AIS4040 - Interrogating race and power in Australian indigenous studies
12 points, SCA Band 1, 0.250 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Arts
Leader(s): Dr Stephen Pritchard
Offered
Clayton Second semester 2009 (Day)
Synopsis
Examination of race, gender, class and discourse of whiteness within Australian Indigenous Studies. Comparative study of other settler societies. Power and privilege in Australia.
Objectives
Upon completion of this unit students will have developed an understanding of the theoretical foundations for an interrogation of the ways in which race, gender and class interact to sustain discourses of whiteness within Australian Indigenous Studies. Students will gain an understanding of the bases of power and privilege as they have been and continue to be exercised in Australia, through a comparative approach to studying material from other settler societies such as Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand, South Africa and the United States. Students will gain the ability to express their understandings of these factors and of Indigenous peoples' responses to the power structures within their colonial and contemporary settings both orally and in writing.
Assessment
Written work: 90% (9000 words)
Oral Presentation 10% (500 words)
Contact hours
2 hours (1 x 2 hour seminar) per week
Prerequisites
A major sequence in Australian Indigenous Studies or cognate discipline(s) as approved by the Honours coordinator