Australian Historical Studies (CLB102)
Semester 2 / 2011

Texts

Macintyre Stuart, ed. The Historian's conscience!$! Australian historians on the ethics of history. Melbourne: MUP, 2004!$!!$!!$!

Description

Rationale

The appropriate content of Australian history courses is openly debated. Even the nation called Australia is problematic as competing identities, discourses, conceptualisations and nations-within-the-nation claim space in the academic, community and personal fabric. There are now competing ideologies and contexts shaping, dominating and influencing the way we think historically about Australia. In national debates in the 1980s it was argued strongly that all tertiary students should take a course of study on "Australia in international contexts or studies which explain Australia's cultural inheritance". This statement was immediately criticised for what it included and for what it left out! The arguments continue. The first part of the lecture program offers a survey of Australia's history from 60000 years ago to the present. The second part interrogates how histories of the past have been presented. Essay questions, student seminars and lectures are based around the ideas presented in Australia's history; Themes and debates edited by Martyn Lyons and Penny Russell (2005) and in the journals Australian Historical Studies, History Australia and the Journal of Australian Studies. These texts are offered as a convenient platform and are contested by many other new books, articles and essays on Australian History. This unit presents a past in Australia that is constructed, invented, contested and open to interpretation.

Aims

To acquire an appreciation that academic, public and political influences can determine historians' portrayal of historical events.

Objectives

At the end of this unit you will be able to:

Identify major themes and patterns in the Australian historical experience

Apply historical knowledge and methodologies to a specific issue

Identify current theories and debates in historiography

Gather evidence, analyse, synthesise, argue logically and express ideas coherently

Content

The subject matter is presented in four related activities; a lecture program which will focus on the historical narrative and then on historiography or the ways that Australia's past is presented in the public domain; a student seminar program that offers a chance to debate the approaches of historians who assert particular views on key themes and debates in Australian history, a research project or essay that involves analysis of an historical problem or issue and a final examination that offers an opportunity to argue holistically about the discipline and to express personal opinions and interpretations.

Approaches to Teaching and Learning

This unit is offered as a series of thirteen weeks of lectures, tutorials and student presentations. To achieve the objectives students will undertake a sequenced program that incorporates a chronological survey, debates in historiography, methodology and research, film, documentaries, newspapers and archival evidence. There will be an emphasis on shared-learning, as well as independent study and teacher-learner interaction.

Assessment

Assessment name: Presentation

Description: Oral presentation to class on a specified topics utilising visual material.

Relates to objectives: 1, 2 and 4

Weight: 20%

Internal or external: Internal

Group or individual: Group

Due date: TBA

Assessment name: Essay

Description: A 1500 word extended prose response to a set question.

Relates to objectives: 1, 2, 3 & 4.

Weight: 40%

Internal or external: Internal

Group or individual: Individual

Due date: TBA

Assessment name: Examination (Theory)

Description: Set questions - Written responses.

Relates to objectives: 1, 2, 3 and 4

Weight: 40%

Internal or external: Internal

Group or individual: Individual

Due date: TBA

Supplementary Texts

References:

Curthoys, A. & Docker, J. Is history fiction? Sydney. UNSW Press.

Davison, G. & Hirst, J. & McIntyre, S. Eds. (2002). The Oxford Companion to Australian History, Melbourne, OUP.

Davison, G. (2000). The use and abuse of Australian history. Sydney. Allen and Unwin.

Day, D. (1996). Claiming a continent; a history of Australia, Sydney: Harper Collins.

Grimshaw, P. & Lake, M. & McGrath, A. & Quartly, M. (1994). Creating a nation 1788-1990. Melbourne. McPhee Gribble.

Healy, C. (1997). From the ruins of colonialism; history as social memory, Melbourne. CUP.

Lake, M. Ed. (2006). Memory, monuments and museums; the past in the present. Melbourne. MUP.

Macintyre, S. and Clark, A. (2003). The history wars. Melbourne. MUP.

Macintyre, S. (Ed.) (2004). The Historian's conscience; Australian historians on the ethics of history. Melbourne: MUP.

Macintyre, S. (2004). A concise history of Australia, Cambridge, CUP.

Molony, J. (2005). Australia our heritage; a history of a nation. Melbourne. ASP.

Nile, R. (Ed). (2000). The Australian legend and its discontents. St Lucia. UQP.

Rickard, J. (1998). Australia; a cultural history. Melbourne. Longman.

Welsh, F. (2004). Great Southern land; a new history of Australia. London. Penguin.

White, R. & Teo, H. (Eds.) (2004). Cultural history in Australia. Sydney. UNSW Press.

Other Details

Offered in: 2009
Current Campus: Kelvin Grove
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