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Monash University Handbook 2011

Postgraduate areas of study by faculty: Arts

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Arts

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Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Anthropology is the discipline within the University that is concerned with the study of specific cultures and their social organisation. All anthropology staff have intensive research experience in other societies and their cultures and bring to the units offered, whether they are about 'others' or 'ourselves', a distinctly anthropological perspective, an understanding of, and respect for, cultural difference. The ethnographic expertise of the staff ranges through indigenous Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific to the study of minority communities and their cultures in Australia, incorporating a range of theoretical perspectives.

Research seminars are an important part of the graduate experience. Students are involved in seminars within the disciplines and the school to help them develop a range of research skills, receive feedback on their work, and share and learn with others in the intellectual community of the school. They are encouraged to organise and attend conferences, summer schools and enrichment programs, and to publish and present their work in a variety of forums.

Previous students of the school who have completed graduate degrees have won scholarships for study, travel and further research. Many have had the opportunity to conduct and speak about their research across Australia and around the world. All our postgraduate programs aim to provide students with a broad range of research skills and equip them for careers in social research, government, industry and the public service.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including:

plus three additional units chosen from the following and selected in accordance with the student's research project:

  • APG4258 Theorising culture
  • APG4259 Into the field: The theory and practice of ethnography
  • APG4378 The Third World
  • APG4381 Asia and the West
  • APG4702 Culture and conflict in Indonesia
  • APG4704 Special subject
Course coordinator

Dr Matt Tomlinson

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This course provides students who already have an honours degree in anthropology or other related disciplines with the opportunity to expand, update and deepen their knowledge and understanding. Students may choose such a program for various reasons, including the desire to pursue their own intellectual interests, gain more specialised and detailed understanding of a particular area, acquire technical and applied skills and knowledge, or prepare themselves for a PhD and a career in research and teaching.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5259 Into the field: The theory and practice of ethnography
  • APG5379 Violences
  • APG5711 Special subject

Alternative units may be taken with the approval of the course coordinator.

Course coordinator

Dr Matt Tomlinson

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Research supervision is available in areas including language teaching and assessment; second language acquisition (including language learning and information communications technology), intercultural interaction; sociolinguistics and language planning.

For further information on courses, contact the school.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points, including two core units and two elective units.

Core units

  • APG4386 Asian studies research project part 1
  • APG4635 Research methodology for applied linguistics

Elective units

  • two units as approved by the course coordinator, usually applied Japanese linguistics or linguistics units
Course coordinator

Assoc Prof Helen Marriott

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Units

Students normally complete two level five units in applied Japanese linguistics.

Course coordinator

Associate Professor Helen Marriott

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 0108 Graduate Diploma in Applied Japanese Linguistics
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3073 Masters of Applied Japanese Linguistics
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy

*By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics

Notes

  • Postgraduate applied linguistics is only available via off-campus learning mode, therefore international students may only undertake this discipline in one of the relevant courses if studying outside of Australia.

Description

The courses relevant to this area of study deal with applications of linguistics to professional and social contexts in which language plays a crucial role. They are particularly suited to teachers of English as a mother tongue, English as a second or foreign language and languages other than English, generalist primary school teachers, and those concerned with multicultural and language policies. Areas covered include the application of linguistics to the professional and social contexts in which language plays a crucial role, as well as other applications of linguistics such as in the media, business and industry.

See also the arts postgraduate areas of study entry for linguistics at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/handbooks/aos/pg-linguistics.html.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 0010 Postgraduate Diploma in Applied Linguistics
  • 3769 Master of Applied Linguistics
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

*By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Gippsland

Description

In today's information society, we are constantly exposed to 'research findings'. Each day when we read the newspapers or listen to the television news we are told 'Research shows that ...', or 'According to a recent study ...', or 'Studies generally agree that ...'. It is essential to have a certain degree of 'research literacy' to understand the flood of 'facts' we are exposed to on a daily basis. Research now also plays a vital role in the shaping of community and governmental policies.

Postgraduate study in applied social research aims to provide an understanding of the particular strengths and weaknesses of various research approaches and methodologies so as to make a critical and informed assessment of research findings. Applied social research is the application of the analytical tools of the social sciences to the social, political and economic policy issues in today's society. In this way, applied social research aims to develop a practical understanding of the design process, execution, and evaluation of social research projects which focus on immediate problems and their resolution.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By Research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Notes

  • Offered by the Centre for Archaeology and Ancient History

Description

The principal aim of the Centre for Archaeology and Ancient History is to expand students' engagement, through detailed research, with the culture and history of key civilisations of the ancient Mediterranean, especially Egypt. It encourages students to explore and consider the various means by which the ancient past can be approached through a combination of textual sources and material culture, and the ways in which it is both constructed and deconstructed.

The centre offers the only program in Victoria and one of only two in Australia that provides supervision of research degrees in Egyptology, especially Egyptian archaeology from the Predynastic to early Christian Period. It also offers supervision in aspects of the classical world, the Near East and regions extending to the Indian sub-continent.

Postgraduate study can be undertaken by research or a combination of research and coursework. Students are supported by a process of induction, training in methodology and theoretical approaches, and supervised project design. Regular seminars are held by staff, students and visiting academics. All postgraduate students are given the opportunity to participate in fieldwork in Egypt on one of the centre's various projects.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including a 12-point research unit, two core units and one 12-point elective chosen from the list below. Not all electives are available each year. Unless otherwise indicated, all units are taught at Clayton.

Research unit

  • APG4697 Research project in archaeology and ancient history

Core units

Students complete a minimum of two core units chosen from the following:

  • APG4256 Predynastic and early dynastic Egypt
  • APG4257 Reading the ancient past
  • APG4345 Research methods in classical antiquity

Elective units

  • APG4295 History and the museum
  • APG4299 History and heritage
  • APG4305 History and memory: Interpreting life stories
  • APG4313 Hidden transcripts: Cultural approaches to the past
  • one other approved 12 point unit
Course coordinator

Associate Professor Colin Hope

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This course is designed for students wishing to combine coursework with research and for whom a research process of induction, training in methodology and concepts, and supervised project design will be particularly useful.

Units

Students complete:

  • APG5257 Reading the ancient past
  • APG5256 Predynastic and early dynastic Egypt

unless they have previously completed these units as part of another program, in which case they will complete:

  • APG5697 Research topics in archaeology: The New Kingdom
  • APG5698 Research topics in archaeology: Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt.

Course coordinator

Associate Professor Colin Hope

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Asian studies comprises the interdisciplinary study of the region referred to as 'Asia'. Asia is usually regarded as starting to the west of Pakistan and extending to the western rim of the Pacific, including those countries in south, south-east and east Asia. The region contains two-thirds of the world's population and many hundreds of distinct cultures and languages. It is home to the world's two largest countries in terms of population and to the world's biggest democracy. It embraces some of the world's most sophisticated and developed economies, and some of the world's most impoverished and least developed countries.

East Asia in particular has been the engine for global economic growth over the last two decades of the 20th century. Many of the region's political, strategic and diplomatic issues have dominated world attention at the beginning of the 21st century. Research on Asia is undertaken across a wide range of disciplines at Monash. Much of it is interdisciplinary and relates to aspects of society, language and culture, politics, government, economics, industrial relations, business, health and nutrition, education and law. Accordingly, supervision of research student candidature is available in a wide range of fields.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points of level four units, including two 12-point core units, a 12-point research project and one of the following options:

(a.) a language sequence totalling 12 points

(b.) 12 points of electives selected from those offered at level four as part of the Asian studies program in the schedule of units available from the postgraduate coordinator in the Monash Asia Institute.

Students undertaking a 12-point coursework unit plus a 6-point language unit in the same semester will be considered full-time. To complete the program in one year, this option requires that two 12-point units and the other 6-point language unit be taken in the other semester. Students are advised to discuss this issue with the course coordinator when enrolling.

The selection of units and a research topic must be approved by the course coordinator. Normally each student's program will emphasise the following:

  • one disciplinary aspect of Asia or Australian-Asian relations
  • one region (for example East, South or Southeast Asia or a country which is related to their language studies).

An Asian language sequence is compulsory for students without any Asian language background. Applications for exemption without credit from language studies will be considered in special circumstances, and whenever previous Asian language studies have been completed within a university degree or the student is a native speaker of an Asian language. Students exempted will choose an additional 12 points of level-four electives to obtain the required number of credit points for their degree.

Core units

  • APG4382 Contemporary issues in Asia
  • APG4384 Research project in Asian studies
  • APG4385 Investigating other societies: Area studies in global perspective
Course coordinator

Professor Marika Vicziany

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This program will enable students to focus their studies around a research thesis on Asia. The coursework component is designed to encourage interdisciplinary perspectives to broaden and deepen the understanding of Asia and Australia-Asia relations, thereby providing a fuller appreciation of the context in which the research project will be conceptualised.

Units

  • APG5382 Contemporary issues in Asia
  • AST5020 Investigating Asia

Course coordinator

Professor Ross Mouer

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3084 Master of Asian Studies
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byCentre for Australian Indigenous Studies
School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Offered by the Centre for Australian Indigenous Studies at Clayton

The Centre for Australian Indigenous Studies (CAIS) has been offering Indigenous studies at the undergraduate level since 1978, and runs a successful honours program. The Centre now offers research programs at the masters and doctoral level. Areas of research include Indigenous education, the history of colonisation of Australia, Aboriginal rock music, Indigenous performance, racism and sport, and public policy.

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences at Gippsland

The School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences (HUMCASS) offers Indigenous Studies at undergraduate, honours, postgraduate diploma and doctoral level. Studies can be taken through both on-campus and off-campus study. Areas of research include politics, public policy, racism, education, art, literature and history.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the Centre for Australian Indigenous Studies (Clayton)

Students complete 48 points comprising the following:

  • ATS4259 Into the field: The theory and practice of ethnography
  • ATS4680 Theories and research methodologies in Australian Indigenous studies
  • ATS4683 Interrogating race and power in Australian Indigenous studies
Course coordinator

Dr John Bradley

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences (Gippsland)

Students complete 48 points comprising the following:

  • ATS4685 Protocols and power in Indigenous studies
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation Part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation Part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Andrew Gunstone

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byNational Centre for Australian Studies
School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Journalism and Australian Studies
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Australian studies aims to investigate and analyse Australian society, culture and politics in order to support greater understanding of Australia both locally and internationally. Australian studies is a dynamic, interdisciplinary subject area which provides insight into the modern world by applying historical perspectives to contemporary issues.

The National Centre for Australian Studies (NCAS) plays a key role in the development of teaching and research in Australian studies both nationally and internationally. NCAS offers innovative undergraduate courses and postgraduate programs taught by staff actively engaged in research projects, public programs and international collaboration. The research interests of staff range from politics and trade union history to youth and Indigenous tourism; from publishing to media studies; from the history of advertising to diasporic Asian identities and culture. Masters and doctoral supervision is available from staff publishing in these and other areas.

NCAS also offers internationally recognised vocationally-oriented tuition in communications and media studies, tourism, and publishing and editing. NCAS staff have expertise in applying interactive, multimedia technologies to teaching and have produced a range of multimedia resources in Australian studies. Teaching and research supervision at NCAS is informed by a commitment to the internationalisation of Australian studies.

NCAS welcomes the interest of international students and visitors in its programs.

Units

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the National Centre for Australian Studies, within the School of Humanities Communications and Social Sciences

This program is designed to give students the opportunity to pursue the study of Australian society and culture at an advanced level. Building on a basis provided by relevant interdisciplinary courses, students go on to develop and complete an appropriate research thesis.

Units

  • APG5391 Exploring Australia: Diverse people, diverse lives
  • APG5396 Researching and writing Australia
Course coordinator

To be advised

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton

Description

Behavioural studies is concerned with a multidisciplinary (sociological, psychological and biological) examination of human behaviour and is also interested in exploring diverse interpretations of the nature and character of human development, personality, identity and relationships. This interest in behaviour has wide and varied applications into areas such as work and workplace relationships and identities, education, criminology, youth studies and services, intercultural communication and understanding, and medical and therapeutic contexts.

Staff are able to provide research candidates with supervision in a range of areas, theoretical orientations and methodological perspectives and are dedicated to promoting research which is theoretically informed as well as grounded in rigorous empirical research.

The school can offer research supervision in the following areas:

  • critical sociologies of terrorism
  • digital identities and behaviours
  • dissociative disorders
  • Foucault and governmentality studies
  • globalisation and postmodernity
  • health psychology
  • impacts of terrorism on business
  • migration and cross-cultural comparison studies.
  • psycho-dermatology
  • psychology of medical treatment compliance
  • quality of life and disability studies
  • social networks and virtual worlds
  • terrorism and popular culture
  • trauma reactions
  • theories and studies of self and identity
  • youth studies.
  • Zizek studies.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Notes

  • The seminars for most of the on-campus units will be taught in the city in 2011. Also available via off-campus learning (OCL). International students may only undertake this discipline via off-campus learning in one of the relevant courses if studying outside of Australia.

Description

The growth of scientific knowledge and technical ability in medicine, genetics and the biological sciences has led to a number of ethical dilemmas which perplex all of us, but especially those in the health care field. Does the fact that we can prolong the life of a patient in a permanent vegetative state mean that we should do so? Is destructive embryo experimentation justified by the prospect it offers of alleviating infertility? Should research designed to find 'gay genes' be conducted given that the results of such work might be used against homosexual people? Should we proceed with research trying to clone people? These and many other questions raise complex ethical and legal issues. The study, discussion and teaching of these issues has come to be known as bioethics - a field generally defined as covering the ethical issues raised by medicine, genetics and the biomedical sciences.

The Centre for Human Bioethics has academic strengths in the areas of:

  • disability and discrimination
  • ethical issues in patient care, especially involving autonomy and confidentiality and clinician accountability; the ethics of clinical trials
  • medical end-of-life decisions
  • moral psychology and moral development
  • new reproductive technologies
  • nursing ethics
  • surrogacy
  • the new genetics and ethics.

The centre's research also has a strong emphasis on ethical theory, especially virtue ethics and consequentialism, the relevance of emotions to ethics, partiality and impartiality in ethics, feminist ethics, and applied ethics and moral philosophy.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points, including two core units and two elective units.

Core units

Elective units

Course coordinator

Associate Professor Justin Oakley

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Fellowships

Master of Bioethics students who have completed at least one semester of the course are eligible to apply for an annual fellowship of $9000 to work during the Australian summer as an intern in the human genetics program at the World Health Organisation in Geneva. For more information contact Associate Professor Justin Oakley.

Relevant Courses

  • 3761 Graduate Certificate in Bioethics
  • 4047 Graduate Certificate in Research Ethics
  • 1158 Graduate Diploma in Bioethics
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 0122 Master of Bioethics
  • 2704 Master of Bioethics*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

*By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Chinese language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad. This can take the form of either a short intensive or semester-long in-country program.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma of Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Chinese studies and sinology have flourished in recent decades, in tandem with the economic and political rise of the People's Republic of China. As the world's longest continuous civilisation, China provides rich sources and case studies for a diverse range of research in the humanities and social sciences. At Monash University, graduate research in Chinese studies and sinology is focused on political, historical and cultural issues in the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries. Several staff members also have strong interdisciplinary interests in Taiwan studies. In addition to individual supervision, the program runs graduate research workshops on theoretical and methodological issues of relevance to China research. Many of our graduate students also undertake field research as part of their candidature, supported with University, school or program funding. Several graduate supervisors in Chinese studies also have the experience and expertise to co-supervise students enrolled in linguistics and translation studies.

Research supervision is available in areas including:

  • Chinese thought and intellectual history
  • Chinese politics and foreign relations
  • post-Mao Chinese society
  • mainland and diasporic cultural issues
  • Taiwan history and cross-strait relations
  • Taiwan politics and foreign relations
  • traditional and modern Chinese culture and literature (including Chinese culture in the digital age).

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising two coursework units and a thesis.

Course coordinator

Dr Warren Sun

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma of Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton

Notes

  • These programs will cease to be taught after Semester 1, 2012 (June 2012). In 2011, there will be an intake for Semester 1 only, and all newly enrolling students will be required to study full time in order to complete their degree by the end of 2011.

Description

The programs in civil ceremonies prepare students to plan and conduct public ceremonies of recognition such as weddings, namings and graduations, and ceremonies of grief such as funerals and divorce. They aim to enable graduates to provide expert advice on precedent and etiquette and to help people handle the often emotionally charged processes of moving through a rite of passage. The programs aim to prepare graduates to orchestrate the delicate issues of planning and conducting rites of passage with sensitivity, dignity and propriety. They are designed to develop an appropriate understanding of the possibilities and limitations of the role of a celebrant, including listening carefully to clients and, where appropriate, referring them elsewhere for professional legal and counselling advice. Literary and musical content of ceremonies are considered.

This emerging profession has grown substantially since the first appointments were made in 1973 such that more than half of all marriages in Australia are now performed by civil marriage celebrants. People who perform functions touching the lives of others are widely expected to have been trained to undertake what they do.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2158 Graduate Certificate in Civil Ceremonies
  • 2157 Graduate Diploma in Civil Ceremonies
  • 4038 Master of Civil Ceremonies

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Areas of research specialisation in classical studies include:

  • ancient comparative literature and religion
  • ancient erotic mythology and ritual
  • ancient Greek drama (especially Old Attic Comedy)
  • Augustan literature and propaganda
  • the interaction of the Greek/Hellenistic world with its Near Eastern neighbours
  • the reception of classics in the Italian Renaissance and in contemporary Italy.

For up-to-date information about research areas, refer to the staff and research interest sections on the classical studies website at http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/classical/staff.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising a core thesis (24 points) and coursework elective honours units (24 points) chosen from the electives listed below (all electives are 6 points unless otherwise indicated):

Core units

  • ATS4703 Honours dissertation in classical studies part 1 (12 points)
  • ATS4704 Honours dissertation in classical studies part 2 (12 points)

Elective units

  • ATS4702 Research seminar: Ritual and drama,the politics of antiquity (12 points)
  • ATS4705 Introductory Latin A/3
  • ATS4706 Introductory Ancient Greek A/3
  • ATS4707 Introductory Latin B/3
  • ATS4708 Introductory Ancient Greek B/3
  • ATS4709 Intermediate Latin A/3
  • ATS4710 Intermediate Ancient Greek A/3
  • ATS4711 Intermediate Latin B/3
  • ATS4712 Intermediate Ancient Greek B/3
  • ATS4713 Advanced Latin A/3
  • ATS4714 Advanced Latin B/3
Course coordinator

Dr Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

*By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton, Gippsland

Description

The last decade has seen unprecedented changes in communications technologies and policy. The communications program is based around the need for a course which meets the academic and research needs of a discrete industry sector undergoing rapid change. The communications program also emphasises the need to maintain a critical literacy in information research, which increasingly requires the development of new skills in technological use and evaluation and an understanding of issues in information access.

In this context, 'communications' is broader than any one of its traditional constituent elements, including journalism, public relations, media studies, publishing and editing, and creative writing. A broader approach, which places these elements in a cultural and policy framework, allows a range of students to enter the program and to specialise as appropriate within it. The program supports students in examining topics relevant to those employed (or seeking employment) in communications and media industries (for instance, audience and internet user studies, electronic journalism, policy formation, public relations and tourism marketing).

Students come from a range of disciplinary and industry backgrounds, including those with undergraduate degrees in politics, journalism, science and fine arts, as well as those with extensive industry experience in areas such as print and radio journalism, public affairs, media liaison, public relations, and media or policy advisers to politicians and industry.

Supervision of research candidates is available, with particular staff strengths in:

  • animation studies
  • computer and video games
  • cultural/communication theory
  • graphic novels and visual fiction
  • internet studies
  • music studies
  • national identity and communications policy
  • new communications technologies
  • philosophy of communication
  • publishing studies
  • sports media
  • textual and discourse analysis of media texts
  • travel writing
  • war and conflict
  • writing practices.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of English, Communications and Performance Studies

Students complete 48 points at fourth-year level including a 24 point core research project and two coursework elective units chosen from the electives listed below.

Core units

One of the following options:

  • APG4890 Research project in communications (24 points)
  • APG4891 Research project in communications part 1 (12 points) and APG4892 Research project in communications part 2 (12 points)

Research project units are chosen in consultation with the unit leader.

Elective units

  • APG4719 Contemporary media and communications theory
  • APG4260 Communication systems and networks
  • APG4261 Communication economies and society
  • APG4262 Media flows
  • APG4263 Propaganda, censorship and the representation of war
  • ATS4723 Current issues in international media and communications
  • a maximum of 12 points at fourth-year level from another discipline and/or institution with the permission of the school's communications postgraduate coordinator
Course coordinator

Dr Andy Ruddock

Offered by the School of Arts and Sciences, Malaysia

Students complete 48 points, including three core units and one additional level four unit chosen from the following electives and selected in accordance with the student's research project. Alternative units may be taken with the approval of the school graduate coordinator.

Core units

  • APG4401 Media empire and entepreneurs
  • APG4703 Research project
  • ATS4402 Communication applied: Industry practice

Elective units

With the permission of the head of Arts, a student may also be given the choice to undertake a 24 point research component similar to an honours thesis in place of APG4703.

Course coordinator

Dr. Helen Nesadurai

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences

Students are required to complete 48 points of study comprising the following units:

  • ATS4729 Media, social relations and power
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Sue Yell

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the National Centre for Australian Studies

The course seeks to strengthen skills in communications research and analysis and to further students' understanding of both the history and current structure of the communications industry in Australia and of the contemporary policy debates. The course is particularly designed to provide students with the necessary analytical research and writing skills to respond to the rapidly changing policy environment in communications.

Units

  • APG5396 Researching and writing Australia
  • APG5401 Media empire and entepreneurs

Note: Both units are taught in the Melbourne central business district.

Course coordinator

Dr Mark Gibson

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

*By Research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byNational Centre for Australian Studies, School of Journalism and Australian Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield

Description

The National Centre for Australian Studies (NCAS) offers an innovative, vocationally oriented graduate program in communications and media studies. It is focused particularly on challenges posed by the emergence of digital media, globalisation and increasing levels of cross-cultural exchange.

The last decade has been one of unprecedented change in communications and media content, forms, technology and policy with wide-ranging implications for business, politics, public administration and everyday life. The graduate program in communications and media studies examines these developments from a historical, political and theoretical perspective and seeks to further students' understanding of communications and media systems both locally and globally.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3065 Graduate Certificate in Communications and Media studies
  • 1398 Graduate Diploma in Communications and Media studies
  • 3064 Master of Communications and Media studies
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

The Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies has an international reputation for its postgraduate research training and graduate education.

Particular research strengths in comparative literature include European, Asian and Latin American literature; romanticism, modernism and postmodernism; literature and philosophy; and comparative literary theory.

Research strengths in cultural studies include postcolonial culture; genre studies; graphic novels; New Hollywood; Japanese popular culture; science fiction; and cyber culture. Cultural studies at Monash seek to problematise the binary oppositions between high and low culture and make use of a broad range of theoretical perspectives.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of English, Communications and Performance Studies

Students complete two core units (24 points) and two elective units (24 points) from the following list.

Core units

  • APG4722 Critical theory research project part 1
  • APG4723 Critical theory research project part 2

Elective units

Coursework units and the research project thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the comparative literature and cultural studies postgraduate coordinator.

Course coordinator

Professor Andrew Milner

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The courses in corporate environmental and sustainability management are designed to integrate environmental management concepts, issues and trends within a commercial context, through an understanding of the linkages between business practices and environmental outcomes. Students gain the analytical skills to identify environmental impacts in terms of product/service life cycles and to understand the synergies between business management theory and practice, and environmental management approaches.

The courses are suitable for corporate managers, business strategists, technical and environmental managers and others who wish to develop combined environmental and business skills.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2529 Faculty Certificate in Corporate Environmental and Sustainability Management
  • 2527 Graduate Certificate in Corporate Environmental and Sustainability Management
  • 2528 Graduate Diploma in Corporate Environmental and Sustainability Management
  • 3090 Master of Corporate Environmental and Sustainability Management

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton

Description

The September 11 attacks, Bali bombings and home-grown operations in London and those thwarted in Australia, have increased the importance of understanding terrorism and political violence. Counter-terrorism studies offers a rigorous course of study that evaluates these multifaceted phenomena, providing an understanding of what terrorism is and how it is constructed and reproduced, and addressing the diverse and multifaceted factors involved in enacting and preventing terrorism and other security concerns. The range of studies includes units on terrorisms (religious, revolutionary and right wing); the political, theological and intellectual bases of terrorism; political violence and political movements; and country and regional studies. Theoretical and empirical units that examine the international processes and events that fuel and discourage terrorism provide further context for students. Counter-terrorism studies is designed for students who wish to pursue graduate study in these areas and professionals working in law enforcement, public service, defence and diplomacy.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3758 Master of Counter-Terrorism Studies

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Embedded in the English section of the school, creative writing offers candidates the opportunity to experiment with creative writing, or with creative non-fiction, and to theorise their writing process by engaging in self-reflexive scholarly critique of the genre, considering it on social, cultural, intellectual and linguistic terms.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3773 Master of Arts (Creative Writing)*
  • 4048 Master of Cultural Arts
  • 3940 Doctor of Philosophy (Creative Writing)*

*By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Gippsland

Description

This area of study presents the application of criminal justice in a unique mixture of regional, urban and international crime-related contexts. Studies specialise in contemporary regional and international crime matters, crime prevention, policing in its generic sense, criminal behaviours and profiles, and alternative justice and corrections initiatives. A special feature is the opportunity for students of criminal justice to develop links with regional practitioners and, in some cases, utilise placements within the criminal justice and allied systems.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3782 Graduate Certificate in Criminal Justice and Criminology
  • 3781 Graduate Diploma in Criminal Justice and Criminology
  • 3772 Master of Criminal Justice and Criminology
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Crime, its causes and consequences, directly impact on all public and private sector institutions and on every member of society. The discipline of criminology interprets, analyses and evaluates critical aspects of crime, social control and the criminal justice process.

People interested in pursuing research into the criminal justice system and related criminological issues are invited to apply. All relevant research topics will be considered, subject to the availability of supervision. Joint interdisciplinary supervision can be arranged.

Current academic strengths relevant to the criminology discipline include:

  • border policing and sovereignty
  • causes of crime
  • crime and human rights
  • gender and the criminal justice system
  • histories of policing
  • people trafficking
  • policing
  • punishment and incarceration
  • restorative justice
  • state crime
  • surveillance
  • terrorism and counter-terrorism
  • transnational crime.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Critical theory is a term that has come to signify a number of contemporary approaches to textual and cultural criticism. Research interests include eco-philosophy and eco-feminism, cultural materialism, deconstruction, feminist critical theory, hermeneutics, and psychoanalysis.

Refer also to the postgraduate area of study entry for 'comparative literature and cultural studies' T http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/handbooks/aos/pg-comparative-literature-and-cultural-studies.html.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete two core units (24 points) and two elective units (24 points) from the following list.

Core unit

  • APG4722 Critical theory research project part 1 (12 points)
  • APG4723 Critical theory research project part 2 (12 points)

Elective units

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the comparative literature and cultural studies postgraduate coordinator.

Course coordinator

Professor Andrew Milner

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

Offered by the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies, School of English, Communications and Performance Studies

Critical theory is a term used to describe a whole series of contemporary approaches to textual criticism: hermeneutics and reception theory, semiotics and structuralism, post-structuralism and deconstruction, post-Marxian theories of ideology and post-Freudian theories of psychoanalysis. These have all been central to recent works in literary and cultural studies. This course is designed to provide students with an introduction to this complex body of work and an opportunity to apply it to a substantive research thesis, which may focus on literary studies, cultural studies or critical theory itself.

Candidates intending to carry out research in comparative literature are normally expected to read literary texts in the original language.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

Course coordinator

Professor Andrew Milner

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Theatre is a discipline that spans a wide range of research interests, characterised by an intersection of textual or theoretical enquiry with performance, as an exploratory activity, and/or a subject for documentation and analysis.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points at fourth-year level including a core unit and 24-point core dissertation, thesis or creative project, and one elective from the list below.

Core units

  • APG4421 Dramatic theory, criticism and research methods

plus one of the following options:

  • ATS4744 Drama and theatre studies research dissertation or ATS4745 Drama and theatre studies research dissertation Part 1 and ATS4746 Drama and theatre studies research  dissertation Part 2
  • ATS4747 Drama and theatre studies thesis/investigative project or ATS4748 Drama and theatre studies thesis/investigative project Part 1 and ATS4749 Drama and theatre studies thesis/investigative project Part 2
  • ATS4750 Drama and theatre studies creative project or ATS4751 Drama and theatre studies creative project Part 1 AND ATS4752 Drama and theatre studies creative project Part 2

Elective units

  • APG4268 Creating the new: Theatre and its experiments
  • APG4269 Rethinking theatre history
  • APG4423 Performance Investigation
  • an approved 12 point fourth year level unit from a related discipline with the approval of the course coordinator
Course coordinator

Dr Stuart Grant

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The discipline of English is concerned with the richest and most varied of the world's literatures, reaching in time from Anglo-Saxon writings of the eighth century to contemporary genre fiction, and in geographical range across all the many nations in which English is a preferred medium for writing. English has also been the source of some of the most exciting theoretical and interdisciplinary advances of recent decades. English at Monash has as its ideal a fruitful interaction of new energies and modes of awareness with the strengths of traditional scholarship and criticism. It offers studies in authors from the Renaissance onwards and in many thematic and theoretical fields. It is a world-recognised centre for the editing of scholarly texts, particularly from British literature pre-1800, classic Australian poetry and fiction, and postcolonial literature. Scholarly editions of Henry Handel Richardson and Mary Gilmore, and 19th-century Indian women's writing in English are among some of the section's recent productions. The Monash Library has particularly fine collections in the field of English literature 1660-1800 and has recently acquired a rare database, exclusive to Monash University, in postcolonial studies - Empire On-Line. The Rare Books library also has outstanding collections of Australian literature, children's literature, science fiction and ephemera.

Particular academic strengths in the section include:

  • 17th and 18th-century writing and new literatures in postcolonial contexts
  • Australian literature (including its regional and textual character)
  • children's literature and discourses of childhood
  • creative fiction writing
  • discourse analysis
  • law and literature
  • literary and cultural theory
  • literary and other biography
  • literature and the history of ideas
  • poetics and poetry
  • postcolonial literature and discourse
  • pre-1800 British literature
  • the construction of canons and the newly emerging developments of English studies
  • the history of authorship and editorial practice and theory
  • Victorian literature
  • women's studies and writing.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including a dissertation, one core theory unit and two elective units chosen from the list below.

Core units

Elective units

  • APG4265 Poetics
  • APG4270 Writing the child
  • APG4271 Gothic revivals
  • APG4272 Writers and the creative process
  • APG4273 Contemporary Australian poetry and fiction
  • APG4275 Drama of the age of Shakespeare
  • APG4276 Exotic erotic other: World writing in English
  • APG4277 Visions and revisions: Reworkings
  • APG4424 Ireland, Swift, England: Special author subject
  • ATS4765 Feminist poetics
Course coordinator

Dr Nina Philadelphoff-Puren

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

On completion of the course, students should have consolidated and extended their knowledge of literature, literary theory and the contexts in which literature is produced and read. They should also have consolidated their skills in originating and pursuing research projects independently and extended their skills of analysis, composition and argument. They should also have completed a substantial research thesis which represents a significant contribution to knowledge in the field in which they are working.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5265 Poetics
  • APG5272 Writers and the creative process
  • APG5273 Contemporary Australian poetry and fiction
  • APG5274 Literary theory
  • APG5275 Drama of the age of Shakespeare
  • APG5276 Exotic erotic other: World writing in English
  • APG5277 Visions and revisions: Reworkings
  • APG5424 Ireland, Swift, England: Special author unit

Course coordinator

Dr Nina Philadelphoff-Puren

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

English as an international language is a new and timely discipline that is concerned with all aspects of the spread and the use of English around the globe. This interdisciplinary area includes studies that deal with all areas of linguistics and applied linguistics that have implications for English as a language of international and intercultural communication.

The very rapid growth in the use of English and in the number of English speakers around the world in recent decades has had significant linguistic, socio-cultural, political and pedagogical implications and consequences for this global language, which deserve scholarly attention. The program of English as an international language provides a unique opportunity for masters and PhD students to undertake in-depth studies in this area that will equip them with knowledge and expertise that is highly needed in today's internationalised world.

Prospective students may choose to investigate topics from a wide range of sub-fields, including teaching and testing of English as an international language, intercultural communication, discourse analysis, pragmatics, sociolinguistics, cognitive linguistics, and cultural linguistics.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including two compulsory coursework honours units and a thesis.

  • ATS4753 Special topics in English as an international language (12 points)
  • ATS4755 English as an international language: Minor thesis and methodology part 1 and ATS4756 English as an international language: Minor thesis and methodology part 2
  • ATS4757 English as an international language: Multilingual identity (12 points)

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the English as an international langauge honours coordinator.

Course coordinator

Associate Professor Farzad Sharifian

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3938 Graduate Certificate in English as an International Language
  • 3931 Graduate Diploma in English as an International Language
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3930 Masters of English as an International Language
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Programs in environment and sustainability have been designed to prepare students for careers in environmental policy and analysis, planning, consulting, education, advocacy and management. Refer also to the postgraduate area of study entries for 'geography' and 'environmental science'.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 0095 Graduate Diploma of Environment and Sustainability
  • 3783 Master of Environment and Sustainability

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Geography and environmental science is concerned with understanding dimensions, complexities and relationships of the physical, human and environmental world. The school has an active research program that provides research training and the foundations for interactions across a range of government, non-government and industry sectors. There are a number of broad research strengths within the school including:

  • urban and regional sustainability - associated with social, cultural, economic, environmental and political change across a range of scales (global to local); dealing with a range of activities (housing, economic development, resource management, sustainability) and contexts (Australia, Africa and Indo-Pacific Region)
  • short and long-term changes in climate, vegetation and the physical and human landscape
  • the socio-political structures shaping human interactions with the biosphere and the exploration of the community governance of environmental and ecological change at the local, national and international scale
  • specialisation in the archaeology of Aboriginal Australia and the Torres Strait
  • geographic information systems (GIS) and remote sensing, with strong emphasis on scientific applications to environmental and resource management, GIS for mapping and modelling in local government, transport and land use planning applications.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete a 24-point research project and 24 points of coursework units. Units are worth 6 points unless otherwise indicated.

Core units

  • APG4425 Perspectives on environment and sustainability
  • APG4427 Frontiers in sustainability and environment
  • APG4737 Research project part 1 and APG4738 Research project part 2

Elective units

  • approved elective unit(s) to the value of 12 points

If the student's previous background does not provide knowledge in particular areas, elective(s) would be chosen from:

  • APG4429 Prosperity, poverty and sustainability in a globalised world
  • APG4430 Ecological systems and management
  • APG4558 Global change and the earth system
  • BTX9100 Sustainability regulation
Course coordinator

Dr Stephen Legg

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2702 Masters of Environmental Science by research and coursework
  • 3902 Master of Environmental Science*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byMonash European and EU Centre
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton

Description

The Monash European and European Union Centre provides a focus for multidisciplinary teaching and research in European and European Union (EU) studies. It gives particular attention to the European Union and its significance on the world scene, including in the Asia-Pacific. The centre is also committed to highlight Europe's cultural, social, linguistic and intellectual heritage as reflected in the diversity of its peoples. It promotes top-quality research on Europe and the European Union.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the Monash European and EU Centre

Students complete 48 points including two coursework units and a thesis.

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the European studies postgraduate coordinator.

Course coordinator

Professor Pascaline Winand

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the Monash European and EU Centre

This program will enable students to focus their studies around a research thesis in European/European Union Studies. The coursework component is designed to explore the significance of the European Union and its peoples not only in Europe and the EU's neighbouring countries, but also on the wider international scene. It aims to provide students with a deep understanding of the institutional framework and policy-making processes of the European Union and its relations with non-EU countries, regions and international organisations. It investigates its political, legal, economic, social, humanitarian, environmental, and security implications for Europe and for the international system.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fourth and fifth year level from:

Students may also take other fifth-year units in cognate areas with the approval of the course coordinator, including those in the list of elective units in course 3924 Master in European and International Studies, and in the faculties of Arts, Business and Economics and Law.

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3925 Graduate Diploma in European and International Studies
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3924 Master of European and International Studies
  • 4411 Master of International Business and Master of European and International Studies
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Film and television studies offers graduate studies in:

  • alternative film and video
  • American film
  • Asian film (Indonesian, Thai, Japanese, Chinese, Hong Kong, Indian)
  • Australian film and television
  • documentary film studies
  • European film (especially French cinema)
  • film aesthetics (form, style, narrative)
  • film and television genre studies
  • film history
  • histories of film theory and criticism
  • international film cultures and institutions
  • teen film and television
  • women and cinema
  • women and television.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points at level four including one research unit, at least one methodology unit and elective units from the list below.

Research unit

  • APG4447 Research essay in film and television studies

Methodology units

  • APG4279 Historical film theory and criticism
  • APG4280 Contemporary film theory and criticism

Elective units

  • APG4448 Experimental screen culture
  • APG4449 Critical studies in television
  • an approved 12 point level four unit from a related discipline with the approval of the course coordinator
Course coordinator

Dr Belinda Smaill

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3945 Master of Film and Television Studies
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

*By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The French language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The French studies program is home to the Australian Journal of French Studies.

Specific research strengths include:

  • 19th-century French literature (especially Zola and the late 19th-century novel)
  • contemporary poetry
  • contemporary popular culture
  • critical theory and practice
  • film studies
  • foreign language learning and classroom instruction
  • French political philosophy and social theory
  • literary translation and translation studies
  • new technologies and language learning
  • the contemporary novel
  • writing in a foreign language and L2 writing instruction.

For a full list of staff and research interests, see http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/historical-studies/staff/index.html.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete one of the following (48 points):

  • two coursework honours units and a 24-point thesis
  • three coursework honours units and a 12-point thesis

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the French studies postgraduate coordinator.

Course coordinator

Dr Philip Anderson

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This program will enable students to focus their studies around a research thesis in French studies. The coursework component is designed to encourage the theoretical issues and practical application relating to French studies to broaden and deepen the students' understanding of this discipline, thereby providing a fuller appreciation of the context in which the research project will be conceptualised.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5444 Directed reading in French studies 1
  • APG5445 Directed reading in French studies 2
  • APG5652 Managing intercultural communication
  • APG5688 Directed reading in translation studies
  • APG5874 Technology and translation
  • APG5876 Theoretical issues in literary and cultural translation
  • APG5877 Research project in translation/interpreting studies
  • APG5878 Research dissertation in translation/interpreting

Students may also take other fifth-year units in cognate areas with the approval of the course coordinator, eg comparative literature and cultural studies, linguistics, or European and international studies, including:

  • APG5265 Poetics
  • APG5266 Deleuze and Foucault
  • APG5267 Hermeneutics
  • APG5418 Semiotic and poststructural theory of literature and culture
  • APG5419 Gender, body and performance
  • APG5420 Popular culture and ethics
  • APG5435 European Union: History, debates, politics
  • APG5436 Comparative regionalism
  • APG5437 Business, civil society and lobbying in the European Union
  • APG5438 The European Union and the world

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma of Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by Research and Coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Geography and environmental science is concerned with understanding dimensions, complexities and relationships of the physical, human and environmental world. The school has an active research program that provides research training and the foundations for interactions across a range of government, non-government and industry sectors. There are a number of broad research strengths within the school including:

  • urban and regional sustainability is associated with social, cultural, economic, environmental and political change across a range of scales (global to local); dealing with a range of activities (housing, economic development, resource management, sustainability) and contexts (Australia, Africa and Indo-Pacific Region)
  • short and long-term changes in climate, vegetation and the physical and human landscape
  • the socio-political structures shaping human interactions with the biosphere and the exploration of the community governance of environmental and ecological change at the local, national and international scale
  • specialisation in the archaeology of Aboriginal Australia and the Torres Strait
  • geographic information systems (GIS) and remote sensing, with strong emphasis on scientific applications to environmental and resource management, GIS for mapping and modelling in local government, transport and land use planning applications.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete a 24 point research project and 24 points of coursework.

Core units

  • APG4737 Research project part 1 and APG4738 Research project part 2 (24 pts)
  • ATS4776 Seminar in geography (12 pts)
  • ATS4889 Directed studies in geography (12 pts)
Course coordinator

Dr Stephen Legg

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

The course is intended for students wishing to obtain an internationally accepted research degree in areas such as geography, environment and sustainability, and geographical information systems (GIS), which testifies to high standards of initiative, independence and innovation and which, if gained at a sufficient standard, is accepted as a qualification for admission to the PhD.

Units

Students complete 24 points of level five units offered by the School of Geography and Environmental Science, or from other schools, subject to approval. Individual units are offered according to the availability of staff and subject to sufficient enrolments.

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The German language program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Areas of research specialisation in German studies include:

  • applied linguistics
  • comparative literature
  • cultural anthropology
  • cultural identity, migration and bilingualism
  • discourse and text analysis
  • German for special purposes
  • German literature from the 18th century to the present (especially Weimar Classic, Romanticism, literature of the 19th century, contemporary literature)
  • history and theory of German drama and theatre
  • history and theory of mass media
  • history of German philosophy
  • literary aesthetics
  • literary theory
  • media studies,
  • poetics
  • psychoanalytic theory
  • rhetoric and cultural studies
  • second language acquisition
  • sociolinguistics
  • sociology of literature
  • travel literature
  • visual culture.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points from units listed below, including a research project. All units are 12 points unless otherwise indicated:

  • APG4101 Language and society: Sociolinguistics from a German language perspective
  • APG4746 Critics of civilisation
  • APG4751 Special reading course (German studies)
  • APG4752 Age of Goethe

Research projects

  • APG4745 German language and society: Research project
  • APG4747 Research project in German studies
  • APG4748 Research project in German studies 2 (24 points)

Studies abroad

All graduate students are strongly encouraged to conduct a part of their studies in a German-speaking country. Assistance is provided in obtaining scholarships and arrangements exist with German universities enabling students to continue their courses under supervision and with a maximum of assistance.

Course coordinator

Dr Christiane Weller

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Historical research is primarily concerned with interpretations of the past based upon the careful analysis of evidence and the critical assessment of other perspectives. History's questions are intrinsically fascinating: How can we know about the past? What can we know? Who speaks in the historical record, and who does not? If the past is written about in this way or that way, what are its consequences for interpretations of the present and the future?

The school's aim is to provide research and coursework students with the critical tools to undertake their own investigations of past worlds and to explore their own. Courses in the school also focus upon different approaches to the tasks of research, interpretation and writing, and encourage students to address questions such as the nature and status of different forms of historical evidence, the 'uses' of history in public debate, and the relationships between history and other ways of recording and remembering the past.

History offers postgraduate research supervision across a broad range of fields, along with coursework units and degrees which enable students to explore their own interests as well as key theoretical, interpretive and methodological questions about the nature of historical knowledge, research and writing. Research degrees in history combine detailed work in a particular area with broader training in appropriate research skills and in understanding of the changes within history as a discipline. Research students are offered regular research training and work-in-progress seminars, an annual one-day conference for the presentation of graduate research, and the opportunity to participate in editing Eras, a refereed online journal. Seminars, conferences and reading groups offered by the school, provide a supportive environment for all postgraduate students.

Specific research strengths in history at Monash include:

  • American history, especially social and cultural history
  • Australian social and cultural history, especially urban history, local history, oral history, public history and social welfare
  • biography, autobiography, oral history, memory and life stories.
  • European social and cultural history, especially French history, German history, Renaissance studies, urban history, family history and the intellectual history of religion and belief in medieval and early modern Europe
  • Indigenous history and the history of racial and ethnic relations
  • Jewish history
  • military history
  • South and Southeast Asian history, Indonesian history and the history of imperialism, colonialism and post colonialism
  • the history of gender and sexuality, especially in Australia, Britain and Europe during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries

There is also considerable expertise in the area of historical biography.

Students with research interests in areas such as public history and heritage should also refer to the postgraduate area of study entry for 'public history'.

For a full list of staff and research interests, see http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/history/staff

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies

Students complete two 12-point elective units and a 24-point research project.

Research project

Students choose from the following options;

  • APG4623 Research project in history (24 points)
  • APG4624 Research project in history - Part 1 (12 points) and APG4770 Research project in history - Part 2 (12 points)

Elective units

Students complete two electives selected from the following:.

  • APG4286 Final journey: The life and death of European Jews, 1900-1945
  • APG4287 Israelis and Palestinians between war and peace
  • APG4289 Medieval dialogues: Reason, mysticism and society
  • APG4293 Genocidal thought
  • APG4294 Fascism, Nazism, and racial and social utopias
  • APG4296 Imagining Europe: Representations and images of a continent
  • APG4297 Recording oral history: Theory and practice
  • APG4299 History and heritage
  • APG4301 Reading and writing Australian history
  • APG4302 Interpreting the Bible: Jewish and Christian perspectives
  • APG4303 Issues in environmental history: Images of the natural world
  • APG4305 History and memory: Interpreting life stories
  • APG4311 Text and community in Medieval and Renaissance Italy
  • APG4313 Hidden transcripts: Cultural approaches to the past
  • APG4319 Zionism: The argument
  • APG4321 Jewish literature of subversion
  • APG4339 Sustainability and the sacred
  • APG4340 Confronting death through ceremony and symbol: A cross-cultural analysis
  • APG4342 Islamic thought in the modern world
  • APG4625 Research methods in biography and life writing
  • APG4629 Global justice: Civil and human rights after 1945
Course coordinator

Dr Christina Twomey

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences (HUMCASS)

Students are required to complete 48 points of study comprising the following units:

  • ATS4794 Research writing in history and politics
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Keith Wilson

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This course is designed to provide students with a broader knowledge of specific fields of history and their associated methodological techniques, to introduce key theoretical concepts and questions regarding the nature of historical investigation and the examination of evidence from a variety of sources, and to provide a context of existing approaches and methods for students developing research theses.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5289 Medieval dialogues: Reason, mysticism and society
  • APG5293 Genocidal thought
  • APG5294 Fascism, Nazism, and racial and social utopias
  • APG5296 Imagining Europe: Representations and images of a continent
  • APG5297 Recording oral history: Theory and practice
  • APG5299 History and heritage
  • APG5301 Reading and writing Australian history
  • APG5302 Interpreting the Bible: Jewish and Christian perspectives
  • APG5303 Issues in environmental history: Images of the natural world
  • APG5305 History and memory: Interpreting life stories
  • APG5311 Text and community in Renaissance Italy
  • APG5313 Hidden transcripts: Cultural approaches to the past
  • APG5319 Zionism: The argument
  • APG5321 Jewish literature of subversion
  • APG5339 Sustainability and the sacred
  • APG5340 Confronting death through ceremony and symbol: A cross- cultural analysis
  • APG5342 Islamic thought in the modern world
  • APG5625 Research methods in biography and life writing
  • APG5629 Global justice: Civil and human rights after 1945
  • APG5794 Research project in history

Course coordinator

Dr Michael Hau

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2056 Faculty Certificate in History
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 4032 Master of Oral History and Historical Memory
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Gippsland

Description

Designed to meet the needs of professionals in the social, community and human services sectors who have, or who wish to move from direct practice into a managerial role. The curriculum includes program planning and evaluation, management and leadership, strategic planning, development of quality standards and best practice models, human resource management, problem-solving and organisational culture and environment analysis. The area of study offers a unique focus on exploring the role, function and responsibilities of the human service organisation in rural, regional and urban environments, and is designed to allow students, whether local or in international agencies, to adapt topics and assignments to their own experience and professional context.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3788 Faculty Certificate in Human Services Management
  • 3789 Graduate Diploma in Human Services Management
  • 3790 Master of Human Services Management

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Indonesian language program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

The program is offered in both on-campus and off-campus modes and can be combined with some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Indonesia is the world's fourth most populated country and has the largest Muslim population of any nation-state. As our nearest Asian neighbour Indonesia has important political, economic and cultural meaning for Australia. Postgraduate study on Indonesia is a crucial component of the relationship between Australia and Indonesia in particular to ensure that there are people in both countries who have the ability and skills to critically engage with each other based on a deep understanding of the language, culture and society of the other country.

Indonesian studies at Monash focuses on socio-cultural, literary and linguistic issues, although within the Faculty of Arts there are also other areas of study which focus on the history, politics, economy and the music of Indonesia. Monash University is an excellent institution to undertake postgraduate study on Indonesia as in addition to the Indonesia program there is also the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies and the Monash Asia Institute. Moreover the Matheson Library has one of the best Indonesian studies collections in the world available for research purposes.

Areas of research specialisation include:

  • Indonesian language and society
  • literature
  • translation
  • performance and media studies.

Joint research supervision with other schools in the faculty is possible.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including two coursework honours units and a thesis.

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the Indonesian postgraduate coordinator.

Course coordinator

Dr Brett Hough

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma of Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts *
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Research in international development covers the ideas and debates that comprise the over-arching term 'development'. The focus is on contemporary concerns with the processes, theories and practices of globalisation and environmental sustainability in the international context.

Supervision of research candidates is available in areas which relate to:

  • centralisation of geopolitical power
  • changing concepts of property in natural resource exploitation and management
  • devolution of governance
  • ethnic minorities
  • foreign investment
  • global production systems
  • political participation and representation
  • poverty.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Geography and Environmental Science
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Coursework programs in international development and environmental analysis have been designed to equip students with tools and knowledge for a career promoting just and sustainable change in the developing world. Studies cover a broad range of topics including:

  • governance
  • participation and representation
  • poverty alleviation
  • the processes, theories and practices of globalisation and environmental sustainability.

Refer also to the postgraduate area of study entries for 'international development', 'geography' and 'environmental science'.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete a 24 point research project and 24 points of coursework units.

Core units

  • APG4627 Research in political ecology
  • APG4556 Urbanisation and regional development in the Indo-Pacific rims or APG4628 Doctrines of development
  • APG4737 Research project part 1 and APG4738 Research project part 2(24 pts)

Elective units

  • approved elective unit(s) to the value of 12 points
Course coordinator

Dr Stephen Legg

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This program provides some coursework as a foundation for students undertaking a substantial piece of research relating to international development theory, policy or practice. The course extends the knowledge, research and writing skills of people already working in, or seeking employment in, organisations involved in international or sustainable development.

Units

  • 12 points of international development units
  • 12 points approved by the international development program coordinators.

Course coordinator

Dr Craig Thorburn

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3754 Graduate Diploma in International Development and Environmental Analysis
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 3086 Master of International Development and Environmental Analysis

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Research programs in international relations at Monash are designed to enable students in politics or related disciplines to explore, at an advanced level, the many issues and questions raised by the rapidly changing nature of contemporary world politics:

  • How are security issues to be understood in a fluid international system?
  • How far can the consideration of ethical, normative and cultural issues contribute to the understanding of politics across state boundaries?
  • How is globalisation affecting the sovereignty of states and the economic policies which governments pursue at home and abroad?
  • What is the significance of issues such as human rights and the environment in contemporary international politics?
  • What kind of world order, or disorder, is emerging in the aftermath of the twenty-first century?

The graduate coursework programs are particularly suitable for students interested in pursuing careers in such areas as government, diplomacy, business, NGOs, teaching and journalism (see Journalism/International relations double masters).

Politics staff are active researchers who are engaged in public debate and are actively sought by the media for expert commentary and regularly address major forums, such as the Australian Institute of International Affairs, dealing with issues of major public interest.

For students who wish to undertake research in international relations at masters or doctoral level, the school is able to provide supervision in a wide variety of sub-fields, including, but not limited to:

  • arms control and strategic studies
  • Australian foreign policy
  • ethics and international relations
  • globalisation
  • international history
  • international law
  • international political economy
  • international relations in East, Southeast and South Asia
  • international relations theory
  • nationalism
  • Russia and the former Soviet Union
  • the European Union, NATO and transatlantic security
  • the Middle East
  • the 'war on terror'
  • US foreign policy.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3765 Graduate Certificate in International Relations
  • 1400 Postgraduate Diploma in International Relations
  • 3093 Master of International Relations
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Expert supervision is available in the fields of translation history, translation and interpreting theory, translation and interpreting pedagogy, literary and cultural translation, gender studies and intercultural studies.

Supervision is available for the following languages: Chinese (Mandarin), French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Russian, Spanish and Ukrainian.

Units

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html

This program will enable students to focus their studies around a research thesis in translation/interpreting studies. The coursework component is designed to encourage the study of theoretical issues and practical application relating to translation/interpreting studies to broaden and deepen the students' understanding of this discipline, thereby providing a fuller appreciation of the context in which the research project will be conceptualised.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5874 Technology and translation
  • APG5876 Theoretical issues in literary and cultural translation
  • APG5877 Research project in translation/interpreting studies
  • APG5878 Dissertation in translation/interpreting (24 points)
  • APG5689 Major translation project (24 points)

Students may also take other fifth-year units in related areas, for example comparative literature or applied linguistics, with the approval of the course coordinator.

Course coordinator

Dr Rita Wilson

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 4041 Graduate Certificate in Translation Studies
  • 3082 Graduate Diploma in Translation Studies
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 3921 Master of Interpreting and Translation Studies
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton

Description

Islamic studies offers a broad and comparative introduction to the social, cultural, historical and political aspects of Islam. A multi-disciplinary approach to the study of Islam is offered and particular attention is paid to Islamic thought, social movements and Muslim societies and cultures in Southeast Asia, South Asia and Turkey which includes the disciplines of anthropology, politics, sociology, history, religion and theology, and international studies.

Studentswill be exposed to the history of Islam and its civilization, its diversity of thoughts and interpretations, its geographical spread, challenges of modernity and globalisation, and the practice of Islam in the West.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 4003 Master of Islamic Studies

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Italian language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Italian studies focus on the study of Italian literature, history, language and linguistics, Renaissance culture and literature, women's studies, cinema studies, and social and linguistic issues connected with Italian migration to Australia.

Italian studies staff can provide supervision of research candidates in the areas of:

  • 19th and 20th-century Italian literature
  • Italian women's studies
  • Italian theatre and cinema studies
  • Italian migration studies
  • Renaissance culture and literature.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising coursework units (24 points) and a thesis (24 points).

Thesis

Students chose one of the following options:

  • ATS4245 Italian honours dissertation (24 points)
  • ATS4246 Italian honours dissertation Part 1(12 points) and ATS4247 Italian honours dissertation Part 2 (12 points)

Coursework units

Students complete units to the value of 24 points chosen from:

  • APG4250 Italian encounters: Translation, literature and cultural identity
  • ATS4233 Italian studies 9
  • ATS4234 Italian studies 10
  • ATS4239 Women in Italy: Representations and realities
  • ATS4241 Italian theatre from Goldoni to Fo
  • ATS4242 Tradurre/Tradire: Italian literary translation
  • ATS4243 The Italian experience in Australia
  • ATS4244 Dante
  • ATS4248 Italian studies 7
  • ATS4249 Italian studies 8
  • ATS4250 Italian encounters: Translation, literature and cultural identity
  • ATS4251 Special reading course (Italian studies)
  • ATS4252 Special reading course Part 1
  • ATS4253 Special reading course Part 2
  • ATS4254 Language study abroad program
  • ATS4255 Language study abroad program 4/2

Coursework units and the thesis topic are chosen in consultation with the Italian studies honours coordinator.

Course coordinator

Mr Raffaele Lampugnani

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This program will enable students to focus their studies around a research thesis in Italian studies. The coursework component is designed to encourage the theoretical issues and practical application relating to Italian studies to broaden and deepen the students understanding of this discipline, thereby providing a fuller appreciation of the context in which the research project will be conceptualised.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5250 Italian encounters: Translation, literature and cultural identity
  • APG5649 Global modernities: Experiences of modernity
  • APG5652 Managing intercultural communication
  • APG5688 Directed reading in translation studies
  • APG5874 Technology and translation
  • APG5876 Theoretical issues in literary and cultural translation
  • APG5877 Research project in translation/interpreting studies
  • APG5878 Dissertation in translation/interpreting

Students may also take other fifth-year units in related areas with the approval of the course co-ordinator, eg comparative literature and cultural studies, linguistics, or European and international studies.

Course coordinator

Dr Simon West

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Japanese language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It may be possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Language units can also be taken within selected masters programs.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages
  • 3084 Master of Asian Studies
  • 3073 Master of Applied Japanese Linguistics

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Supervision of research candidates, as well as coursework-based studies are available in the following areas:

  • applied linguistics
  • child language acquisition and language planning
  • gender studies
  • history of the Asia-Pacific wars
  • industrial relations
  • intercultural communication
  • Japanese culture and society
  • Japanese history (20th century)
  • Japanese interpreting and translation
  • Japanese linguistics
  • Japanese sociolinguistics
  • languages in contact

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points selected in consultation with the course coordinator, including:

  • 12 or 24 points of research
  • no more than 12 points of Japanese language units
  • a research methods unit from an appropriate discipline
  • the remaining units required from level four units in appropriate disciplines

It may be possible to include study in Japan as part of this program.

Course coordinator

Dr Beatrice Trefelt

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Students enrolled in the Master of Arts in Japanese studies are expected to develop research skills through the completion of a thesis as well as acquiring advanced knowledge of Japanese society, culture or langauage.

Units

Students normally complete two level five units in Asian studies or other appropriate discipline.

Course coordinator

Dr Beatrice Trefelt

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 0108 Graduate Diploma in Applied Japanese Linguistics
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3073 Master of Applied Japanese Linguistics
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byAustralian Centre for Jewish Civilisation, School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield

Description

The Graduate School of Jewish Studies is Australia's leading institute of Jewish studies, attracting students nationally and internationally. Its diverse program offers academics and students an environment shaped by the Monash ethos of excellence in teaching and research. An academic faculty comprised of four Professorial Chairs, lecturers and a stream of distinguished Visiting Fellows lead the programs. The activities of the school are diverse and incorporate interdisciplinary perspectives by drawing on a range of partners from Monash University. Supervision of research candidates is also available.

Relevant Courses

  • 3946 Master of Holocaust and Genocide Studies
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Journalism and Australian Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield

Notes

  • Some journalism courses are available off-campus.

Description

This course caters for students from various disciplines with no journalism background as well as extending the professional skills of students with journalism degrees and those with industry experience. Students also have the opportunity to research their own particular field of interest in journalism and related media.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising the following units:

  • ATS4811 Journalism studies research seminar
  • ATS4812 Journalism  dissertation part 1
  • ATS4813 Journalism  dissertation part 2
  • ATS4814 Advanced journalism project
Course coordinator

Prof Chris Nash

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 3932 Master of Journalism
  • 4039 Master of Journalism and Master of Australian Studies
  • 4054 Master of Journalism and Master of Business
  • 4057 Master of Journalism and Master of Environment and Sustainability
  • 4060 Master of Journalism and Master of International Development and Environmental Analysis
  • 4063 Master of Journalism and Master of International Relations
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By Research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Korean language studies program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Language units can also be taken within selected masters programs.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Areas of research supervision include Korean linguistics and applied Korean linguistics. Close links with several universities in the Republic of Korea are maintained. Travel and field grants are available on a competitive basis for research students. Korean studies may also be incorporated into coursework masters programs in Asian studies and applied linguistics for language teachers.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points selected in consultation with the course coordinator, from one of the following options:

Option one

  • 24 points of research
  • 24 points through the ATS4183 Korean Language Study Abroad (24 points)

Option two

  • 24 points of research
  • 24 points of level four Asian studies and/or Korean language units
Course coordinator

Dr. Injung Cho

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Linguistics is the study of the structure and function of language and the uses of language in communication, including written, spoken and cyber contexts. Linguistics explores how languages differ and what they all share, and provides the techniques and principles to be adopted in the analysis and description of any given language. In addition, the linguistic study of language and language use in socio-cultural contexts contributes to our understanding of identities, social and cultural organisation, multiculturalism and multilingualism, institutions and power, as well as the creative functions of language in texts and discourses. Knowledge of linguistics is also central to the study of languages.

Linguistics also offers students of anthropology, mathematics, philosophy, sociology, engineering, psychology, law, and computer science, useful insights into the nature of language in their particular area of interest. Examples of the practical applications of linguistics include communications within organisations, communications interfaces with electronic systems, the preparation of materials for language teaching, the documentation of endangered languages, the development of language policies in government and education, and in the areas of business, professional and technical communication, tourism, intercultural communication and speech therapy.

The school accepts suitably qualified candidates for research degrees in linguistics. Monash staff in the linguistics program have expertise in a number of areas including:

  • anthropological linguistics
  • applied linguistics
  • Australian Aboriginal languages
  • Australian English
  • Austronesian languages
  • bilingualism and multilingualism
  • child language acquisition
  • cognitive linguistics
  • comparative and contrastive linguistics
  • computers in linguistic research
  • conversational analysis
  • cross-cultural communication
  • dialectology
  • discourse analysis
  • functional grammar
  • historical linguistics
  • language and discrimination
  • language description and documentation
  • language attitudes
  • language attrition
  • language contact
  • language ecology
  • language maintenance and shift
  • language planning and policy
  • language typology
  • literacy development
  • morphology and morphosyntax
  • new and other Englishes
  • phonetics (acoustic and articulatory)
  • phonology
  • politeness phenomena
  • pragmatics
  • prosody and meaning
  • second language acquisition
  • semantics
  • sociolinguistics
  • syntax.

In addition, there is close collaboration with linguists in other programs within the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics who may have skills not represented within the linguistics program. Co-supervision can be arranged where it will be beneficial to a postgraduate student.

Refer also to the postgraduate area of study entries for applied linguistics, Chinese studies, English, English as an international language, French language, German studies, Hebrew, Hispanic studies, Indonesian language, interpreting and translation studies, Italian studies, Japanese language, Korean language, Slavic studies, Spanish and Latin American studies, Spanish language, translation studies, Ukrainian.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising the following units:

Course coordinator

Dr Anna Margetts

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5347 Research methods in applied linguistics
  • approved units at level five

Course coordinator

Professor Kate Burridge

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3767 Graduate Certificate in Linguistics
  • 0010 Postgraduate Diploma in Applied Linguistics
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3769 Master of Applied Linguistics
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Music - Conservatorium
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Music at Monash comprises the areas of composition, ethnomusicology, musicology and performance.

Students may choose to complete a postgraduate program in music that is musicology-oriented, ethnomusicology-oriented, composition-oriented, music education-oriented, or performance oriented, or a combination of these. Facilities are available for the supervision of research candidates in most of the main areas of music, including historical and systematic musicology and ethnomusicology, music pedagogy, music performance and music composition.

The school's concentration is on:

  • 19th and 20th-century music
  • composition and music technology
  • contemporary music
  • European (Western), including Australian music
  • music pedagogy
  • music of Southeast Asia
  • music semiotics
  • organology
  • popular and folk music.

Composition

The Monash School of Music - Conservatorium has one of the finest composition programs in Australia in terms of works composed and performed by staff and students. The school also offers performance opportunities dedicated to the development and performance of works written by its students. Composition students will have access to a wide range of facilities at various levels of sophistication in computer music, studio recording, and electronic music. They can also be involved with the sonic art group, which is a studio-based ensemble for composition students interested in electronic and computer music.

Ethnomusicology and musicology (music studies)

The programs in music studies are designed for musicians who wish to develop a greater knowledge, understanding and competence in music. Students can acquire skills in research methods and techniques and develop the capacity for critical reflection and informed assessment in the area of music specialisation. Vocational outcomes include musicology, ethnomusicology and world music, composition, music education and pedagogy, contemporary music and Australian music.

Performance

The School of Music - Conservatorium is involved in presenting sixty to seventy concerts a year by students, staff and outside artists. They include many large-scale choral/orchestral and small-scale solo and chamber music concerts of music from countries in all continents. The concerts are widely advertised as part of the Monash performing and visual arts activities and are presented mainly in the excellent venues of the Monash Arts Precinct (which comprises the Robert Blackwood Hall, Music Auditorium, Alexander Theatre, and Drama Theatre, as well as the Religious Centre) but also in the city of Melbourne, and overseas.

The school offers many major concerts of choral and orchestral works as well as solo, chamber and small ensemble concerts. The large ensembles in the school and their vibrant public concert seasons include performers from across the faculties of the University and from the external community. They include the Monash Academy Orchestra, the Monash Sinfonia (string orchestra), the Monash Wind Symphony, the Monash Viva VoceChoral ensemble, re-sound (a contemporary music group), and the Monash Gamelan Orchestra. There are also several chamber groups. In recent years, the school's choirs and orchestras have toured Japan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including one 12-point core unit, at least one relevant co-core unit and elective units from the list below.

Core unit

  • APG4789 Research methods in music
Composition option - co-core unit
  • APG4791 Special project: Composition and music technology - Part 1
  • APG4792 Special project: Composition and music technology - Part 2
Performance option - co-core unit

Elective units

  • APG4664 Music pedagogy
  • APG4788 20th and 21st century music repertoire studies
  • APG4790 Special research project in music
  • APG4791 Special project: Composition and music technology - Part 1
  • APG4792 Special project: Composition and music technology - Part 2
Course coordinator

Dr Joel Crotty

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5835 Topics in musicology
  • APG5836 Directed reading in music
  • APG5837 Australian music history
  • APG5838 Medieval and Renaissance music
  • APG5839 Music scholarship
  • APG5843 Compositional thought: Writings by composers and sound artists

Candidates are required to attend a minimum of 10 (five for part-time candidates) of the school's postgraduate seminars during each year of their candidature.

Course coordinator

Dr Joel Crotty

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3068 Graduate Diploma in Music
  • 3071 Graduate Diploma in Music Studies
  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3069 Master of Music
  • 3070 Master of Music Studies
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 3059 Master of Arts (Music Performance)*
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 3063 Master of Arts (Music Composition)*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy
  • 4067 Doctor of Philosophy (Music Composition)*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The school's strength lies in the area of analytic philosophy in the Anglo-American tradition. It is also able to offer high-quality supervision in many areas of recent European thought, feminism and the history of ideas.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete the following units:

  • APG4794 Philosophy masters qualifying research project - part 1
  • APG4795 Philosophy masters qualifying research project - part 2
  • APG4796 Philosophy masters qualifying A
  • APG4797 Philosophy masters qualifying B

In addition to the workload associated with each unit, students will be expected to attend weekly work-in-progress seminars for honours and graduate students and to make a presentation to the seminar series.

Course coordinator

Dr Monima Chadha

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

All students attend staff and honours seminars, and engage in philosophical discussion with staff members and peers.

Units

  • APG5845 Philosophy MA coursework A
  • APG5847 Philosophy MA coursework B
Course coordinator

Dr Monima Chadha

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Politics is a field of study that focuses on the way people live in association, addressing in particular the institutions, practices and cultural meanings of public and private expressions of power. It examines basic questions about the nature of politics and communities, and how they are organised. The politics discipline takes an analytical-critical rather than simply descriptive approach to the area, attempting to explain why and how things happen politically.

Politics staff are active researchers. Supervision of research candidates is available in a wide range of sub-fields, including specialisations in the nature and implications of globalisation, social and political theory, contemporary political cultures and Australian politics.

Refer also to the postgraduate area of study entries for:

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of Political and Social Inquiry

Students complete 48 points including one core unit and three electives chosen from the list below.

Core unit

  • APG4798 Research project (Politics)

Electives

  • APG4324 Advanced seminar in international political economy
  • APG4327 Wars of recognition: Terrorism and political violence
  • APG4328 Grand theories of politics
  • APG4329 Political Islam
  • APG4330 Global soul: Consumers, citizens and rebels
  • APG4332 Strategic studies
  • APG4333 Australian national government
  • APG4334 Southeast Asian politics
  • APG4336 Islam and modernity
  • APG4337 Conflict resolution and Islam in the Middle East
  • APG4667 Fringe politics and extremist violence: An introduction to terrorism
  • APG4668 Perspectives on world politics
Course coordinator

Dr Andy Butfoy

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences (HUMCASS)

Students are complete 48 comprising the following units:

  • ATS4794 Research writing in history and politics
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Keith Wilson

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Berwick, Gippsland

Notes

  • This course is also available off campus.

Description

As a discipline, psychological studies has a teaching and research interest in all fields of psychology and a myriad interations with other disciplines. Students and staff within psychological studies are involved in both laboratory- and field-based research, and are supported by grant and industry sources of funding. Two current broad areas of interest are virtual reality (VR), and road safety.

Projects associated with our virtual reality laboratory include the development and testing of VR interfaces, particularly using the sense of touch; simulations, training and remote control for mining and medical applications, and the interaction between the different sensory modalities in virtual reality. Current road safety topics have a particular focus in the areas of heavy vehicle safety, motorcyclists, and ecodriving. While these are current topics, supervision is also potentially available in a wide range of other areas such as the psychophysics of touch, sensory integration, parapsychology, sports psychology, motivation, health psychology, teaching and learning technologies, human factors, human-machine interface, and behaviour change. Psychological studies academics also have a history of collaboration with academics in other disciplines (both within and outside Monash, including internationally) in order to accommodate projects that cross boundaries.

Psychological studies boasts strong cross-fertilisation across projects as all staff and student researchers (honours and postgraduate) participate in regular informal round-table discussions of all ongoing projects. Research students at all levels are also strongly encouraged and supported to publish, including attendance at appropriate conferences.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points comprising the following units:

  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
  • ATS4846 Methods in psychological sciences
Course coordinator

Dr Mark Symmons

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield, Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Public history offers vocational programs for historians and related professionals. They deal with working in public history, heritage conservation and management, museums and community or local history. Graduates may go on to work in the fields of commissioned history, heritage conservation and management, oral history, community history, museums and related areas.

The programs have excellent links with the heritage industry and professional historians working in these fields. The public history program draws on teaching strengths across the faculty, and students will have a number of opportunities to build professional networks through assessment tasks, including a period of supervises work experience. Specific research strengths in this area include historic conservation, the heritage movement's indigenous and colonial histories, especially of landscape and environment; and oral history, life stories and memory.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3076 Graduate Diploma in Public History
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 3077 Master of Public History
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byNational Centre for Australian Studies, School of Journalism and Australian Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield

Description

This vocationally-oriented program in publishing and editing is designed to prepare graduates for careers in the publishing industries. Graduates will acquire advanced skills in the preparation of print and electronic publications; understand the roles of the author, publisher, editor, designer, production manager, publicist, sales manager and sales representative; and understand key topics in publishing, including technological development, intellectual property rights, international sales and licensing, market analysis and project commissioning and leadership.

Monash staff from the publishing and editing program are available to supervise research candidates in a variety of publishing-based areas.

Units

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the National Centre for Australian Studies, within the School of Journalism and Australian Studies 

Units

Students complete 48 points from the following:

  • APG5670 Authorship, editing and text*
  • other publishing or approved units at level five to the value of 12 points

* This is a core unit required by candidates in this course who have not completed the Graduate Certificate or Graduate Diploma in Publishing and Editing or equivalent. Students who do not have to complete APG5670 undertake an additional 12-point level five unit instead.

Course coordinator

Dr David Dunstan

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 4011 Graduate Certificate in Professional Editing
  • 3752 Graduate Certificate in Publishing and Editing
  • 1357 Graduate Diploma in Publishing and Editing
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2183 Master of Publishing and Editing
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Philosophical, Historical and International Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

All human cultures reflect on the meaning of life through myth, symbol and abstract reflection. Studying the religions and theologies of different cultures, within a variety of historical contexts is both an important intellectual exercise and a fascinating process that provokes many questions about the past, the present and the future. The Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology was established in order to promote interdisciplinary teaching and research in the areas of religion and theology. The centre has established extensive links with the Melbourne College of Divinity and offers symposia, workshops and seminars in which research into religion and theology is presented and discussed. The centre is devoted to the critical study of a wide range of religious traditions, as interpreted both in the past and in the contemporary world. It is also concerned with thinking about the ways in which specific religious traditions (such as Buddhism, Judaism and Christianity) engage in intellectual reflection on a wide range of specific issues, such as the nature of God, ethics, social issues, gender, the environment and the meaning of life.

The centre has research strengths in the area of the relationship between culture and belief, both in relation to contemporary society and to the past. There is supervisory expertise in the historical and literary analysis of religion in biblical, medieval and early modern periods, as well as in contemporary (postmodern) approaches to the study of religious questions, including religion in Australian society. Expertise also exists in Islamic studies, contemporary hermeneutics, gender studies, environmental thought, philosophical theology, and Jewish civilisation, religion and history, ancient and modern.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including a research project, at least one methodology unit, and two elective units chosen from the list below (note that not all units are offered each year).

Research unit

  • APG4675 Research paper in religion and theology

Methodology units

  • APG4289 Medieval dialogues: Reason, mysticism and society
  • APG4302 Interpreting the Bible: Jewish and Christian perspectives
  • APG4343 Religion and ceremony in Australian society

Elective units

  • APG4278 Religion and secularism in the quest for European integration
  • APG4285 Dante's medieval world: Politics, religion and the city
  • APG4288 Angels and demons: Rome, the papacy and the world
  • APG4307 Cultures of devotion in Renaissance Italy
  • APG4319 Zionism: The argument
  • APG4320 Jewish history, Jewish memory
  • APG4339 Sustainability and the sacred
  • APG4340 Confronting death through ceremony and symbol: A cross-cultural analysis
  • APG4341 Interpreting the sources of Islam: The Qur'an and Hadith
  • APG4342 Islamic thought in the modern world
  • APG4344 Sexuality and religion: Monotheist traditions
  • APG4676 Medieval women and their world: Literacy, authority and spirituality

Students may apply to undertake units at level four at another tertiary institution, such as the Melbourne College of Divinity, approved by the director of the Centre for Studies in Religion and Theology.

Units taken outside Monash will not amount to more than 50 per cent.

Course coordinator

Professor Constant Mews

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5278 Religion and secularism in the quest for European integration
  • APG5289 Medieval dialogues: Reason, mysticism and society
  • APG5302 Interpreting the Bible: Jewish and Christian perspectives
  • APG5307 Cultures of devotion in Renaissance Italy
  • APG5319 Zionism: The argument
  • APG5320 Jewish history, Jewish memory
  • APG5339 Sustainability and the sacred
  • APG5340 Confronting death through ceremony and symbol: A cross- cultural analysis
  • APG5342 Islamic thought in the modern world
  • APG5343 Religion and ceremony in Australian society
  • APG5344 Sexuality and religion: Monotheist traditions
  • APG5675 Research paper in religion and theology
  • APG5676 Medieval women and their world: Literacy, authority and spirituality
  • other units by permission

* At least one of these units must be taken if not already completed at honours or masters qualifying or in the Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research).

Course coordinator

Professor Constant Mews

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Slavic studies program conducts and supervises research in the literatures and cultures of various Slavic nations, in the first instance Russia, and the nations of the former Yugoslavia, as well as Slavic socio-linguistics.

Areas of research specialisation include:

  • Russian theory of literature and philosophy (Russian Formalism, M M Bakhtin, the New StPetersburg School of Philosophy, M M Mamardashvili and theory of perecption)
  • Russian postmodernism (Sorokin, Tolstaya, Petrushevskaya, Ulitskaya)
  • Russian and Yugoslav Modernisms
  • Slavic popular culture
  • Russian avant-garde and (post-)Yugoslav cinema and theory of film (Eisenstain, Vertov, Kusturica)
  • Slavic drama in a comparative European perspective
  • the Realist canon (Dostoevsky, Tolstoy in the context of phenomenology)
  • metaphors of war in contemporary Russian and Ukrainian news media.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Gippsland

Description

Human services professionals working across sectors in various capacities, are more and more required to demonstrate the higher order skills associated with post graduate qualifications to move into leadership and senior positions. In rapidly changing social, economic, cultural and political societies, professional leadership demands ongoing familiarity with emerging research , the capacity to evaluate competing knowledge claims and concomitantly, to provide sophisticated rationales for program or policy proposals to funding bodies or to decision makers. Participation in academic debates and knowledge exchange through conferences and seminars enables professional leaders' contribution to ongoing quality improvements and policy responsiveness.

Post graduate study at HUMCASS Gippsland campus enables educational and skills development through exposure to:

  • Contemporary national and international practice modalities and strategies
  • Contemporary national and international research literature
  • Contemporary national and international theoretical thought
  • Contemporary national and international political and social debate
  • Contemporary national and international service models, programs, community initiatives, social movements and policy practices
  • Research methodology skills
  • Capacities to evaluate research designs and the value of research data

Students come from a range of disciplinary and industry backgrounds including therapists, case managers, support workers and counsellors with various client groups, community development workers, local government planners, bureaucrats with program development or policy development responsibilities, middle managers in ngos or government organisations, policy advisors, public advocates and activists, health workers with cross disciplinary backgrounds,

Supervision of research candidates is available, with particular staff strengths in:

  • community development
  • counselling skills
  • cross cultural services
  • developing practice based research and evaluation methodologies
  • educational access and equity
  • emancipatory and anti-oppressive welfare practice
  • family violence
  • homelessness
  • human services management
  • labour market policies and programs
  • management
  • men's behaviour change programs
  • multiculturalism and race relations
  • NGOs in developing countries
  • personal construct theory
  • program evaluations
  • qualitative research methods
  • regional social sustainability
  • representations of women
  • social and public policy
  • social documentary photography
  • social inclusion
  • visual representation
  • youth justice and child protection
  • youth policy and services.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences

Students are required to complete 48 points of study comprising the following units:

  • ATS4854 Research methods for social and community welfare
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Mark Symmons

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 3790 Master of Human Services Management
  • 3789 Graduate Diploma in Human Services Management
  • 3788 Faculty Certificate in Human Services Management
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

The focus of sociology is the study of human society. It involves the investigation of human groups, communities, institutions and organisations, and the networks of meaning and association which link individuals and groups to the broader social structure of society. Sociologists are also concerned with the analysis of policy, for example public health policy, and its impact on society and individuals. Sociologists have developed a range of research methods and techniques, and theoretical approaches, that can be applied to diverse issues and problems in social life. Coursework studies in sociology at Monash aim to provide the student with a broad range of relevant and widely applicable research skills and equip them for careers in social research, government, industry and the public service.

Research supervision is available in areas including:

  • applied social research
  • Australian society
  • childhood and youth studies
  • comparative sociology
  • demography
  • deviance
  • economic sociology
  • ethnicity and minority relations
  • gender studies
  • health
  • homelessness
  • mass media
  • migration, urban affairs and social cohesion
  • relationships, intimacy and sexualities
  • religion
  • research methods
  • social implications of new technology
  • sociology of family
  • social policy
  • social psychology
  • social theory
  • sociology of work.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences

Students complete 48 points comprising the following units:

  • ATS4677 Theory and practice in sociology
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Vaughan Higgins

Offered by the School of Political and Social and Inquiry

Students complete 48 comprising the following units:

plus three additional units chosen from the following and selected in accordance with the student's research project:

  • APG4681 Qualitative research strategies
  • APG4683 Survey research
  • APG4684 Analysing quantitative data
  • APG4822 Feminist research
Course coordinator

Dr Kirsten McLean

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the School of Political and Social Inquiry

This course provides students who already have an honours degree in sociology or other related disciplines with the opportunity to expand, update and deepen their knowledge and understanding. Students may choose such a program for various reasons, including the desire to pursue their own intellectual interests, gain more specialised and detailed understanding of a particular area, acquire technical and applied skills and knowledge, or prepare themselves for a PhD and a career in research and teaching.

Units

Students complete 24 points at fifth year level from:

  • APG5343 Religion in Australian society
  • APG5681 Qualitative research strategies
  • APG5683 Survey research
  • APG5684 Analysing quantitative data
  • SWM5140 Policy, program planning and evaluation I
  • SWM5160 The child in society: Promoting children’s wellbeing and responding to child maltreatment

Alternative units may be taken with the approval of the course coordinator.

Course coordinator

Dr Jo Lindsay

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Research specialisations and supervision of research candidates in this area include:

  • Hispanic and Lusophone cinema
  • Spanish and Latin American popular culture
  • Spanish sociolinguistics, pragmatics, discourse analysis and media and political discourses
  • Spanish, Catalan and Latin American literatures and cultures.

For up-to-date information about research areas, refer to the staff and research interest sections on the Spanish and Latin American studies website at http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/spanish/staff.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 2695 Masters of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Spanish language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of English, Communications and Performance Studies
Campus(es)Clayton

Relevant Courses

  • 3939 Master of Arts (Theatre Performance)*
  • 4048 Master of Cultural Arts
  • 4066 Doctor of Philosophy (Theatre Performance)*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered byNational Centre for Australian Studies, School of Journalism and Australian Studies
Campus(es)Caulfield

Description

The tourism industry currently employs around 10 per cent of the Australian workforce and over the last decade has been both one of the world's, and Australia's, fastest growing industries. Currently more than eight million international visitors are forecast to arrive in Australia by the year 2012. Australia is widely regarded as being one of the global leaders in the management and marketing of tourism.

Some of the key issues that the graduate tourism program addresses include the following:

  • associated impacts of tourism on the environment
  • developmental and planning issues associated with managing tourism growth
  • how destinations are marketed and the notion of whether countries can become 'brands'
  • how new technologies such as the internet will impact on the industry
  • the current state of the global tourism industry
  • the patterns of global tourism development and why some regions are growing faster than others
  • the role 'culture' plays in the industry
  • the role of special events such as major sporting events in tourism development
  • the role of the government in managing the industry
  • the segments of the market which offer the greatest growth prospects
  • type of tourism emerging in the 21st century
  • where the proposed tourism growth will come from and where will it occur in the world.

The key strength of the graduate tourism program lies in its international focus, its multidisciplinary nature, its industry links and its ability to critically evaluate the industry from various perspectives. The program highlights the value of field-based learning, and a range of study tours are offered to encourage student interaction with the industry. Academically, the program encompasses the areas of:

  • Australian culture and society
  • communications and technology
  • cross-cultural analysis
  • cultural tourism
  • development and planning issues
  • environmental tourism
  • independent tourism
  • marketing and international marketing
  • museum and heritage studies
  • special events.

All courses within the graduate tourism program are designed for students who wish to work in the management sector of the industry.

The graduate tourism program actively pursues research and supervision in the following areas:

  • Aboriginal tourism
  • backpacker/independent tourism
  • cultural tourism and museum studies
  • educational tourism
  • international tourism marketing
  • tourism and development in less-developed countries
  • tourism planning and development in regional areas
  • urban tourism
  • wine tourism
  • tourism in transition in Eastern Europe.

Units

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

Offered by the National Centre for Australian Studies, within the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences

This course seeks to develop a strategic understanding of how the industry operates and is designed for those students who desire to undertake some original research in close association with the industry. Students are encouraged to conduct research internationally with universities that have exchange agreements with Monash.

Units

  • APG5717 Applied industry research
  • an additional unit to the value of 12 points as approved by the course coordinator

Course coordinator

Dr Vicki Peel

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3763 Graduate Certificate in Tourism
  • 0114 Graduate Diploma in Tourism
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 3067 Master of Tourism
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The translation studies program is designed to provide an academic qualification for those intending to take up careers as professional translators working in a broad range of fields, such as business, science, technology, and cross-cultural communication, as well as those who wish to pursue careers in publishing, or the media. The flexible structure of courses in this area allows participation by working language professionals who wish to expand and enrich their knowledge or specialise in new areas.

Students develop skills in translation to and from English and another language, and their awareness of practical and theoretical approaches to translation and translation studies. Languages available include Arabic, Chinese (Mandarin), French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish (refer also to the postgraduate area of study entries for these languages). Other languages may be available depending on student numbers.

An introduction to the field of translation studies is supplemented by a translation project and elective units that offer a wide range of choice, thus enabling student to work on topics tailored to their interests, whether they be vocational or theoretical/literary. Electives include a unit that focuses on the work of the professional translator.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 4041 Graduate Certificate in Translation Studies
  • 3082 Graduate Diploma in Translation studies
  • 3921 Master of Interpreting and Translation Studies

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

The Ukrainian language program is available to postgraduate students as part of the Graduate Diploma in Languages. This program is for those wishing to add the equivalent of an undergraduate language major to their existing undergraduate degree. Students are enrolled at the appropriate level for their language competence; from introductory to advanced.

It is possible to undertake some studies abroad via either a short intensive program or semester-long program overseas.

Units

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3058 Graduate Diploma in Languages

Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics
Campus(es)Clayton

Description

Research supervision is available in the areas of Ukrainian literature and culture, including nineteenth and twentieth century literature; contemporary literature and popular culture; and Ukrainian culture in Slavic and European contexts. Projects involving rhetorical and postcolonial approaches are especially welcome.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students are complete 48 points comprising a 24 points of thesis units and 24 points of coursework units.

Thesis units

  • ATS4221 Ukrainian honours thesis part 1 and ATS4222 Ukrainian honours thesis part 2 (24 points)

Coursework units

Students complete one of the following options.

Option one
  • ATS4219 Ukrainian studies 9 (6 points)
  • ATS4220 Ukrainian studies 10 (6 points)
  • fourth-year-level coursework units to the value of 12 points selected in consultation with the course co-ordinator
Option two

Students who have completed ATS3219 Ukrainian studies 9 (previously coded UKR3090) and ATS3220 Ukranian studies 10 (previously coded UKR3100) in previous studies select:

  • fourth-year-level coursework units to the value of 24 points in consultation with the course co-ordinator.
Course coordinator

Associate Professor Marko Pavlyshyn

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
School of Political and Social Inquiry
Campus(es)Clayton, Gippsland

Description

Women's and gender studies is an exciting interdisciplinary field of study offering feminist perspectives on gender, sexuality and culture. The study programs provide graduates with a broad knowledge of, and a familiarity with, a wide range of feminist and social and cultural theories and methodologies of gender. The postgraduate programs seek to bring innovative theory and research techniques to the study of women's lives, their status in society, and the dilemmas and contradictions surrounding gender identity, power relations and sexualities. In this way, women's studies attempts to correct the absence of material on women and gender relations that for a long time characterised more traditional areas of study. Women's and gender studies also emphasises the diversity of women's experience and the different cultural and historical forms of gendered and sexual embodiment and experience. Beyond general considerations of the changing status of women and where dominant ideas and assumptions about gender and sexual difference come from, women's and gender studies therefore also covers broader issues of:

  • how different cultures shape gender identities and sexualities
  • how questions of sex or gender relate to questions of class, ethnicity, race, nation, sexuality, religion, ability and age
  • how women and gender are represented in film, literature and the media
  • shifting cultural and historical modes of femininity and masculinity and transgender
  • the role of women and gender in important political, economic, sociological and philosophical debates.

Supervisory expertise is offered in:

  • feminist literary, historical and cultural studies
  • feminist pedagogy
  • film, visual culture, popular culture and performance
  • gender and crime
  • gender and cultural difference
  • gender studies
  • medicine, birth and motherhood
  • postcolonialism and indigeneity
  • sexuality studies
  • transgender, feminist and queer theory.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Students complete 48 points including a 24-point core research unit, a core

coursework unit and one elective unit.

Core units

  • APG4284 Gender, sexuality, power
  • APG4819 Women's studies research component, or APG4820 Women's studies research component part 1 and APG4821 Women's studies research component part 2

Elective units

  • one unit as approved by the course coordinator

Part-time students will be required to complete APG4284 and an elective level-four unit in the first year and units APG4820 and APG4821 in the second year of the program.

Course coordinator

Dr JaneMaree Maher

Master of Arts by Research and Coursework

The entry below only details the coursework component of this degree. For all requirements including the research/thesis component refer to the full course entry at http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/2011handbooks/courses/2846.html.

This program is recommended for candidates who may not have a strong academic background in feminist theory and gender issues or who are returning to study after a break and would benefit from undertaking coursework units to enhance their understanding of the field.

Units

  • APG5284 Gender, sexuality, power*
  • an additional approved level five unit to the value of 12 points

* Unless completed at level four in which case another approved level five unit will be selected.

Course coordinator

Dr JaneMaree Maher

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2846 Master of Arts by research and coursework
  • 2695 Master of Arts *
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.


Managing facultyFaculty of Arts
Offered bySchool of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences
Campus(es)Gippsland

Description

The postgraduate writing program enables students to gain an understanding of a range of writing practices in the context of media and communication studies, contemporary cultural theory, and analyses of literary and other media forms. Students will increase their knowledge and understanding of different kinds of contemporary writing, especially prose forms, and acquire detailed knowledge of a range of techniques associated with contemporary cultural production. Research in the postgraduate program allows students to reflect critically on their own writing practices while developing and applying skills and techniques though individual and collaborative projects.

Both coursework and individual research projects in the postgraduate writing program broach the question of how to define the nature and status of "creative" writing. The program deepens student's contextual understanding of writing practices by engaging with a range of theories, with particular reference to feminism, psychoanalysis, postmodernism and post-structuralism, in terms of their potential to shed light on the philosophical and social implications of creative writing practice, where the term "creative" is understood in its broadest sense.

Units

Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)

Offered by the School of Humanities, Communications and Social Sciences

Students are required to complete 48 points of study comprising the following units:

  • ATS4864 Literary theory
  • ATS4805 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 1
  • ATS4806 HUMCASS honours dissertation part 2
  • ATS4807 HUMCASS selected topics in theory and practice
Course coordinator

Dr Sue Yell

Further courses

For a list of units studied or course outlines, refer to the relevant courses.

Relevant Courses

  • 3937 Postgraduate Diploma in Arts (Research)
  • 2695 Master of Arts*
  • 0020 Doctor of Philosophy*

* By research.