Clayton First semester 2008 (Day)
This unit investigates the views of policy-makers and intellectuals on Europe, European unity, and the relationship of Europe to the rest of the world in the 20th and 21st Century. Topics include the nature of Europe's cultural cohesion, the relationship between liberal-democratic Western Europe and the parts of Europe recently ruled by communist regimes, intellectuals' response to aspects of Europe's historical heritage, and the attitudes of European and non-European policy-makers towards European unity. Readings will include texts and documents on Europe by Derrida, Habermas, Havel, Kundera, Said, Tourraine, Monnet, Spinelli, De Gaulle, and other intellectuals and policy-makers.
On completion of this subject students should:
Short essay (2000 words): 35%; Long essay (4500 words): 50%; Class project (equivalent to 2000 words): 15%.
Fourth-year students will be expected to demonstrate more developed research, analytical and critical skills than their third-year counterparts.
Students completing the unit at 5th year level will be required to engage with civilizational theoretical approaches to the topic.
One 1-hour lecture and two 1-hour seminars per week
A second-year unit in European studies or approval by the Monash European and EU Centre