SCY2130

Culture and society: introduction to cultural theory

Andrew Milner

8 points - 3 hours per week - Second semester - Clayton - Prohibitions: CLS2130/ANY2230/COS2130

Objectives Upon completion of this subject students should be able to demonstrate some familiarity with recent debates in cultural theory; articulate the analytical skills, theoretical vocabularies and conceptual apparatuses studied in the subject; demonstrate a sense of their own personal and cultural reflexivity; and write clear, grammatically and syntactically appropriate, independent essays on the topics chosen for assessment.

Synopsis The subject introduces students to a variety of theoretical approaches to the study of the relationship between culture and society, drawing on literary-critical, socio-historical and anthropological discourse. The subject begins with English literary-critical conceptions of culture; proceeds to the French structuralist tradition, especially as exemplified in anthropology and in semiotics; and to that mainly German tradition of theorising about culture which arises from the encounter between sociology, psychoanalysis and Marxism. The subject then moves to a discussion of current theoretical debates concerning the sociology of culture, the cultural politics of sexual difference, cultural nationalism and multiculturalism, postcolonialism and postmodernism.

Assessment Tutorial paper (1000 words): 10% - Essay (3000 words): 50% - Examination (2 hours): 40%

Prescribed texts

Beilharz P Social theory: A guide to central thinkers Allen and Unwin, 1991
Eagleton T Literary theory: An introduction Blackwell, 1996
Milner A Contemporary cultural theory Allen and Unwin, 1991

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