian population and to current population policies. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE204Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE204 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Work and Unemployment Unit enrolment code HGA215/315 (Hobart) Explores individual experiences of work and unemployment in the context of the national and international organisation of labour. Changes to the organisation of labour such as Fordism, Just-in-time, and the globalisation of the labour market are analysed in the context of differing theoretical explanations. Changes to the meaning of work for the individual are also examined including topics such as the Protestant ethic, instrumental versus normative orientations to work, and the experience of unemployment. The role of industry and employment in community formation is also considered. The main themes are the social and cultural construction of the meaning and organisation of work and unemployment. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HGE237/337Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Ezzy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE237/337 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Science, Technology and Contemporary Society Unit enrolment code HGA220/320 Explores two principles theses: (1) that contemporary societies can be understood only with reference to the dynamics of science and technology; and (2) that science and technology require analysis as social phenomena. Consideration of these theses raises questions about the degree of autonomy enjoyed by science and technology as forms of knowledge, as cultures and as social institutions and practices. The unit provides students with an understanding of the main dimensions of the relations between science, technology and society, and with an overview of the development of the sociology of science and technology. It aims to develop studentsÕ abilities to use sociological concepts, arguments and methods in the analysis of critical issues facing their own societies. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC223/323 or FST260/360Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R White ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC223/323, FST260/360 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) The Individual and Society Unit enrolment code HGA221/321 (Hobart) Focuses on social interaction as providing a point of articulation between the macro analysis of social institutions and identity formation and change at the level of the individual. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RD Julian ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A Popular Culture and the Mass Media Unit enrolment code HGA225/325 (Hobart) Reviews sociological conceptions of culture, considers variants of Ômass culture theoryÕ and seeks to identify major forms of contemporary popular culture. Television news, advertising, newspapers, film and Ôsoap operaÕ are among those forms of media that are taken as case studies. The overall aims of the unit are: to develop awareness among students of competing theories and approaches in the sociology of culture; to explore in depth the role of mass media in society, highlighting the crucial role it plays in cultural formation; to show how popular culture formation is a continually changing and contested process; and to explore the links between popular culture, consumerism and consumption. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC225/325; not offered in 1999Ê Women, Power and Society Unit enrolment code HGA227/327 (Hobart) Examines gender relations, with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. The importance of gender divisions in key institutions such as family, school, and labour market is considered. Claims that gender is a major dimension of social inequality are assessed. Attention is paid throughout to the cultural production of femininity and masculinity. The unit not only considers the main developments in the social science literature on the role and significance of gender in society, but also enables students to formulate their own position in relation to central debates in the sociology of gender. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF201/301 or HGE223/323; not offered in 1999Ê Qualitative Research Methods Unit enrolment code HGA230/330 (Hobart) Explores established research techniques in contemporary sociology including observation and interviewing not typically considered under quantitative methods. In addition to the qualitative methods themselves, consideration is also given to the analysis of data collected by such methods and their uses in sociological inquiry. Students receive hands-on experience and practice with a range of qualitative research methods in a new, purpose-built qualitative research laboratory. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RD Julian, Dr D Ezzy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2 exercises (25%), assignment (50%), final exam (25%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Migrants in Australian Society Unit enrolment code HGA231/331 For details of this unit, contact the School. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Mass Social Movements Unit enrolment code HGA233/333 (Hobart) Addresses the major theoretical debates and research findings in the sociology of mass social movements. The unit reviews the results of movement studies in Australia within a broad comparative framework which includes Western ÔecopaxÕ, civil rights and feminist movements, European fascist movements, and democratic movements in Eastern Europe. The unitÕs objectives are: to familiarise students with major theories of mass movements and key theoretical debates; to introduce major concepts used in contemporary analyses of social movements; to outline the main types of contemporary mass social movements; to familiarise students with methodological problems encountered in movement research; and to provide an opportunity for critical assessment of current debates on the nature and importance of mass social movements. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KGN233/333; not offered in 1999Ê Understanding Organisations Unit enrolment code HGA236/336 (Hobart) Is an analysis of the formal and informal structure of contemporary, large scale organisations. The unit includes a comparative examination of government agencies, public service organisations, businesses, churches, schools, hospitals, trade unions, political parties and recreational associations. It examines such issues as coordination and control, rational and natural systems, communications and information flows, patterns of leadership, organisational survival in turbulent environments, organisational cultures, the consequences of technological change and organisational design. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD238/338Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Ezzy, Dr R Hall ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD238/338 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Health Sociology Unit enrolment code HGA239/339 Provides a sociological analysis of contemporary issues and debates in health. The unit examines health care organisations, funding, providers and consumers and the professionalisation of health care. The objectives are (1) to familiarise students with the key theoretical and empirical research on health care, (2) to introduce students to major contemporary debates in health care, and (3) to develop the skills of critical analysis as applied to health issues. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HGE232/332Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA299/329, HGE232/332 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Sport, Leisure and Tourism Unit enrolment code HGA251/351 (Hobart) Investigates the prominent positions that sport, leisure and tourism occupy in contemporary society. Processes of development and change affecting sport, leisure and tourism, including commercialisation and policy development are examined in the light of competing theoretical approaches. Particular attention is paid to recent empirical research. Topics include: the growth of womenÕs sports; home leisure and entertainment; and eco-tourism. Australian and Tasmanian case studies are explored and placed in comparative perspective. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC228/328 or KGN251/351 or FST265/365Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Franklin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC228/328, KGN251/351, FST265/365 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A S3G(D3) (+OC) Cultures and Societies of Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HGA254/354 (Hobart) Examines similarities and divergences of social organisation, culture and experience among peoples of Southeast Asia. Specific topics include social transformation in rural areas; the impacts of industrialisation, urbanisation and tourism; minority groups in multiethnic societies; and the emergence of social movements in the region. Points of comparison between the experiences of Southeast Asians and Australians are noted where appropriate. A major analytic theme is the applicability of standard ÔWesternÕ sociological concepts and models to less-industrialised societies. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC229/329 or HMA217/317Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Cook ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC229/329, HMA217/317 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment or test (10%), major assignment (40%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A Sociology of Deviance Unit enrolment code HGA259/359 (Launceston) Examines the major theoretical explanations of deviance, ranging form the psychological to the structural. The unit considers the relationship between power and the way in which certain types of behaviour come to be identified as ÔdeviantÕ and subject to social control. This involves exploring the moral and political nature of the defining process and focuses not only on traditional working class delinquency but corporate crime and crimes committed by women. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE205; not offered in 1999Ê Sociology of Power Unit enrolment code HGA260/360 (Launceston) Is one of two complementary units which examine the issues of power and inequality in contemporary society with a particular focus on Australia. The other unit is HGA 262/362 Social Inequality.Ê The two units are organised around the concepts of class, status and power. This unit looks at the issue of power by examining sociological debates about the nature of power, the role of the state in contemporary society, the power structure of Australian society and the effects of possession or lack of power on life chances. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Sociology of Nature Unit enrolment code HGA261/361 (Hobart) Introduces students to the sociology of nature and provides a solid understanding of human relations with the natural world. The unit covers three broad areas. First, global variations in human relations with the natural world, including religious and mythic dimensions. Second, historical changes, with particular emphasis on modernisation processes in the West. Third, theoretical perspectives that explain the social inundation of human relations with the natural world. Topics will include: a comparative analysis of hunters and gatherers, pastoralists and agriculturalists; nature, religion and myth; food and culture; the romantic movement and social Darwinism, animal sentiments and risk, nature and postmodernity. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC243/343 or KGN261/361 or FST266/366Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr AS Franklin ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC243/343, KGN261/361, FST266/366 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A S3G(D3) (+OC) Social Inequality Unit enrolment code HGA262/362 (Launceston) Is one of two complementary units which examine the issues of power and inequality in contemporary society with a particular focus on Australia. The other unit is HGA260/360 Sociology of Power.Ê The two units are organised around the concepts of class, stains and power. This unit looks at the issue of social inequality by examining theoretical debates about class and status, the class structure of Australian society and the effects of age, gender and ethnicity on life chances. Undertaking this unit will lead to an understanding of major features of the social structure of Australian society. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE208/308; not offered in 1999Ê Sociology of Crime Unit enrolment code HGA263/363 (Launceston) Is a companion unit to HGA259/359 Sociology of Deviance.Ê While the latter explores explanations of crime and deviance, the present unit focuses exclusively on crime and the criminal justice system with the objective of understanding (1) patterns of crime, (2) perpetrators and victims of crime, and (3) the social policy implications of crime. These are examined in the context of sociological arguments that the kind and amount of crime in a society is shaped by societyÕs social organisation. The unit points out the interconnectedness of various criminal behaviours with each other and with social institutions. Sociological arguments about the role of forces of law enforcement including the police, prisons and the courts are examined as well as the role and effect of punishment. Specific areas considered include sociological interpretations of criminal statistics, the criminal justice system, treatment and corrections, juvenile crime, white collar crime, violent crime, victims of crime, women and crime, and Aborigines and the criminal justice system. Throughout the unit Australian society is the main focus although examples from other English speaking countries are also used. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE206/306Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Habibis ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE206/306 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2-000-word assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Gender and Power Unit enrolment code HGA272/372 (Launceston) Explores the complexities of power in relation to gender. The concept of gender is examined from a variety of contemporary feminist and postmodern theories to show how gender/sexuality is a primary way of signifying relationships of power. Theories of power are also critically examined to explore how power works in everyday life. The unit goes on to analyse how gendered power is constructed and the ways in which it affects women and men in specific social settings such as the workplace and bureaucracy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr GW Jones ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2-000-word assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Contemporary Social Issues Unit enrolment code HGA274/374 (Launceston) Covers contemporary issues in key policy areas such as education, the economy, familes, crime, and health. The unit examines Australian and international evidence and debates about such issues as educational access, poverty and wage inequality, chaning family structures, health inequalities, and criminal behaviour. Part of the unit addresses recent debates about the extent to which social inequalities reflect inherited differences in intelligence rather than socially structured advantages and disadvantages. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE236/336Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE236/336 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (50%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Sociology of Music Unit enrolment code HGA276/376 (Hobart) Explores the social construction of music in modern western societies. The starting point is the tradition of the sociology of music Ð including authors such as Weber, Adorno, Becker; but also considered are anthropological, cultural studies and philosophical approaches to the study of music in terms of processes such as modernisation and postmodernisation. The unit also focuses on the concrete activities through which western peoples experience music as music, i.e. as distinct from other acoustic phenomena such as sound and noise. Topics to be covered include: frameworks for understanding the music-society nexus; the social uses of music; the concept of a Ômusic worldÕ; the concert as ritual; musical tastes; music and identities; music and technology; film music; the politics of music; music and postmodernism; and special case studies Ð dance music, Muzak, heavy metal, tango, jazz, avant-garde. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC232/332 or FST267/367Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr E de la Fuente ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC232/332, FST267/367 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Dynamics of Indigenous Cultures Unit enrolment code HGA278/378 Compares the extant cultures of four contemprary indigenous peoples. For a fuller description, see HAB253. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HAB253/353Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Onsman, Mr L Wilson ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3x1hr lectures fortnightly, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAB253/353 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word essay (10%), major 2,000-word essay (20%), class participation (30%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A Families, Households and the Lifecourse Unit enrolment code HGA279/379 Examines family relations and patterns with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. The demographic structure of the family-household, as well as sociological theory on the family has undergone considerable change in recent years. The aim of this unit is to introduce students to the main debates in this area and to use relevant empirical material to illustrate changes in family structure and lifecourse processes. Topics covered include definitions of the family; the social construction of the family-household; love, sex and marriage; paid work and family life; domestic labour; mothering, fathering, and care work; divorce and remarriage; the state and the family; and the future of family life. The unit focuses primarily on Australian material, but cross-cultural examples are used where appropriate. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF263/363 or HGE238/338Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Baxter ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF263/363, HGE238/338 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment (10%), major assignment (50%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Change and Order in Contemporary Society Unit enrolment code HGA302 Examines the changes that have taken the advanced societies beyond the familiar structures of modern industrial society. It assesses prominent accounts of the emergence of a new socio-cultural order, such as those associated with the terms Ôpost-industrialismÕ, Ôdisorganised capitalismÕ, reflexive modernityÕ and ÔpostmodernityÕ. Particular attention is paid throughout to the relations between cultural, social and technological structures and processes. General models and debates are linked to substantive issues in areas that will already be familiar to students. The unit will provide students with the following. (1) an understanding of the nature and scope of change in the advanced societies. (2) an appreciation of the points at issue in sociological debates about change and order. (3) a capacity to apply theoretical concepts and arguments to the analysis of contemporary Australia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC345Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr E de la Fuente ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HGA202 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC345, HAC221/321, HAC232/332, HGA205/305, HGA257/357 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2,000-word assignment (40%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Sociology Honours units Honours in Sociology (Full time/Part time) Unit enrolment code HGA400/401 Coordinator: Dr R Julian. The Honours program is made up of the following elements: (a) One semester of supervised reading on a topic selected by the student in consultation with an appropriate member of staff, to be assessed in June (15%) Ð leading into (d). (b) A half-year seminar in ÔTheory Construction and Research DesignÕ focusing on precision in theory formulation, the working of concepts and the problems of objectivity (15%). (c) A half-year seminar on ÔProcesses and Institutions in Contemporary SocietyÕ, reviewing processes of social change with reference to research undertaken in the School (15%). (d) A ÔResearch Project SupervisionÕ consisting of regular meetings between students and their principal supervisors, conducted throughout the second half of the year and aimed at monitoring the progress of research projects and thesis preparation Ð not assessed separately from (e). (e) A ÔResearch WorkshopÕ consisting of regular meetings in the second half of the year during which honours students discuss research problems, upgrade their research skills and report on the progress of their projects Ð not assessed separately from (f). (f) A thesis with a maximum length of 12,000 words based on the studentÕs own research, and an oral examination (55%). Prerequisites include a major in Sociology including one of the following combinations of required units: (a) HGA203/303 (Social Research) and HGA257/357 (Modernity to Postmodernity) or, (b) HGA203/303 and HGA201 and HGA205/305 (Social and Cultural Change in Contemporary Society). The School expects that intending honours students will also have completed either HGA204/304 (Quantitative Research Methods) or HGA230/330 (Qualitative Research Methods) and retains the right to require that any deficiency be made good during the honours year. From 2000 the standard Hobart Honours prerequisites will be eight 200/300 level HGA units including HGA202 (Sociological Analysis of Modern Society), HGA302 (Change and Order in Contemporary Society), HGA203/303 and either HGA204/304 or HGA230/330. It is planned to offer an honours program in Sociology in Launceston in the near future. Please contact the School in Launceston for details.Ê Entry into Honours is subject to performance levels as indicated under ÔCourse detailsÕ on page xx. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, including either (HGA203/303 and HGA257/357) or (HGA203/303, HGA201 and HGA301) or HGA203/303, HGA201 and HGA205/305). Students are also expected to have completed either HGA204/304 or HGA230/330, but a deficiency can be made good in the honours year; and satisfaction of Faculty Grade-Point Average. Courses: R4A Social Ecology Ð School of Sociology and Social Work, School of Geography and Environmental Studies Coordinator: tba The major will be offered both internally and by distance education, and for part-time and full-time students. The Social Ecology major offers a series of units which address the relationships between human populations, spatial environments and social organisation, including: ¥ the distribution of attributes across and within particular populations and communities; ¥ the role of institutions and institutional arrangements in the formation and distribution of population attributes and behaviours; ¥ the effects of population change on social institutions; ¥ the development and distribution of particular Ôsocial pathologiesÕ across populations and communities, e.g. crime, youth suicide, health and illness, educational disadvantage, socio-economic disadvantage, gender disadvantage, and rural-urban differences; ¥ the relationship between industrial reorganisation and redistribution on one hand, and population and social organisation on the other; ¥ the distribution of goods and services across populations and the effects of differential social characteristics and the physical environment on these distributions; and ¥ the formation, implementation and evaluation of a broad array of contemporary public policies (for example, with respect to the labour market, health, education, social welfare and criminal justice) as specific population policies centred on the measurement, surveillance and governance of pupulations. The major offers a useful and effective mechanism to integrate related and collateral fields of teaching and research that cross disciplinary and faculty boundaries into a single, coherent course structure. In addition, the Social Ecology major will be attractive to students with a broad range of intellectual interests that transcend traditional academic disciplines and are deeply concerned with the complex relationships between natural and social eco-systems. Structure of the major Unit title weight sem campus code Level 100 BA and BSocSc: 25%: two required units of 12.5% each Launceston (required) HGE103Êand either HGE101Êor HGE102 Population and Urbanisation 12.5% [1] [LBdf] HGE103 Sociology A 12.5% [1] [HLBd] HGE101 Sociology B 12.5% [2] [HLBd] HGE102 HGE138Êor HGE139Êor HGE126 Society, Culture and Health 1 12.5% [1] [L] HGE138 Society, Culture and Health 2 12.5% [2] [L] HGE139 Health Care Where People Live and Work 1 12.5% [1] [L] HGE126 Hobart (required) Sociology A 12.5% [1] [HLBd] HGE101 Sociology B 12.5% [2] [HLBd] HGE102 Students also taking a major in sociology may substitute: HGE105Êor HGE104 Community Health and Medicine 12.5% [1] [H] HGE105 Geography and Environmental Studies 1A 25% [fy] [H] HGE104 Level 200 BA: 37.5%: two required units of 12.5% each and one elective (12.5%) BSocSc: 50%: two required units of 12.5% each and two electives (25%) Launceston (required) Population and Society 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE204 Australian Natural Environments 12.5% [1] [Ld] HGE201 Hobart (required) Population and Society 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE204 Australian Natural Environments 12.5% [1] [Ld] HGE201 Level 300 BA: 37.5%: two required units of 12.5% each and one elective (12.5%) BSocSc: 50%: two required units of 12.5% each and two electives (25%) Launceston (required) Health and Population Policy 12.5% [L] HGE301 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE302 Hobart (required) Health and Population Policy 12.5% [L] HGE301 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE302 Electives Community Health and Medicine 25% [fy] [H] HGE207/307 Community Practice 25% [fy] HGE231/331 Contemporary Indigenous Tasmania 12.5% [na] [Ld] HGE230/330 Contemporary Social Issues 12.5% [1] [L] HGE236/336 Economics of Human Resources 12.5% [2] [H] HGE233/333 Families, Households and the Lifecourse 12.5% [2] [HL] HGE238/338 Government and the Economy 12.5% [2] [HL] HGE228/328 Health Sociology 12.5% [2] [HL] HGE232/332 Industrial Geography 25% [2] [L] HGE229/329 Perspectives on Ageing 12.5% [1] [L] HGE209/309 Population, Culture and Environment 12.5% [2] [H] HGE218/318 Regional Development Policy 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE226/326 Resource Economics 12.5% [1] [H] HGE222/322 Social & Environmental Accounting 12.5% [na] [H] HGE221/321 Social Inequality 12.5% [na] [Ld] HGE208/308 Social Policy in Welfare States 12.5% [1] [HL] HGE227/327 Sociology of Crime 12.5% [1] [Ld] HGE206/306 Sociology of Deviance 12.5% [na] [Ld] HGE205/305 The Global Space Economy 12.5% [1] [H] HGE219/319 Urban Planning: Space, Place and Society 12.5% [1] [H] HGE220/320 Women, Power and Society 12.5% [na] [H] HGE223/323 Work and Unemployment 12.5% [1] [H] HGE237/337 Social Ecology Ð Level 100 units Sociology A Unit enrolment code HGE101 Introduces students to central concepts and methods used by sociologists to study society. For a fuller description, see HGA101. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA101Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R White (Hbt), Dr D Habibis, Ms KF Willis (Ltn) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA103, HGA104, HWS101, HWS102, HGA100, HGA101 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Sociology B Unit enrolment code HGE102 Develops an understanding of sociology by examining the major social institutions and processes, and sociological modes of inquiry. For a fuller description, see HGA102. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA102Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof Easthope, Dr D Ezzy, Dr R White (Hbt), Dr J Baxter, Ms GW Jones, Ms KF Willis (Ltn) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, Brn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA103, HGA104, HWS101, HWS102, HGA100, HGA102 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (60%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Population and Urbanisation Unit enrolment code HGE103 Key geographical concepts and skills are introduced. For a fuller description, see KJG101. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KJG101Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Hanson ¥ÊLtn, int, Brn, dist.ed, flexible ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 2-hr practical weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ KJG101 ¥ÊassessÊ essay (15%), practical exercises (45%), final exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ Peters GL and Larkin RP, Population Geography: Problems, Concepts and Prospects,Ê 5th edn, Kendall-Hunt, 1997. Courses: R3A R3C Geography and Environmental Studies 1A Unit enrolment code HGE104 Introduces various approaches to the study of environmental processes and human relations with nature, including key spatial, developmental, and cultural dimensions of human adaptation of the Earth as habitat. For a fuller description, see KGA101. ¥ÊstaffÊ (Society, Space and Development) Dr LJ Wood; (Ecosystem Processes) Dr K Brown; (Environment and Society) Ms L Mendel, Dr J Russell ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures, 1 tutorial weekly, and 2 days of excursion (students are responsible for modest accommodation costs) ¥Êm/exclÊ KGA100, KGA101 ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam in June, 2x2-hr exams in Nov (20% ea). 4x1,500-word essays (30%), tutorial exercises (10%). ¥ÊreqÊ Knox PL and Marston SA, Places and Regions in Global Context: Human Geography,Ê Prentice Hall, NJ, 1998 Goudie A, The Nature of the Environment,Ê 3rd edn, Blackwell, Oxf, 1993. Courses: R3A R3C Community Health and Medicine Unit enrolment code HGE105 Seeks an understanding of modern medicine in the Australian community. For a fuller description, see CAM105. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr S Lockwood (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 42 hrs of lectures and 42 hrs of practicals and tutorials ¥ÊprereqÊ admission to Medicine ¥Êm/exclÊ CAM105 ¥ÊassessÊ a written exam at the end of sem 1 (60%), essays and written reports (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ in addition to prescribed journal articles and specially extracted material which will be reserved for studentsÕ use, the following texts are recommended and prescribed: St JohnÕs Ambulance Association, First Aid,Ê Ruskin Press. Lovat TJ and Mitchell KR, Bioethics for Medical and Health Professionals,Ê Social Science Press, Wentworth Falls, NSW 1991 Clements A (ed), Infant and Family Health in Australia,Ê 2nd edn, Churchill Livingstone, Melb, 1992. ¥ÊrdgÊ Davis A and George J, States of Health,Ê 2nd edn, Harper Educational, Syd, 1993. Australian Resuscitation Council, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation,Ê 1980. Illingworth R, The Normal Child,Ê 10th edn, Churchill Livingstone, 1991. Illingworth R, The Development of the Infant,Ê 9th edn, Churchill Livingstone, 1987. Courses: R3A R3C Health Care Where People Live and Work 1 Unit enrolment code HGE126 Draws on the World Health OrganisationÕs Primary Health Care approach as outlined in the Alma Ata Declaration (1978) and also examines contemporary public health developments. For a fuller description, see CNA126. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr G Crack ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ CNA126 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,500-word assignments (30%), 2x2,000-word assignments (60%), a skill assessment test (10%). ¥ÊreqÊ Unit Reader (sem 1) Jarvis C, Physical Examination and Health Assessment,Ê 2nd edn, Saunders, 1996 Jarvis C, Student Laboratory Manual for Physical Examination and Health Assessment,Ê 2nd edn, Saunders, 1996. Courses: R3A R3C Society, Culture and Health 1 Unit enrolment code HGE138 Introduces the sociology of health and illness, with an emphasis on the ways in which socio-cultural factors and power relations in Australia affect experiences of health and illness. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x500-word assignments (10% ea), 2x1,500 to 2,000-word assignments (20% ea), 2x2-hr exams (20% ea). Courses: R3A R3C Society, Culture and Health 2 Unit enrolment code HGE139 Explores current health issues, focusing on the allocation of resources, interest groups in health, professions in health and the ideas and values that underpin health policy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x500-word assignments (10% ea), 2x1,500 to 2,000-word assignments (20% ea), 2x2-hr exams (20% ea). Courses: R3A R3C Social Ecology Ð Level 200/300 units Australian Natural Environments Unit enrolment code HGE201 Deals with Australian natural environments, incorporating a systematic examination of the natural environment of Australia including recent modification by post-European settlement, with related spatial and sociocultural concerns. For a fuller description, see KJG201. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KJG201Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture, 3-hr practical or 2-hr lecture, 2-hr practical, 1 1-hr tutorial (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ KJG101 and KJG102 or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ KJG201 ¥ÊassessÊ (int) 2,500-word essay (15%), practical assignments (25%), seminar paper (10%), final 2-hr exam (50%); (dist.ed) 2,500-word essay (20%), practical assignments (30%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Population and Society Unit enrolment code HGE204 Examines the relationship between popluation and society. For a fuller description, see HGA214. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA214/314Ê ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA214/314 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A R3C Sociology of Deviance Unit enrolment code HGE205/305 (Launceston) Examines the major theoretical explanations of deviance, ranging form the psychological to the structural. For a fuller description, see HGA259. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA259/359; not offered in 1999Ê Sociology of Crime Unit enrolment code HGE206/306 (Launceston) Focuses on crime and the criminal justice system with the objective of understanding (1) patterns of crime, (2) perpetrators and victims of crime, and (3) the social policy implications of crime. For a fuller description, see HGA263. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA263/363Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Habibis ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA263/363 ¥ÊassessÊ minor 1,000-word assignment or test (10%), major 2-000-word assignment (40%), final 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Community Health and Medicine Unit enrolment code HGE207/307 Encourages students to see health, illness, and medical care in terms of the individual being treated, building on their interpersonal and communication skills; and developing a hierarchical concept of health and health care. For a fuller description, see CAM205. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr S Lockwood (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 84 hrs of lectures, and 84 hrs of practical, tutorials, and experiential learning in the community ¥Êm/exclÊ CAM205 ¥ÊassessÊ work assigned during the year (40%), and assessment early in sem 2 (20%) formal end-of-year exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Social Inequality Unit enrolment code HGE208/308 (Launceston) Looks at the issue of social inequality by examining theoretical debates about class and status, the class structure of Australian society and the effects of age, gender and ethnicity on life chances. For a fuller description, see HGA262. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA262/362; not offered in 1999Ê Perspectives on Ageing Unit enrolment code HGE209/309 Seeks to problematise the field of aged care and to promote the studentsÕ independence in learning. For a fuller description, see CNA126. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr A Robinson (Coordinator), Ms F McInerney, Ms B Walkem, Dr PJ Martyr ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð felxible delivery Ð offered either conventionally (with lectures and tutorials) or electronically using WWW, email and other on-line modes of delivery ¥Êm/exclÊ CNA126 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x2,000-word essays (50% ea). Courses: R3A R3C Population, Culture and Environment Unit enrolment code HGE218/318 Focuses on the interrelationships in space and time of human populations, cultures and the environment. For a fuller description, see KGA270. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr N Chick ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 6 tutorials and 2 days field work or equiv ¥ÊprereqÊ KGA100 or KGA101 ¥Êm/exclÊ KGA270/370 ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam in Nov (60%), 2,500-word research essay (40%). Courses: R3A R3C The Global Space Economy Unit enrolment code HGE219/319 Analyses the consequences of recent developments in transportation and communication for employment, trade, and the environment, and examines the social and cultural implications for individuals and communities in adjusting to a new era of change. For a fuller description, see KGA208. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr RDM Cotgrove ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 9 tutorials ¥ÊprereqÊ KGA100 or KGA101 (one of BEA100, BEA101, BEA102 or BEA105 for Faculty of Commerce & Economics students only) ¥Êm/exclÊ KGA208/308 ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam in June (50%), 1,500-word essay (30%), 2x500-word tutorial papers (20%). Courses: R3A R3C Urban Planning: Space, Place and Society Unit enrolment code HGE220/320 Focuses on how Ôthe urbanÕ is planned, produced, maintained and valued in the context of Australian society. For a fuller description, see KGA253. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Stratford ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 6 tutorials and 2 days field work or equiv ¥ÊprereqÊ KGA100 or KGA101 ¥Êm/exclÊ KGA253/353 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500-word research paper (30%), 2hr exam in June (50%), 500-word field report (10%), 500-word poster (10%). Courses: R3A R3C Social & Environmental Accounting Unit enrolment code HGE221/321 Examines the social dimension of accounting theory and practice, and the potential impact of accounting information upon issues of social justice, ethics and the natural environment. For a fuller description, see BFA307. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Resource Economics Unit enrolment code HGE222/322 Enables students to analyse critically, within an economic framework, debates on the current use of natural resources. For a fuller description, see BEA301. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Valenzuela ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ BEA100 ¥Êm/exclÊ BEA301 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (30%), final exam (70%). Courses: R3A R3C Women, Power and Society Unit enrolment code HGE223/323 (Hobart) Examines gender relations, with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. For a fuller description, see HGA227. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF201/301 or HGA227/327; not offered in 1999Ê Regional Development Policy Unit enrolment code HGE226/326 Examines the interaction of state, community and market at the local level, and their impact on regional development. For a fuller description, see HSD223. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD223/323 or HGE226/326Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD223/323 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000word essay (20%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A R3C Social Policy in Welfare States Unit enrolment code HGE227/327 Describes and explains key features of the welfare state in liberal democracies. For a fuller description, see HSD231. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD231/331Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward, Mr I Beckett ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD231/331 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Government and the Economy Unit enrolment code HGE228/328 Examines key intersections between politics and the economy, focusing on the politics of economic policy formation in Australia including the historical evolution of Australian economic policy. For a fuller description, see HSD236. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD236/336 or HSA266/366Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof SR Bell ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD236/336, HSA266/366 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Industrial Geography Unit enrolment code HGE229/329 Studies Industrial Geography. For a fuller description, see KJG302. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Hanson ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x2-hr seminars and 2x2hr practicals weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ KJG201 and KJG202 or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ KJG302 ¥ÊassessÊ essays (20%), seminar preparation, contribution and paper (20%), practical/project report (30%), final exam (30%). Courses: R3A R3C Contemporary Indigenous Tasmania Unit enrolment code HGE230/330 Explores Tasmanian Aboriginal identity, activism, and socio-economic experience since the 1970s. For a fuller description, see HAB206. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAB206/306; not offered in 1999Ê Community Practice Unit enrolment code HGE231/331 For details of this unit, contact the School of Nursing. ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year ¥Êm/exclÊ CNA317 ¥ÊassessÊ (Mental Health Nursing) exam (50%); (Community Practice) student negotiated assessment (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Health Sociology Unit enrolment code HGE232/332 Examines health care organisations, funding, providers and consumers and the professionalisation of health care. For a fuller description, see HGA239. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HGA239/339Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PH Cameron, Assoc Prof G Easthope, Ms KF Willis ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA299/329, HGA239/339 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A R3C Economics of Human Resources Unit enrolment code HGE233/333 Introduces students to important theoretical models in labour economics, and evaluates their usefulness in explaining characteristics and patterns of the Australian labour market. For a fuller description, see BEA306. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T McDonald ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures, 1 workshop weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ BEA100 ¥Êm/exclÊ BEA306 ¥ÊassessÊ internal assessment (30%), final exam (70%). Courses: R3A R3C Contemporary Social Issues Unit enrolment code HGE236/336 (Launceston) Covers contemporary issues in key policy areas such as education, the economy, familes, crime, and health. For a fuller description, see HGA274. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA274/374Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA274/374 ¥ÊassessÊ assignments (50%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A R3C Work and Unemployment Unit enrolment code HGE237/337 (Hobart) Explores individual experiences of work and unemployment in the context of the national and international organisation of labour. For a fuller description, see HGA215. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HGA215/315Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Ezzy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA215/315 ¥ÊassessÊ assignment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A R3C Families, Households and the Lifecourse Unit enrolment code HGE238/338 Examines family relations and patterns with an emphasis on advanced industrial societies. For a fuller description, see HGA279. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA279/379 or HAF263/363Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Baxter ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA279/379, HAF263/363 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment (10%), major assignment (50%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Health and Population Policy Unit enrolment code HGE301 For details of this unit, contact the School of Sociology and Social Work. ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5%. Courses: R3A R3C Social and Political Research Unit enrolment code HGE302 Concerns the whys and hows of social research as practised in Sociology. For a fuller description, see HGA203. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA264/364 or HGA203/303 or HSD203/303Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab/tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA264/364, HSD203/303, HGA203/303 ¥ÊassessÊ 5 exercises (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C Social Work Ð School of Sociology and Social Work The School of Sociology & Social Work offers a two-year full-time course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Social Work. The degree is designed to meet the educational requirements of the Australian Association of Social Workers (AASW) and to produce graduates with a knowledge and understanding of social functioning, social problems and social services. It emphasises a commitment to the values and ethics of the profession and an ability to apply professional social work skills and methods at a level of competence suitable for beginning practice. Social Work Ð Level 300 units Interpersonal Theory and Practice 1 Unit enrolment code HGW301 (Launceston) Consists of two parts: (a) Working with Individuals: develops an understanding of the helping process in the context of human services; examines a number of interventions including active listening, problem solving, griefwork and crisis intervention. Tutorials are experiential and focus on communication skills as they relate to social case work. (b) Small Group Theory: provides an introduction to the central concepts and concerns of group work theory; and explores group dynamics and group processes in relation to planning, implementing and evaluating group programs, including teams, task force committees, self-help and personal growth groups. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms D Murray ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð (13 wks) part (a) 2-hr lecture, 2-hr tutorial weekly; part (b) weekly workshop ¥ÊprereqÊ entry to Year 1 of BSW ¥ÊassessÊ part (a) tape and analysis (40%), 3-hr exam in June (40%); part (b) 1,000-word essay (20%). Courses: R3B Social Work Practice and Theory Unit enrolment code HGW302 (Launceston) Assists students in developing a practice identity at a beginning level. Students consider relationships between theory and practice and examine issues, problems and dilemmas that confront social workers in their daily practice. In doing so, they will also analyse the relation of theory to values, attitudes, beliefs and action in social work and in the wider social context. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms C Craft ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture and 2-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ entry to year 1 of BSW ¥ÊassessÊ written assignment (25%), essay (35%), exam in June (40%). Courses: R3B Social Work Practicum 1 Unit enrolment code HGW303 (Launceston) Students are provided with a 13 week fieldwork placement in a social work setting in order to experience a range of practice tasks. Qualified supervisors (Social Workers with a minimum of 2 years experience in the field) are allocated to each student and, through supervision, the theory of social work is translated into practice. Assistance is provided to ensure that studentsÕ personal reactions to social work practice are better understood. Students return to the University early in semester 2 for 6 days (over two weeks) of workshops which prepare them for the practicum experience. ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê50% ¥Êsem 2 Ð (13 wks fieldwork placement) (490 hrs) in a social service agency with the supervision of a qualified social worker ¥ÊprereqÊ successful completion of all first year BSW academic units ¥ÊassessÊ continuous evaluation of student performance by the Fieldwork supervisor. Completion of the personal educational plan in the first three weeks. At mid placement and at the end of placement, student, Fieldwork supervisor and liaison staff (from the School of Sociology & Social Work at the University) formally evaluate student performance based on the education plan and the Assessment Workbook. In addition to successfully meeting the performance standards of the placement evaluation, students must attend the integration days and complete the required assignment. Courses: R3B Social Policy Unit enrolment code HGW304/404 (Launceston) Provides students with an understanding of the social policy process and its relationship with social work practice in the Australian context. Students consider the value dilemmas and the social, political and economic influences in contemporary policy making, and by critically assessing policy initiatives and the areas of problem identification and policy formulation and implementation, help to develop their own framework for practice. ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture and 2-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ entry to year 1 of BSW ¥ÊassessÊ written assignment (25%), essay (35%), exam in June (40%). Courses: R3B R4B Research Processes in Social Work Unit enrolment code HGW305/405 (Launceston) Introduces students to various types of social work research and covers basic skills in regard to data entry and analysis. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Patford ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture and 2-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ entry to Year 1 of BSW ¥ÊassessÊ assignment and/or tests (35%), data gathering exercise (15%), exam in June (50%). Courses: R3B R4B Organisational Context and Administrative Practice Unit enrolment code HGW306/406 (Launceston) Reviews some key areas of organisational theory and explores the organisational ramifications of recent economic, legislative and cultural changes in Australian society. The unit also aims to develop a range of practical skills that social workers are likely to need when they take up employment in diverse roles and organisational settings. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unit; not offered in 1999Ê Social Work Practice and the Law Unit enrolment code HGW307/407 (Launceston) Provides students with an awareness and understanding of the legal dimensions and issues in a number of specific areas and settings in which social work and law typically interact. The unit enables them to perform as competent social workers who have an understanding of legal institutions, issues and procedures, as well as of the major areas of law which relate to their practice. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unit; not offered in 1999Ê Social Work Ð Level 400 units Interpersonal Theory and Practice 2 Unit enrolment code HGW401 (Launceston) Consists of two parts: (a) Casework with Individuals and Families: builds on the communication skills learned in HGW301 and integrates them into the more complex interventions involved in social casework. Reference is made throughout the lectures and tutorials to age, gender, cultural background and agency context, emphasising their relevance for practice. Ethical issues and the principles of social justice are addressed throughout. (b) Groupwork Theory and Practice: provides an opportunity for students to integrate groupwork theory and practice, by joining a number of groups both as leaders and as participants and completing a detailed analysis of at least one group session. Workshops are experiential and based on a range of topics relevant to social work practice. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms C Craft ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð part (a) 2-hr lecture and 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks); part (b) 1-hr workshop weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ completion of all 1st-year BSW requirements ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500word essay (20%), practical demonstration of skills (20%), 3-hr exam (30%), group presentation (10%), groupwork log (20%). Courses: R3B R4B Community Work Practice Unit enrolment code HGW402 (Launceston) Explores the historical development and theoretical foundations of community development practice. Relevant knowledge and practice skills are developed through analysis of Australian and overseas projects. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms D Rowley ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 2 hrs tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ completion of all 1st-year BSW requirements ¥ÊassessÊ group presentation (30%), group assignment (30%), exam in June (40%). Courses: R3B R4B Social Work Practicum 2 Unit enrolment code HGW403 (Launceston) Is conducted in the same manner as HGW303. Students draw on experiences gained from the first fieldwork placement. There is an expectation that students will be functioning reasonably independently as a beginning level practitioner and will demonstrate greater familiarity with the field. ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê50% ¥Êsem 2 Ð (13 wks fieldwork placement) (490 hrs) in a social service agency with the supervision of a qualified social worker ¥ÊprereqÊ completion of all first year BSW units and second year BSW academic units ¥ÊassessÊ as for HGW303. Courses: R3B Social Work Practicum 2 (Honours) Unit enrolment code HGW408 (Launceston) Has the same objectives as HGW403. ¥ÊN.B. differs from HGW403 only in the number of weeks and weightÊ ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê35% ¥Êsem 2 Ð (10 wks fieldwork placement) (350 hrs) in a social service agency with the supervision of a qualified social worker ¥ÊprereqÊ completion of all first year BSW units and second year BSW academic units ¥ÊassessÊ as for HGW303. Courses: R4B Social Work Practicum 3 (Honours) Unit enrolment code HGW409 (Launceston) Is a 10-week research placement. The unit provides the opportunity for student to implement the research proposal prepared as a part of HGW410. ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê10% ¥Êsem 2 Ð compulsory attendance (10 wks placement) (350 hrs) in a research environment ¥ÊprereqÊ successful completion of HGW410 in sem 1 and University Ethics Committee approval for research proposal ¥ÊassessÊ participation (60%), 2 research presentations (20% ea). Courses: R4B Social Work Honours Dissertation Unit enrolment code HGW410 (Launceston) Builds on the knowledge gained in HGW305/405 Research Processes in Social Work.Ê The unit provides an opportunity for students to apply their knowledge of either quantitative or qualitative research methods to a topic of their choosing as approved by the Honours Committee. ¥ÊN.B. may be completed full time or part timeÊ ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê15% ¥Êfull year Ð sem 1: 1x2-hr workshop weekly; sem 2: 1x2hr supervision weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ entry into BSW(Hons) ¥ÊassessÊ 15,000word dissertation. Courses: R4B Information Ð Learning Skills Unit The Learning Skills Unit offers this unit on both the Hobart and Launceston campuses provided enough students show an interest in the unit. Information (Learning Skills Unit) Information Sources Unit enrolment code HLA210/310 (Hobart and Launceston) Introduces students to a systematic and structured approach to the solution of information problems. The unit is intended to equip the students with a high level of information literacy. It covers strategies and skills for the retrieval, analysis and management of information, and explores issues in the provision of and access to information. Electronic sources of information, including online databases and CD ROM; the Internet; archival and statistical sources; and a wide range of printed reference sources is examined. There is particular emphasis on practical, hands-on experience in problem solving, using various information sources. The unit incorporates a series of ten one-hour practical information problem-solving exercises, and an evaluation of the process of information problem-solving, based on an assignment from the individual studentÕs academic program. ¥ÊN.B. this unit will not be offered if enrolments in any semester are below 6Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DH Waters ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 [H] sem 2 [L] Ð 5 hrs lectures and tutorials fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ reference tools test (20%), major assignment (40%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A E3A(SEC) Asian Languages and Studies Ð School of Asian Languages and Studies The School of Asian Languages and Studies offers teaching in four areas: Asian Studies (HMA units) Chinese (HMC units) Japanese (HMJ units) Indonesian (HMN units) All units may count towards the BA degree (course code R3A) as well as support study towards other degrees. For details of how units offered by this and other schools and faculties may be combined, students should refer to the various courses described in the course details section in this Handbook or consult appropriate faculty officers. In considering course combinations, students should pay careful attention to unit weights. Majors for the BA degree (100% for Asian Studies and 112.5% for the three languages) are available to internal students. Double majors (175%) are available in Asian Studies and the three languages. Part-time students should note that some units are offered only every second year. Enquiries on the possible availability of units other than as listed in this Handbook should be addressed to the HoS. In-Country Programs The School offers students of languages the opportunity to take some languages units overseas. In-country units are available in China, Indonesia and Japan. Students receive full credit for their in-country study towards their degree. For details of the in-country units that are available, see course details below. And for details of how the incountry units are organised and implemented, students should consult the Head of each of the language sections. Honours Programs Students who have completed the requirements for the BA degree may be eligible to procede to a fourth honours year in Asian Studies, Indonesian or Japanese. Students on both the Hobart and Launceston campuses may enrol in the honours course. For eligibility requirements, students should consult the honours description in each of the three areas.In addition, Faculty rules, which can be found in the Calendar,Ê also apply. Enquiries may be directed to the HoS or the head of the relevant section. For postgraduate programs by research (MA, PhD) see the Head of the School. Associate Diploma in Modern Languages (AssocDipModLang) This course is described in full on page xx. See also Asian Languages on page xx. Asian Studies Ð School of Asian Languages and Studies Coordinator: Dr S Philpott Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary program involving various schools within and outside the Faculty of Arts. Its programs aim to provide informed knowledge of specific areas of Asian Studies while stimulating interest in and developing a range of useful skills and abilities. Because of its interdisciplinary nature, Asian Studies serves as a useful complement to studies in other Faculties such as Education, and Commerce and Law. The foundation unit, HMA100, provides students with a thorough and comprehensive grounding in modern Asian problems through a study of key themes in the geography, history, politics, economics and social structure of the region. At 200 and 300 levels, students are able to choose from a wide range of units related to Asia and the South Pacific. All Asian Studies units at these levels are semester length and have a weight of 12.5%, with the exception of the year-long languages units with a weight of 25%. Students can obtain a major in Asian Studies by accumulating a minimum of 100% (25% at level 100 and 75% at levels 200/300 Ð not more than 62.5% at either level). To obtain a double major, students need to accumulate a total weight of 175% in Asian Studies units. Note: As Asian Studies 1 is not a prerequisite for Asian Studies at 200 level, any valid unit at 100 level (25%) may be counted towards a major or a double major in Asian Studies. Unit title weight sem campus code Level 100 Asia in Transition Ð Change and Continuity in Modern Asian Developments 25% [fy] [H] HMA100 Asian Studies units (200 & 300 levels) Prerequisite: HMA100 Asian Studies 1 (or any other 25% unit at 100 level). As some units are also components in major studies in other disciplines, students who are enrolled or have already passed these units (which may have been named differently in the past) as part of another course or major must choose other units to make up their Asian Studies program. No unit may be counted twice within an award. Note:<s50>Students should consult the Coordinator when planning their Asian Studies major or double major. Enrolments in Asian Studies require the approval of the Coordinator. full year units Japanese 2 Language Skills A 25% [fy] [H] HMA230/330 Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) 25% [fy] [HL] HMA232/332 Chinese 2 Language Skills A 25% [fy] [HL] HMA234/334 Chinese 2 Language Skills B 25% [fy] [HL] HMA235/335 Research Project 25%/12.5% [fy]HMA300 [1/2]HMA301 [HL] HMA300/301 semester 1 units Modern India till Independence 12.5% [na] [H] HMA204/304 Politics in Contemporary Japan 12.5% [1] [H] HMA205/305 India since Independence 12.5% [1] [H] HMA207/307 Politics in Contemporary China 12.5% [1] [H] HMA210/310 Politics of Democratisation, East and West 12.5% [1] [H] HMA216/316 Asian Political Thought 12.5% [1] [H] HMA219/319 The Asia-Pacific Economies: Tigers 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA222/322 Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA233/333 Modern Japanese Literature 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA237/337 Survey of Indonesian Literature 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA238/338 Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA240/340 Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives 12.5% [1] [H] HMA244/344 Imagining Southeast Asia 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA245/345 The Early History of Indonesia 12.5% [1] [HL] HMA247/347 semester 2 units Geography of Asia 12.5% [2] [H] HMA202/302 Australia and Asia 12.5% [2] [HL] HMA211/311 Advanced Buddhist Philosophy 12.5% [2] [H] HMA242/342 Issues in Contemporary China 12.5% [2] [HL] HMA246/346 The Later History of Indonesia 12.5% [2] [HL] HMA248/348 Summer School unit IndoÐTibetan Philosophy, History and Culture 25% [3] [ic] HMA228/328 Units not offered in 1999 Cultures and Societies of Southeast Asia HMA217/317 Contemporary Asian Issues HMA221/321 Chinese Culture and Society HMA227/327 Classical Japanese Literature HMA236/336 Asian Work and Environment HMA239/339 The Sound of the Past HMA243/343 Honours Program See Asian Studies 4 (HMA400/401) Asian Studies Ð Level 100 units Asia in Transition Ð Change and Continuity in Modern Asian Developments Unit enrolment code HMA100 (Hobart) Is designed as a foundation course for students who wish to pursue their interest and acquire expertise in either the general or more specialised fields of Asian Studies. The first semester will examine the question of ÔWhat is Asia?Õ focusing on the diversity of culture, social and political structures, languages, religions, and geography across East and Southeast Asia. The second semester will consider the modern states of China, Japan, and Indonesia in detail. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (Mon, Fri at 11.10 a.m.),1-hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2x2,500-word essays (20% ea), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in June (25%), 2hr exam in Nov (25%). ¥ÊreqÊ [p/b] Borthwick M, Pacific Century. The Emergence of Modern Pacific Asia,Ê Allen & Unwin, Oxf, 1992 p/b] Mackerras C (ed), Asia Since 1945,Ê Longman Cheshire, Melb, 1992 [p/b] Murphey R, A History of Asia,Ê Harper Collins, NY,1992. [p/b] Grant E (ed), AsiaÕs Cultural Mosaic. An Anthropological Introduction,Ê Prentice Hall, NY, 1993 [p/b] Pandey BN, South and South-east Asia 1945-1979: Problems and Policies,Ê Macmillan, Lond, 1980. Courses: R3A C3C Asian Studies Ð Level 200/300 elective units Geography of Asia Unit enrolment code HMA202/302 Examines issues relevant to the understanding of the geography of contemporary Asia. For a fuller description, see KGA202. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RG Kellaway, Dr LJ Wood ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 9 tutorials (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ KGA100 or KGA101 (no prereq required for Asian Studies students taking the unit as HMA202/302) ¥Êm/exclÊ KGA202/302 ¥ÊassessÊ 2-hr exam in Nov (60%), 2,500-word essay (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Modern India till Independence Unit enrolment code HMA204/304 (Hobart) Focuses on the formidable problems besetting IndiaÕs emergence as a modern nation. For a fuller description, see HTA221. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA221/321; not offered in 1999Ê Politics in Contemporary Japan Unit enrolment code HMA205/305 Introduces students to the most important features of contemporary Japanese politics. For fuller details of this unit, see HSA250/350. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA213/313Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Narramore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1 lecture, 1 tutorial weekly, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HSA100 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA250/350, HSA213/313 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A C3C India since Independence Unit enrolment code HMA207/307 (Hobart) Can India, with her gigantic demographic, ethnic, social and economic pressures, continue to maintain her democratic system, stability and global aspirations? For fuller details, see HTA222. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA222/322Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA222/322 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Politics in Contemporary China Unit enrolment code HMA210/310 Deals briefly with the major political and social developments in Mao ZedongÕs China. For a fuller description, see HSA256. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA256/356Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1 lecture, 1 tutorial weekly, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HSA100 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA256/356 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Australia and Asia Unit enrolment code HMA211/311 (Launceston, video link with Hobart) Analyses history, theory and practice of contact between Asian and Western cultures. The unit aims to foster understanding of perceptions of cultural difference. Initial contact, colonialism, ÔorientalismÕ, human rights, education and differing ideas about the individual will be some of the problems investigated. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMA100 or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ exam (40%), 2,500-word essay (20% ea), tutorial participation (20%). Courses: R3A C3C Politics of Democratisation, East and West Unit enrolment code HMA216/316 Considers the historical, cultural, social and political preconditions for democratisation in East Asia, and Eastern and Western Europe. For a fuller description, see HSA227. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA227/327Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones, Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1 lecture, 1 tutorial weekly, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA227/327 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Cultures and Societies of Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HMA217/317 Examines similarities and divergences of social organisation, culture and experience among peoples of Southeast Asia. For a fuller description, see HGA254. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA254/354 or HAC229/329; may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr N Cook ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC229/329, HGA254/354 ¥ÊassessÊ minor assignment or test (10%), major assignment (40%), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Asian Political Thought Unit enrolment code HMA219/319 Familiarises students with some of the key texts and debates in Asian political thought. For a fuller description, see HSA218. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA218/318Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1 lecture, 1 tutorial weekly, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA218/318 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Contemporary Asian Issues Unit enrolment code HMA221/321 (Launceston, video link with Hobart) Examines the issues and problems facing contemporary Asian societies and states. Issues such as population control, deforestation, the position of women, human rights, ethnic/group relations and economic development will be analysed using a multidisciplinary approach. ¥ÊN.B. rotational unit, alternating with HMA246/346; not offered in 1999Ê The Asia-Pacific Economies: Tigers Unit enrolment code HMA222/322 Analyses the development, current institutional structure and recent growth of the Asia-Pacific economies, such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia, Korea, Thailand and Indonesia. For a fuller description, see BEA211. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as BEA211Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ BEA211 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (40%), final exam (60%). Courses: R3A C3C Chinese Culture and Society Unit enrolment code HMA227/327 Introduction of essential elements of Chinese culture and contemporary society and further consolidation of the language. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HMC303; not offered in 1999Ê IndoÐTibetan Philosophy, History and Culture Unit enrolment code HMA228/328 An intensive introduction to Buddhist philosophy, Tibetan Buddhist hermeneutics and Tibetan history and culture. For a fuller description, see HPA276. ¥ÊN.B. taught in India by exchange arrangement; may be studied as HPA276/376Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan (Coordinator) and staff of the CIHTS ¥Êin-country ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 3 Ð orientation 2 wks of 2-hr meetings; in India 3 wks of 5 days, 5 hrs per day, plus additional study programs ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100, or completion of first year in the Faculty of Science and Technology ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA276/376 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment including weekly 1,000-word essay, half-hour oral exam (3 wks) (50%), final 4,000-word exam essay (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Japanese 2 Language Skills A Unit enrolment code HMA230/330 Develops grammatically correct and fluent control of the spoken language. Some attention is given to the writing of Japanese. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMJ201Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms F Maejima ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ100 or TCE Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMJ201 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (30%), continuous assessment of oral skills (15%), 2-hr exam in June (15%), end-of-year oral exam (15%), 3-hr exam in Nov (25%). Courses: R3A C3C Japanese 2 Language Skills B Unit enrolment code HMA231/331 Develops reading skills (1 hour a week) through reading of graded texts and performance of comprehension and structure tasks, and oral/aural skills (1.5 hours a week) through Video-based oral/aural work. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMJ202Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch, Ms F Maejima ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 1-hr lectures, 1.5-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ100 or TCE Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMJ202 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment for oral/aural (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A C3C Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) Unit enrolment code HMA232/332 (Hobart, Launceston) Students read and write about ideas and information gained from the contemporary reading matter. For a fuller description, see HMN201. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMN201Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba (Ltn); Ms PM Allen (Hbt) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5x1-hr classes fornightly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ This unit is offered to students who have completed one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or have a high achievement at the TCE Stage 4 course ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN204 and HMN206, HMN201 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly written assignments and fortnightly tests (30%), 2 major assignments/essays in Indonesian (30%), final 2-hr written exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) Unit enrolment code HMA233/333 (Hobart, Launceston) Enables students to converse with a native speaker in Indonesian about the more complex topics covered in the unit; and to discuss ideas and information gained from listening and viewing and reading matter provided, dealing with both Indonesian and Australian cultures. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMN202Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba (Ltn); Ms PM Allen (Hbt) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5x1-hr classes fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ This unit is offered to students who have completed one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or who have a high achievement at the TCE Stage 4 course ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN202, HMN203, HMN205, HMN202 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments and fortnightly tests (30%), 2 seminar papers in Indonesian on an aspect of Indonesian culture or Australia-Indonesia concerns (20%), final written exam (20%), oral/aural exam (30%). Courses: R3A C3C Chinese 2 Language Skills A Unit enrolment code HMA234/334 Further develops the two macroskills of listening and speaking. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMC201Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CF Gao ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC100 or TCE Chinese Stage 4 (HA), or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMC201 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous aural and oral assessment (40%), 2-hour exam in June (20%), 3-hour exam in Nov (20%). Courses: R3A C3C Chinese 2 Language Skills B Unit enrolment code HMA235/335 Further develops the two macroskills of reading and writing. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMC202Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CF Gao ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5 hrs fortnightly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC100 or TCE Chinese Stage 4 (HA), or equiv ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMC201 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMC202 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous aural and oral assessment (40%), 2-hour exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Classical Japanese Literature Unit enrolment code HMA236/336 A study of the classics of Japanese literature from the 8th to the 13th centuries, using English translations. For a fuller description, see HMJ333. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unit; may be taken as HMJ333; not offered in 1999Ê Modern Japanese Literature Unit enrolment code HMA237/337 A survey of 20th century Japanese literature as it developed under the influence of English, European and American literature. HMA237/337 students will read Japanese novels and poetry in English translation. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMJ331Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2hr seminar weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMA- students: a pass in a yr-1 HMA unit; HMJ331 students: HMJ201 (DN), HMJ202 (DN) or HMJ305-307 (CR) ¥Êm/exclÊ HMJ331 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (25%), 2 tutorial papers (25%), 3-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Survey of Indonesian Literature Unit enrolment code HMA238/338 (Hobart, video link to Launceston Examines 20th-century Indonesian literature by looking at its history, development, major writers and works. Important novels, short stories, poetry and plays are considered. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMN304Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN307, HMN304 ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 2,500-word paper (20%), class presentation and write-up (20%), 3-hr final exam (40%). Courses: R3A C3C Asian Work and Environment Unit enrolment code HMA239/339 Examines Ôsocial and environmental justiceÕ in South East Asia, in particular the problems of Ôwork and environmentÕ in the Asian context. It moves from the national focus of HSD230/330 Australian Environment PolicyÊ (not a prerequisite) to the regional challenge of achieving socially and ecologically sustainable development in newly industrialising nations. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD239/339 or KGN239/339; not offered in 1999Ê Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy Unit enrolment code HMA240/340 (Hobart and Launceston) Introduces students to the principal traditions of Buddhist philosophy. For a fuller description, see HPA219. ¥ÊN.B. a Tasmania-Tibet Partnership Program courseÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Ven Geshe Ngawang Samten ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly (12 wks), 1 tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 or HAS100 ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA265/365, HPA219/319 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%), 2,500-word take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Advanced Buddhist Philosophy Unit enrolment code HMA242/342 (Hobart) Involves an intensive study of AryadevaÕs 400 stanzas,Ê a principal Mahayana Buddhist text of the 3rd-century. For a fuller description, see HPA297. ¥ÊN.B. a Tasmanian-Tibet Partnership Program courseÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Ven Geshe Ngawang Samtem ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly (12 wks), tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA265/365 or HPA219/319 ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA297/397 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (50%), 3,000word take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A C3C The Sound of the Past Unit enrolment code HMA243/343 (Launceston and Hobart) Is concerned with the uses and historicity of orally-transmitted traditional historical narratives which were primarily intended to be recited and heard, though now found in written form. For a fuller description, see HTA281. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA281/381; not offered in 1999Ê Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Unit enrolment code HMA244/344 Explores the historical and contemporary situation of Muslim women in the specific context of the interplay of religion and law in Islam, with special reference to the vast Muslim world of South and Southeast Asia. For a fuller description, see HTA223. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA223/323 or HAF260/360Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Roy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥ÊcoreqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF260/360, HTA223/323 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A C3C Imagining Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HMA245/345 (Hobart, and Launceston via video-link) The rise of Southeast Asia as a coherent region and field of study in Western social science is the primary focus of the unit. Beginning with precolonial and colonial ideas of region and identity and concluding with late 20th-century ideas of the Asia-Pacific, the unit traces the events and ideas which give Southeast Asia its character in a variety of scholarly and popular discourses. The aim of the unit is to show that Southeast Asia as a Ôplace,Õ is indistinguishable from the ways in which it is conceptualised in social thought. Issues such as space, identity, colonialism, nationalism, Marxism, modernisation, democracy, authoritarianism and globalisation are considered in the context of Southeast Asia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA257/357Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Philpott ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1.5-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMA100 or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA257/357 ¥ÊassessÊ exam (40%), 2,500-word essay (30%), journal (20%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A C3C Issues in Contemporary China Unit enrolment code HMA246/346 (Hobart and video-link to Launceston) Examines the issues and problems facing contemporary China. Issues such as population control, human rights, ethnic relations, and economic development will be analysed using a multi-disciplinary approach. ¥ÊN.B. rotational unit, alternating with HMA221/321Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMA100 or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA221/321 ¥ÊassessÊ exam (50%), 2,500-word essay (25%), tutorial participation (25%). Courses: R3A C3C The Early History of Indonesia Unit enrolment code HMA247/347 (Launceston) Studies the Indonesian archipelago, from the early first millennium to the end of the 18th century. For a fuller description, see HTA261. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA261/361Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof CC Macknight ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA261/361 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A The Later History of Indonesia Unit enrolment code HMA248/348 (Launceston and Hobart) Covers the growth of the Dutch colonial state from 1800 to 1942, the gradual erosion of other powers in the archipelago over the same period, and the emergence and progress of the Indonesian republic into the 1990s. For a fuller description, see HTA262. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HTA262/362Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof CC Macknight ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA262/362 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Japanese Film from the 1920s to the 1990s Unit enrolment code HMA249/349 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Is a survey of the major developments in Japanese film from its earliest days to the present. For a fuller description, see HMJ334. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMJ334Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð no more than 10 films viewd in the sem, plus 1 lecture and 1 tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ a pass in a level 100 Faculty of Arts unit ¥Êm/exclÊ HMJ334 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial paper (20%), 2,500-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C War and Peace in the Pacific Unit enrolment code HMA250/350 (Launceston and Hobart) Concentrates on selected historical events in the Pacific region during the first six decades of the 20th century. For a fuller description, see HTA255. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as as HTA255/355Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DJ Overton, Dr T Dunning, Dr DHuon ¥ÊLtn, Hbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA255/355 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (45%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (45%). Courses: R3A Research Project Unit enrolment code HMA300/301 (Launceston, video link with Hobart) Involves structured reading and writing on a topic agreed upon by the student and a supervisor and approved by the lecturer responsible for the unit. Students are expected to employ the skills and conceptual knowledge acquired in earlier units to investigate an appropriate issue or topic in Asian studies. At least one preliminary piece of writing of 1500 words will be required before the final exam. ¥ÊN.B. the HoSÕs permission is needed for enrolment in this unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê25%/12.5% ¥Êfull year HMA300 sem 1/2 HMA301 ¥ÊprereqÊ at least 25% at level 200 in Asian Studies or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ a report of 7,000 words (3,500 for 12.5% unit); alternatively, the lecturer responsible for the unit may approve a report of 3,500 words (or 2,000 for the 12.5% unit) for 50% of the assessment, and a 3-hr exam for the other 50%. Courses: R3A C3C Asian Studies Ð Honours units Asian Studies 4 Ð Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HMA400/401 A multidisciplinary program, Asian Studies honours draws on the resources primarily withinThe Faculty of Arts. Note: admission into honours is subject to attainment of standards as stipulated in the specifications of the Bachelor of Arts with Honours (see Calendar). Additionally, candidates are expected to have completed a first year of a relevant language other than English, or equivalent, and by the end of the honours year have undertaken additional language study which would demonstrate an ability to read competently in that language. The Coordinator shall be responsible for approving the candidature of each applicant. Intending candidates are asked to consult the Head of Section at the end of the preceding year or the beginning of the honours year. The program comprises four components: 1. A compulsory core unit: HMA411 Authoritarian Governmentality: Power and Domination in Contemporary Southeast AsiaÊ (25% semester 1) [For details, see below] 2. Two elective units: (See list below) (12.5% each). Students are required to choose two elective units from a range of units offered by the Schools participating in the Asian Studies honours program. The units are listed below, and their details, except one offered under the auspices of the Asian Studies, are available in the this Handbook under their respective school or discipline entries. In very special circumstances, an alternative seminar unit other than those stipulated above may be approved by the Coordinator and the relevant School, whereby a student may select a seminar unit from another major discipline, which may not necessarily contain an Asian Studies component, but is likely to have methodological benefits for the student. Students may also be allowed, in special circumstances, to elect some appropriate units which are not offered as part of the Asian Studies honours program. Such elections are strictly subject to approval by the Coordinator, as well as by the Schools concerned. 3. Guided Reading program (one): HMA404 (12.5% semester 1). Each honours candidate may undertake, instead of one elective, one Guided Reading program with an appropriate Asian expert in a School. The choice of the Reading program will be carefully decided in close consultation with the student, the relevant staff member, and the Coordinator. The program will consist of regular meetings with the chosen guide, leading to the preparation of a 5,000-word literature survey in the particular area of the study. The purpose of this unit will be to familiarise students with the relevant and necessary disciplinary and regional specialisation in a comparative perspective. The 5,000-word literature survey, forming part of the Guided Reading program, is also intended to enhance the studentÕs research skill which will be at a high premium for the thesis work in semester 2. 4. Thesis: HMA402 (50% semester 2). Close and careful consultation among the student, the supervisor of the thesis concerned, and the Coordinator will be needed to determine the area of research for the student in tune with the nature and direction of the studentÕs honours thesis. Regular meetings and consultation with the supervisor of the thesis, within the broad University guidelines on conducting research, overseen by both the School concerned and the Coordinator, will be the norm for conducting research and preparing the thesis. Thesis weight: 50%; length of the thesis: 10,000Ð12,000 words; submission date: early November; examination of the thesis: by two examiners, one of which should be external to the supervisorÕs School. ¥ÊN.B. partly Ltn if necessaryÊ ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, including satisfaction of the Faculty Grade-Point Average, plus a completed first year of a relevant language other than English, or equivalent. By the end of the honours year, students will have undertaken additional language study so as to demonstrate an ability to read competently in that language. Courses: R4A Muslim Nationalism and Indian Partition Unit enrolment code HMA405 (Hobart) Has the same objectives as HTA463. For information, students may contact Dr A Roy (School of History & Classics). ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Roy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ written work of about 4,000 words, 3-hr exam in June, seminar presentation and performance. Courses: R4A Asia in International Politics Unit enrolment code HMA408 (Hobart) Has the same objectives as HSA437. For information, students may contact Dr B He (School of Government). ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 1. Courses: R4A The Study of South Sulawesi Unit enrolment code HMA410 (Hobart) For information, students may contact Professor CC Mcknight, (School of Asian Languages and Studies). ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof CC Macknight ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1. Courses: R4A Authoritarian Governmentality: Power and Domination in Contemporary Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HMA411 (Hobart) Reconsiders theories of authoritarianism in the light of recent developments in the study of liberal democratic polities. ÔGovernmentalityÕ is concerned with the techniques, technologies and notionalities of power. It assumes the citizen-subject is constantly produced and unproduced by a variety of discourses including health, education, development, psychology and medicine. The unit explores the possibility that even authoritarian governments develop and depend on individual and collective agency to achieve their governmental ambitions. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Philpott ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ faculty requirements ¥ÊassessÊ 5,000-word essay, 2-day take home exam, seminar participation. Courses: R4A Postmodern Politics: East and West Unit enrolment code HMA412 (Hobart) Examines key themes in the theoretical background, interpretation and practices of postmodern politics in contemporary Asia. The unit considers ideas of ÔdeconstructionÕ, power and subjectivity in their impact on political analysis, and introduces examples of how these ideas are being adapted to the study and practice of politics in North and Southeast Asia. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Narramore, Dr S Philpott ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs seminar weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x3,500-word essays (45% ea), participation (10%). Courses: R3A C3C Chinese Ð School of Asian Languages and Studies Coordinator: Dr Mobo CF Gao. The School of Asian Languages and Studies at Hobart offers two undergraduate courses in Chinese. 1) Diploma in Modern Languages (Chinese) For those with or without degrees who wish to upgrade their language competence. Students must consult the head of the Chinese section before enrolling. They will need to have successfully completed HMC100 or TCE Chinese Stage 4 (HA), or equivalent. The course consists of two or three years part time study and involves 50% at 200 level in Chinese, and 50% at 300 level in Chinese. 2) Major in Chinese for students enrolled in a bachelor degree The student who has successfully completed the major (i.e. to third year) will have competence in speaking and understanding modern standard Chinese and in reading modern books, journals and newspapers. Though simplified characters, which are used in mainland China, are taught as a priority, traditional characters are also introduced gradually so that the student will be able to read original materials that are published in Hong Kong and Taiwan. HMC100 and HMC200 are intended to teach the student the four basic and essential macro-skills (speaking, listening, reading and writing modern standard Chinese). The third year units HMC301 and HMC302 build on the skills from first and second year Chinese and are intended to bring the studentÕs competence in the four macro-skills to a higher level; HMC303 is intended to introduce basic elements of Chinese culture and contemporary society and at the same time to further develop language skills; HMC304 is intended to teach the skills of decoding the Chinese mass media; HMC305 is a vocational unit developing skills in business Chinese using computers; HMC306 teaches the student classical Chinese; and HMC307 is a modern Chinese literature unit. Agreements have been reached between the University of Tasmania and two Chinese universities, Nankai and Jiangxi Normal, to run a summer course from mid-December to mid-February. Students will have the opportunity to undertake an eight-week intensive course of Chinese language, plus culture and social activity studies. There are two summer courses: one at a lower level for students who have passed HMC100, and one at a higher level for students who have passed HMC201 and HMC202. Upon successful completion, students of the lower level course will be credited with HMC201 (25%) and/or HMC202 (25%); and students of the higher level course will be credited with HMC301 (25%) and/or HMC302 (25%). Students with a high score in TCE Chinese Stage 4 or equivalent, upon recommendation of the Coordinator of the Chinese section, should enrol in the second year Chinese units, but this does not automatically mean that students so enrolled will receive credit for first year units. Advanced and native (including dialect), or advanced speakers enrol in third-year units in consultation with the Head of the Chinese section. Units offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code 100 level Chinese 1 25% [fy] [HL] HMC100 200 level Chinese 2 Language Skills A 25% [fy] [HL] HMC201 Chinese 2 Language Skills B 25% [fy] [HL] HMC202 300 level Chinese Speaking and Listening Skills 25% [fy] [HL] HMC301 Chinese Reading and Writing Skills 12.5% [1] [HL] HMC302 Chinese Mass MediaÊ[a] 12.5% [1] [HL] HMC304 Computer-Related Chinese Business and Office Writing 12.5% [2] [Hf] HMC305 Classical Chinese 25% [fy] [Hf] HMC306 Modern Chinese Literature 12.5% [2] [HL] HMC307 [a]Ê HMC100 is a sufficient prerequisite for HMC303 for students from other faculties or Schools. Students undertaking a major in Chinese may progress according to one of the following three routes: Route (a): HMC100 (25%), HMC201 (25%), HMC202 (25%), HMC301 (25%), HMC302 (12.5%) Route (b): HMC201 (25%), HMC202 (25%) + 62.5% at the 300 level Route (c) Double major: 112.5% at 300 level of units in Chinese. Students wishing to undertake a double major in Chinese will be required to take, in addition to their major in Chinese, a further 62.5% at level 300. Prior consultation with the Coordinator of Chinese section is required. Notes: Degree students may not enrol in a lower and higher level of the same language concurrently. Degree students may not enrol in a lower level after they have passed a higher level of the same language. Chinese Ð Level 100 unit Chinese 1 Unit enrolment code HMC100 (Hobart and Launceston) Develops competence in basic spoken and written Chinese (simplified characters). Oral/aural classes, language laboratory sessions and video classes as well as reading and writing classes feature in the learning of Chinese. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures , 3x1-hr tutorials weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises (20%), continuous assessment of aural/oral work (25%), midyear oral exam (10%), 1-hr test in June (10%), final aural/oral (15%), 2-hr exam in Nov (20%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Chinese Ð Level 200 units Chinese 2 Language Skills A Unit enrolment code HMC201 (Hobart and Launceston) Further develops the two macroskills of listening and speaking. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA234/334Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð (4 hrs) 2 lectures, 2 tutorials weekly, (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC100 or TCE Chinese Stage 4 (HA), or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA234/334 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous aural and oral assessment (40%), 2-hr exam in June (20%), 3-hr exam in Nov (20%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Chinese 2 Language Skills B Unit enrolment code HMC202 (Hobart and Launceston) Further develops the two macroskills of reading and writing. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HMA235/335Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5 hrs fortnightly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC100 or TCE Chinese Stage 4 (HA), or equiv ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMC201 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA235/335 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous aural and oral assessment (40%), 2-hr exam in June (20%), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Chinese Ð Level 300 units Chinese Speaking and Listening Skills Unit enrolment code HMC301 (Hobart and Launceston) Builds on the competency achieved by students in HMC201 and HMC202. This unit is obligatory for students who wish to major in Chinese. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC201 and HMC202, or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous aural-oral assessment (40%), aural-oral exam in June (20%), aural-oral exam in Nov (20%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Chinese Reading and Writing Skills Unit enrolment code HMC302 (Hobart and Launceston) Builds on the competency achieved by students in HMC201 and HMC202. This unit is obligatory for students who wish to major in Chinese. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC201 and HMC202, or equiv ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMC301 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMC202 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous assessment (40%), written exam in June (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Chinese Culture and Society Unit enrolment code HMC303 (Hobart and video-link to Launceston) Introduction of essential elements of Chinese culture and contemporary society and further consolidation of the language. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HMA227/327; not offered in 1999Ê Chinese Mass Media Unit enrolment code HMC304 (Hobart and video-link to Launceston) Introduction of essential skills in decoding the Chinese mass media and further opportunity to acquire the language. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CF Gao ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC201 and HMC202, or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous assessment (40%), written exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Computer-Related Chinese Business and Office Writing Unit enrolment code HMC305 (Hobart) Provides students with practical writing skills in dealing with various Chinese business and official situations. Skills in wordprocssing, spreadsheet and statistical applications in Chinese are developed. Varieties of official business writing, including product introduction, news reports, memoranda, tenders, contracts, etc., are covered. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Zheng ¥ÊHbt, int, flexible ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC201 or HMC202, or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 6 written assignments (60%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R1A R3A Classical Chinese Unit enrolment code HMC306 (Hobart) Develops studentsÕ reading skills in Classical Chinese. The unit examines the fundamental features of Classical Chinese from discussing analysis of texts. Through the analysis of selected texts, the unit also provides students with a knowledge of aspects of Classical Chinese culture such as Chinese philosophy, religion, and ethnic issues. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CF Gao, T Zheng ¥ÊHbt, int, flexible ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC301 and HMC302, or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 2 papers (60%), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Modern Chinese Literature Unit enrolment code HMC307 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Is a survey of 20th-century Chinese literature as it developed under the influence of Japanese, European and American literature. Students read some novels and poetry each week. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr CF Gao ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMC301 and HMC302, or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (25%), 2 tutorial papers (25%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R1A R3A Japanese Ð School of Asian Languages and Studies Coordinator Dr M Flutsch. The School of Asian Languages & Studies at Hobart offers two undergraduate courses in Japanese. 1) Diploma in Modern Languages (Japanese) For those with or without degrees who wish to upgrade their language competence. Students must consult the Coordinator of the Japanese section before enrolling. They will need to have successfully completed HMJ100 or TCE Japanese Stage 4 (HA) The course consists of two or three years part time and involves 50% at 200 level and 50% at 300 level . 2) Major in Japanese for students enrolled in a bachelor degree The student who has successfully completed the major (i.e. to third year) will have competence in speaking current standard Japanese and in reading modern books, journals and newspapers. HMJ100 and HMJ201, 202 are intended to give the student control of the standard language in both its written and spoken forms. Oral drills and video classes have a place in the course alongside study of the Japanese writing system and the reading of texts in modern Japanese. The third year units HMJ306Ð308 build on these skills and develop the studentsÕ ability to express themselves both in written and in spoken Japanese. The third year units HMJ331Ð334 are designed to advance the studentsÕ knowledge of Japanese literature and culture as well as develop skills in using technical, scientific and business Japanese. All of HMJ303Ð308 and three of HMJ331Ð334 must be taken by students wishing to proceed to an honours degree in Japanese (Japanese 4). Students intending to do a double major in Japanese should discuss this with the Coordinator of the Japanese section. Students with a high score in TCE Japanese Stage 4 or equivalent, upon the recommendation of the Coordinator of the Japanese section, should enrol in the second year Japanese units. This, however, does not mean that students so enrolled will receive credit for first year. Native, near-native or advanced speakers should enrol in level 300 HMJ units in consultation with the Coordinator of the Japanese section. Units offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code 100 level Japanese 1 25% [fy] [H] HMJ100 200 level Japanese 2 Language Skills A 25% [fy] [H] HMJ201 Japanese 2 Language Skills B 25% [fy] [H] HMJ202 300 level Reading Japanese 12.5% [1] [HL] HMJ306 Spoken Japanese 25% [fy] [H] HMJ307 Writing Japanese 25% [2] [HL] HMJ308 Modern Japanese Literature 12.5% [1] [HL] HMJ331 Japanese for Professional Purposes 25% [fy] [H] HMJ332 Japanese Film from the 1920s to the 1990s 12.5% [1] [HL] HMJ334 First year students with the appropriate language background may, upon the recommendation of the head of the Japanese section, be accepted into the second year Japanese course. Advanced speakers may take their major in Japanese entirely at the 300/400 level of Japanese. Students undertaking a major in Japanese may progress according to one of the following three routes: Route (a): HMJ100 (25%), HMJ201 (25%) and HMJ202 (25%), plus 37.5% of HMJ306Ð308. Route (b): 37.5% at 200 level; and 75% at 300 level (taken over not less than two years). Route (c): 112.5% at the 300/400 level for advanced speakers. Double major Students undertaking a double major in Japanese will be required to take, in addition to their major in Japanese, a further 62.5% at the 300 and/or 400 level of Japanese. Notes: Degree students may not enrol in a lower and a higher level of the same language concurrently. Degree students may not enrol in a lower level after they have passed a higher level of the same language. Honours Minimum prerequisites for entry into Japanese include one distinction and two credits in HMJ300 units and two credits and one pass in HMJ33- units. Japanese Ð Level 100 unit Japanese 1 Unit enrolment code HMJ100 (Hobart) Develops competence in basic spoken and written Japanese. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mrs T Ueki-Sabine ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3x1-hr lectures, 2x1-hr tutorials weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous assessment of aural/oral work (5%), 2-hr exam in June (25%), final aural/oral (15%), 3-hr exams in Nov (35%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Japanese Ð Level 200 units Japanese 2 Language Skills A Unit enrolment code HMJ201 (Hobart, video link with Launceston) Develops grammatically correct and fluent control of the spoken language. Some attention is given to the writing of Japanese. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA230/330Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms F Maejima ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ100 or TCE Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA230/330 ¥ÊassessÊ classwork (20%), continuous assessment of oral skills (10%), 2-hr exam in June (20%), end-of-year oral exam (15%), 3-hr exam in Nov (35%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Japanese 2 Language Skills B Unit enrolment code HMJ202 (Hobart, video link with Launceston) Develops reading skills (1 hour a week) through reading of graded texts and performance of comprehension and structure tasks. Further oral/aural skills are developed through conversation and video classes (1.5 hours a week). ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA231/331Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch, Ms F Maejima ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 1-hr lecture, 1.5-hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ100 or TCE Stage 4 (HA) or equiv ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMJ201 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA231/331 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous oral/aural assessment (20%), 2-hr written exam in June (15%), end-of-yr exam (30%), 2-hr written exam in Nov (35%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Japanese Ð Level 300 units Reading Japanese Unit enrolment code HMJ306 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Requires the reading of extracts from modern Japanese fiction, from newspapers, journals, and other non-fiction works and includes comprehension tasks and discourse structure analysis. The goal of this unit is to attain the reading ability of a young adult Japanese. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ201 and 202 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises (40%), 3-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Spoken Japanese Unit enrolment code HMJ307 (Hobart) Enables students to converse in Japanese at an adult level on selected topics such as politics, society, culture, and tourism. Grammatical analysis of the spoken language is included. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ201 and 202 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (40%), 2-hr exam in June (10%), final 30-min oral test (35%), 2-hr exam in Nov (15%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C R6F Writing Japanese Unit enrolment code HMJ308 (Hobart, Launceston by video-link) Enables students to write essays, letters and application forms in Japanese. The goal of this unit is for students to attain the writing ability of a young adult Japanese. ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly (1-hr lecture and 1.5-hr tutorial) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ201 and 202 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises (50%), 3-hr written exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Modern Japanese Literature Unit enrolment code HMJ331 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) A survey of 20th-century Japanese literature as it developed under the influence of English, European and American literature. HMA237/337 students will read Japanese novels and poetry in English translation. HMJ331 students will also read some work in the original Japanese in an extra hour tutorial per week. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA237/337Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2hr seminar weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMA- students: a pass in a yr-1 HMA unit; HMJ331 students: HMJ201, HMJ202 or HMJ305Ð308 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMJ306Ð308 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA237/337 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (25%), 2 tutorial papers (25%), 3-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Japanese for Professional Purposes Unit enrolment code HMJ332 (Hobart) Introduces readings in technical, scientific and business Japanese, and provides training in professional translation and interpreting into English and Japanese as well as in the spoken language of business, government, legal, health matters and tourism. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch, Ms T Ueki-Sabine, Ms F Maejima ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ201 (DN) and HMJ202 (DN); or HMJ306Ð308(CR) ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMJ306Ð308 ¥ÊassessÊ 2xhalf-hr exams in June (20%), 2xhalf-hr oral exams in Nov (20%), weekly exercises (30%), 3-hr written exam in Nov (30%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Classical Japanese Literature Unit enrolment code HMJ333 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) A study of the classics of Japanese literature from the 8th to the 13th centuries, including The Pillow Book of Sei ShonagonÊ and The Tale of GenjiÊ as well as the Imperial Poetry Collections.Ê Asian Studies (HMA) students will read the works in English translation. HMJ333 students will read some of the works in the original classical Japanese in an extra one hour tutorial weekly. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unit; may be taken as HMA236/336; not offered in 1999Ê Japanese Film from the 1920s to the 1990s Unit enrolment code HMJ334 (Hobart, video-link to Launceston) Is a survey of the major developments in Japanese film from its earliest days to the present, studying the works of the best-known directors such as Ozu, Kinugusa, Mizoguchi, Naruse, Kurosawa, Oshima, Ichikawa, Kon, Nagisa, etc. Issues such as the politics of film, gender representation, the negotiation of modernity and tradition, language asu, the problem of subtitling, colonialism and postcolonialism and the emergence of anime will be covered. The unit is taught in English and is open to non-Japanese speakers with all films shown with subtitles. Separate exercises regarding content, script, characters etc. are assigned to language and non-language students. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA249/349Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð no more than 10 films viewd in the sem, plus 1 lecture and 1 tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMJ201 and 202; for others, a pass in a level 100 Faculty of Arts unit (e.g. English) ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA249/349 ¥ÊassessÊ tutorial paper (20%), 2,500-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Japanese Honours units Japanese 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HMJ400/401 Intending students should consult the head of the Japanese section in December concerning preliminary reading and the structure of the course. Students must take HMJ415 and modern Japanese Literature and Applied Linguistics. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0%, see value of individual units ¥ÊprereqÊ two Distinctions (DN) and one Credit (CR) in HMJ306Ð308 and two Passes (PP) in three HMJ331Ð334. Courses: R4A R6F Twentieth Century Japanese Literature Unit enrolment code HMJ411 Requires students to read in the original Japanese short stories by six of the most prominent contemporary writers, which were published between 1985 and 1995. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Flutsch ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay in English (50%), classwork (50%). Courses: R4A R6F Japanese Applied Linguistics Unit enrolment code HMJ412 Introduces students to relevant concepts and issues of Japanese Applied Linguistics. The unit also includes a contrastive study of Japanese and English with particular emphasis on selected areas of morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mrs T Ueki-Sabine ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1.5-hr seminars weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises and tests (80%), written work/essays in Japanese to the total of 2,500 ji (20%). Courses: R4A R6F Thesis Unit enrolment code HMJ415 Students must write a thesis of 12,500 words in English on a topic of their choice subject to the approval of the head of the Japanese section. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê50%. Courses: R4A R6F Indonesian Ð School of Asian Languages and Studies Indonesian (and its close relation Malay) is spoken by over 200 million people in Southeast Asia and is the most widely taught language in Tasmanian schools. Successful completion of a major in Indonesian provides a student with the ability to speak, read and write standard and colloquial styles of the language. Additionally, students become familiar with 20th century Indonesian literature (its history and development, important writers and major works). Contemporary use of the language within the context of Indonesian culture is emphasised with some of the materials drawn from newspapers and magazines. Units at 200/300 level offered at Padang allow a student to complete the requirements for the second and third year of a major in Indonesian in a summer semester. A further 40% of units at 300 level is offered to provide continuity of study for such students. Students with prior knowledge of the language, students from Indonesia, Malaysia or Singapore, or native speakers of Indonesian should consult the head of the Indonesian section before enrolling in Indonesian. The School of Asian Languages and Studies at Hobart and Launceston offers two undergraduate courses in Indonesian: 1) Diploma in Modern Languages (Indonesian) For those with or without degrees who wish to upgrade their language competence. Students must consult the head of the Indonesian section before enrolling. They will need to have successfully completed HMN100 or TCE Indonesian Stage 4 (HA) The course consists of two or three years part time and involves 37.5% at 200 level in Indonesian, 62.5% at 300 level in Indonesian. 2) Major Honours in Indonesian for students enrolled in a bachelor degree The student who has successfully completed the major (i.e. to third year) has competence in speaking current standard Indonesian and in reading modern books, journals and newspapers. HMN100 and HMN201, 202 (or HMN203, 204 or HMN205, 206) are intended to give the student control of the standard language in both its written and spoken forms, and use oral drills and the reading of texts in modern Indonesian. The third-year units HMN302 (or 306), 303, 308 (or 382) build on these skills and develop the studentsÕ ability to express themselves in both written and spoken Indonesian. The third-year units HMN304, 305 (or 307) are designed to advance the studentsÕ knowledge of Indonesian literature and culture. Students with a high score in TCE Indonesian Stage 4 or equivalent, upon the recommendation of the head of the Indonesian section, should enrol in the second year Indonesian units. This, however, does not mean that students so enrolled will automatically receive credit for first year. Native, near native or advanced speakers should enrol in level 300 units in consultation with the head of the section. Units offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code 100 level Introductory Indonesian 25% [fy] [HL] HMN100 200 level Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) 25% [fy] [HL] HMN201 Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) 12.5% [1] [HL] HMN202 Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) (Padang) 12.5% [3] [ic] HMN203 Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) (Padang) 25% [3] [ic] HMN204 Intermediate Indonesian for Teachers (Conversation) (Padang) 12.5% [3] [ic] HMN205 Intermediate Indonesian for Teachers (Reading and Writing) (Padang) 25% [3] [ic] HMN206 300 level Advanced Indonesian Language Skills 25% [fy] [LH] HMN302 Interpreting and Translation 12.5% [2] [LH] HMN303 Survey of Indonesian Literature 12.5% [1] [HL] HMN304 Topics in Indonesian Literature 12.5% [na] [LH] HMN305 Advanced Indonesian Language Skills (Padang) 25% [3] [ic] HMN306 Indonesian Literature in Context (Padang) 12.5% [3] [ic] HMN307 Reading Indonesian 25% [fy] [LH] HMN308 Reading and Writing Jawi 12.5% [2] [LH] HMN309 Advanced Indonesian Language Skills 12.5% [1] [L] HMN312 Reading Indonesian 12.5% [1/2] [L] HMN382 Students undertaking a major in Indonesian progress according to the following routes: Route (a): HMN100 (25%), 200 level HMN units (total 37.5%), 300 level HMN units (total 50%) Route (b): 37.5% at 200 level; and 75% at 300 level (taken over not less than two years). Route (c): 112.5% at 300 and/or 400 level for native or advanced speakers Double major In addition to their major in Indonesian, students wishing to take a double major in Indonesian will be required to undertake a further 62.5% of 300 and/or 400 level HMN units. Notes: Degree students may not enrol in a lower and a higher level of the same language concurrently. Degree students may not enrol in a lower level after they have passed a higher level of the same language. Indonesian Ð Level 100 unit Introductory Indonesian Unit enrolment code HMN100 (Hobart, Launceston) Emphasises interactive use of Indonesian language and an understanding of contemporary Indonesian society. Uses written text, audio, video and computers for language learning. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5 contact hrs weekly (2 lectures, 3 tutorials) plus 5 hrs individual study (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ this unit is offered to students in any year with little or no previous background in Indonesian language study. There are no prerequisites for studying this unit. Students who have studied TCE Indonesian may have supplementary and/or alternative work provided, or proceed direct to second year ¥ÊassessÊ exercises and bi-weekly tests (20%); 2x500-word assignments in Indonesian (20%); 2 seminar presentations on an aspect of Indonesian culture or Australia-Indonesia concerns (20%); final 2-hr written exam (20%); final oral/aural tests (20%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Indonesian Ð Level 200 units Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) Unit enrolment code HMN201 (Hobart, Launceston) Enables students to read and write about the more complex topics covered in the unit. Students read and write about ideas and information gained from the contemporary reading matter provided, especially Indonesian newspaper and popular magazine material. Students are introduced to more formal styles to gain an appreciation of the aesthetic uses of language through literature. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA232/332Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba (Ltn); Ms PM Allen (Hbt) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 5x1-hr classes fortnightly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ This unit is offered to students who have completed one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or have a high achievement at the TCE Stage 4 course ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN204 and HMN206, HMA232/332 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly written assignments and fortnightly tests (30%), 2 major assignments/essays in Indonesian (30%), final 2-hr written exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) Unit enrolment code HMN202 (Hobart, Launceston) Enables students to converse in Indonesian about the more complex topics covered in the unit; and to discuss ideas and information gained from listening and viewing and reading matter provided, dealing with both Indonesian and Australian cultures. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA233/333Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ tba (Ltn); Ms PM Allen (Hbt) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 5x1-hr classes fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ This unit is offered to students who have completed one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or who have a high achievement at the TCE Stage 4 course ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN203, HMN205, HMA233/333 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly assignments and fortnightly tests (30%), 2 seminar papers in Indonesian on an aspect of Indonesian culture or AustraliaÐIndonesia concerns (20%), final written exam (20%), oral/aural exam (30%). Courses: R1A R3A C3C Intermediate Indonesian (Conversation) (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN203 Enables students to converse in Indonesian about more complex topics and to discuss ideas and information gained from listening, viewing and reading materials dealing with both Indonesian and Australian culture. Students live with families and deal directly with Indonesians to develop and sharpen their communication skills and ability to deal with various kinds of people while using Indonesian. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and Institut Keguruan Ilmu Pendidikan (IKIP) (Teacher Training College) teaching staff Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia ¥Êin-country ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð a total of 90 contact hrs in a 6-week intensive program; 1-hr lecture and 2x1-hr tutorials daily plus 3 hrs of individual study each day ¥ÊprereqÊ one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoD ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN204 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN202, HMN205 ¥ÊassessÊ class participation and 10 tests throughout the program (30%), weekly report based on interviews (20%), final written exam (20%), final oral/aural examination (30%). Courses: R1A R3A Intermediate Indonesian (Reading and Writing) (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN204 Enables students to read and write about the more complex topics covered in the unit. They read and write about ideas and information gained from the contemporary listening, viewing, and reading matter provided, especially Indonesian newspapers, short stories and popular magazines. Students also gain familiarity with Indonesian grammar and develop the ability to express ideas appropriately in writing. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and IKIP teaching staff Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia ¥Êin-country ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 3 Ð A total of 90 contact hrs in a 6week intensive program; 1-hr lecture, 2x1-hr tutorials daily plus 3 hrs of individual study each day ¥ÊprereqÊ one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN203 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN201 and HMN206 ¥ÊassessÊ class participation and 10 tests throughout the program (30%), weekly written assignments based on readings or interviews (30%), final 2-hr written exam (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ materials prepared by the program. Courses: R1A R3A Intermediate Indonesian for Teachers (Conversation) (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN205 Enables students to converse in Indonesian about more complex topics and to discuss ideas and information gained from listening, viewing and reading materials dealing with both Indonesian and Australian culture. Students live with families and deal directly with Indonesians in the community to develop and sharpen their communication skills and their ability to deal with various kinds of people while using Indonesian. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and IKIP teaching staff Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia ¥Êin-country ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð a total of 90 contact hrs in a 6-week intensive program; 1-hr lecture, 2x1-hr tutorials daily plus 3 hrs of individual study each day ¥ÊprereqÊ one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN206 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN202, HMN203 ¥ÊassessÊ class participation and 10 tests throughout the program (30%), weekly report based on interviews (20%), final written exam (20%) final oral/aural exam (30%). Courses: R1A R3A Intermediate Indonesian for Teachers (Reading and Writing) (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN206 Enables students to read and write about the more complex topics covered in the unit. Students read and write about ideas and information gained from the contemporary reading matter provided, especially Indonesian newspapers, short stories, popular magazines and texts used in Australian schools. Students also gain familiarity with Indonesian grammar and develop the ability to express ideas appropriately in writing. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and IKIP teaching staff Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia ¥Êin-country ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 3 Ð a total of 90 contact hrs in a 6week intensive program; 1-hr lecture, 2x1-hr tutorials daily plus 3 hrs of individual study each day ¥ÊprereqÊ one year of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN205 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMN201 and HMN204 ¥ÊassessÊ class participation and 10 tests throughout the program (20%), weekly written assignments based on readings or interviews (20%), 2,000-word paper due at the end of week 5 (20%), final 2-hr written exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A Indonesian Ð Level 300 units Advanced Indonesian Language Skills Unit enrolment code HMN302 (Hobart, Launceston) Enables students to read, understand, and use more technical and formal Indonesian. Materials, which are not adapted or abridged, include synopses of novels, short stories, popular and academic journals and newspapers and videos. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen (Hbt), tba (Ltn) ¥ÊLtn, Hbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 3 hrs tutorial weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 2,500-word paper due at the end of first sem (20%), 2 seminar presentations (20%), 2-hr final exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Interpreting and Translation Unit enrolment code HMN303 (Launceston, video link to Hobart) Students learn translation theories and principles of interpreting and translation through practice and discussion. The wide range of topics includes education, government, health, the arts, law, the press, religion, and culture. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture, 2x1-hr tutorials weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian or equivalent as approved by the HoS ¥ÊassessÊ weekly interpreting exercises (20%), weekly translation work (20%), special translation project (20%), final interpreting exam (20%), final translation exam (20%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F C3C Survey of Indonesian Literature Unit enrolment code HMN304 (Launceston, video link to Hobart) Examines 20th-century Indonesian literature by looking at its history, development, major writers and works. Important novels, short stories, poetry and plays are considered. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA238/338Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1hr lecture, 1-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA238/338 ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 2,500-word paper (20%), class presentation and write-up (20%), 3-hr final exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Topics in Indonesian Literature Unit enrolment code HMN305 (Hobart, video link to Launceston) Requires students to read a novel and short stories in Indonesian. The understanding of these works and their place in Indonesian literature are discussed in class. ¥ÊN.B. rotating unit; not offered in 1999Ê Advanced Indonesian Language Skills (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN306 Enables students to read, understand, and use more technical and formal Indonesian. Materials, which are not adapted or abridged, include synopses of novels, short stories, popular and academic journals and newspapers. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and IKIP teaching staff IKIP Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia ¥Êin-country ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 3 Ð a total of 90 contact hrs in a 6week intensive instruction program; 3 hrs daily plus 3 hrs of individual study and participatory activities ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN307 ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 2,500-word paper (20%); weekly written assignments (20%), 2-hr final exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Indonesian Literature in Context (Padang) Unit enrolment code HMN307 Requires students to read some prominent novels and short stories in their original form. The unit aims to develop studentsÕ understanding and language skills. ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms PM Allen and IKIP teaching staff IKIP Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia. ¥Êin-country ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð a total of 90 contact hrs in a 6-week intensive instruction program; 3 hrs daily plus 5 hrs of preparation outside class. ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊcoreqÊ HMN306 ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 1,500-word paper (20%), class presentation and write-up (20%), 2-hr final exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Reading Indonesian Unit enrolment code HMN308 (Launceston, video link to Hobart) Develops the studentsÕ skill in reading Indonesian and their ability to discuss, in Indonesian, topics based on this reading. In addition to works assigned to them, students may choose articles or books of personal, academic and professional interest. Weekly written assignments develop their skills in reporting and expressing opinions on what they have read. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð based on reading assignments, and 2-hr discussion weekly (26 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMN302 or HMN306 or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (a) preparation for and performance during discussion (20%), (b) weekly written assignment (20%), special project at the end of sem 1 (20%), endof-year 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Reading and Writing Jawi Unit enrolment code HMN309 (Launceston, video link to Hobart) Enables students to read the old Arabic-based script of Indonesian and Malay. Students are trained to read old manuscripts and documents. Methods for writing the script are also introduced. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999; check with head of the Indonesian section before enrollingÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 hrs reading and writing practice weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment Ð (a) weekly reading practice (20%), ( b) weekly writing practice (20%), special project at the end of sem (20%), end-of-year 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R1A R3A R6F Advanced Indonesian Language Skills Unit enrolment code HMN312 (Launceston) Is identical to the first semester of HMN302. ¥ÊN.B. except with permission of HoS, for BEd students onlyÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ two years of tertiary Indonesian language study or equiv as approved by the HoS ¥ÊassessÊ preparation and class participation (20%), 2,500-word paper due at end of week 12 (20%), class presentation (20%), 2-hr final exam (40%). Courses: E3A Reading Indonesian Unit enrolment code HMN382 (Launceston) Is identical to the one semester of HMN308. ¥ÊN.B. except with permission of HoD, for BEd students onlyÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1/2 Ð based on reading assignments and 2-hr discussion weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HMN302 or HMN306 or equiv as approved by HoS ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (a) preparation for and performance during discussion (30%), (b) weekly written assignment (30%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: E3A Indonesian Honours units Honours in Indonesian Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HMN400/401 (Hobart, Launceston) The BA Honours degree in Indonesian is made up of three parts: (a) Thesis, between 10,000 and 12,000 words, to be submitted by the end of the first week of November (50%); (b) compulsory core seminar on the History and Development of the Indonesian Language (25%); and (c) either the seminar Images of Women in Contemporary Indonesian CultureÊ (25%) or Guided ReadingÊ (25%). The student selects the topic of the Guided Reading in consultation with the supervisor and the approval of HoS. The two seminars are offered in semester 1. Students are required to participate in/make a presentation at the 2-hour seminars. and to write an essay of at least 5,000 words Ð due at the end of week 13. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba (Ltn), Ms PM Allen (Hbt) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥Êfull year Ð the seminar taught in Hobart is offered in Launceston by video conference; and that taught in Launceston is available in Hobart by video conference. ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, with Grade-Point Average of 7.0 or better. Courses: R4A Philosophy Ð School of Philosophy Philosophy is the inquiry into the fundamental nature of reality, our knowledge thereof, the nature of our moral life, and what it is to be human. The principal divisions of philosophy are metaphysics, epistemology, aesthetics, ethics, political philosophy, logic, the philosophy of language and the philosophy of science. Philosophy is foundational to many other disciplines and is an excellent vehicle for developing critical and creative reading, reasoning and writing skills, as well as for developing a deeper understanding of the nature of existence. The School of Philosophy offers a range of units addressing philosophical concerns from both Western and Asian perspectives. The School particularly encourages the study of the history of philosophy because of the context it provides for understanding individual philosophical texts and ideas. Units Offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code Level 100 Semester 1 Philosophy 1A 12.5% [1] [H] HPA101 Introduction to Philosophy 1A 12.5% [1] [Ld] HPA181 Semester 2 Philosophy 1B 12.5% [2] [H] HPA102 Introduction to Philosophy 1B 12.5% [2] [Ld] HPA182 Level 200/300 January-February Leibniz and Hume 12.5% [3] [H] HPA257/357 Science and Religion: The Philosophical Perspective 12.5% [3] [H] HPA274/374 IndoÐTibetan Philosophy, History and Culture 25% [3] [ic] HPA276/376 semester 1 Moral Philosophy 12.5% [1] [HLB] HPA210/310 Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy 12.5% [1] [HL] HPA219/319 Chinese Philosophy 12.5% [1] [H] HPA220/320 Kierkegaard and Nietzsche 12.5% [1] [L] HPA231/331 Reason and Experience 12.5% [1] [LH] HPA232/332 Philosophy of MathematicsÊ[a] 12.5% [1] [HLB] HPA246/346 Chance, Coincidence and Chaos 12.5% [1] [HLd] HPA256/356 History of Philosophy: from Early Greece to the Renaissance 12.5% [1] [H] HPA266/366 Philosophy of Health CareÊ[a] 12.5% [1] [HL] HPA269/369 Gender Issues 12.5% [1] [H] HPA271/371 Political Philosophy 12.5% [1] [L] HPA289/389 Introduction to Logic 12.5% [1] [HLBd] HPA291/391 Advanced Buddhist Philosophy 12.5% [1] [H] HPA297/397 Semester 2 Philosophy of Mind 12.5% [2] [H] HPA207/307 Idealism 12.5% [2] [H] HPA211/311 Sartre & Foucault 12.5% [2] [LH] HPA233/333 Berkeley and Hume: The Empiricist, the Idealist and the Science of Man 12.5% [2] [L] HPA258/358 History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy 12.5% [2] [H] HPA268/368 HPA370 Contact school for availability and details Environmental Ethics 12.5% [2] [HLB] HPA277/377 Philosophy of Religion and Science 12.5% [2] [LH] HPA283/383 Logic and Possibility 12.5% [2] [HLd] HPA292/392 Choice, Risk and Decision 12.5% [2] [HLB] HPA294/394 Philosophy 1999 12.5% [2] [H] HPA398 [a]Ê run concurrently at Ltn and Hbt (not as video-link) The following units are offered on 2-year rotational basis: Units on offer in odd-numbered years: Philosophy of Mind HPA207/307 Moral Philosophy HPA210/310 Idealism HPA211/311 Kierkegaard and Nietzsche HPA231/331 Reason and Experience HPA232/332 Sartre & Foucault HPA233/333 Philosophy of Mathematics HPA246/346 Chance, Coincidence and Chaos HPA256/356 Gender Issues HPA271/371 Philosophy of Religion and Science HPA283/383 Choice, Risk and Decision HPA294/394 Units on offer in even-numbered years: Philosophy and Literature HPA201/301 Greek Philosophy: Metaphysics and Epistemology HPA205/305 The Meaning of Life HPA209/309 Philosophy of Art HPA215/315 Law, Society and Morality HPA242/342 Ways of Reasoning HPA275/375 Ecophilosophy HPA278/378 Philosophy of Religion HPA293/393 Deviant Logic HPA295/395 Philosophy Ð Level 100 units Philosophy 1A Unit enrolment code HPA101 (Hobart) Introduces philosophy by examining some of the most intriguing and exciting philosophical writings of the modern period. Issues raised include what is the mind? how do we know anything? do we have free will? what makes things right and wrong? what kind of society do we want? who am I and where do I fit in? and what is truth anyway? ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Dowe ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA100, HPA181 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,000-word essay (20%), 1,500-word essay (40%), 2-hr test (40%). ¥ÊreqÊ Course reader Courses: R3A Philosophy 1B Unit enrolment code HPA102 (Hobart) Examines four issues that contemporary philosophers find challenging, including philosophy of science, free will, issues in religion and science, and philosophy of feminism. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Dowe ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures (13 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA100, HPA182 ¥ÊassessÊ 2 x 1,200-word essays or 1-hr test (50%), exam (50%). Courses: R3A Introduction to Philosophy 1A Unit enrolment code HPA181 (Launceston) Introduces some major philosophical issues and the methods of philosophising. The unit involves the study of the following issues: the justification of punishment; the problem of freewill and determinism; and a study of MillÕs On LibertyÊ with reference to some contemporary issues such as censorship, freedom of speech and drug taking. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr JA Norris ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA100 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Introduction to Philosophy 1B Unit enrolment code HPA182 (Launceston) Introduces students to the basics of philosophy, with methods of conceptual analysis covering the following important areas: mind and body, critical thinking, perception, issues in religion and science. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Watkin ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures (13 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (12wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA100 &/or HPA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 1,000-word essay or 1-hr test (40%), toturials (10%), 2hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Philosophy Ð Level 200/300 units Philosophy and Literature Unit enrolment code HPA201/301 (Launceston and Hobart) Examines classical and contemporary views concerning the relation between philosophy and literature. A study is made of the writings of such philosophers as Plato, Aristotle, Coleridge, Kierkegaard, Nussbaum and Derrida. In particular, attention is paid to issues concerning the nature of moral knowledge, its forms and the manner in which literature supplements and extends moral inquiry. The scope of moral principles and reasoning is examined in relation to questions concerned with the nature of the self and the place of subjective knowledge. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Greek Philosophy: Metaphysics and Epistemology Unit enrolment code HPA205/305 Plato and Aristotle are commonly thought to be two of the three greatest philosophers of the West, and their works to constitute the foundation on which subsequent Western philosophy has developed. In this unit several of PlatoÕs dialogues concerning his views on the fundamental nature of reality and our knowledge of it are studied. In general, Plato believes in a transcendent realm of reality, contrasting with the physical, while his pupil and successor, Aristotle, attempts to give an account of things largely in terms of commonsense beliefs. A selection of AristotleÕs writings will be studied, in which he discusses knowledge, the mind, logic, society and the basic categories of human thought. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Philosophy of Mind Unit enrolment code HPA207/307 (Hobart) Examines a number of issues in the contemporary philosophy of mind and action: the identity of actions and events; the explanation of intentional behaviour; weakness of the will, self-deception and wish fulfilment; and a number of related topics in the philosophy of psychoanalysis and foundations of cognitive science. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A The Meaning of Life Unit enrolment code HPA209/309 (Hobart and Launceston) Is an examination of philosophical attempts to explore the meaning and value of life, and of the arguments which are used to support different answers which have been offered to the question: Is life meaningful? ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Moral Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA210/310 (Hobart, Launceston and Burnie) Moral philosophers are engaged in the attempt to understand our moral life. What are the foundations of morality? What makes some actions right and others wrong? What is moral goodness? The unit studies a number of major issues in contemporary moral philosophy: moral relativism; consequentialism versus nonconsequentialism (i.e. are acts right because of their consequences or because of the kinds of acts they are?); the nature of moral value; the virtues; moral scepticism and nihilism. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Colman ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, Brn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 x 1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (60%), 3-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Idealism Unit enrolment code HPA211/311 (Hobart) Broadly speaking Idealism is the doctrine that Reality is fundamentally mental. In one form or another this doctrine has had considerable influence both in the history of philosophy and the history of ideas (the early philosophy of Moore and Russell is a revolt against the Idealism of Bradley and McTaggart; Romanticism was largely driven by German Idealism). This unit will explain and critically examine three major forms of Idealism in historical order: 1. BerkeleyÕs Subjective Idealism( immaterialism) 2. KantÕs Transcendental Idealism 3. BradleyÕs Absolute Idealism. It will be shown how these forms relate to each other, consider the standard criticism of idealism and modern defences of the doctrine. The unit will also include an outline of HegelÕs Idealism drawing on his Lectures on the History of Philosophy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Colman ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% of level 100 Philosophy ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A Philosophy of Art Unit enrolment code HPA215/315 Considers some of the major theories about the arts, concentrated around questions of the following kind among others. What is art? What is the function of art? Is there such a thing as the aesthetic attitude? Is there such a thing as the aesthetic experience? What is the relation between art and knowledge and art and morality? Are aesthetic values objective or subjective? ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA219/319 (Hobart and Launceston) Introduces students to the principal traditions of Buddhist philosophy. The unit begins with an examination of the discourses of the Buddha in the PaliÊ tradition and an examination of the common core of all Buddhist philosophical schools. It then studies the MahayanaÊ tradition, with attention both to Buddhist analyses of the nature of phenomena and to Buddhist moral theory. ¥ÊN.B. a TasmaniaÐTibet Partnership Program courseÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Ven Geshe Ngawang Samten ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly (12 wks), 1 tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 or HAS100 ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA265/365, HMA240/340 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%), 2,500-word take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A Chinese Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA220/320 (Hobart) Examines the major currents in Chinese Philosophy such as Confucianism, Taoism, Mohism, Legalism, the Logicians, the Yin-Yang School, and Buddhism. The focus is on understanding the key doctrines, how they differ from and relate to each other, and also, on how the issues and approaches that typify Chinese Philosophy relate to central trends in Western Philosophy. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA251/351Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Sleinis ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lecture weekly (13 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA251/351 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam (60%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Kierkegaard and Nietzsche Unit enrolment code HPA231/331 (Launceston) Introduces students to the thought of two exciting major figures in modern philosophy, Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. The unit explores important themes such as the nature and communication of truth, the human self and its goals, and the nature and scope of human freedom. How was it that Kierkegaard and Nietzsche came to such opposite conclusions about the nature of the world and human existence? ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Watkin ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture weekly (12 wks), 3 tutorials fortnightly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HHP221/321 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (2,500 words for level 300 students) (40%), 3-hr exam (50%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Reason and Experience Unit enrolment code HPA232/332 (Launceston and video-link to Hobart) Acquaints students with the work of two of the founders of modern philosophy, Descartes and Locke. How did Descartes think he could reason his way to certainty? Why did Locke start with the empirical world in his quest for knowledge? This unit focuses especially on the assumptions and method of argument of two great minds, to see how they arrived at the conclusions they did. What significance does their thought have for our own time? ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Watkin ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1hr lecture weekly (13 wks), 3 tutorials fortnightly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HHP231/331 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000word essay (2,500 words for level 300 students) (40%), 3-hr exam (50%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Sartre & Foucault Unit enrolment code HPA233/333 (Launceston and video-link to Hobart) Introduces students to the philosophical work of Sartre and Foucault concerned with the nature and structure of the self. The unit contrasts SartreÕs Humanism with the development of the anti-humanism of Foucault and the subsequent postmodernist view of the self. Central themes include analysis of the nature and extent of human freedom, characterisation and description of the human subject, the role of self-criticism, self-stylisation and the development of ethics. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Norris ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1hr lecture weekly (12 wks), 3 tutorials fortnightly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or equiv ¥Êm/exclÊ HHP221/321 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000word essay (2,500 words for level 300 students) (40%), 3-hr exam (50%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Law, Society and Morality Unit enrolment code HPA242/342 Examines issues concerned with the relationship between the law and morality. The unit looks into various views concerning the role of morality in law. A study is then made of issues such as obscenity, euthanasia, pornography and various topics involving sexual morality, e.g. homosexuality, prostitution and sado-masochism. ¥ÊN.B. rotational unit; not offered in 1999Ê Philosophy of Mathematics Unit enrolment code HPA246/346 (Hobart, and Launceston and Burnie by video) Looks at some of the fascinating philosophical issues arising out of the study of mathematics. These include the nature of mathematical knowledge, the ontological status of mathematical entities and the implications such philosophical issues have for the methodology of mathematics. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, Brn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% of level 100 of Philosophy or Mathematics ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000word essay (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A Chance, Coincidence and Chaos Unit enrolment code HPA256/356 Hobart, Launceston, distance education Is a study of the ÔchanceÕ world view and its implications for the way we think of ourselves and the universe in which we live. The unit examines the ideas of chance, coincidence and chaos; and the related ideas of reason, probability and purpose. Students study the relevance to these of some startling results of modern science, including BellÕs Theorem, The Anthropic Principle and Chaos Theory; and the implications for the following: our place in the universe, human free will, everyday decision-making and metaphysical reasoning. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Dowe ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (13 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000word essay (40%), tutorial participation (20%), 2-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Leibniz and Hume Unit enrolment code HPA257/357 The philosophies of Leibniz and Hume are in many ways diametrically opposed, yet both have influenced contemporary philosophy in many ways. This unit introduces and compares the metaphysics of these two influential philosophers. Topics covered include truth, personal identity, freedom of the will, the scope of reason, and causality. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Dowe ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð 2x1.5 hr lectures weekly (6 wks), 2-hr tutorials weekly (6 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% of level 100 Philosophy or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment (20%), 2 tutorial presentations (20% ea), take-home exam (40%). Courses: R3A Berkeley and Hume: The Empiricist, the Idealist and the Science of Man Unit enrolment code HPA258/358 (Launceston) Introduces the thought of two great British empiricists concerned with the nature and extent of knowledge. The unit explains the main tenets of BerkeleyÕs idealism and his rejection of ÔmaterialismÕ and the philosophy of Locke. The unit examines some of the central notions of HumeÕs philosophy including those of causality, the justification of induction, reason and the imagination, the nature of the external world and his account of personal identity. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Norris ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1-hr lecture weekly (13 wks), 3 tutorials fortnightly (12 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HHP241/341 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word assignment (2,500 words for level 300 students) (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A History of Philosophy: from Early Greece to the Renaissance Unit enrolment code HPA266/366 (Hobart) Studies the development of philosophy from the period of the early Greeks to the period of the Renaissance. Students are able to examine the ideas of philosophers like Plato and Aristotle; see how those ideas took a grip on the minds of theologians and other thinkers throughout the middle ages; see how the same ideas came together in the doctrines of St Thomas Aquinas and see how they laid the foundation for many philosophical beliefs of our own day. The unit will be useful not only to students of philosophy but also to students of history, literature, ancient civilisations, art, and religion. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 x 1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ pass in any 25% level 100 unit in the BA schedule ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA268/368 (Hobart) Studies the development of philosophical ideas in the modern period, starting from the Renaissance and going through to the present day. Students see where those ideas came from and how they gave rise to traditions: how the ideas of Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza and others formed one tradition; how the ideas of Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley, Hume and others formed a second; and how these two traditions gave rise to a third, the tradition of Kant and his followers. They will then be able to follow those traditions into the 20th century, where they are vigorously alive in the thought and writings of English-speaking philosophers and Continental philosophers alike. The unit will be useful not only to students of philosophy but also to students of history, literature, ancient civilisations, art, and religion. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr E Sleinis ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly (12 wks) 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ pass in any 25% level 100 unit in the BA schedule ¥ÊassessÊ 3000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Philosophy of Health Care Unit enrolment code HPA269/369 (Hobart and Launceston) Introduces students to the philosophical consideration of some complex moral issues generated by contemporary health care. Topics to be discussed will be selected from the following: abortion; neonatal intensive care; Ôinformed consentÕ; confidentiality; HIV/AIDS; euthanasia and palliative care and justice in the distribution of health care resources. These issues will be used as a starting point for reflection on various moral theories and concepts which have been influential in recent philosophical discussion. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Colman (Hbt); tba (Ltn) ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly (13 wks), 1 tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 or a successfully completed first year in any faculty ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), participation (10%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: H3D R3A Philosophy of Feminism Unit enrolment code HPA270/370 (Hobart and Launceston) Examines critically both philosophy and feminism. The unit employs feminist perspectives to examine critically such philosophic notions as reason, human nature, civil society, equality, nature, culture and ethics to discern the role that gender plays in philosophical theory; it also employs philosophic methods to assess critically the central conceptual issues of feminism, including those that divide feminists. The unit also considers the way in which feminist perspectives have influenced contemporary thinking on such issues as bioethics, prostitution, justice and the State. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF204/304Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M La Caze ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 x 1-hr lectures weekly (13 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ pass in any 25% level 100 unit in the BA Schedule ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF204/304 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Gender Issues Unit enrolment code HPA271/371 (Hobart) Contemporary feminist philosophy problematises gender categories and their implications for epistemology, politics and social relations. This unit examines both how gender is theorised, and the new developments in feminist epistemology and ethics deriving from current gender theory. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF264/364 or FST254/354Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M La Caze ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lecture weekly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or WomenÕs Studies ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF264/364, FST254/354 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word mid-term essay (50%), 3-day take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Science and Religion: The Philosophical Perspective Unit enrolment code HPA274/374 (Hobart) Examines the relation between science and religion with particular reference to Galileo, Darwin, and Stephen Hawking. Topics include miracles and laws of nature, a comparison of scientific and religious concepts of explanation and justification; and related questions, such as: Are science and religion incompatible? Does science reveal the mind of God? ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr P Dowe ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 3 Ð 2x1.5-hr lecture, 2-hr tutorial weekly (6 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% level 100 Philosophy or completion of first year in Faculty of Science and Engineering ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA283/383 ¥ÊassessÊ 3 class presentations (20% ea), take-home exam (40%). Courses: R3A S3G Ways of Reasoning Unit enrolment code HPA275/375 Contact the School for details. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê IndoÐTibetan Philosophy, History and Culture Unit enrolment code HPA276/376 An intensive introduction to Buddhist philosophy, Tibetan Buddhist hermeneutics and Tibetan history and culture. Students study at the Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies (CIHTS) and are taught by staff of that institute. Lectures on Tibetan politics, art, music and medicine are also given; and students participate in various ancillary activities, including Indian cultural programs, tours of Varanasi and travel to important Buddhist sites in India, including Bodh Gaya, Raj Ghir and the ruins of Nalanda University. Each student is assigned a student colleague drawn from the student body of the CIHTS who will help in acculturation and give a ÔstudentÕs eye viewÕ of Tibetan culture. ¥ÊN.B. taught in India by exchange arrangement; may be taken by students who are not enrolled at University of Tasmania; or as HMA228/328Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan (Coordinator) and staff of the CIHTS ¥Êin-country ¥Ê25% ¥Êsem 3 Ð orientation 2 wks of 2-hr meetings; in India 3 wks of 5 days, 5 hrs per day, plus additional study programs ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100, or completion of first year in the Faculty of Science and Technology ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA228/328 ¥ÊassessÊ continuous assessment including weekly 1,000-word essay, half-hour oral exam (3 wks) (50%), final 4,000-word exam essay (50%). Courses: R3A Environmental Ethics Unit enrolment code HPA277/377 (Hobart, Launceston and Burnie) Is for students who want to study a specialised area of applied ethics, and is a unit in the interdisciplinary environmental studies course open to both humanities and science undergraduates. The unit introduces students to the consideration of some philosophical problems in environmental ethics. The following questions are posed in relation to the environment: what are our duties to the environment, to other species, to future generations? how can these duties be determined? are there intrinsic and/or inherent values in nature? These questions are used as a basis for a critique of traditional moral theories. Contemporary moral theories, which have been suggested as plausible alternatives, are explored: is a universal ethic possible or desirable? does postmodernist relativism offer more plausible solutions to the environmental crisis? is the feminist ethic of care an alternative to a traditional ethic based on justice and rational principles? ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KGN277/377Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ms L Shotton ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, Brn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly (12 wks), 1 tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100, or completion of first year in any faculty ¥Êm/exclÊ KGN277/377 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A S3G(D3) Ecophilosophy Unit enrolment code HPA278/378 (Hobart, and Launceston and Burnie by video) Introduces students to issues concerned with the relationship between human beings and the environment. The unit examines the place and development of ecological ethics and their relationship to general ethical theories. An examination of the range and basis of environmental ethics is undertaken including theories developed from traditional ethical theories to the ethics of Ôdeep ecologyÕ. The unit then examines a selection of environmental issues addressed by enviromental ethicists, including questions to do with resouce allocation, the value of wilderness, population control and conservation ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Philosophy of Religion and Science Unit enrolment code HPA283/383 (Launceston and video-link to Hobart) Do religion and science come into irreconcilable conflict or is it the case that they support each other through the insights each provides? This question is investigated through an analysis of the nature of religion and science and through a study of important issues and sources of confict in the history of their encounter. Important themes to be explored include the arguments surrounding opposed models of the universe and the methods and theories underlying scientific and religious debate. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Watkin ¥ÊLtn, int, Hbt by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1 lecture weekly, 3 tutorials fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% of level 100 Philosophy ¥Êm/exclÊ HPA274/374, HPA261/361 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word assignment (2,500 words for level 300 students) (40%), 3-hr exam (50%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A Political Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA289/389 (Launceston) Introduces Political Philosophy, including the political thought of Locke and examines some contemporary views, such as Rawls and Nozick, concerning justice, liberty, equality and democracy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr J Norris ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊprereqÊ 25% of level 100 Philosophy ¥ÊassessÊ written assignment (50%), 3-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Introduction to Logic Unit enrolment code HPA291/391 (Hobart, and Launceston and Burnie by video) Introduces students to symbolic logic, including proof theory, semantics and elementary metatheory of the propositional calculus and the first order predicate calculus, as well as the application of elementary logical techniques to the formalisation of natural language reasoning. The unit is suitable for students wishing to pursue logic further, as well as those wishing to acquire some familiarity with logic for other purposes. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, Brn, by video-link, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly (13 wks), tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2 assignments (25% ea), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A C3S Logic and Possibility Unit enrolment code HPA292/392 (Hobart, and Launceston, distance education Continues the study of logic begun in Introduction to Logic.Ê Topics include more advanced metatheory of first-order predicate calculus (including completeness and incompleteness results) and an introduction to modal logics. The latter are logics enriched with the operators ÔpossiblyÕ and ÔnecessarilyÕ. Both the metatheory and modal logics covered in this unit have many interesting applications and raise many philosophical issues, some of which will be addressed. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, dist.ed ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly (13 wks), tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA291/391 ¥ÊassessÊ 2 assignments (25% ea), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A Philosophy of Religion Unit enrolment code HPA293/393 (Launceston) Is a philosophical investigation of the interaction between religion and science through an examination of the nature of religious and scientific language and of the grounds of scientific and religious authority. Topics include issues surrounding religious revelation and personal religious experience, also Darwinism and other evolution theories. The course is complete in itself but can be taken as a continuation of HPA274/374 Philosophy and Religion and Science I. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Choice, Risk and Decision Unit enrolment code HPA294/394 (Hobart, and Launceston and Burnie by video) Introduces students to the formal study of decision theory. This is the theory of rational decision making by individuals Ð taken alone, in competition or in groups. Topics covered include decisions under ignorance, decisions under risk (both Bayesian and fuzzy approaches) and game theory. Throughout the unit, the various applications of the theory are stressed. The unit is of use to a variety of students, including students of: philosophy, logic, psychology, computer science and information systems, social science, environmental science, management and law. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Colyvan ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, Brn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3x1-hr lectures fortnightly (12 wks), 1-hr tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ completed first year of study in any faculty ¥ÊassessÊ 2 assignments (25% ea), final exam (50%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Deviant Logic Unit enrolment code HPA295/395 (Hobart) Continues the study of logic begun in Introduction to LogicÊ (zaHPA291za>HPA291/391). The main emphasis is on non-classical logics. These include multi-valued logics (such as fuzzy logic), non-monotonic logics, and relevant logics. The unit looks at both the technical aspects of these logics and their many interesting applications. Some of the philosophical issues raised by these alternative logics are also considered. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999; will be available in 2000Ê Advanced Buddhist Philosophy Unit enrolment code HPA297/397 (Hobart) Involves an intensive study of AryadevaÕs 400 stanzas,Ê a principal Mahayana Buddhist text of the 3rd-century. This text expands on NagarjunaÕs MulamadhyamakakarikaÊ and explores the relation of Buddhist metaphysics and ethics. It inspires a large commentarial literature. Studying the text and its allied written and oral literature will also introduce students to Tibetan hermeneutical theory and practice. ¥ÊN.B. a TasmaniaÐTibet Partnership Program course; may be taken as HMA242/342Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Ven Geshe Ngawang Samtem ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly (12 wks), tutorial weekly (11 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA219/319 or HPA276/376 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA242/342 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (50%), 3,000word take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A Philosophy Ð Level 300 unit Philosophy 1999 Unit enrolment code HPA398 (Hobart) Is designed for students intending to do honours in philosophy. The staff of the School of philosophy will join in presenting to students the most important philosophical work published in the past year in a variety of philosophical specialities. In this way, students will gain an appreciation of the kinds of philosophical research now being undertaken around the world, and the most important philosophical questions being asked today. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M La Caze (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr lecture weekly (13 wks), tutorial weekly (12 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ HPA100 or equiv ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (50%), 3,000-word take-home exam (50%). Courses: R3A Philosophy Honours units Philosophy 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HPA400/401 1. Students take either four one-semester units, or two full-year units, or an equivalent combination thereof. Each unit consists of a detailed study of a set of philosophical problems and/or a major text or texts. In each unit students will write a substantial essay (totalling 50% of the overall assessment). For each of the units there are weekly 2-hour seminars. Students also attend the weekly School seminars and work-inprogress sessions in Hobart, and Philosophy Society meetings in Launceston. 2. Students are required to submit a thesis (50% of the overall assessment) during the course of the year. 3. Candidates for honours in philosophy must have satisfied the prerequisites of the Faculty as set out in the Calendar. ¥ÊN.B. some units are offered by video-link to both campuses; enquire from the School of PhilosophyÊ ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê50%/100% ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, including satisfaction of the Faculty Grade-Point Average. Courses: R4A Political Science Ð School of Government The School of Government offers majors in two programs: Political Science (offered on the Hobart Campus) and Government and Public Policy (offered on the Hobart and Launceston Campuses). Each major is complete in itself, with the two complementing each other in understanding and explaining politics and policy at all levels from the smallest political community to the international system of states. ( For details of the Government and Public Policy major, see under ÔGovernmentÕ). Political Science is the study of the ideas, processes and institutions which determine public decisions within and among communities. Understanding the nature of political activity is important for citizenship in a democracy such as Australia. It is also necessary in order to understand political activity in other societies. First year Two first year (100 level) Political Science units (Political Science 1A and Political Science 1B) seek to provide both an adequate base for students intending to major in Political Science and an adequate background for others who wish to understand better the ideas and institutions influencing Australian democracy. Completion of both Political 1A and 1B is a prerequisite for admission to second year (200 level) units. Second and third year Second year (200 level) and third year (300 level) units address a range of themes: political theory and methodology, international relations, comparative politics, Australian politics and Asia-Pacific politics. A major in Political Science requires a student to gain a minimum of 100% from Political Science units, of which 25% (HSA101 and HSA102) will be obtained at the 100 level and the remaining 75% from units at levels 200 and 300. A double-major requires students to gain 175% Political Science units, of which 25% (HSD101 and HSD102) will be obtained at the 100 level and the remaining 150% from units at levels 200 and 300. Honours year The Honours program of study is an advance exploration of selected issues in Political Science. Beyond an additional qualification to the bachelor degree, successful completion of honours may enable the student to pursue a higher degree in Political Science without further preparation. The program is open to students who have majored in Political Science with a Grade-point Average of 6.5 or higher. The study of Political Science is useful preparation for a variety of careers including government service, teaching, journalism and research. For non-majors, Political Science complements most other subjects in Arts, Commerce and Law. It is a common major in the Arts-Law combined degree. Units in the Political Science program at the 100, 200 and 300 levels are set out below in the following table. Unit title weight sem campus code Year 1 (100 level) semester 1 Political Science 1A 12.5% [1] [H] HSA101 semester 2 Political Science 1B 12.5% [2] [H] HSA102 Year 2 (200 level) & Year 3 (300 level) 1. The School reserves the right not to offer any 200/330 level units which do not attract a minimum enrolment, or which cannot be offered due to staff leave or movements. 2. Students may not enrol in units which substantially repeat other units, or units which they have previously passed. semester 1 Political Ideologies 12.5% [1] [H] HSA210/310 Political Thought: Liberal Democracy 12.5% [1] [H] HSA212/312 Contemporary Feminist Thought 12.5% [1] [H] HSA214/314 Asian Political Thought 12.5% [1] [H] HSA218/318 Ethnic and Race Politics 12.5% [1] [H] HSA201/301 Politics of Democratisation, East and West 12.5% [1] [H] HSA227/327 Approaches to International Relations 12.5% [1] [H] HSA202/302 Media and Politics in Australia 12.5% [1] [H] HSA203/303 Politics in Contemporary Japan 12.5% [1] [H] HSA250/350 Politics in Contemporary China 12.5% [1] [H] HSA256/356 Imagining Southeast Asia 12.5% [1] [HL] HSA257/357 semester 2 The Politics of Gender, The Politics of Feminism 12.5% [2] [H] HSA213/313 Comparative Political Systems 12.5% [2] [H] HSA222/322 Australia in Regional Context 12.5% [2] [H] HSA244/344 Australian Foreign Policy 12.5% [2] [H] HSA240/340 The Australian Political System: Political Parties and Parliament 12.5% [2] [HL] HSA241/341 Imagining Southeast Asia 12.5% [1] [HL] HSA257/357 Politics in Literature and Film 12.5% [2] [H] HSA204/304 Parliamentary Internship HSA361/432 not offered in 1999 International Organisation: Globalism and Regionalism 12.5% [na] [H] HSA232/332 Tasmanian Politics and Australian Federalism 12.5% [na] [H] HSA260/360 Level 100 units Political Science 1A Unit enrolment code HSA101 Political Science deals with key questions about the nature of power, forms of government and political ideas in the modern world. This unit explores a wide range of issues, debates and concepts including freedom, justice and participatory and representative democracy. Feminist critiques of traditional political matters also are examined. The unit introduces the study of international relations and considers a number of topics: the Cold War and the manner of its ending; the salience of Australian engagement with Asia; and conflict and cooperation between countries. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones, Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), tutorial assessment (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ Crick B, In Defence of Politics,Ê 4th edn, Penguin, Harmondsworth, 1992 McWilliams W and Piotrowski H, The World Since 1945: A History of International Relations,Ê Lynne Rienner, Colorado, 1993. Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Political Science 1B Unit enrolment code HSA102 Begins with an investigation of the institutions of Australian government, the electoral process, and the role of the media and political movements in policy formation. The unit concludes with an examintion of the institutions and electoral processes in four democracies: the United Kingdom, France, the United States and Japan. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Tanner and others ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), tutorial assessment (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ Aitkin D, Jinks B and Warhurst J, Australian Political Institutions,Ê 4th edn, Longman Cheshire, Melb, 1990 orÊ Stewart RG and Ward I, Politics One,Ê Macmillan, Melb, 1992 orÊ Lovell DW, McAllister I, Maley W and Kukathas C, The Australian Political System,Ê Longman, Melb, 1995. Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Year 2 (200 level) and Year 3 (level 300) units Ethnic and Race Politics Unit enrolment code HSA201/301 Introduces the politics of ethnicity and race. After a study of some relevant concepts, paradigms and theories, the unit will examine a range of situations of ethnic and race politics drawn from such countries as Sri Lanka, Canada, Belgium, South Africa, and some supra-national movements. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr W Bostock ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Approaches to International Relations Unit enrolment code HSA202/302 Reviews a range of theoretical and empirical approaches to the study of international relations. The unit considers the significance of these differing perspectives in a period of growing internationalisation Ð both global and regional. It also seeks to promote a more effective understanding of how the nature of contemporary politics influences the desire and capacity of states (and other actors) to achieve their external objectives. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof RA Herr ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Media and Politics in Australia Unit enrolment code HSA203/303 Examines the ways in which the media has become an integral part of the political process. The goal is to provide students with an understanding of the way in which the media operates, but particularly in relation to its coverage of politics. The proposed curriculum is: 1. An historical introduction, 2. Media theories, 3. Manufacturing news, 4. Politicians and political reporters, 5. The media and elections, 6. Opinion polling, 7. Case studies. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr S Tanner ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Politics in Literature and Film Unit enrolment code HSA204/304 A dominant understanding in the teaching of politics contends that political understanding is reducible to scientific method. By contrast this unit seeks to examine politics as an art, the art of government, and more precisely the role that particular modes of discourse have constituted that art. In order to explore these modes students examine a number of early modern attempts to explore the conditions of rule in what would now be considered drama, poetry, satire and political theory, but need not necessarily have been so constituted by contemporaries. In this context they first examine: John DrydenÕs Absalom and Achitophel,Ê John GayÕs BeggerÕs Opera,Ê John LockeÕs Two TreatisesÊ and Jonathan SwiftÕs A Modest ProposalÊ and GulliverÕs Travels.Ê The second part of this unit examines the manner in which satire, the novel and film reflect and inform contemporary understandings. Here students examine George OrwellÕs 1984Ê (film and book), Private EyeÊ (selected extracts), BertolucciÕs The Conformist,Ê Costa GavrasÕ Z,Ê MacmillanÕs GhostsÊ and Zena and GilliamÕs Brazil.Ê Finally, we shall consider the role of satire, utopia and dystopia in the contruction of historical and contemporary political narratives. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones, Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 or level 100 English ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (25%), tutorial presentation (10%), 500Ð1,000-word review of text (15%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Political Ideologies Unit enrolment code HSA210/310 The central concern of this unit is to examine politics and its relationship to what Destut de Tracy termed ÔideologyÕ. The unit begins by considering what kind of activity politics actually involves, arguing that political rule arises when a collection of people deemed to be formally equal form a government amongst themselves. The mode of political communication between these people is persuasion. A further consequence of politics is a literature of political thought. Politics accordingly is not a universal activity and even where it is established it is often regarded with hostility. This rhetorical style is contrasted with a rationalistic, scientistic and ideological style of thinking that emerged in the 19th century. In this context, the unit considers liberalism, nationalism, Marxism and fascism as ideological styles of rule located in modernity, and concludes by considering whether post modernity offers any relief from the rationalistic certainties of modernity. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), tutorial/workshop/report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Political Thought: Liberal Democracy Unit enrolment code HSA212/312 Should liberal states adopt redistributive justice principles? Is there global justice? Should minorities be granted collective rights? Are there any alternatives to liberal democracy? This unit introduces the theories of justice by John Rawls, Robert Nozick, Michael Walzer and Will Kymlicka. It explores the notions of international justice, cosmopolitan democracy and global civil society beyond liberal democratic states, and offers Marxist, feminist and post-structuralist critiques of liberal theories and institutions. The central focus of the unit is on justice and democracy. The aims of the unit are (1) to provide and analyse competing conceptions of justice and democracy; (2) to understand and engage current debates over the central issues of liberal democracy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), tutorial/workshop/report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J The Politics of Gender, The Politics of Feminism Unit enrolment code HSA213/313 Examines the ways in which gender has become a political issue. The unit begins with feminist critiques of political theory (liberal and Marxist) and then looks at the criticisms of these approaches by radical and cultural feminisms. Next, the unit considers theorists of sexual difference and critics of the sex/gender distinction. Finally, the unit questions the very stability of gender as a category in feminist thought by raising issues of ethnicity and sexuality. ¥ÊN.B. may also be taken as HAF210/310Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF210/310 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Contemporary Feminist Thought Unit enrolment code HSA214/314 Provides an introduction to the themes, issues and conflicts in contemporary feminist thought. For a fuller description, see HAF215. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF215/315Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WL Kwok ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HAF215/315 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000- word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Asian Political Thought Unit enrolment code HSA218/318 Familiarises students with some of the key texts and debates in Asian political thought. Chinese political thought is the main focus, with some reference to other traditions. The period covered is from the beginnings of Chinese statehood to the 20th century. The thinkers considered include Confucius, Lao Tzu, Han Fei Tzu, Chu Hsi, and Sun Yat-Sen. Asian political thought is the foundation of Asian government with an influence still apparent today. It is also a body of theorising as rich and diverse as Western political thought, to which it provides an essential complement. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA219/319Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA219/319 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Comparative Political Systems Unit enrolment code HSA222/322 A study of the concept of system and its relevance to politics, with particular reference to the relationship between system and structure. Britain, France, Germany and the European Union are given particular attention. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr WW Bostock ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Politics of Democratisation, East and West Unit enrolment code HSA227/327 Considers the historical, cultural, social and political preconditions for democratisation in East Asia, and Eastern and Western Europe. Examines the process of democratisation and the attended problems, by comparing and contrasting the democratic experiences of a range of cases including China, Taiwan, Korea, Russia, Poland and the European Union. The Ôtransition to democracyÕ literature will constitute the theoretical framework for the discussion of change in East Asia and Europe in the context of global democratisation in the world of post-cold war era. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA216/316Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones, Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA216/316 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J International Organisation: Globalism and Regionalism Unit enrolment code HSA232/332 Examines theory and politics in the field of study of international organisation. For a fuller description, see HSD232. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Australian Foreign Policy Unit enrolment code HSA240/340 Is a critical examination of Australian foreign policy from federation until the present. This unit focuses on the search for an independent foreign policy throughout this period, including recent attempts to define an integral role in the Asia Pacific region and its role as a middle power in international affairs in the 1990s. It examines political, economic and strategic issues and includes an evaluation of the links between external and domestic policy decisions. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD241/341Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof P Boyce ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD241/341 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J The Australian Political System: Political Parties and Parliament Unit enrolment code HSA241/341 Australian liberal democracy provides a distinctive political culture. Within this concept the unit will consider the Australian state, the party system, the media, electoral law and behaviour drawing on theoretical and comparative material. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD242/342Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr S Tanner, Assoc Prof RA Herr ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD242/342 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Australia in Regional Context Unit enrolment code HSA244/344 Examines AustraliaÕs engagement with the various regions which help to define it as a Middle Power. The unit considers the significantly differing demands put on Australian foreign policy-making which arises from the markedly different circumstances of regions such as Antarctica, Asia-Pacific, the South Pacific, Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean. It also seeks to promote a more effective understanding of both these areas individually and of their collective impact on the style and aims of contemporary Australian foreign policy in this regional context. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof RA Herr, Dr T Narramore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Politics in Contemporary Japan Unit enrolment code HSA250/350 Introduces students to the most important features of contemporary Japanese politics. The unit analyses democratic reconstruction after World War II, the dominance of the Liberal Democratic Party and the recent emergence of new conservative forces, the rise and decline of the Socialists, the political context of economic and industrial policies, and the political tensions that these policies have created in areas such as the environment and local, ethnic and sexual politics. The unit also familiarises students with some of the general forms of political analysis that have been applied to the particular case of Japan. ¥ÊN.B. not available to students who have undertaken HSA213/313 Democracy and the State in Japan; may be taken as HMA205/305Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Narramore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA205/305, HSA213/313 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Politics in Contemporary China Unit enrolment code HSA256/356 Deals briefly with the major political and social developments in Mao ZedongÕs China. The unit concentrates on political developments with particular emphasis on the post-Cultural Revolution period and the political and economic reforms instituted since 1978 in Deng XiaopingÕs China. The intentions behind the reforms are examined in more detail, along with their political, social and economic consequences. The events leading up to June 4, 1989 and the decisions which led to the crisis are analysed from various points of view. Reasons for the survival of Chinese communist party rule and broadly socialist policies are examined and contrasted with some Soviet and Eastern European experiences. The Democracy Movement and the question of an emergent civil society in China are examined. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA210/310Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA210/310 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Imagining Southeast Asia Unit enrolment code HSA257/357 Shows that Southeast Asia as a ÔplaceÕ, is indistinguishable from the ways in which it is conceptualised in social thought. For a fuller description see HMA245. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA245/345Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr S Philpott ¥ÊHbt, int, Ltn, by video-link ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 1-hr lecture, 1.5-hr tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA245/345 ¥ÊassessÊ exam (40%), 2,500-word essay (30%), journal (20%), tutorial participation (10%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Political Economy of East Asia Unit enrolment code HSA258/358 Examines the political development of the countries of the East Asian region Ð Japan, China, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia Ð in the context of the international political economy. The unit begins with an introduction to the main interpretations of international political economy. It then considers: the relationship between the countries of East Asia and the US-dominated postwar international political economy; the nature of an East Asian model of political economy, pioneered by Japan, and the extent to which it may be imitated in the region; the challenge of this East Asian model to international political economy; the potential for an East Asian regionalism; and the pressures for radical change in the political economy of East Asia as a result of the financial crisis in the region. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr DM Jones, Dr T Narramore ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (40%), tutorial/workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Tasmanian Politics and Australian Federalism Unit enrolment code HSA260/360 Introduces students to both Tasmanian politics and the politics of Australian federalism as seen from the state perspective. The specific features of Tasmanian politics will be used to help explain the broader changes in contemporary Australian federalism. Special attention will be given to understanding the needs of Tasmania in responding to the dynamics of Australian federal policy-making. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD243/343; not offered in 1999Ê BusinessÐGovernment Relations Unit enrolment code HSA262/362 Explores interactions and interdependencies between business and government in contemporary liberal capitalist countries, especially Australia. For a fuller description, see HSD208. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD208/308Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof S Bell ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD208/308 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A Australian Environmental Policy Unit enrolment code HSA263/363 Introduces students to the dynamics that shape environmental policy in contemporary Australia and to aspects of environmental policy. For a fuller description, see HSD230. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD230/330 or KGN230/330Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr K Crowley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD230/330, KGN230/330 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A Social and Political Research Unit enrolment code HSA264/364 Concerns the whys and hows of social research as practised in Political Science. For a fuller description, see HGA203. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA203/303 or HSD203/303 or HGE302Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab/tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA203/303, HSD203/303, HGE302 ¥ÊassessÊ 5 exercises (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Survey Research Unit enrolment code HSA265/365 Teaches the Ôcausal logicÕ and basic statistical techniques used in survey analysis. For a fuller description, see HGA204. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA204/304 or HSD204/304Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr BK Tranter, Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1 lecture and 2-hr lab weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HGA203/303 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA204/304, HSD204/304 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises (60%), final exam (30%), laboratory performance (10%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Government and the Economy Unit enrolment code HSA266/366 Examines key intersections between politics and the economy, focusing on the politics of economic policy formation in Australia including the historical evolution of Australian economic policy. For a fuller description, see HSD236. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSD236/336 or HGE228/328Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof SR Bell ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSA100; thereafter HSA101 and HSA102 (or yr-1 Economics or Commerce) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD236/336, HGE228/328 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A Political Science (Parliamentary Internship) Parliamentary Internship Unit enrolment code HSA361/432 A Parliamentary Internship is available at the Parliament of Tasmania. This Internship is open to Third Year (300 level Ð use enrolment code HSA361) and Honours (400 level Ð use enrolment code HSA432) students in 1999. Interested candidates may seek further advice on this matter from Assoc Prof Richard Herr. Courses: R3A R4A Political Science Honours program Political Science 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HSA400/401 The full-time course (HSA400) consists of three units taken in semester 1 and a dissertation of 15,000 words on a subject approved by the Head of School, to be submitted in early November. Students undertaking the parttime course (HSA401) should plan their course in consultation with the Head of School. Students are required to take Ð HSA490 Theory and Methodology [10%] HSA499 Dissertation [50%] and two of the following units, all of which are weighted at 20%: HSA417 Interpretations of Asian Politics Dr T Narramore, Dr S Philpott HSA420 Third World Politics not offered in 1999Ê HSA425 Comparative Politics: Selected Topics Dr WW Bostock HSA431 Selected Topics in Australian Politics, Staff as appropriate HSA434 Parliament in Society Assoc Prof RA Herr HSA435 Special Reading Program staff as appropriate HSA437 Asia in International Politics Dr B He HSA475 Contemporary Political Thought Dr DM Jones & Dr B He HSA476 Issues in Polar and Marine Policy Assoc Prof RA Herr HSA477 Ethics and Diplomacy Prof PJ Boyce HSA432 Parliamentary Internship A relevant Honours level unit from another discipline may be substituted for one of the electives, subject to the approval of the Head of the School of Government as to its suitability, weighting, and satisfaction of any prerequisites. The number and pattern of elective units offered may depend on staff loads and student numbers. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥Êseminar based ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, with Grade-Point Average of 6.5 or higher ¥ÊassessÊ dissertation plus 7,000 words per 20% unit plus 3,000 words in HSA490. Courses: R4A Government and Public Policy Ð School of Government Government and Public Policy is the study of the ways by which countries or societies organise themselves to achieve public goals (such as economic development, protection of the environment, etc). Students may undertake (i) a major program, or part thereof, in their Bachelor of Arts course (taught on both the Hobart and Launceston Campuses); (ii) a major program, or part thereof, in their Bachelor of Social Science course (taught on the Launceston campus); or (iii) units counting toward courses offered by other faculties. First year The first year (or 100 level) units introduce students to strategies of governance, the public policy system, the nature of political power, institutional elements of the Australian system of government and major public policy issue areas. Completion of both Government and Public Policy 1A and 1B is a prerequisite for admission to second year (200 level) units. Second and third year Second year (or 200 level) and third year (or 300 level) units address a range of themes dealing with the institutions and processes of public policy and policy arenas including the economy, the environment, the workplace and the welfare state. A major in Government and Public Policy requires a student to gain a minimum of 100% from Government and Public Policy units, of which 25% (HSD101 and HSD102) will be obtained at the 100 level and the remaining 75% from units at levels 200 and 300. A double-major requires students to gain 175% from Government and Public Policy units, of which 25% (HSD101 and HSD102) will be obtained at the 100 level and the remaining 150% from units at levels 200 and 300. The undergraduate study of Government and Public Policy is useful preparation for students planning careers in the public sector, private industry or community organisations. The program of study is relevant to students who want to understand more about how to deal with, or operate within, complex modern public sector organisations. The structure of the program is shown in the following table. Relevant optional units from Political Science and Sociology, which students may take as part of the Government and Public Policy program, are identified below. Students undertaking courses in Commerce, Economics, Law, Science or combined degrees would also find Government and Public Policy units useful for their professional development. Completion of both Government and Public Policy 1A and 1B (HSD101 and 102) are prerequisites for enrolment by Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Social Science students in 200 and 300 level units (though Economics and Commerce students may enrol in HSD208/308 Business-Government Relations and HSD236/336 Government and the Economy; and students who have completed BMA101 Introduction to Management may enrol in HSD238/338 Understanding Organisations). Completion of either Government and Public Policy 1A (HSD101) or Government and Public Policy 1B (HSD102) is a prerequisite for enrolment in other courses of study offered by other faculties. Honours year The fourth year (or 400 level) Honours program provides a more advanced understanding of current Government and Public Policy theory and practice. It is open to students who have majored in Government and Public Policy with a Grade-Point Average of 6.5 or higher. The Honours year consists of specialised coursework units and introduces students to the skills involved in independent research. The Honours program also provides a stepping stone to Masters and PhD work, as well as providing an additional qualification. The following is a summary of units offered in the Government and Public Policy program: Unit title weight sem campus code Year 1 (100 level) semester 1 Government and Public Policy 1A 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD101 semester 2 Government and Public Policy 1B 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD102 Year 2 (200 level) and year 3 (300 level) semester 1 Policy Process 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD206/306 BusinessÐGovernment Relations 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD208/308 Regional Development Policy 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD223/323 Australian Environmental Policy 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD230/330 Social Policy in Welfare States 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD231/331 The Politics of Workplace Relations 12.5% [1] [H] HSD202/302 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD203/303 semester 2 Policy Analysis 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD209/309 Public Administration 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD235/335 Government and the Economy 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD236/336 Understanding Organisations 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD238/338 Global Environmental Policy 12.5% [2] [H] HSD229/329 Media, Mass Communication and Information Technology Policy 12.5% [2] [H] HSD227/327 Survey Research 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD204/304 not offered in 1999 Women and Work in Australia 12.5% [na] [H] HSD225/325 International Organisation: Globalism and Regionalism 12.5% [na] [H] HSD232/332 Asian Work and Environment 12.5% [na] [H] HSD239/339 Women and Public Policy 12.5% [na] [H] HSD240/340 Note for students enrolled in the Bachelor of Social Science course. The Government and Public Policy program that constitutes part of the Bachelor of Social Science course (that is offered from the Launceston Campus) introduces students to the Australian political system and its governance. It examines political and administrative processes and institutions with particular emphasis placed on the relationship between citizens, the community and government. The following is a summary of Government and Public Policy units offered for the Bachelor of Social Science course: Unit title weight sem campus code Year 1 (100 level) semester 1 Government and Public Policy 1A 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD101 semester 2 Government and Public Policy 1B 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD102 Year 2 (200 level) and year 3 (300 level) semester 1 Policy Process 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD206/306 BusinessÐGovernment Relations 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD208/308 Regional Development Policy 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD223/323 Australian Environmental Policy 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD230/330 Social Policy in Welfare States 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD231/331 Social and Political Research 12.5% [1] [HL] HSD203/303 semester 2 Policy Analysis 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD209/309 Public Administration 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD235/335 Government and the Economy 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD236/336 Understanding Organisations 12.5% [2] [HL] HSD238/338 Year 1 (100 level) units Government and Public Policy 1A Unit enrolment code HSD101 Introduces the student to the basic issues of how countries or societies, including Australia, organise themselves to achieve public goals. The first part of the unit examines community, markets and governments, as organisational strategies to achieve such goals. The main political ideas that inform debates about the relative merits of using community, markets and governments as alternative strategies for governance are also discussed. The second part of the unit looks at how the formal governmental process Ð as organised through bureaucracies, formal organisations and public policy systems Ð works. The third part discusses the nature of political power and how governments exercise political power. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Hall (Coordinator), Assoc Prof S Bell, Dr MG Haward, Mr I Beckett, Mr T McCall ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial, weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD100, HSD105, HSD110 ¥ÊassessÊ 1-hr test (10%), 2,500-word essay (20%), tutorial assessment (10%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ A reader, available from the School of Government Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Government and Public Policy 1B Unit enrolment code HSD102 Introduces the student to the key institutional elements of the Australian system of governance as well as covering a range of major public policy issue areas or arenas. These arenas provide an introduction to the topics and issues which form the basis of units in Government and Public policy at the 200 and 300 levels. The first part of the unit introduces the elements of the institutional framework in which public policy is developed. Three broad arenas of policy are then examined: environmental and international policies; regional, economic and workplace relations policies; and gender and social policies. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Hall (Coordinator), Assoc Prof S Bell, Dr K Crowley, Dr MG Haward, Mr I Beckett, Mr T McCall ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly (13 wks) ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD100, HSD105, HSD110 ¥ÊassessÊ 1-hr test (10%), 2,500-word essay (20%), tutorial assessment (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ A reader, available from the School of Government Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Year 2 (200 level) and Year 3 (300 level) units The Politics of Workplace Relations Unit enrolment code HSD202/302 Provides an understanding of the political dimensions of workplace relations through a critical examination of the origins, functions and strategies of both management and labour toward each other in the workplace. The role of the state in the regulation of workplace relations is also examined. Equity issues in the workplace will be surveyed. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Hall, Assoc Prof S Bell ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSD217/317 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Social and Political Research Unit enrolment code HSD203/303 Concerns the whys and hows of social research as practised in Government and Public Policy. For a fuller description, see HGA203. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA203/303 or HSA264/364 or HGE302Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures fortnightly, 1-hr lab/tutorial weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA203/303, HSA264/364, HGE302 ¥ÊassessÊ 5 exercises (60%), final exam (40%). Courses: R3A R3C (+OC) Survey Research Unit enrolment code HSD204/304 Teaches the Ôcausal logicÕ and basic statistical techniques used in survey analysis. For a fuller description, see HGA204. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA204/304 or HSA265/365Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr BK Tranter, Dr M Western ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 1 lecture and 2-hr lab weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA204/304, HSA265/365 ¥ÊassessÊ exercises (60%), final exam (30%), laboratory performance (10%). Courses: R3A (+OC) Policy Process Unit enrolment code HSD206/306 Provides an understanding of public policy-making as a primary activity of governments. The setting of agendas, issue processing and implementation of policy are key aspects of the policy process discussed. The unit also makes a critical evaluation of several theories of policymaking and especially the interaction between different actors within this process. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Haward ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J BusinessÐGovernment Relations Unit enrolment code HSD208/308 Explores interactions and interdependencies between business and government in contemporary liberal capitalist countries, especially Australia. The unit examines the critical aspects of the political and economic environment which shape business-government interaction. Topics include the ideologies which shape this interaction between business and government, the structural interdependency of business and government in capitalist economic systems, the relative political power of business and government, patterns of interaction between business and government, contemporary issues of structural economic adjustment and the role of business and government in this process. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA262/362Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof S Bell ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA262/362 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Policy Analysis Unit enrolment code HSD209/309 Provides an introduction to the analysis of public policymaking, focusing on techniques and models used to assess and evaluate policy. Policy analysis is a central activity within government, but it is also of key interest to non-governmental organisations. The unit focuses on the differences between Ôanalysis forÕ and Ôanalysis ofÕ policy-making, and includes topics such as option analysis, implementation research, evaluation and forecasting. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Regional Development Policy Unit enrolment code HSD223/323 Examines the interaction of state, community and market at the local level, and their impact on regional development. Topics include the role of official development agencies, central-regional relations, alternative community-based strategies and oppositional planning. Cases considered include Tasmania, the Maritime provinces of Canada, and Appalachia in the USA. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE226/326Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE226/326 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000- word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Women and Work in Australia Unit enrolment code HSD225/325 Examines, from the point of view of various disciplines, the position of women in the workforce in Australia. Particular attention is paid to the ways in which education, professional, trade union and organisational practices, and government policy affect womenÕs career biographies. The issues of equal employment opportunity, affirmative action and sexual harassment are examined, as is the economic contribution of womenÕs unpaid work. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF214/314; not offered in 1999Ê Media, Mass Communication and Information Technology Policy Unit enrolment code HSD227/327 The mass media and the global communications revolution are playing a major part in shaping culture and influencing politics. The development of information technology (IT) and the so-called information economy are central to these developments. Despite the scale of the changes, it is still true that governments shape rules of the game through a wide variety of regulations. Hence, questions of regulation, censorship, privacy and access are significant issues in the development of approprate government policy towards information technology and the mass media. Other important issues relate to ownership and control of key components in the media, communications and the IT revolution. At the same time the development of new information technology based media have placed pressures on governments to respond to the challenges posed by the Internet. These challenges have seen new delivery systems for government services developed, increased opportunity for citizen input into public policy and encouraged new approaches to employment. This unit introduces students to the critical public policy and regulatory issues which ground government reponses to ongoing developments in media, communications and IT sectors. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof SR Bell, Dr MG Haward, Dr R Hall ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Global Environmental Policy Unit enrolment code HSD229/329 Examines both international relations and broader governance approaches to understanding global environmental policy. It will focus upon the roles that nation-states, international organisations and nongovernmental actors, play in global policy processes. The formation and operation of international regimes as major policy instruments for the management of the global environment will be discussed. The unit will also introduce aspects of the global ecology and global economy, and review links between trade and environment, debt and environment, and security and environment. Students will have the opportunity to research global environmental issues such as climate change (including the ÔgreenhouseÕ issue), oceans policy, polar regimes, wildlife and biodiversity conservation. The unit will critically assess the effectiveness of global policy in protecting the environment. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KGN202/302Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Hall, Dr K Crowley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ KGN202/302 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Australian Environmental Policy Unit enrolment code HSD230/330 Introduces students to the dynamics that shape environmental policy in contemporary Australia and to aspects of environmental policy. The relationship between capitalism and environmental protection is considered in the context of recent disputes between economic and environmental concerns. The role and capacities of the state in relation to environmental policy are considered, and the pattern of Australian environmental policy is examined through case studies. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as KGN230/330 or HSA263/363Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr K Crowley ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ KGN230/330, HSA263/363 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word paper/presentation(20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Social Policy in Welfare States Unit enrolment code HSD231/331 Describes and explains key features of the welfare state in liberal democracies. Focusing primarily on the Welfare State in Australia, the unit examines issues such as: its history and form; its political bureaucratic and community foundations; the policy community and dominant paradigms; the political choices involved; the characteristics of the policies developed; and, in particular, the recent shift towards increasing use of market mechanisms in policy design and delivery. Theoretical debates about citizenship, justice and individualism in relation to welfare are also considered. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE227/327Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward, Mr I Beckett ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE227/327 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J International Organisation: Globalism and Regionalism Unit enrolment code HSD232/332 Examines theory and politics in the field of study of international organisation. The unit considers various theoretical approaches that have clustered around the problem of international governance, with particular attention being paid to regime analysis; and then applies these theoretical approaches in the specific context of global institutions such as the United Nations, and regional institutions in Europe, the South Pacific and Antarctica, and institutions for the protection of the environment. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA232/332; not offered in 1999Ê Public Administration Unit enrolment code HSD235/335 Familiarises students with the theory and practice of public administration in liberal democracies such as Australia. The unit comprises three sections: (a) deals with traditional approaches to public administration; (b) examines the ideological and empirical criticisms of existing systems; and (c) examines the origins, characteristics, implications and criticisms of ÔmanagerialismÕ introduced since the 1970s and 1980s. Comparisons are made between Australia, Britain, the United States, Canada and New Zealand. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr MG Haward, Mr I Beckett ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%); 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%, including marks for participation and presentation); 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Government and the Economy Unit enrolment code HSD236/336 The economy and economic policy are central features of Australian public life. The unit examines key intersections between politics and the economy, focusing on the politics of economic policy formation in Australia including the historical evolution of Australian economic policy. Particular attention is paid to key shifts in macro- and microeconomic policy since the end of the long post-war economic boom in the 1970s. The major institutions and processes of economic policy formation are considered; and the relative capacities of the Australian state in relation to the management of economic policy are evaluated. Arguments about AustraliaÕs key economic problems and economic prospects, and about the capacity and desirability of state regulation of the economy are also considered. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGE228/328 or HSA266/366Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof SR Bell ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGE228/328, HSA266/366 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Understanding Organisations Unit enrolment code HSD238/338 Is an analysis of the formal and informal structure of contemporary, large-scale organisations. For a fuller description, see HGA236. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HGA236/336Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr R Hall, and others ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HGA236/336 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500 to 3,000-word essay (40%), 1,000word workshop report/project (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G(D3) C3C C3H C3J Asian Work and Environment Unit enrolment code HSD239/339 Examines Ôsocial and environmental justiceÕ in South East Asia, in particular the problems of Ôwork and environmentÕ in the Asian context. It moves from the national focus of HSD230/330 Australian Environment PolicyÊ (not a prerequisite) to the regional challenge of achieving socially and ecologically sustainable development in newly industrialising nations. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA239/339 or KGN239/339; not offered in 1999Ê Women and Public Policy Unit enrolment code HSD240/340 Examines the role of women in public decision-making in Australia. The unit will specifically address the issues of women as citizens and consumers of policy; women as public officals making and delivering policy; and women as politicians representing the electorate in policymaking. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Australian Foreign Policy Unit enrolment code HSD241/341 Is a critical examination of Australian foreign policy from federation until the present. For a fuller description, see HSA240. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA240/340Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof P Boyce ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA HSD101 and HSD102; all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA240/340 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J The Australian Political System: Political Parties and Parliament Unit enrolment code HSD242/342 Considers the Australian state, the party system, the media, electoral law and behaviour drawing on theoretical and comparative material. For a fuller description, see HSA241. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA241/341Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr S Tanner, Assoc Prof RA Herr ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 3 lectures, 1 tutorial, 1 workshop fortnightly (13 wks) ¥ÊprereqÊ 1999, HSD100 or HSD105 or HSD106; thereafter for BA/BSocSc HSD101 and HSD102, all other courses HSD101 or HSD102 ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA241/341 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500word essay (30%), 1,000-word workshop report/project (10%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A R3C L3D S3G C3C C3H C3J Tasmanian Politics and Australian Federalism Unit enrolment code HSD243/343 Introduces students to both Tasmanian politics and the politics of Australian federalism as seen from the state perspective. For a fuller description, see HSA260. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HSA260/360; not offered in 1999Ê Government and Public Policy Honours program Government and Public Policy 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time (over two years) Unit enrolment code HSD400/401 The full-time course (HSD400, weight 100%) consists of three units, taken in semester 1, and a dissertation of 15,000 words on a subject approved by the Head of School, to be submitted early in November. Students undertaking the part-time course (HSD401, weight 50%) should plan their course in consultation with the Head of School. Students are required to take Ð HSD402 Theory and Methodology [10%] HSD403 Dissertation [50%] and two of the following units, all of which are weighted 20%: HSD410 Polar and Oceans Policy Ð Dr R Hall, Dr MG Haward< HSD411 Labour-Management Relations Ð Dr R Hall, Assoc Prof S Bell HSD412 Environmental Politics and Policy Ð Dr MG Haward, Dr K Crowley HSD413 Special Reading Program Ð staff as appropriate HSD414 Economic Policy Ð Assoc Prof S Bell HSD415 Women and Public Policy Ð staff as appropriate HSD416 Public Sector Internship Ð (see unit description below) ¥ÊN.B. for details of the individual honours units, contact the School of GovernmentÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr B He (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, with GradePoint Average of 6.5 or higher ¥ÊassessÊ dissertation plus 7,000 words per 20% unit plus 3,000 words in HSD402. Courses: R4A Public Sector Internship Unit enrolment code HSD416 The Public Sector Internship is offered as a research based unit in the Government and Public Policy Honours program. This unit involves a parttime placement in a public sector agency within the Tasmanian State Service during semester 1. This placement will see the intern undertake a practical, research oriented report. It is expected that interns would spend about 10 hours per week during the semester in the placement. The internship aims to give students experience in practical aspects of policy making and analysis and public administration. Interested candidates for an Honours level Public Sector Internship may seek further advice on this matter from Dr Marcus Haward or Dr Kate Crowley. Courses: R4A Public Administration Ð Centre for Public Policy and Management Human Resource Management Unit enrolment code HSD705 Critically examines the policies, processes and procedures involved in the management of people in public sector workplaces. It is concerned with those areas of employment regulation which are primarily the responsibility of public sector managers. The unit focuses on human resource management and industrial relations in the Commonwealth and Tasmanian state and local governments ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word research paper (40%), 3000-word research project (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ a reader available from the Centre for Public Management; other texts tba Courses: R7D Political Institutions and Policy Dynamics Unit enrolment code HSD714 Deals with the key administrative and policy-making institutions of the modern state, including parliament, cabinet, political parties, intergovernmental structures and public bureaucracies. The unit also examines public policy processes, policy formulation, implementation and evaluation. Particular attention is given to theories of power and its distribution. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3,000-word essay (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D Public Sector Management Unit enrolment code HSD715 Examines the origins, theory and practice of public sector administration and management in modern liberal democracies such as Australia. Bureaucracy, responsible government the career service, and the politics, principles and criticisms of ÔmanagerialismÕ are examined, as are alternative models of reform. The unit examines the principles of strategic management and planning, budgeting and financial management, implementation and service delivery, performance management and review, organisational design, personnel management, and information systems. Particular attention is paid to reform in the Commonwealth and Tasmanian public services. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3,000-word essay (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D State, Economy and Public Policy Unit enrolment code HSD716 Focuses on the critical interaction between politics and the economy and examines the way in which major changes in the world economy have reshaped Australian public policy in recent decades. Issues such as the economic rationalism debate, the impact of global market pressures on policy and the changing role of the state are considered. Various perspectives on these issues are dealt with, including public choice advocacy of privatisation and deregulation. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3,000-word essay (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D Research Strategies Unit enrolment code HSD717 Prepares students for independent research in public administration and policy. Major intellectual orientations and methodological debates regarding research and analysis are examined, as are the main tools for research, analysis and evaluation of administration and policy. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3,000-word essay (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D Research Project Unit enrolment code HSD718 In this unit, based on the research plan developed in HSD717 Research Strategies,Ê students undertake independent research on an agreed topic and write a major essay of 10,000 words. Guidance will be provided throughout the semester in a series of workshops ¥Ê50% ¥Êsem 3 ¥ÊassessÊ 10,000-word research essay. Courses: R7D Financial and Technology Management Unit enrolment code HSD740 Familiarises students with the principles of contemporary financial practice and systems design and use to a level where, as managers, they will be able to make informed decisions for the organisations in which they are employed. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,800-word Financial Management Project (70%), 1,200-word Technology Management Project (30%). ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D Ethics and Administrative Law Unit enrolment code HSD741 Introduces students to the basic concepts and issues in ethics and administrative law. The unit aims to integrate theoretical and practical understandings of ethics and administrative law within the overall processes of contemporary public sector management in Australia. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay on Ethics, and a 2,500-word research paper on Tasmanian administrative law. ¥ÊreqÊ tba Courses: R7D Planning Implementation and Review Unit enrolment code HSD743 Familiarises students with the models, issues and practices of strategic organisational and program planning, program implementation and service delivery, and monitoring and evaluation in public organisations. ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3,000-word essay (60%). Courses: R7D History Ð School of History and Classics To understand the present and to imagine the future it is necessary to study the past. The History program aims both to impart knowledge and stimulate enquiry about the human past, and to develop, by means of historical study, a range of valuable skills and qualities of mind which have general application. History provides an important bridge between the Humanities and Social Sciences, and can be a valuable complement to studies in other faculties, especially Law and Commerce. History also provides opportunities for specialisation in area studies: Australian, European, African or Asian. History is offered on both the Hobart and Launceston campuses. History 1 is available at Burnie through the North West Centre, and a full History major is available through distance education. In addition, some Hobart and Launceston units are available by cross-campus delivery. This means that a unit tuaght on one campus is made available on the other through a combination of video-link, tape-recordings, written material and face-toface instruction. The tables below list what is available in 1999 in Hobart, Launceston and through distance education. It is not a full list of electives, many of which are available every second year. Unit title weight sem campus code Hobart Level 100 History 1 25% [fy] [H] HTA100 The Impact of Europe c. 1640Ð1780 12.5% [1] [H] HTA103 (a) Age of Revolution and Empire c.1780Ð1815; (b)The Modern World in Australia to 1860 12.5% [2] [H] HTA104 Levels 200/300 Full year The Early Middle Ages: From Rome to the Millennium AD 410Ð1000 25% [fy] [H] HTA201/301 Late Medieval and Renaissance Europe 25% [fy] [H] HTA202/302 Australia from 1914 to the Present 25% [fy] [H] HTA207/307 Special Topic in History 25% [fy] [HL] HTA399 Semester 1 Europe at War 1914Ð1945 12.5% [1] [HL] HTA211/311 Revolution and Dissent 12.5% [1] [H] HTA216/316 Cultural Encounters in the Eighteenth Century 12.5% [1] [H] HTA219/319 India since Independence 12.5% [1] [H] HTA222/322 Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives 12.5% [1] [H] HTA223/323 Van DiemenÕs Land 1642Ð1850 12.5% [1] [H] HTA229/329 The Early History of Indonesia 12.5% [1] [HL] HTA261/361 Semester 2 Historiographical Studies 12.5% [2] [H] HTA220/320 Heresy and Inquisition in Medieval Europe AD 1100Ð1500 12.5% [2] [H] HTA225/325 War and Peace in the Pacific 12.5% [2] [LH] HTA255/355 The Later History of Indonesia 12.5% [2] [HL] HTA262/362 Launceston Level 100 History 1 25% [fy] [LB] HTA101 The History of Europe from c 1620 to 1789 12.5% [1] [LB] HTA105 The Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil War 12.5% [2] [LB] HTA106 Levels 200/300 Full year History of Australia 1788 Ð 1990s 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA240/340 History of the USA 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA241/341 African History 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA250/350 Special Topic in History 25% [fy] [HL] HTA399 Semester 1 The Early History of Indonesia 12.5% [1] [HL] HTA261/361 History of the Indigenous Peoples of North America 12.5% [1] [L] HTA275/375 Semester 2 War and Peace in the Pacific 12.5% [2] [LH] HTA255/355 The Later History of Indonesia 12.5% [2] [HL] HTA262/362 Distance education Level 100 History 1 25% [fy] [d] HTA102 The History of Europe from c 1620 to 1789 12.5% [1] [LB] HTA105 The Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil War 12.5% [2] [LB] HTA106 Levels 200/300 Full year History of Australia 1788 Ð 1990s 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA240/340 History of the USA 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA241/341 African History 25% [fy] [Ld] HTA250/350 Environmental History 25% [fy] [d] HTA271/371 Level 100 History: students may study eitherÊ HTA100 (Hobart) or HTA101 (Launceston) or HTA102 (distance), or semester by semester, in which case the appropriate codes are HTA103, HTA104, HTA105 or HTA106. The units seek to introduce the discipline through a study of key themes in the making of the modern world. Levels 200 and 300: students choose from a schedule of units ranging from the end of antiquity to the present, and from Australia to Europe, Asia, America and Africa. A major in History requires the student to pass units to the total value of 100% or more, of which 25% will be at 100 level, 25% or more at 200 level, and 25% or more at 300 level. History units are either 25% (full year) or 12.5% (semester-length). Students fill out (or build on) their History major by taking additional units at 200 or 300 level. A double major requires students to pass units to a total value of 175%. Students may include any of the Classics history units as part of a History major (up to 25%) or a double major (up to 50%). It also recognises certain units in Aboriginal Studies. Students wishing to pursue a History major, especially if intending to proceed to honours, are encouraged to study at least one year of a foreign language. To cater for part-time students and to counteract timetabling difficulties, most teachers are willing to make tapes of their lectures available to the Library and to arrange a tutorial in the late afternoon or early evening. History students with the requisite grades are encouraged to undetake an honours degree. When possible, the School offers postgraduate courses in Tasmanian history and the history of Christianity, and welcomes enquiries from students wishing to undertake research MA and PhD work in any of the fields in which the School has expertise. Note: the following books will be useful for students at all stages: [p/b]Tosh J, The Pursuit of History,Ê Longman [p/b]Kinder H and Hilgemann W, The Penguin Atlas of World History,Ê 2 vols, Penguin. Level 100 units History 1 Unit enrolment code HTA100 (Hobart) Provides an introduction to history focusing on key themes in the making of the modern world. Students complete ÔThe Impact of Europe c. 1640Ð1780Õ in semester 1 and one of modules (a) or (b) in semester 2. Semester 1 Ð The Impact of Europe c. 1640Ð1780 considers developments in Europe from the late 17th to the late 18th century and their role in the making of the modern world. Topics include: the rise of the major European powers; war, politics and state-building; imperial expansion and rivalry; social change in Britain and France; the Enlightenment; and the dawn of the Age of Revolution. Semester 2 Ð (a) Age of Revolution and Empire c.1780Ð1815 focuses on ÔrevolutionaryÕ change in Britain and France in the late 18th and early 19th century, and its impact on the wider world. It considers the French Revolution; radicalism and reaction in Britain; Napoleon and the Napoleonic wars; French and British imperialism; the Industrial Revolution and social change; the Ôbirth of the modernÕ. (b) The Modern World in Australia to 1860 traces the evolution of the rudimentary penal settlement founded by Arthur Philip in 1788, and self governing colonies in the mid-nineteenth century. Attention is given to the nature of convictism and the forces which increasingly challenged a Ôconvict societyÕ; the crisis in AboriginalÐEuropean relations resulting from the impact of British colonisation on AustraliaÕs indigenous people; and the movement for self government and democracy in the era of the Gold Rushes and the Eureka Stockade, when both new opportunities and daunting challenges are opened to the Australian people as Australia moves into the modern age in the 1850s. ¥ÊN.B. Students who wish to enrol in this unit on a semester basis should use enrolment codes HTA103 (sem 1) and HTA104 (sem 2)Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof MJ Bennett, Dr M Lindley, Mr GP Chapman ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA101, HTA102, HTA103, HTA104, HTA105, HTA106 ¥ÊassessÊ written work 3,000 words each semester (45%), tutorial participation (5%), 2-hr exam in June, 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ (sem 1) [p/b] Bennett MJ (ed), The Impact of Europe: Selected Readings,Ê School of History & Classics, Univ Tas [p/b] Williams EN, The Ancien Regime in Europe,Ê Penguin [p/b] Woloch I, Eighteenth-Century Europe. Tradition and Progress, 17151789,Ê Norton Sem 2 (a) [p/b] Bennett MJ (ed) The Age of Revolution and Empire 1780Ð1820: Selected Readings,Ê School of History & Classics, Univ Tas [p/b] Breunig C The Age of Revolution and Reaction 1789Ð1850,Ê Norton [p/b] Hobsbawm EH, The Age of Revolution 1789Ð1848,Ê Abacus (b) There will be a specially prepared book of readings. [p/b] Clark M, A Short History of Australia,Ê Mentor [p/b] McQueen H, A New Britannia,Ê Penguin White R, Inventing Australia,Ê Allen & Unwin Robson LL, The Convict Settlers of Australia,Ê Melb Univ Press [p/b] Reynolds H, The Law of the Land,Ê Penguin. Courses: R3A S3G(iv) History 1 Unit enrolment code HTA101 (Launceston and Burnie) Provides an introduction to history focusing on key themes in the making of the modern world. Students complete ÔThe History of Europe from c. 1620 to 1789Õ in semester 1 and ÔThe Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil WarÕ in semester 2. Semester 1 Ð The History of Europe from c 1620 to 1789 introduces European history focusing on the 1620 to 1789 period. Topics include the English Civil War, FranceÕs impact on western Europe during Louis XIVÕs reign; the Scientific and Intellectual Revolutions; European overseas expansion, including the American Revolution; the emergence of Russia and Prussia as major powers; an analysis of the Ancient Regime in France and the outbreak of the French Revolution. Semester 2 Ð The Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil War focuses on the emergence of modernity within both the European metropole and peripheral European societies, especially the United States. The reciprocal influences of the European centre and the periphery on each other are emphasised. Among the topics to be studied are the nature and influence of both the French Revolution and the Industrial Revolution; the rise of modern nationalism; and the impact of total war. Particular attention is paid to the ways in which these factors intertwined to begin the creation of our ÔmodernÕ world. ¥ÊN.B. Students who wish to enrol in this unit on a semester basis should use the enrolment codes HTA105 (sem 1) and HTA106 (sem 2)Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DJ Overton, Dr TP Dunning, Dr D Huon ¥ÊLtn, Brn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA102, HTA103, HTA104, HTA105, HTA106 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x2,500-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June and Nov (50%). ¥ÊreqÊ sem 2 Hobsbawm E, The Age of Revolution, 1789Ð1848,Ê Abacus Courses: R3A History 1 Unit enrolment code HTA102 (Distance education) Provides an introduction to History focusing on key themes in the making of the modern world. Students complete The Impact of Europe c. 1640Ð1780Ê in semester 1 (as in Hobart Ð see HTA103 above) and The Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil WarÊ in semester 2 (as in Launceston Ð see HTA106 above). ¥ÊN.B. distance education students who wish to enrol in this unit on a semester basis should use enrolment codes HTA103 (sem 1) and HTA106 (sem 2)Ê ¥Êdist.ed ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA101, HTA103, HTA104, HTA105, HTA106 ¥ÊassessÊ tba. Courses: R3A The Impact of Europe c. 1640Ð1780 Unit enrolment code HTA103 For description and reading list, see Semester 1 of HTA100. ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof MJ Bennett, Dr M Lindley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA101, HTA102, HTA105, HTA106 ¥ÊassessÊ written work 3,000 words (45%), tutorial participation (5%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A S3G(iv) (a) Age of Revolution and Empire c.1780Ð1815; (b)The Modern World in Australia to 1860 Unit enrolment code HTA104 For description and reading list, see Semester 2 of HTA100. ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof MJ Bennett, Dr M Lindley, Mr GP Chapman ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA101, HTA102, HTA106 ¥ÊassessÊ written work 3,000 words (45%), tutorial participation (5%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A S3G(iv) The History of Europe from c 1620 to 1789 Unit enrolment code HTA105 For description, see Semester 1 of HTA101. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DJ Overton, Dr TP Dunning, Dr D Huon ¥ÊLtn, Brn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA101, HTA102, HTA103 ¥ÊassessÊ 2.500-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A The Impact of Europe from the French Revolution to the American Civil War Unit enrolment code HTA106 For description, see Semester 2 of HTA101. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr TP Dunning, Dr D Huon ¥ÊLtn, Brn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA100, HTA101, HTA102, HTA104 ¥ÊassessÊ 2.500-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Level 200/300 units The Early Middle Ages: From Rome to the Millennium AD 410Ð1000 Unit enrolment code HTA201/301 (Hobart) From the end of the Roman empire to the tumultuous ÔbarbarianÕ invasions of the 10th century, the early Middle Ages saw Europe, east and west, undergo funamental cultural, religious and political change. This unit examines the many histories of eastern and western Europe from AD 410Ð1000. Topics include the myths and memories of the barbarian invasions: Christian colonisation of Europe; the Carolingian ÔrenaissanceÕ; the rise of Islam; the empires of Charlemagne and Byzantium; Arthurian and Anglo-Saxon Britain; the legends of the Vikings. On completing this unit, students should have an understaning of the main changes to Europe from 410Ð1000; have a grasp of the ways in which modern historians have shaped our ideas about the medieval world; and be familiar with the main sources for the period from Rome to the Millennium. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Cassidy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x2,500-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Late Medieval and Renaissance Europe Unit enrolment code HTA202/302 (Hobart) On the eve of the Black Death in 1348, Europe was still a backward corner of the world. The following two centuries were an age of war and upheaval, but also of creativity and development. The topics covered include: the Black Death, the Hundred Years War and popular revolt; Renaissance humanism and art; state-building and politics in the age of Machiavelli; the late medieval Church, and the origins of the Reformation. ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof MJ Bennett ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (25%), 1,500-word essay (15%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Modern Europe 1815 Ð 1914 Unit enrolment code HTA203/303 (Hobart) The years from the final defeat of Napoleon to the outbreak of the First World War saw the development of the ideas and social forces which still shape and colour our world. These are the years of the rise of modern social classes, of socialism and feminism, of nationalism and racism. They are years of revolt and of nation-building, of enormous technological advances and of artistic and intellectual revolutions. Europe and the world were transformed in the process. The unit examines these dramatic developments across Europe, from Great Britain to Russia. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Australia from the 1850s to the Eve of ÔThe Great WarÕ Unit enrolment code HTA204/304 (Hobart) For details of this unit, contact the School of History and Classics. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Gender in European Thought Unit enrolment code HTA205/305 (Hobart) Europeans have expressed their ideas and beliefs about gender and sexuality in a variety of ways which have differed over time. Those beliefs have had an enormous effect on the way we live our lives. What beliefs were held, at what times, and by whom? How were notions of gender and sexuality shaped? The unit examines these issues in the context of persecutions of women as witches and the policing of sexual preference. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HAF203/303; not offered in 1999Ê Australia from 1914 to the Present Unit enrolment code HTA207/307 (Hobart) Examines patterns of change and continuity in Australia since 1914. Topics include: the first world war and, for Australia, progressivism in the 1920s; Australia and the world depression in the 1930s; the second world war and implications for Australia; economic and social transformations of the late 1940s and 50s; exploration of how far the 1960s saw a social and cultural revolution in Australia; changes in political and economic culture, and the ethnic mix, from the 1970s; changes in the status and situation of women and Aborigines over the last eighty-five years; debates over national identity. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RG Ely ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2-hr lecture weekly, 1hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA204/304 (pre-1997), HHH211/311, HTA240/340 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (20%), 4x500-word exercises (20%), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Europe in an Age of Crisis 1560Ð1640 Unit enrolment code HTA209/309 (Hobart) The late 16th and early 17th centuries were an age of crisis in Europe. Population growth, price rises, taxation and war were creating social unrest and political division, while religious division and cultural ferment were undermining old certainties and values. This unit considers Spain under Philip II, Elizabethan England, the French Wars of Religion, the Dutch revolt, and the Thirty Years War, and focuses on changing social conditions and world views as well as power politics. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Europe at War 1914Ð1945 Unit enrolment code HTA211/311 (Hobart and Launceston) Between 1914 and 1945 Europe experienced two devastating wars, a revolution of epic proportions and significance and a great depression. The unit examines the forces of conflict within Europe from World War 1 to the collapse of the Third Reich in 1945. It is concerned with the impact of the Russian Revolution, the rise of European dictatorships and the crushing of the Nazi regime. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Lindley ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Jun (50%). Courses: R3A Europe in the High Middle Ages, AD 1000Ð1300 Unit enrolment code HTA212/312 (Hobart) Studies the general history of Europe during the formative period from the recovery after the last Barbarian invasions to the end of the 13th-century expansion. Special attention is given to the ÔTwelfthCentury RenaissanceÕ, with emphasis on such topics as the early development of the modern nation state, growth of papal government, the Crusades and the origin of universities. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Revolution and Dissent Unit enrolment code HTA216/316 (Hobart) Historical events both drive and are driven by powerful beliefs. The unit considers some of the great historical dramas of European societies and their colonies as expressions of power relations, of the enactment of authority and rebellion, dissidence and reaction. It examines the millenarian revolts and peasant uprisings of the Middle Ages and Renaissance; the English, American, French and Russian Revolutions; and the expression in political action of anti-semitism, fascism and imperialism, with particular emphasis on the Dreyfus Affair and todayÕs neo-fascism. What forms of activity do particular beliefs take? How are beliefs practised? ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Lindley ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HSA229/329 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A Crime and the Law in Historical Perspective Unit enrolment code HTA218/318 (Hobart) Examines the relations between crime and the law in England and Australia from the middle ages to the present. The unit discusses the origins of the criminal law system, the changing roles of state and community in the regulation of conduct, and the changing nature and definition of crime and criminal activity. It considers the history of the courts, the police and the prison system, and the ways they define and deal with a range of crimes and social problems over a broad period of time. The assumption of the unit is that a knowledge of history fosters both an understanding of, and a critical engagement with, the criminal justice system as it operates today. Emphasis will be given to topics that bear on contemporary issues, and, where appropriate and possible, to Tasmanian case studies. Interested students will have the opportunity to conduct primary research on aspects of the Tasmanian criminal justice system. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as BLA618; not offered in 1999Ê Cultural Encounters in the Eighteenth Century Unit enrolment code HTA219/319 (Hobart) Issues of historical method, explanation and interpretation are explored through two 18th-century case studies of cultural imperialism, and associated cultural interaction. The first case study is of encounters between European maritime venturers and indigenous peoples of the Pacific. In the foreground of this case study is long-standing, but recently fierce, controversy over interpreting and explaining the death of Captain James Cook at Kealakekua Bay in 1779. The second study focuses on comparison of the accounts given by Samuel Johnson and James Boswell of their joint tour of Scotland in 1773. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC254/354Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RG Ely ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2-hr tutorial-seminar weekly, 1-hr lecture fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HCA254/354 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000word essays (35%), tutorial-seminar participation (15%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Historiographical Studies Unit enrolment code HTA220/320 (Hobart) Discourses methodological and philosophical issues in historical research and writing. Issues of method will be approached through study of the work of some historians who have given an account of what they hoped to achieve in their research. Philosophical issues related to history are approached in a preliminary and non-technical way, and it is not necessary for students to have previously studied philosophy. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr RG Ely ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2-hr lecture-seminar weekly, 1-hr lecture fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 2x1,000-word essays (30%), tutorial participation (20%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Modern India till Independence Unit enrolment code HTA221/321 (Hobart) Focuses on the formidable problems besetting IndiaÕs emergence as a modern nation. It explores the formation of IndiaÕs national identity during the colonial period, ending with its independence in 1947. It also explores the growth of religious nationalism and ethnicity, challenging the basis of the emerging nation. Many of these problems and challenges persisted and plagued IndiaÕs critical nation-building efforts following independence. HTA222/322 India since IndependenceÊ is a natural extension of this unit and is strongly recommended to students of HTA221/321. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA204/304; not offered in 1999Ê India since Independence Unit enrolment code HTA222/322 (Hobart) Though IndiaÕs national liberation movement is one of the oldest and most experienced in colonial Asia and Africa, she shares with other newly liberated countries the formidable problems and challenges of national reconstruction. Perhaps the worldÕs oldest continuous civilisation, forming a complex mosaic of enormous social and cultural diversities, and comprising the worldÕs second largest population, facing serious problems of economic development, India chose a democratic path to nation building and has astonishingly earned the reputation of being the developing worldÕs Ômost shining exampleÕ of parliamentary democracy. What made this possible? Can India, with her gigantic demographic, ethnic, social and economic pressures, continue to maintain her democratic system, stability and global aspirations? Issues such as these should remain the central concerns of this unit. HTA221/321 Modern India till IndependenceÊ is a direct antecedent of this unit, and is strongly recommended to students of HTA222/322. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA207/307Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Roy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA207/307 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A Islam, Law and Women Ð Historical and Contemporary Perspectives Unit enrolment code HTA223/323 (Hobart) Explores the historical and contemporary situation of Muslim women in the specific context of the interplay of religion and law in Islam, with special reference to the vast Muslim world of South and Southeast Asia. The regions provide an excellent comparative framework to explore the problems of Muslim women, law and religion in the varying contexts of their secular and Islamic constitutions on the one hand, and democratic and authoritarian governments on the other. The explication of the general and theoretical issues concerning religion, law and women in Islam will be grounded on historical and empirical illustrations drawn largely from these two regions. The raging controversies surrounding Muslim Personal Law and the issue of Uniform Civil Code in relation to women, including its underlying politics, will also be covered. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAF260/360 or HMA244/344Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr A Roy ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥ÊcoreqÊ as applicable to the relevant disciplines or schools ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA244/344, HAF260/360 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Heresy and Inquisition in Medieval Europe AD 1100Ð1500 Unit enrolment code HTA225/325 (Hobart) From 1100Ð1500, major forms of heresy and dissent emerged in European society. During this period, there was a concomitant expansion of institutions designed to deal with unorthodox beliefs. The unit traces the growth of heretical movements in Europe, and explores the development of the Inquisition Ð the most notorious means by which orthodox belief was asserted: the Cathars, Waldensians and Albigensians and the rise of the mendicant orders; the construction and demonisation of Jews, witches and lepers; the influence of the Lollards and Hussites; and the Spanish Inquisition. Students should develop an awareness of the religious and social structures that defined ÔmainstreamÕ and ÔhereticalÕ beliefs during the period 1100Ð1500, gain a critical understanding of the ways in which ÔpopularÕ movements can challenge orthodoxies, and identify the means by which medieval societies sought to deal with dissent. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAC253/353 or FST263/363Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr M Cassidy, Prof MJ Bennett ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAC252/353, FST263/363 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Van DiemenÕs Land 1642Ð1850 Unit enrolment code HTA229/329 (Hobart) Studies: the history of the colony of Van DiemenÕs Land from its discovery to self-government, relating interpretation of the historical process to available sources; the evolution of the colony from a penal station into a free society, paying close attention to the Ôfatal clashÕ with the Aborigines, and issues of crime, punishment and reform; the economic, cultural and political development of the colony, culminating in the anti-transportation movement and the achievement of selfgovernment, relating the colonyÕs history to the pattern of British control and management of her other colonies during the period; and the historiography of the period, using contemporary documents and other source material (particularly the rich colonial office documents on microfilm) to analyse how historical accounts of the colony developed. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr P Chapman ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ 500-word survey paper (10%), 2,000-word research essay (35%), tutorial participation (5%), 2-hr exam (50%). Courses: R3A History of Australia 1788 Ð 1990s Unit enrolment code HTA240/340 (Launceston) Explores some major themes in Australian history: British transplantation and colonial adaptation; the Aboriginal dispossession and the grazing economy; the imperial convict system; immigration and the values and ideas of immigrants; the interplay of class, race and gender in the evolution of a liberal democracy; federation; the 20th-century wars and the impact of great powers; the quest for security in the proximity of Asia; protection and its dismantling in the age of globalisation; the making of a consumer society; the arts and the Australian spirit. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Huon ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorials fortnightly ¥ÊassessÊ (int) 2x2,500-word essays (25% ea), tutorial participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%); (dist.ed) essays (60%), exam (40%). Courses: R3A History of the USA Unit enrolment code HTA241/341 (Launceston and Hobart) Provides an introduction to the social, cultural and political history of the United States. Major themes include: initial culture contact among Europeans, Africans and Amerindians; the development of colonial American communities; an explanation of the American Revolution; an examination of the economic and social reordering of 19th-century America; and a study of the 20th-century American West. Special attention is paid to the methodological and conceptual problems confronting the historian seeking to reconstruct the American past. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr TP Dunning ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTA210/310 ¥ÊassessÊ (int) introductory exercise (10%), methodological assignment (20%), essay (20%), class participation (10%), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%); (dist.ed) introductory exercise (20%), methodological assignment (20%), essay (20%), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A African History Unit enrolment code HTA250/350 (Launceston) Is an introduction to African history. Topics include: European initial contacts with and penetration into sub-Saharan Africa, the Atlantic and Indian Ocean slave trades; European colonialism, racism, the rise of African nationalism, and the struggle for independence from European political and economic domination. Some concentration is placed on the histories of South Africa and Kenya to illustrate various apsects of the unit. ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DJ Overton ¥ÊLtn, int, dist.ed ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 2x1-hr lectures, 1-hr tutorial weekly (26 wks); dist.ed 3x1-day study schools ¥ÊassessÊ 2x3,000-word essays (25% ea), tutorial participation (10%), exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A War and Peace in the Pacific Unit enrolment code HTA255/355 (Launceston and Hobart) Concentrates on selected historical events in the Pacific region during the first six decades of the 20th century, including: JapanÕs emergence as a significant military power around the time of the RussoÐJapanese War, 1904Ð1905, its subsequent expansion into Korea, Manchuria and China, and its involvement in the Second World War. Other topics include AustraliaÕs and the United StatesÕ roles in the Pacific War, the communist rise to power in China, the early years of the Cold War in the Asia-Pacific region, the Korean War, and the European colonial withdrawal from Pacific Asia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA250/350Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Mr DJ Overton, Dr T Dunning, Dr DHuon ¥ÊLtn, Hbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA250/350 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000-word essay (45%), tutorial performance (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (45%). Courses: R3A The Early History of Indonesia Unit enrolment code HTA261/361 (Launceston and Hobart) From the early first millennium to the end of the 18th century, the Indonesian archipelago was the site of contest and collaboration for a remarkable range of traditions. Austronesian speakers confronted Indic, Chinese and Muslim concepts and beliefs, as well as those from both southern and northern Europe. Yet until 1800, when the scope of this unit ends, indigenous rulers maintained political power over most of the archipelago. Recent advances in understanding the societies of this period involve not only the discovery of much new evidence, especially in Sumatra and the eastern parts of the archipelago, but also radical shifts in the historiography. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA247/347Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof CC Macknight ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA247/347 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A The Later History of Indonesia Unit enrolment code HTA262/362 (Launceston and Hobart) Covers the growth of the Dutch colonial state from 1800 to 1942, the gradual erosion of other powers in the archipelago over the same period, and the emergence and progress of the Indonesian republic into the 1990s. The unit is concerned particularly with the nature of and interaction between various societies and problems of perspective in representing these issues. Some attention will be given to evaluating the emerging historiography of New Order Indonesia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA248/348Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Prof CC Macknight ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HMA248/348 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essays (40%), tutorial participation (10%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Environmental History Unit enrolment code HTA271/371 (Distance education) Focuses on how the discipline of history can provide a useful perspective on ecological issues implicating society and economy over the past 200 years. With the New World lands of Australia and the United States as comparative case studies and Tasmania as a special focus, the unit appraises the industrialÐurban revolution as an ecological revolution and the environmental impact of cities and environmental pollution; discusses historical and contemporary Western ideas about Nature including the Gaia hypothesis; traces the rise of national parks and of ideas about wilderness, conservation and preservation; explores contemporary envionmental history since the advent of the environmental crisis in the late 1960s; examines the history and varieties of environmentalism and the debate and conflicting meanings of ecological sustainability; appraises the contributions of evolutionary biology to environmental history. ¥ÊN.B. weekend workshops for this unit, in Hobart only; may be taken as KGN271/371Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr D Huon ¥Êdist.ed ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year ¥Êm/exclÊ KGN271/371 ¥ÊassessÊ 2x2,500-word essays (30% ea), 3-hr exam in Nov (40%). Courses: R3A History of the Indigenous Peoples of North America Unit enrolment code HTA275/375 (Launceston) Introduces the historical experiences of various indigenous peoples of North America using both the work of non-indigenous historians and the writings of indigenous peoples. Emphasis is given to the large literature concerning Native American peoples. Some attention is also paid to the Inuit and Aleut. Themes include: the nature of historical indigenousness; the varieties of inter-cultural relations; the problems of re-capturing and understanding the worlds of past peoples: the uses of the past by indigenous peoples to sustain and regain identities, including the issues of the ownership of that past; and the challenges to everyone of writing histories of these people. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HAB254/354Ê ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr T Dunning ¥ÊLtn, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2x1-hr lectures weekly, 1-hr tutorial fortnightly ¥Êm/exclÊ HAB254/354 ¥ÊassessÊ 3,000word essay (40%), tutorial participation (20%), 2-hr exam in June (40%). Courses: R3A The Sound of the Past Unit enrolment code HTA281/381 (Launceston and Hobart) Is concerned with the uses and historicity of orally-transmitted traditional historical narratives which were primarily intended to be recited and heard, though now found in written form. Consideration of general questions will be based on examples drawn from the Indonesian archipelago, including both verse and prose narratives, but there will also be some attention to the way these questions have been dealt with elsewhere. The matter of the historicity of such sources has been much debated in recent years and the comparative approach has much to contribute to this debate. Where possible, reference will be made to the leading work on these issues by scholars based in Australia. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HMA243/343; not offered in 1999Ê Indigenous Life Histories Unit enrolment code HTA282/382 Pursues two related streams: an historical evidence stream focusing on personal and community histories; and an issues stream, in which several issues related to the production of Aboriginal history are examined. For a fuller description see HAB252. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HBA252/352; not offered in 1999Ê Special Topic in History Unit enrolment code HTA399 Students select a Special Topic taught at honours level and prepare, under supervision, a research essay. ¥ÊN.B. enrolment requires specific approval by the Head of School, and is normally restricted to students who have the potential for honours level work and are doing more than a basic major in HistoryÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ various ¥ÊHbt, Ltn, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ at least 25% at 200 level ¥ÊcoreqÊ at least 25% at 300 level ¥ÊassessÊ 1,500-word essay (20%), 4,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam (40%). Courses: R3A Honours units History 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HTA498/499 (Hobart and Launceston) Special Topics in History (40%). Students choose two Special Topics in History from the list of offerings available in the School of History and Classics for 1999. Each unit will comprise 20 hours of class contact. Each elective requires written work (5Ð6,000 words); class participation; and a 3-hr examination. Each is weighted at 20%. The Practice of History A & B (20%). These modules deal with the work of historians both by displaying a wide range of concerns, approaches and controversies, and by an introduction to professional employment. Each module requires written work (2,500 words) and class participation. Each is weighted at 10%. Thesis (40%). In addition, students develop a research proposal, and prepare, under supervision, a thesis of between 12,000 and 15,000 words in length. The thesis constitutes 40% of the assessment. ¥ÊHbt, Ltn ¥Ê100%/50% ¥ÊprereqÊ Major, with Grade-Point Average of higher than 6.5 ¥ÊassessÊ listed above. Courses: R4A Ancient Civilisations Ð School of History and Classics Head of Discipline: Assoc Prof P Davis. A. Ancient Civilisations The units in Ancient Civilisations survey the history, literature, philosophy and artistic and material remains of the ancient cultures of the Mediterranean, particularly Greece and Rome. Historical documents and literary works are studied in translation so that no knowledge of the original languages is required. However there is no doubt that students will significantly deepen their knowledge and appreciation of these cultures so important for the understanding of contemporary Western society by acquiring some capacity in the languages in which the Greeks and Romans expressed themselves. A major sequence (100%) is offered in the Bachelor of Arts degree consisting of Ancient Civilisations 1 (25%), and 6 units (each 12.5%) taken over two years from options available at 200 level and 300 level (75%). N.B. Students who enrolled before 1993 are required to complete 2 units (12 points) at 200 level and 3 units (18 points) at 300 level. B. Ancient Greek and Latin A major sequence (100%) in each language is usually offered in the Bachelor of Arts degree consisting of units at first year (25%) second year (37.5%) and third year (37.5%) levels. Students are taught these languages and gain the ability to read some of the classics of Greek and Roman literature in their original form. In each case the first year unit is designed for those who have no prior knowledge of the language. Some advanced units in ancient Greek and Latin, that is HTG200 Ancient Greek 2 (37.5%), HTG300 Ancient Greek 3 (37.5%), HTL200 Latin 2 (37.5%) and HTL300 Latin 3 (37.5%) may not be offered depending on student enrolments and the availability of staff. It is essential that students wishing to enrol in Ancient Greek 1 should consult Assoc Prof Peter Davis in August 1998. Students intending to take Advanced Greek and Latin should see Assoc Prof Peter Davis as early as possible and no later than December 1998. A table of units in Ancient Civilisations being offered in 1999 Unit title weight sem campus code Level 100 semester 1 Ancient Civilisations 1A: Introduction to Greek and Roman Literature 12.5% [1] [H] HTC101 semester 2 Ancient Civilisations 1B: Introduction to Greek and Roman History 12.5% [2] [H] HTC102 Levels 200/300 semester 1 Archaic & Classical Greek Art 12.5% [1] [H] HTC208/308 Roman Empire: Tiberius to Hadrian 12.5% [1] [H] HTC202/302 Classical Tragedy: Euripides and Beyond 12.5% [1] [H] HTC213/313 semester 2 Roman Republic 133Ð31 BC 12.5% [2] [H] HTC201/301 The Later Roman Empire 12.5% [2] [H] HTC206/306 Greek and Roman Mythology 12.5% [2] [H] HTC223/323 C. Classics 4 An Honours course, Classics 4, is offered in fourth year. Courses at this level (400) require as a minimum an ability in Latin at 100 level. Students gaining a good four-year Honours degree in Classics should note that the School accepts candidates for the Graduate Diploma in Humanities and for the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy. Research supervision is available in the fields of Greek and Roman history and literature. Qualified students intending to pursue postgraduate research in any of these fields should consult the Head of Discipline for further details. Students should be aware of other aids to study which the program offers. The John Elliott Classics Museum, exhibited in the University Centre, forms a major collection of antiquities comprising representative examples of the art and artefacts of the civilisations studied in the Classics program. The study area of the Museum also contains slides and some reference works available for student use. Level 100 units Ancient Civilisations 1A: Introduction to Greek and Roman Literature Unit enrolment code HTC101 (Hobart) First-year Ancient Civilisation units examine the civilisation of ancient Greece and Rome, especially Athens in the age of Pericles and Rome in the age of Augustus. HTC101 presents a wide variety of texts produced by the Greeks and Romans (epic and didactic poetry, tragedy, philosophy, the novel) and concentrates on issues involving gender representation and political ideology in classical literature. ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof PJ Davis (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word tutorial paper (50%), 3hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Ancient Civilisations 1B: Introduction to Greek and Roman History Unit enrolment code HTC102 (Hobart) Examines the economic, political and social history of the Greek and Roman societies with particular attention to the development of empire and imperial ideology. The approach is primarily through literary sources in translation, although other types of evidence are introduced when relevant. ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr PA Gallivan (Coordinator) ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures, 1 tutorial weekly ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word tutorial paper (50%), 3hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Level 200/300 units Philip II, Alexander the Great and Macedonian Imperialism Unit enrolment code HTC200/300 Concentrates on the history and politics of Greece and Macedonia during the period 359 to 322 BC, focusing on relations between Athens and Kings Philip II and Alexander III (Ôthe GreatÕ) of Macedonia as well as the exploits and conquests of Alexander the Great. Athenian domestic policy is also studied, and special attention is paid to the leading statesman and orator Demosthenes and his policy of opposition to Macedonia. Various controversies which arise from this period are also considered. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Roman Republic 133Ð31 BC Unit enrolment code HTC201/301 Covers the Roman Republic from the period of Roman expansion in the Mediterranean to the end of the civil wars. The unit will concentrate on the political and social structures underlying this process, with particular emphasis on the Roman aristocracy, the individuals and forces which led to the fall of the Republic. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as a History unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr PA Gallivan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 if taken as an Acient Civilisations unit ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Roman Empire: Tiberius to Hadrian Unit enrolment code HTC202/302 Examines the institutions, organisation and society of the Roman Empire during the first century AD to the beginning of the second century. The approach to the period will be primarily through literary sources in translation, including especially Tacitus and Suetonius. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as a History unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr PA Gallivan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 if taken as an Ancient Civilisations unit ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Roman Imperial Society Unit enrolment code HTC203/303 Deals with the social, economic and administrative structure of the Roman imperial system during its full period of development from the end of the first century to the mid-third century AD. The unit concentrates on topics such as social structure, slavery, the role of cities, agriculture, the Roman imperial army, and elite careers. The approach is thematic and does not include a continuous narrative of historical events. The sources used will be predominantly documentary, including inscriptions, coins and, where appropriate, archaeological material, but will also include a wide range of literary sources. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê The Later Roman Empire Unit enrolment code HTC206/306 Deals with selected aspects of the history of the Roman Empire during the 3rd and 4th centuries AD. Particular attention is given to the following topics: the ÔcrisisÕ of the 3rd-century; Diocletian; Constantine; the rise of Christianity; religion and society; theories of decline and fall. The source material used is based on both literary and documentary evidence. Materials not readily available will be supplied as required. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as a History unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Dr PA Gallivan ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 or any level 100 HTA unit ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Archaic & Classical Greek Art Unit enrolment code HTC208/308 Deals with the developments and achievements of Greek art from its beginnings in the eighth century BC to the end of the High Classical period in 400 BC. Concentrating on the major forms of architecture, sculpture and vase-painting, it will examine the different stylistic approaches of artists to formalism, naturalism and idealism and the ways in which artists were influenced by, or reacted to, changing historical, social, economic and political conditions. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Later Greek & Roman Art Unit enrolment code HTC209/309 Examines the evolution of ancient art after the Classical period, concentrating on architecture, sculpture, painting and mosaics. The unit examines how artists during the Hellenistic period and then under Rome responded to new expressive demands resulting from the changing social, cultural and political conditions. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Greek and Roman Epic Unit enrolment code HTC210/310 In the classical world epic poetry was not only the most prestigious literary form, but also a major medium for the examination of moral and political issues. This unit examines HomerÕs Iliad,Ê the first work in the western tradition, VirgilÕs Aeneid,Ê the central literary achievement of the Romans, OvidÕs Metamorphoses,Ê an extraordinary poem which encompasses the entire world of Graeco-Roman mythology, and LucanÕs Pharsalia,Ê a powerful denunciation of the Roman Imperial system. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Greek Tragedy Unit enrolment code HTC211/311 Consists of a study of varous major tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides. Particular attention is paid to the development of the tragic form and the change in the nature and characteristic concerns of tragedy in 5th-century Athens. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Classical Tragedy: Euripides and Beyond Unit enrolment code HTC213/313 Examines the handling of Greek myth in Euripides, Seneca and Racine. The unit starts with a number of fifth century Greek tragedies which have proved particularly influential in European culture and then examines how they have been rewritten by tragedians in the classical tradition. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as an English unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ Assoc Prof PJ Davis ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fornightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 if taken as part of Ancient Civilisations ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (50%), 2-hr exam in June (50%). Courses: R3A Latin 1 Unit enrolment code HTC215 Ð as a year-2 unit, has the same objectives as HTL100. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as an English unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 ¥Êm/exclÊ HTL100 and HTC315 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly language and unseen exercises (40%), 2x3-hr exams in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek A Unit enrolment code HTC216/316 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. Before the beginning of the semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Qualified students should see the Head of Discipline in December 1998. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Latin A Unit enrolment code HTC217/317 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. Before the beginning of the semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Qualified students should see the Head of Discipline in December 1998. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek B Unit enrolment code HTC218/318 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. Before the beginning of the semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Qualified students should see the Head of Discipline in December 1998. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Latin B Unit enrolment code HTC219/319 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. Before the beginning of the semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Qualified students should see the Head of Discipline in December 1998. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 3-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Written Women: Gender in Roman Erotic Poetry Unit enrolment code HTC222/322 Roman love elegy is the only genre of classical literature in which women play a central role by definition. This unit will examine all four of the major Roman love poets, Catullus, Propertius, Tibullus and Ovid. It will be particularly concerned with such issues as the representation of male and female, sexual politics, the nature of desire (both heterosexual and homosexual) and the extent to which these texts are genuinely womancentred. ¥ÊN.B. may be studied as HAF222/322; not offered in 1999Ê Greek and Roman Mythology Unit enrolment code HTC223/323 Is a study of the role of myth in Greek and Roman culture. The emphasis will be on the treatment of myth in classical literary texts, but some attention will be paid to oral tradition, religion, ritual and art, to classical mythology in later literature and art, and to modern discussions of myth and its functions. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as an English unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê12.5% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2 lectures weekly, tutorial fortnightly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 if taken as an Ancient Civilisations unit; HEA100 if taken as part of English ¥ÊassessÊ 2,500-word essay (50%); 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Greek Moral Philosophy Unit enrolment code HTC224/324 Greek moral philosophy was essentially practical. Philosophers aimed to establish and justify a particular system of conduct. The kinds of questions that interested them were: How should we lead our lives? What is the highest human good? How can we be happy? Such questions are of interest to all of us and the Greeks initiated a lively and continuing debate. This unit will provide an introduction to the moral philosophy of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Epicureans and the Stoics largely through a selection of the ancient texts. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Reading the Classics: Ovid and Chaucer Unit enrolment code HTC225/325 Examines the relations between two major authors of the western canon, classical Ovid and medieval Chaucer. For a fuller description, see HEA224. ¥ÊN.B. may be taken as HEA224/324 or HAF224/324; not offered in 1999Ê Medieval Latin and the Classical Tradition Unit enrolment code HTC226/326 Examines a wide variety of Latin texts produced between 400 and 1400 AD. Students read in Latin specimens of important historical, technical and general literature, including poetry both secular and sacred. Particular attention is paid to the relationship between medieval texts and their classical ancestors. There is also a workshop in basic palaeography in which participants will themselves handle authentic manuscripts. ¥ÊN.B. not offered in 1999Ê Level 300 units Latin 1 Unit enrolment code HTC315 Ð as a third-year unit, has the same objectives as HTL100. ¥ÊN.B. can be taken as an English unitÊ ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTC100 ¥ÊcoreqÊ one of the series HTC200 Ð 224 ¥Êm/exclÊ HTL100, HTC215 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly language and unseen exercises (40%), 2x3-hr exams in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Honours units Classics 4 (Honours) Full time/Part time Unit enrolment code HTC400/401 Consists of two semester-length units of coursework on topics to be determined plus a special reading course and a thesis. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê100%/50% ¥Êfull year Ð 2-hr seminar weekly (26 wks) and 2x1hr reading classes weekly (13 wks) in one semester. ¥ÊprereqÊ Major in ancient Civilisations (including Latin 1 Ð HTL or equivalent) OR Ê a Major in Latin and satisfaction of the Faculty Grade-Point Average ¥ÊassessÊ essays as prescribed in each unit of coursework, 2x3-hr exams in June, 2x3-hr exams in Nov, 3-hr exam in either June or Nov, a thesis (maximum 15,000 words). Courses: R4A Ancient Civilisations Ð Cross-listed units Appropriate non-Classics units with a weight of up to 25% in total may be counted towards a major in Ancient Civilisations. In 1999, the following units are available to Classics students: Unit title weight sem campus code The Legend of King Arthur 12.5% [2] [H] HEA277/377 Shakespeare: Comedy and Romance 12.5% [1] [H] HEA223/323 Elizabethan and Jacobean Tragedy 12.5% [1] [H] HEA225/325 The Early Middle Ages: From Rome to the Millennium AD 410Ð1000 25% [fy] [H] HTA201/301 Late Medieval and Renaissance Europe 25% [fy] [H] HTA202/302 Heresy and Inquisition in Medieval Europe AD 1100Ð1500 12.5% [2] [H] HTA225/325 Ancient Greek Ð School of History and Classics Ancient GreekÊ is intended for those who have no prior knowledge of Ancient Greek. It is designed to provide a rapid survey of ancient Greek accidence and syntax sufficient to enable students to read easy prescribed portions of selected classical Greek authors. Because of limited staff numbers, the School does not offer the unit from its own resources in Hobart. Instead, the unit will be studied externally. Students wishing to enrol in the unit will be required to participate in a four-day residential school in April. (Funding will be available for some pre-honours and postgraduate students to enable them to participate in the residential school. Other students may enrol but no guarantee of funding can be given to them.) Students undertaking this unit will be granted automatic credit to their University of Tasmania degrees. It is essential that students intending to enrol in this unit notify the Head of Discipline in August 1998.Ê assessment course work (40%) 3-hr exam in June, 3-hr exam in Nov (60%). required reading [p/b] Reading Greek: Grammar, Vocabulary and ExercisesÊ CUP [p/b] Reading Greek: TextÊ CUP. Level 200 units Ancient Greek 2 Unit enrolment code HTG200 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts (both poetry and prose) plus revision of the grammar covered in Ancient Greek 1. Before the beginning of each semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Note: The course of study (37.5% combined weight) consists of three corequisite units. A result is given for the course as a whole, rather than for the constituent units. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê37.5% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG216, 218, 220. Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek A Unit enrolment code HTG216 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG218, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek B Unit enrolment code HTG218 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG216, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Intermediate Ancient Greek Grammar Unit enrolment code HTG220 Consists of a study of intermediate Ancient Greek grammar. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ Ancient Greek 1 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG216, 218 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises and unseens (50%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Level 300 units Ancient Greek 3 Unit enrolment code HTG300 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts (both poetry and prose) plus advanced study of Ancient Greek grammar. Before the beginning of each semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the School. Note: The course of study (37.5% combined weight) consists of three corequisite units. A result is given for the course as a whole, rather than for the constituent units. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê37.5% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ HTG200. Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek A Unit enrolment code HTG316 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTG200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG318, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek B Unit enrolment code HTG318 Consists of a study of selected Ancient Greek texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTG200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG316, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Ancient Greek Grammar Unit enrolment code HTG320 Consists of a study of advanced Ancient Greek grammar. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTG200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTG316, 318 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises and unseens (50%), 3-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Latin Ð School of History and Classics Latin second and third-year units See also Ancient Civilisations units (HTC215, HTC315, HTC217/317, and HTC219/319) Unit title weight sem campus code<c23>Latin 1 25% [fy] [H] HTC215 Latin 1 25% [fy] [H] HTC315 Advanced Latin A 12.5% [1] [H] HTC217/317 Advanced Latin B 12.5% [2] [H] HTC219/319 Level 100 unit Latin 1 Unit enrolment code HTL100 Provides for those having no previous knowledge of the language, and enables them to proceed either to further studies in Latin or to use their basic knowledge to assist in advanced study in English, the Romance languages or Ancient Civilisations. Students having passed HSC Latin or its equivalent will undertake such work as may be prescribed by the Head of Discipline. The unit is designed to provide a rapid survey of Latin accidence and syntax sufficient to enable students to read easy prescribed portions of standard Latin authors; and it includes some historical and cultural background. ¥ÊstaffÊ tba ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê25% ¥Êfull year Ð 4 hrs weekly ¥Êm/exclÊ HTC215, 315 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly language and unseen exercises (40%), 2x3-hr exams in Nov (60%). ¥ÊreqÊ Jones P and Sidwell K, Reading Latin,Ê 2 vols, CUP CollinsÕ Latin Gem Dictionary.Ê Courses: R3A Level 200 units Latin 2 Unit enrolment code HTL200 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts (both poetry and prose) plus revision of the grammar covered in Latin 1. Before the beginning of each semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the Department. Note: The course of study (37.5% combined weight) consists of three corequisite units. A result is given for the course as a whole, rather than for the constituent units. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê37.5% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL217, 219, 220. Courses: R3A Advanced Latin A Unit enrolment code HTL217 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL219, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Latin B Unit enrolment code HTL219 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL217, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Intermediate Latin Grammar Unit enrolment code HTL220 Consists of a study of intermediate Latin grammar. ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL100 or HTC215/315 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL217, 219 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises and unseens (50%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). Courses: R3A Level 300 units Latin 3 Unit enrolment code HTL300 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts (both poetry and prose) plus advanced study of Latin grammar. Before the beginning of each semester, intending students will be notified which texts are to be studied. Texts will be provided by the Department. Note: The course of study (37.5% combined weight) consists of three corequisite units. A result is given for the course as a whole, rather than for the constituent units. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê37.5% ¥Êfull year ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL317, 319, 320. Courses: R3A Advanced Latin A Unit enrolment code HTL317 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 1 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL319, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in June (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Latin B Unit enrolment code HTL319 Consists of a study of selected Latin texts. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êsem 2 Ð 2.5 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL317, 220 ¥ÊassessÊ 2,000-word essay (40%), 2-hr exam in Nov (60%). Courses: R3A Advanced Latin Grammar Unit enrolment code HTL320 Consists of a study of advanced Latin grammar. ¥ÊN.B. may not be offered in 1999Ê ¥ÊHbt, int ¥Ê0% ¥Êfull year Ð 2 hrs weekly ¥ÊprereqÊ HTL200 ¥ÊcoreqÊ HTL317, 219 ¥ÊassessÊ weekly exercises and unseens (50%), 2-hr exam in Nov (50%). 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