judith.keogh@arts.monash.edu.au or louella.dcosta@arts.monash.edu.au
http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/schools/lvcs/
Room W707, West Wing, Menzies building, Clayton campus
(03) 9905 2148 or (03) 9905 2140
The English section offers a variety of units in the literatures of Britain, Australia, America, Asia, and in a range of related areas including academic, professional and creative writing.
In first year, students are introduced to the study of English through a
choice of unit sequences. Each sequence has a different focus - the study of
English literature and the study of effective writing. Each aims to introduce
students to a variety of modes of reading and to a number of ways of speaking
and writing about what they read.
Second and third-year units in literature introduce students to the literature
and culture of different historical periods. Related units are offered in the
following fields: Australian studies, the theory and practice of children's
literature, war literature and travel writing, critical theory, feminist theory
and women's writing, postcolonial theory and literature, the languages of
literature, literary and visual semiotics and performance studies, creative
writing and professional writing. Students may select from these areas to
develop their major in English. For the language of places and performance
sequence, see entry for `Drama and theatre studies'.
Students will find the expectations of English outlined in unit handbooks as
they proceed through the degree.
English provides consultation and advice on choice of units at first, second,
third and fourth-year levels to ensure that students choose suitable and
coherent sequences.
The visual culture program teaches courses in two major streams: visual culture, and film and television studies. Minor sequences, major sequences and honours studies may be undertaken in either of these broad areas, or a combination of the two. The first-year unit VSA1000 (Introduction to visual culture: back to the future) is designed to provide a foundation for all subsequent studies in visual culture. Students may choose to complete a first-year sequence by taking VSA1010 (Contemporary visual culture) or VSA1050 (Contemporary popular film), or both, in second semester.
Visual culture units involve historical and critical approaches to film and
television, video and new screen technologies, photography, painting, fashion,
sculpture and the built environment, with a special emphasis on Australian,
European and American art and architecture. Particular attention is paid to
recent manifestations of visual culture. Film and television studies cover
Australian, Asian and European national cinemas, contemporary popular Hollywood
and its institutions, alternative film and video, documentary and television
studies and video practice.
Throughout the course of studies, emphasis will be given to a variety of
critical and theoretical methods of analysis appropriate to the study of visual
culture, including formal, semiotic and psychoanalytic approaches,
consideration of issues to do with the intersection of ideology and culture,
the representation of gender, race and class, and questions concerning the
relations between visual culture and technology.
Students are encouraged to consider combining their visual culture studies with
other relevant and compatible disciplines in the Faculty of Arts. Examples are
performing arts, comparative literature and cultural studies, English, history,
women's studies, and a range of relevant Asian and European languages.
Particular attention is drawn to: CLS1010 (Text and context), CLS1040
(Introduction to cultural studies) and WMN2240/WMN3240 (Introduction to
contemporary feminist theory).
Students who wish to make a specialist study of drama and theatre studies as part of their Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Performing Arts may do so within the Centre for Drama and Theatre Studies. The units available represent a wide range of approaches to studies in the field. Most place a strong emphasis on performance. While the major in drama and theatre studies is not designed specifically as a course in systematic skills training, the element of performance in our program (whether in public production or through in-house experimental work) is regarded as fundamental to the analysis of theatre texts and processes.
The first-year prerequisite for students intending a major or minor sequence
in drama and theatre studies is DTS1060 (The language of performance) and
DTS1160 (The places of performance). A second first-year sequence is available
as an additional option (DTS1320 and DTS1420). In later years, majoring
students should take at least 48 points (12 points at second-year level and 24
points at third-year level) from DTS units offered by the faculty. While some
of the units, which are not offered solely by the centre, have disciplinary
prerequisites, students taking these units as DTS studies may, with the
permission of relevant discipline area, be excused of those requirements.
Students who are appropriately qualified may be admitted to the fourth-year
honours program.
The DTS units listed in this handbook are offered at the Clayton campus unless
otherwise indicated. None of the DTS units listed in the handbook may be
counted towards more than one minor or major sequence. Units with the prefix
PER are available only to students enrolled in the Bachelor of Performing Arts
degree.
The Centre for Drama and Theatre Studies has close connections with a number of other teaching programs in the Faculty of Arts, all of which are concerned in one way or another with the study of texts and textuality. These are comparative literature, critical theory, cultural studies and English literature - units offered in these areas are listed under each of these disciplines.
It is possible to take a double major in any two of comparative literature and cultural studies, drama and theatre studies, and English. A major in any of these may also be combined with a minor sequence in any other or with a minor sequence in critical theory.
For details of the following courses, see `Outline of undergraduate studies' earlier in this section.
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