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Arts

HSA304

Enrolment
Unit Code
Unit Title
HSA301 Race and Ethnic Politics
HSA302 Approaches to International Relations
(Not Offered 2010)
HSA303 Media and Politics
(Not Offered 2010)
HSA304 Politics in Literature and Film
HSA310 Political Ideologies
(Not Offered 2010)
HSA327 Democratisation in Asia
(Not Offered 2010)
HSA340 Australian Foreign Policy
HSA360 Tasmanian Politics and Australian Federalism
HSA361 Parliamentary Internship
HSA370 Espionage, Terror and Global Disorder

2010  HSA304  Politics in Literature and Film

Unit Level: Advanced

Available as a Student Elective: Yes

View timetable of lectures only for this unit.  View ALL timetable events for this unit.

See also   HSA204

OFFERINGS

Unit Sem 1 Sem 2 Full Yr Spring Summer Winter
HSA304 H
Distance(H,L,W,I,N)

Key Semester Dates
Semester Note Start Date Census Date Final WW Date* End Date
Sem 1 22-FEB-2010 23-MAR-2010 12-APR-2010 28-MAY-2010

*The Final WW Date is the final date from which you can withdraw from the unit without academic penalty, however you will still incur a financial liability (see Withdrawal dates explained for more information).

This unit can be taken in other courses
About Census Dates

DESCRIPTION
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 and, more precisely, the way that particular idioms of discourse have constituted that art. In order to explore this understanding we shall initially examine how the political can be read through various texts of literature and satire, and visual texts such as film and television and, indeed, how political meaning is constituted through these media. In this context we will consider the work of Marshall McLuhan and Richard Rorty.

The second part of the unit considers the manner in which satire, the novel, nonfiction literature and visual text, inform and constitute contemporary political understandings. Here we shall examine themes such as: vision of the future in George Orwell's 1984 (film and book); dystopia in Anthony Burgess and Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (film and book); politics and resources in Agnes Varda's The Gleaners and I; resistance and regime change, Joachim Fest's Plotting Hitler's Death, and Oliver Hirschbiegel's Downfall; media and the Vietnam War in Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (film); the individual in Graham Greene's The Quiet American (book and film); the postmodern US Presidency in Mike Nichols' Primary Colours (film and book); and the art of spin doctoring in Barry Levinson's Wag the Dog (film), The West Wing (TV) and Dick Morris's Behind the Oval Office (book). We shall conclude by studying the way in which modern media examines the individual, society and the state. Here we will look at the films Battle for Algiers , Saviour and the documentary Srebrenica.

WEIGHT:  12.5%

ASSESSMENT: 200 level: 2,000-word essay (30%), tutorial assessment (10%), 1,000-word book review (20%), 2-hr end-of-sem exam (40%)

300 level: 2,500-word essay (30%), tutorial assessment (10%), 1,000-word book review (20%), 2-hr end-of-sem exam (40%)

TEACHING PATTERN: Int: 2-hr lecture weekly, 1 tutorial fortnightly;
Dist. Ed: web-based delivery of 13 lectures, 1 online tutorial discussion fortnightly

FLEXIBLE & ONLINE STUDY OPTIONS
Note: Class attendance may still be required

   Web supported - H
Online access to some part of this unit online is optional
   Fully online - I,L,N,W
This unit is taught entirely online
   Resource supported teaching & learning - H,I,L,N,W
Additional resources are provided for your optional use; e.g. audio taped lectures
About Flexible Study Options

REQUISITE INFO
Prereq 25% Introductory level Politics units
M.Excl HAC244/344, FST257/357

TEXTS
Information about any textbook requirements for Semester (Sem 1) will be available from mid November 2009

STAFF: Dr WW Bostock

FEES
View fees for this unit

KEY

Units are offered in attending mode unless otherwise indicated (that is attendance is required at the campus identified). A unit identified as offered by distance, that is there is no requirement for attendance, is identified with a nominal enrolment campus. A unit offered to both attending students and by distance from the same campus is identified as having both modes of study.

Campus - H Hobart, L Launceston, W Burnie. Study Centre - V Sydney, R Rozelle. Distance units may also have a campus identifier of I Isolated, N Interstate, O Overseas. Units delivered in Transnational Education (TNE) Programs have a campus identifier of A Hangzhou, F Fuzhou, G Shanghai, J Indonesia, K KDU Malaysia, Q Kuwait or Z New Zealand.

Special approval is required for enrolment into TNE Program units - campuses A, F, G, J, K, Q and Z click here for more information.



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