102-206 Witness: War and the Australian Media

Note

Students are not permitted to undertake within a 12-month period more than two undergraduate subjects offered by the Australian Centre.

Availability

2nd and 3rd year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Dr Fay Anderson

Semester

1 (view timetable)

Contact

A 1.5-hour lecture and a 1-hour tutorial per week for 12 weeks

Subject Description

This subject examines Australia's involvement in war and the journalists and photographers who reported on these international conflicts. Since Howard Lambie was embedded in the Sudan in 1885, our war correspondents have been considered important witnesses and the public's main source of information. This subject explores the background of the major wars that the Australian media have covered including the Boer War, the World Wars, the Spanish Civil War, Vietnam, the Middle East, Ireland, Cambodia, East Timor, Kosovo and the present battle in Iraq. Within this context, the subject considers the rich history of Australian war journalism (print and broadcasting), the evolution of the industry, the extent of the war correspondents' influence, how they shaped public perceptions and the prevailing representations. Drawing on a range of case studies involving the seminal battles and iconic correspondents, students will consider Banjo Patterson's reports from the Boer War, the legend of Gallipoli immortalised by C.E.W. Bean, Damien Parer's images of the Kokoda Trail, Wilfred Burchett's warning to the world at Hiroshima, East Timor and the Balibo Four and Paul McGeough's coverage of the fall of Baghdad. Major topics include: the creation of the Anzac legend, the mythmaking and truths, censorship, embedded journalism, propaganda, genocide, gender, national identity, objectivity and the changing nature of war reporting.

Generic Skills

  • research: through competent use of the library and other information sources, and the definition of areas of inquiry and methods of research;

  • critical thinking and analysis: through recommended reading, essay writing and tutorial discussion, and by determining the strength of an argument;

  • understanding of social, ethical and cultural context: through the contextualisation of judgments, developing a critical self-awareness, being open to new ideas and possibilities and by constructing an argument;

  • communicating knowledge intelligibly and economically: through essay writing and tutorial discussion; written communication: through essay preparation and writing; public speaking: though tutorial discussion and class presentations;

  • attention to detail: though essay preparation and writing, and examination revision; time management and planning: through managing and organizing workloads for recommended reading, essay and assignment completion and examination revision;

Assessment

An article review of 1500 words 30% (due before mid semester break), a research essay of 2500 words 55% (due during the examination period), a 10 minute group presentation 15%. Students must have attended at least 70% of classes to be eligible for assessment.

Prescribed Texts

A subject reader will be available from the Bookroom at the beginning of semester.



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