CU5031 - Crime, Media and Popular Culture
[Offered in even-numbered years]
Credit points: | 03 |
Year: | 2010 |
Student Contribution Band: | Band 1 |
Administered by: | School of Arts & Social Sciences |
The representation of crime in the popular media has vital political, social, and psychological significance. This subject enables students to study this phenomenon in an historical context while providing them with theoretical and methodological tools for its analysis.
Learning Outcomes
- an understanding of the historical development of crime fiction across the media;
- an introduction to the social, psychological and ideological factors which have informed the idea of 'crime' in the modern western cultural imagination;
- command of the theoretical and methodological tools for analysis of popular cultural narrative.
Graduate Qualities
- The ability to think critically, to analyse and evaluate claims, evidence and arguments;
- The ability to speak and write logically, clearly and creatively;
- The ability to use and interpret different media.
Inadmissible Subject Combinations: | CU2031 CU3031 |
Availabilities | |
Townsville, Internal, Study Period 1 | |
Census Date 25-Mar-2010 | |
Coordinator: | Dr Mervyn Bendle |
Lecturers: | Dr Greg Manning, Dr Mervyn Bendle. |
Contact hours: |
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Assessment: | other exams (40%); seminar participation (20%); essays (40%). |
Note: Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process, and in case of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest official information.