IP103-30 Art & Revolution
Introductory description
This module explores the ways in which art and artistic expressions prompt, influence, or resist moments of crisis and change. Using Problem-Based Learning, students explore four rich case studies that cut across a range of historical, cultural, and conceptual boundaries. The case studies are organized around four central themes that require students to connect theoretical frameworks and methodologies to specific actions, conceptual and material objects, texts, datasets, and academic fields in order to tackle complex problems. While the specific content of the case studies are dynamic, changing year on year in response to specific cohort interests, the four case studies retain their thematic structures to help students build knowledge transfer and critical thinking skills. Students will work individually and in groups with a wide range of diverse materials; these student-led activities require that students interrogate existing professional, academic, and cultural paradigms through the lenses of race, gender, colonialism, and cultural theory.
Module aims
By the end of the module, students will be expected to:
-- Understand the ways in which artistic expression has positioned itself in relation to revolutionary events;
-- Examine in-depth the historical contexts of each revolution and relate them to specific artistic productions;
-- Explore the political and social contexts of each revolution and understand how they impacted on artistic production;
-- Critically analyse specific artistic productions by deploying an appropriate theoretical framework
-- Compare artistic productions from various eras and in different parts of the world, and attempt to theorise their contributions
-- Compare dominant revolutionary narratives and scholarship with marginalized ones in relation to scholarly theory and practice;
-- Have demonstrated foundational research and professional communication skills
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Term 1
Week 1: Introduction to Term 1: Identity and Power
Week 2: Humanity and Revolution: Analyzing Objects [Skills-based session]
Week 3: Authority in the French Revolution
Week 4: Society and the Self in the French Revolution
Week 5: Success and Failure in the Haitian Revolution
Week 6 Politics and Revolution: Using the Past/Historiography [Skills session]
Week 7: Trotsky on Art and Revoluti
Week 8: Class and Revolution
Week 9: The Truth and the Russian Revolution
Week 10: Critical Reflection
Term 2
Week 1: The Cultural Revolution: a student revolution?
Week 2: Destroying the Four Olds
Week 3: Creating Revolutionary Art Forms
Week 4: The Cultural Revolution: lasting impact on Society?
Week 5: Global responses to the Cultural Revolution
Week 6: Australia’s Passive Revolution
Week 7: Colonisation: aboriginal culture
Week 8: Stolen generations
Week : Dealing with colonial heritage
Week 10: Critical Reflection
Term 3
Weeks 1-2: Revision workshops
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Understand the ways in which artistic expression has positioned itself in relation to revolutionary events
- Examine in-depth the historical contexts of each revolution and relate them to specific artistic productions
- Explore the political and social contexts of each revolution and understand how they impacted on artistic production
- Critically analyse specific artistic productions by deploying an appropriate theoretical framework
- Compare artistic productions from various eras and in different parts of the world, and attempt to theorise their contributions
- Compare dominant revolutionary narratives and scholarship with marginalized ones in relation to scholarly theory and practice
- Have demonstrated foundational research and professional communication skills
Indicative reading list
Arendt, H. (1963) On revolution. London: Faber & Faber.
Arendt, H. (1970) On violence. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich.
Attwood, B. (2003) Rights for Aborigines. Sydney: Allen & Unwin.
‘Battleship Potemkin’ (1925). FilmFour.
Beaty, B. and Woo, B. (2016) The greatest comic book of all time: symbolic capital and the field of American comic books. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
Bonnell, V. E. (1999) Iconography of Power: Soviet Political Posters Under Lenin and Stalin. Berkerley: University of California Press.
Chang, J. (1991) Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Chesterman, J. and Galligan, B. (1997) Citizens Without Rights: Aborigines and Australian Citizenship. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Chinese Posters: Propaganda, Politics, History, Art. https://chineseposters.net/.
Chute, H. L. (2010) Graphic women: life narrative and contemporary comics. New York: Columbia University Press.
Clark, K. et al. (2006) Soviet Culture and Power: A History in Documents, 1917-1953. New Haven: Yale University Press.
Clark, P. (2008) The Chinese Cultural Revolution: A History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Connelly, O. and Hembree, F. (1993) The French Revolution. Arlington Heights, Ill: Harlan Davidson.
Coppola, S. et al. (2006) ‘Marie Antoinette.’ London: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment.
Darnton, R. (1995) The forbidden bestsellers of pre-revolutionary France. London: W.W. Norton.
Doyle, W. (2002) The Oxford history of the French Revolution. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Esherick, J.W. et al (eds.) (2006) The Chinese Cultural Revolution as History. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
‘Goodbye Lenin’ (2003). BBC4.
Haebich, A. (2001) Broken Circles: Fragmenting Indigenous Families, 1800-2000. Fremantle: Fremantle Arts Centre Press.
Han, D. (2008) The Unknown Cultural Revolution. New York: Monthly Review Press.
Hanson, P. R. (2009) Contesting the French Revolution. Chichester, UK: Wiley-Blackwell.
Highway, T. (2008) Kiss of the fur queen. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
Hobsbawm, E. (1998) On History. London: Little, Brown Book Group.
Hobsbawm, E. J. (1977) The age of revolution: Europe, 1789-1848. London: Abacus.
James, C. L. R. and Walvin, J. (2001) The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L’Ouverture and the San Domingo revolution. London: Penguin.
Joseph Betz (1992) ‘An Introduction to the Thought of Hannah Arendt’, Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society. Indiana University Press, 28(3), pp. 379–422.
View reading list on Talis Aspire
Interdisciplinary
This is a core module on the BA in Liberal Arts course which offers students a unique transdisciplinary learning experience that enables students to achieve a breadth and depth of knowledge.
Subject specific skills
Understand the ways in which artistic expression has positioned itself in relation to Revolutionary events
Examine, in-depth, the historical contexts of each revolution and relate them to specific artistic productions
Explore the Political and Social contexts of each revolution and understand how they impacted on artistic production
Critically analyse specific artistic productions by deploying an appropriate theoretical framework
Compare artistic productions from various eras and in different parts of the world, and attempt to theorise their contribution
Transferable skills
Critical analysis, theorise to assimilate and consolidate knowledge
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Practical classes | 22 sessions of 2 hours (7%) |
Other activity | 12 hours (2%) |
Private study | 244 hours (41%) |
Assessment | 300 hours (50%) |
Total | 600 hours |
Private study description
Reading, research, preparation for practical classes
Other activity description
Film screenings
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You do not need to pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Assessment group A1
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
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Assessment component |
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Presentation | 10% | 30 hours | Yes (extension) |
Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Archival Analysis | 15% | 40 hours | Yes (extension) |
Archival research |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Image Analysis | 15% | 40 hours | Yes (extension) |
Analysis of a still image. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Film Analysis | 15% | 40 hours | Yes (extension) |
Analysis of a Film |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Research Project | 30% | 120 hours | Yes (extension) |
A 3000 word research project. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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In-class Analytical Exam | 15% | 30 hours | No |
Analytical exam. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
Feedback on assessment
All written assessment, except for the final in-class test, will be submitted electronically via Tabula. Feedback will be provided electronically within the university’s prescribed timeline of 20 days. Each student will be given individual feedback on their work in dedicated office & feedback hours.
Courses
This module is Core for:
- Year 1 of UVCA-LA99 Undergraduate Liberal Arts