AIS4041 - Protocols and power in indigenous studies
12 points, SCA Band 1, 0.250 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Arts
Leader: Dr Andrew Gunstone and Robyn Heckenberg
Offered
Gippsland First semester 2009 (Day)
Gippsland First semester 2009 (Off-campus)
Gippsland Second semester 2009 (Day)
Gippsland Second semester 2009 (Off-campus)
Synopsis
This is a preparatory unit for further research in the area of Indigenous Studies. Theoretical and methodological issues involved in researching and writing Indigenous Studies, including race, gender, class and ethnicity will be examined. This subject will be underpinned by an examination of appropriate ethical and protocol considerations. The subject will also deeply analyse power and privilege within the context of researching Indigenous Studies. Students will also be given the opportunity to enhance their understandings of Indigenous Studies at a global level.
Objectives
Upon completion of this unit students should have developed an understanding of:
- their own subject and speaking positions;
- constructions of Aboriginality and discourses of Aboriginalism;
- ethical responsibilities and different methodological approaches to Australian Indigenous Studies;
- theories, practices, and the importance of oral history;
- historical and contemporary concepts of 'race,' in Australian scholarship;
- the value of interdisciplinary and comparative perspectives;
- the basis of power and privilege;
- indigenous issues at a global level.
Assessment
Seminar paper (3000 words): 30%
Essay (6000 words): 60%
Presentation: 10%
Contact hours
2 hours per week
Prerequisites
A major sequence in Australian Indigenous Studies
