<SOURCE TABLE="English:Arts:4:v3.60">
<SUBJECT ID="106-447" CODEUSED="106-447">
<TITLE>COLONIAL CULTURAL STUDIES</TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 4th year
<COORDINATOR>Anne Maxwell.
<SEMESTER>First semester
<CONTACT>One 2-hour seminar per week.
<OBJECTIVES>Students who complete this subject successfully will:
<ul>
<li>have developed critical and analytical skills that will enable them to trace the operations of imperialist discourse in the context of the Pacific;
<li>examine the cultural consequences of imperialist practices in the Pacific;
<li>adapt a wide range of theoretical material to the cultural productions arising from European and North American presence in the Pacific;
<li>carry out archival work in the areas of literary, pictorial or filmic representations.
</ul>
<CONTENT>This subject examines a number of different sites of colonial cultural production located within the imperial centre and the colonies themselves. The aim is to demonstrate the plurality of colonialism's culture by examining a number of written and visual practices which include the exhibitionary complex, anthropology, travel writing, photography, tourist postcards, film and fiction.
<ASSESSMENT>Written work of not more than 6,000 words.
<PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
<ATEXT>Pratt M <i>Imperial Eyes </i>Routledge
<ATEXT>Spurr D <i>The Rhetoric of Empire </i>Duke
<ATEXT>Stephens A Thomas N and Gibson R <i>Pirating the Pacific</i> Powerhouse Museum
<ATEXT>Stevenson R L <i>The Beach of Falsea </i>Edinburgh
<ATEXT>Thomas N <i>Colonialism's Culture</i> Princeton
<ATEXT>Young R <i>Colonial Desire: Hybridity in Theory, Culture and Race</i> Routledge
<ATEXT>Course reader available from the department
<ATEXT>Films: Costner <i>Rapa-Nui. </i> Flagherty M <i>Moana of the South Seas.</i>
</PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>

<XREF TABLE="CulturalStudies:Arts:4:v3.49">
<SUBJECT ID="106-447" CODEUSED="106-447">
<TITLE>COLONIAL CULTURAL STUDIES</TITLE>
<POINTS>16.7 4th year
<COORDINATOR>Anne Maxwell.
<SEMESTER>First semester
<CONTACT>One 2-hour seminar per week.
<OBJECTIVES>Students who complete this subject successfully will:
<ul>
<li>have developed critical and analytical skills that will enable them to trace the operations of imperialist discourse in the context of the Pacific;
<li>examine the cultural consequences of imperialist practices in the Pacific;
<li>adapt a wide range of theoretical material to the cultural productions arising from European and North American presence in the Pacific;
<li>carry out archival work in the areas of literary, pictorial or filmic representations.
</ul>
<CONTENT>This subject examines a number of different sites of colonial cultural production located within the imperial centre and the colonies themselves. The aim is to demonstrate the plurality of the colonialism's culture by examining a number of written and visual practices which include the exhibitionary complex, anthropology, travel writing, photography, tourist postcards, film and fiction.
<ASSESSMENT>Written work of not more than 6,000 words.
<PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
<ATEXT>Pratt M <i>Imperial Eyes</i> Routledge
<ATEXT>Spurr D <i>The Rhetoric of Empire </i>Duke
<ATEXT>Stephens A Thomas N and Gibson R <i>Pirating the Pacific </i>Powerhouse Museum
<ATEXT>Stevenson R L <i>The Beach of Falsea</i> Edinburgh
<ATEXT>Thomas N <i>Colonialism's Culture</i> Princeton
<ATEXT>Young R <i>Colonial Desire: Hybridity in Theory, Culture and Race </i>Routledge
<ATEXT>Course reader available from the department
<ATEXT>Films: Costner <i>Rapa-Nui. </i> Flagherty M <i>Moana of the South Seas.</i>
</PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
</SUBJECT>
</XREF>


