<SOURCE TABLE="AustStudies:Arts:4:v3.25">
<SUBJECT ID="100-402" CODEUSED="100-402">
<TITLE>NATION/COMMUNITY/ CITIZEN </TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 4th year
<COORDINATOR>Dr D Goodman; Assoc Prof R Fincher.
<SEMESTER>First semester
<CONTACT>One 2-hour seminar per week
<OBJECTIVES>Students completing this subject should have: critical understanding of the functioning of Australian nationalism in diverse sites and contexts in Australian culture and society; awareness of changing representations of community and citizen in Australia; a sense of the contributions to be made by a range of disciplines to the study of these issues; ability to carry out a focussed investigation and relate it to this context.
<CONTENT>An interdisciplinary seminar examining the interrelationships of nation, community and citizen in Australia. Particular attention to: the history and contemporary forms of Australian nationalism, the Australian state and its changing views of citizens (including issues of gender and ethnicity), multiculturalism and its critics, sustainable futures for particular Australian communities.
<ASSESSMENT>One 6,000 word essay.
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>

<XREF TABLE="History:Arts:4:v3.110">
<SUBJECT ID="100-402" CODEUSED="100-402">
<TITLE>NATION/COMMUNITY/CITIZEN </TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 4th year
<COORDINATOR>Dr D Goodman. ; Assoc. Prof R Fincher.
<SEMESTER>1st semester
<CONTACT>One 2-hour seminar per week
<OBJECTIVES>Students completing this subject should have: critical understanding of the functioning of Australian nationalism in diverse sites and contexts in Australian culture and society; awareness of changing representations of community and citizen in Australia; a sense of the contributions to be made by a range of disciplines to the study of these issues; ability to carry out a focussed investigation and relate it to this context.
<CONTENT>An interdisciplinary seminar examining the interrelationships of nation, community and citizen in Australia. Particular attention to: the history and contemporary forms of Australian nationalism, the Australian state and its changing views of citizens (including issues of gender and ethnicity), multiculturalism and its critics, sustainable futures for particular Australian communities.
<ASSESSMENT>One 6,000 word essay.
</SUBJECT>
</XREF>


