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Handbook 1997 : Faculty of Arts : Criminology
191-338/438 Storytelling and Crime |
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Credit Points: | 16.7 3rd and 4th year | |
Coordinator: | Dr D Tait | |
Prerequisite/s: | Any criminology, sociology, political science, history or cultural studies course taken at second-year level or above. | |
Contact: | A 1-hour lecture and one 2-hour seminar. | |
Subject Description: | A critical examination of the way crime participants tell stories about crime. It analyses the 'voices' and scripts used by victims, bystanders, offenders, police, judges, prosecutors, official statisticians, the media and criminologists. The course looks at the social context of the stories, the spaces opened up (or legitimated) by the narratives, and the identities being constructed by the stories. Students who complete this course should be able to interpret critically stories of current criminological interest, such as police 'crime wave' reports, victim impact statements, road accident commercials and war atrocity stories, be able to find and follow current crime stories on the Internet, such as death penalty cases, 'terrorist' campaigns, political corruption trials or war crime prosecutions, be able to analyse critically the purpose of the crime stories, their marketing and their audiences. | |
Assessment: | Up to 5000 words of written work at 3rd year level and 6000 words at 4th year level. Students may be required to prepare and make class presentations and follow crime stories on the Internet. | |
Prescribed Texts: | None. A virtual reader will be provided, supplemented by a reading pack of other useful materials.
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Handbook 1997 : Faculty of Arts : Criminology
Status: OFFICIAL 1997 Last Modified: Wednesday March 12 3:36 pm SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Technology Services Authorised by: Academic Registrar Email Enquiries: Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au
Copyright © University of Melbourne 1997.