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 166-015 Transforming Australian Culture: State, Society and the Australian Way of Life

Note

Formerly available as 166-209/309. Students who have completed 166-209/309 are not eligible to enrol in this subject.

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Michael Crozier

Prerequisites

Usually 25 points of first year Politics subject. Students with only 12.5 points in Politics may apply to the second/third year coordinator.

Semester

1 (view timetable)

Contact

Usually two 1-hour lectures and a 1-hour tutorial per week

Subject Description

This subject explores the proposition that a unique Australian Way of Life emerged in the first decades of this century with the establishment of the Federation Settlement. Implicit in this proposition is the idea that through its sponsorship and development of the various social and political arrangements of the Settlement, the State generated more than a set of institutions but a whole way of life, a culture. This theme of a 'state-sponsored' culture will be brought to bear on contemporary Australian society. Key questions to be examined include: what are the implications of the dismantling of the Settlement institutions during the 1980s for (the notion of) the Australian Way of Life? Is the State attempting to generate new institutional arrangements in place of the old? If so, what kinds of cultural visions do they entail? In what ways has globalisation impacted on the reshaping of Australian political culture?

Assessment

A literature review of 800 words, and a research essay of 2000 words, and an integration paper of 1200 words.

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available.



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