Year
2016
Units
4.5
Contact
1 x 50-minute lecture weekly
1 x 50-minute tutorial weekly
1 x 50-minute seminar fortnightly
Enrolment not permitted
1 of WMST2004, WMST2018, WMST7010, WMST7020, WMST8043 has been successfully completed
Course context
Graduate Diploma in Gender and Development
Topic description
This topic introduces students to the different ways in which women's lives may be researched and represented from feminist perspectives. Examples of women's life stories in various genres (biography, autobiography, oral history, life-story writing and documentary film) will be considered. The topic focuses on researching the diversity of women's lives, as individuals and as groups, in different contemporary cultures. It encourages critical thought about the processes of feminist research and representation, and will enhance students' research, oral and writing skills. Students will conduct a small individual or group research project.
Educational aims
The topic aims to introduce students to the variety of ways in which women's lives are researched and represented. It introduces students to a range of contemporary feminist theories about the representation of women's lives. It aims to develop critical perspectives on the ways that stories of women's lives have been told and the limits on and possibilities for the ways that they can be told. It aims to foster an ethical sense of the ways in which representations of the lives of women, in particular those from non-culturally dominant backgrounds, play a part in the power relations of social life. Students will explore the lives and scholarly and creative work of and about a range of women from contemporary and past contexts. The topic aims to develop students' oral presentation and written communication skills.
Expected learning outcomes
  • Understanding of some of the theoretical issues, including ethical issues, relating to the research and representation of women's lives

  • Demonstration of knowledge of some of the particular ways in which women's lives are researched and represented

  • Demonstration of familiarity with the complexity of the representation of one woman's life, or with a groups of women's lives

  • Demonstration of competent communication skills