Topics in Theatre Research (DRAM3103)
Information valid for Semester 2, 2025
Course level
Undergraduate
Faculty
Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Units
2
Duration
One Semester
Attendance mode
In Person
Class hours
2 Seminar hours
Incompatible
DRAM3100 or DRAM3101
Prerequisite
#8 from English or Drama Major
Restricted
Students should be in their final semester or two of study
Assessment methods
Participation, Presentation, Essay
Course enquiries
Doctor Emma Cole (Semester 2, St Lucia, In person)
Current course offerings
Course offerings | Location | Mode | Course Profile |
Semester 2, 2025 (28/07/2025 - 22/11/2025) | St Lucia | In Person | Profile unavailable |
Please Note: Course profiles marked as not available may still be in development.
Course description
Compulsory Third Year Course (Capstone). As its name suggests, this course examines theatre's engagement with themes of violence and conflict, and theatre's subsequent potential to affect its audiences viscerally. Starting with the Greeks, we trace our way though some of the most extreme plays in the canon, touching on Roman theatre, Medieval and Renaissance theatre, the nineteenth-century gothic, sensational melodramas, and contemporary iterations of violence on stage, to investigate how certain tropes and approaches have reoccurred or changed over time. Students will read accompanying critical theory and will have the opportunity to develop their own individual research projects. This course aims to deepen students' understanding of the development of some of the more provocative elements of Western theatre history, while consolidating their research skills.