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Racial Literacy: Indigeneity & Whiteness (INDG20004)
Undergraduate level 2Points: 12.5Not available in 2025
About this subject
Overview
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This subject aims to enhance student's racial literacy with a focus on representations of Indigeneity and whiteness in Australia. The term, "racial literacy", devised to describe anti-racist practices, entails students becoming literate in critically reading and understanding multiple modes of race representation. The inter-disciplinary approach enables students to analyse the relationships among texts, images, language and social practices, drawing on Australian literature, media, film and the visual arts. In this way, the subject equips students to become multi-literate in critiquing race constructions of identity formation and nation building through the creative and communicative arts. The subject introduces students to critical theoretical frameworks incorporating postcolonial, race and whiteness studies. It will engage with questions of voice, position, power, agency, capital and social justice issues to explore how representations of Indigeneity and whiteness operate with regard to the intersections of race, gender and class relations in an Australian context (with links and comparisons also made to examples of race representation in a global context).
Intended learning outcomes
On successful completion of this subject, students should have:
- Critique multiple modes of race representation and articulate the strategies utilised in the operation of specific representations of Indigenous Australians and white Australians.
- Discuss the impact of the complexities and power of race representation on the formation of nation, history and political and public issues in Australia.
- Weigh their own racial locations, cultural identities, ideologies and social experiences.
- Examine how racial hierarchies and investments are reinforced or countered through representations of Indigeneity and whiteness.
- Investigate critical theoretical frameworks incorporating postcolonial, race, whiteness studies and the politics of representation.
- Critique race constructions of identity formation and nation building through the creative and communicative arts.
- Compare questions of voice, position, power, agency, capital and social justice to explore how representations of Indigeneity and whiteness operate with regard to the intersections of race, gender and class relations in an Australian context.
Generic skills
At the completion of this subject, students should gain the following generic skills:
- A developed understanding of relevant critical theories and methods
- The ability to work effectively as an individual and member of class
- Competency in the use of a wide range of research applications and resources
- Ability to communicate complex ideas clearly and comprehensively
- Ability to produce high quality written material in a timely manner.
Last updated: 6 December 2024