HIST333 History Through Monuments
Updated: 06 November 2006| Credit Points | 6 | ||||||
| Offering |
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| Online level | Level C - Internet access required | ||||||
| Intensive School(s) | None | ||||||
| Supervised Exam | None | ||||||
| Pre-requisites | any 12 cp in ANCH, ECON (units with a 4 or 5 as second digit [denoting ECON HIST] only) or HIST | ||||||
| Co-requisites | None | ||||||
| Restrictions | LOCH 223; HIST 233 | ||||||
| Notes | None | ||||||
| Combined Units | None | ||||||
| Coordinator(s) | Andrew Piper (andrew.piper@une.edu.au) | ||||||
| Unit Description |
Monuments and cemeteries are a particularly valuable source of historical evidence. They both commemorate and perpetuate memory, and fix meaning on the landscape - meaning that changes over time. This changing meaning and the changing treatment of death and public memory will be explored using Australian and international examples. Of particular interest to local and family historians will be study of the theory and method for research and interpretation of cemeteries. Students enrolling in this unit must have access to a general cemetery and/or a public monument/memorial. Field work is necessary. |
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| Prescribed Material Mandatory |
Textbook information is only available from 2008 units onwards. | ||||||
| Recommended Material Optional |
Textbook information is only available from 2008 units onwards. | ||||||
| Disclaimer | Offer of some subjects is subject to viability. Information in these unit descriptions is subject to change prior to commencement of semester. |
