Anthropology of New Guinea and Melanesia ANTH6006  - Details

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Offered By: School of Archaeology & Anthropology
Academic Career: Graduate Coursework
Course Subject: Anthropology
Offered in: Second Semester, 2010
Unit Value: 6 units
Course Description:

Few regions of the world can match Melanesia in the diversity and richness of the cultures it encompasses. This course, through a mixture of general characterisations and intensive study of particular contexts, seeks to provide students with an understanding of the range of cultures found in Melanesia. We will also consider just what that variation encompasses in terms of subsistence, exchange social organisation, cosmology, concepts of personhood and historical transformations. The region has also, however, been a crucial part of the theoretical developments within the discipline of anthropology. So, not only does the course aim to give the student a deeper appreciation of the various peoples who live so close to Australia, but it also highlights the debates that the ethnography of Melanesia has given rise to and the contributions these have made to the broader field of anthropology.

Learning Outcomes:   By the end of the course you should be able to:
  • Appreciate the unique diversity of cultural forms in Melanesia in relation to their various histories.
  • Give an account of the importance of New Guinea within the broader anthropology of Melanesia and appreciate the place of the region in theoretical debates within anthropology.
  • Grasp the continuities spanning pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial Melanesian life-worlds and their role in the current dynamics of the region.
  • Appreciate the issues involved in using essentialising categories in a region with such a rich, dynamic history.
  • Appriciate an instance of the subtle interaction between feminist theory and regional ethnography.
Indicative Assessment:

By negotiation: 6,000 words

Workload:

Two hours of lectures and one hour of tutorial per week

Course Classification(s): TransitionalTransitional courses are designed for students from a broad range of backgrounds and learning achievements, which provide for the acquisition of generic skills; or an informed understanding of contemporary issues; or fundamental knowledge for transition to Advanced or Specialist courses.
Areas of Interest: Anthropology
Preliminary Reading:

*Brookfield, H.C. and Hart, D. Melanesia: a geographical interpretation of an island world, Methuen, 1971.
*Chowning, A. An Introduction to the Peoples and Cultures of Melanesia, Addison-Wesley, 1977.

Majors/Specialisations: Anthropology and Anthropology
Academic Contact: Dr Don Gardner