units

APG4270

Faculty of Arts

Monash University

Postgraduate - Unit

This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2012 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.

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12 points, SCA Band 1, 0.250 EFTSL

Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered, or view unit timetables.

LevelPostgraduate
FacultyFaculty of Arts
OfferedNot offered in 2012
Coordinator(s)Dr Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario

Notes

Previously coded ENM4210

Synopsis

This unit will examine historical and cultural changes in the representation of childhood and the child figure in a range of texts from the romantic to the modern eras. Prose fictions, some addressed to adult readers, some to child readers, will be explored for the ways in which discourses about the 'child' intersect with discourses about notions of origins; gender and sexuality; class, social place, power and subjectivity; race; the family and the home; education of mind and body; and growing up. The unit will employ poststructuralist, semiotic and discourse theory, and will have a feminist emphasis.

Outcomes

It is intended that students undertaking this course should develop:

  1. Knowledge and an understanding of the historicity and cultural constructedness of the child figure.
  2. A detailed knowledge and understanding of traditional, romantic, modernist and postmodern representations of the child.
  3. A detailed knowledge and understanding of the iconography of childhood.
  4. Critical skills pertaining to deconstruction, and the specific ability to deconstruct discourses of childhood in a range of texts for adults and children.
  5. An understanding of the ideological relationship between discourses of childhood and western discourses of gender, class and race.
  6. A knowledge of narratology and reception theory, and the skills to analyse and interpret such textual elements as narrator, implied reader and narratee in cultural context.
  7. The capacity to meet the general learning objectives of the department.

Assessment

Written work: 100% (9000 words)

Chief examiner(s)

Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario

Contact hours

2 hours (1 x 2 hour seminar) per week