James Cook University Subject Handbook - 2002

EL2040:04

*NOTE* Strangers in the South Pacific

Cairns

HECS Band 1

12 lectures, 24 tutorials. Semester 2.

Staff: Dr R Lansdown.

The South Seas have been a particular object for Eurocentric imaginative scrutiny ever since the beginning of the 18th century. The South Sea Bubble, the Cook voyages and the Bligh mutiny were early instances; later writers like Melville, Stevenson and Gauguin, saw the area in quite different, explicitly romantic terms; in the 20th century imaginative perceptions have changed all over again. The South Seas are, all at once it seems, a ‘dark continent’ awaiting civilisation and exploitation, an escapist idyll and a mirror in which Western writers have seen their own disappointments.

Learning Objectives:

  1. to broaden and intensify the literary-critical skills and understanding attained by students at earlier levels, particularly where essay writing and extra-literary issues are concerned;
  2. to attain a full and close understanding of particular set texts;
  3. to achieve a reasonable understanding of the patterns of ‘Eurocentric’ imaginative responses to the South Pacific area (loosely defined) since the period of discovery and colonisation.

Assessment by participation in discussion (20%); one assignment of 1,500 words (30%); one essay of 3,000 words (50%).