units
ATS3114
Faculty of Arts
This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2015 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.
Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered.
Level | Undergraduate |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
Organisational Unit | Communications and Media Studies |
Offered | Not offered in 2015 |
Coordinator(s) | Associate Professor Kevin Foster |
Through lectures, seminars, workshops, and a field trip the unit will study how photography from across the globe has shaped perceptions of and responses to war from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. It will examine how the visual representation of conflict has been informed and inflected by a range of constraints and influences - technological, commercial, cultural and political. It will examine specific case studies to demonstrate how the provision or withholding of photographs has helped to initiate or end hostilities, motivate and inform their participants, and how specific images have framed, fixed and challenged the public's understanding of the conduct and purposes of particular conflicts. It will examine the work of both professional and amateur photographers, it will consider the formal regimes of censorship and collection whereby photographs are prepared for public release or archived in museums and galleries. The unit will encourage students to interrogate how, why, for whom and with what purposes visual images of conflict are framed, formed and deployed, and how over time, in different geographical and cultural contexts, these images have emerged and developed.
On successful completion of this unit students will be able to:
Within semester assessment: 100%
Minimum total expected workload to achieve the learning outcomes for this unit is 144 hours per semester typically comprising a mixture of scheduled learning activities and independent study. A unit requires on average three/four hours of scheduled activities per week. Scheduled activities may include a combination of teacher directed learning, peer directed learning and online engagement.
See also Unit timetable information
Twelve credit points of second-year Arts units.