- Students are to follow the requirements of the Handbook for the year they commenced the course.
However, the subject links below do not contain the subject information for the current year. You can view current subject information through the new Course Handbook.
Cultural Studies
Cultural Studies is an innovative interdisciplinary field of inquiry that explores the production of culture, with a particular concern for the operations of power in everyday practice. Themes and topics include everyday life, global media and cultures, race, sexuality, identities, and the body and emotion. Students learn how to apply a broad and coherent body of knowledge in cultural studies to a range of contexts including a professional environment and as a pathway to further learning. Students gain experience in designing, managing and presenting research projects, working individually and in teams and work in a range of formats including reflective journals and creative writing, briefing papers, blogs and formal reports
Major Study
The Cultural Studies major requires a minimum of 54 credit points including one core subject at 100 level, both core subjects at 200 level and the core (capstone) subject at 300 level. The remaining subjects can be taken from the list of electives subjects listed in the study program below.
Minor Study
A minor in Cultural Studies will consist of at least 28 credit points from the schedule of the major. It will include CST 120 or CST 130, as well as CST 234 or CST 240 and CST 350. Students may not cross-count any subjects from the minor in any other minor or major study.
Subject Code | Subject Name | Credit Points | Session |
CORE At least one of the following 100 level core subjects | |||
The Culture of Everyday Life | 6 | Autumn | |
Ordinary Lives in a Diverse World | 6 | Spring | |
Plus both of the following 200 level core subjects | |||
Cultural Investigations | 8 | Autumn | |
Contesting Cultures | 8 | Spring | |
And the following Capstone 300 level subject | |||
Culture and the Creative Economy | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Electives 200-level subjects | |||
Transnational Media and Culture Industries | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Global Television and Cultural Identity | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Happiness: investigating its causes and conditions | 8 | Autumn | |
Youth Cultures | 8 | Spring | |
Electives 300-level subjects | |||
Culture and Emotion | 8 | Spring | |
Diasporic Cultures | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Hollywood and Beyond: Genres Across Cultures | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Genre Fictions | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Sex, Gender and Sexuality | 8 | Autumn | |
Critical Race Studies | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Cybercultures | 8 | Autumn | |
Emotions, Body and Society | 8 | Spring |
Themes and Topics that can be studied as part of the Cultural Studies Major are Emotions and Embodiment, Culture and Identities and Global Cultures. Should you wish to learn about any of these particular areas, the Faculty recommends the following list. These combinations of subjects listed below are not defined as Major or Minor Studies and will not appear on the Testamur or Transcript upon Graduation.
Emotions and embodiment
The study of the body and emotions in culture has developed over the past decade into an innovative domain of research and study that represents the cutting edge of cultural studies work. We are learning that emotions are not simply biologically generated phenomena, but rather are defined and enacted by and within the discourses of culture.
Subject Code | Subject Name | Credit Points | Session | |||
Happines: Investigating its causes and conditions | 8 | Autumn | ||||
Culture and Emotion | 8 | Spring | ||||
Emotions, Body and Society | 8 | Spring |
Culture and Identities
The question of how we understand ourselves and the ways in which that understanding is forged in a cultural context is at the heart of contemporary cultural studies. More has been written about identities in Cultural Studies than any other subject.
Subject Code | Subject Name | Credit Points | Session |
Sex, Gender and Sexuality | 8 | Autumn | |
Critical Race Studies | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Emotions, Body and Society | 8 | Spring |
Global Cultures
The processes of globalisation have made the boundaries of culture porous and to some degree enabled the interpenetration of cultural texts and practices to the extent that writers talk about cultural routes in global space rather than cultural roots in locations and place. Global media networks have been central to this process, although the transnational movements of people and the diffusion of vernacular cultural practices also play their part.
Subject Code | Subject Name | Credit Points | Session |
Transnational Media and Culture Industries | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Global Television and Cultural Identity | 8 | Spring | |
Diasporic Cultures | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Hollywood and Beyond: Genres across Cultures | 8 | Spring | |
Genre Fictions | 8 | N/O 2014 | |
Cybercultures | 8 | Autumn |
Honours
See Bachelor of Arts (Honours)
Other Information
Further information is available at:
UOW Course Finder
Email: lha-enquiries@uow.edu.au