GND2050 - Sex, science and the body
6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Arts
Leader(s): JaneMaree Maher
Offered
Clayton Second semester 2009 (Day)
Synopsis
How do science, medicine and gender intersect in contemporary Western societies? How do ideas about sex and gender shape scientific knowledge and medical practice? What impact do gender norms have on the provision and delivery of health care? How does the development of scientific knowledge reflect contemporary ideas about sex and gender? This unit draws on scholarship in feminist science studies to engage students in current critical debates concerning sex, bodies and medical knowledge. A range of critical analytic approaches to contemporary medical and scientific questions will be introduced and key contemporary debates will be selected for close analysis and problem-based learning.
Objectives
By the successful completion of this unit, students will have acquired the following skills:
- A grounded working knowledge of the major feminist theoretical and methodological approaches to science and the production of scientific knowledge.
- An informed theoretical critique of how such concepts as sex, gender and knowledge are present in the development and dissemination of scientific knowledge.
- An interdisciplinary approach to the analysis of scientific knowledge and the role of science in defining sex, gender and sexuality.
- Library based research skills and a working knowledge of the major data-bases used in feminist science studies.
- The ability to think critical and analytically, and to be able to articulate those thought processes in a high standard of written and oral expression.
- A focus upon the production of scholarly research as the end point of a process of reading, discussion, drafting and debate.
- The ability to work both independently as scholars and to participate actively in group projects.
Assessment
Written work: 80%
Class Participation/presentation: 20%