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Representing Heritage (ABPL90241)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
About this subject
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Semester 2
Overview
Availability | Semester 2 |
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Representing Heritage examines how designers and professionals in the built environment and heritage fields observe, record, document, interpret and act upon sites of interest and significance. Discussions will range from the highly theoretical to the creative and the practical, with exposure to cutting edge digital practices and techniques.
Over the semester students will assemble a toolkit of theoretical and practical ways of thinking about spaces, places and buildings across time, and techniques for site representation, documentation and interpretation. The subject available to students from all Melbourne School of Design (MSD) majors with an interest in the heritage, history, memory and conservation of places.
The subject will include content from academic and professional guests delivered through on campus seminars and online additional material.
Assessments will include an individual reflective journal, an experimental group project which documents and interprets a site of the group’s choosing in Melbourne, and an individual critical reflection of this project. This subject will allow students to build on the core subjects in the M.UCH degree, and to augment design, history and theory-based subjects in the MSD programs.
Intended learning outcomes
At the successful completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Investigate and analyse complex historical places, their inhabitation and experience over time;
- Critically consider and creatively apply a variety of methods of representing, documenting and interpreting particular sites;
- Work individually, and in a multi-disciplinary team, to document and interpret historical places.
Generic skills
- Build on critical skills in evaluating key texts in the area of place-making and representation;
- Build on technical skills in methods of visual documentation and presentation (for example drawing, photography and mapping).
Last updated: 8 November 2024