Situating Australia (WCIV3100)
Information valid for Semester 2, 2025
Course level
Undergraduate
Faculty
Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
School
Humanities Arts Social Science
Units
2
Duration
One Semester
Attendance mode
In Person
Class hours
Lecture 1 Hour/ Week
Seminar 2 Hours/ Week
Prerequisite
WCIV1100 or 4 units of HUMN courses.
Restricted
BAdvHum(Hons) and BHum/LLB(Hons) students only. BAdvHum(Hons) students taking this course as an elective please email westernciv@uq.edu.au to enable your enrolment. The maximum enrolment quota is 60.
Assessment methods
Participation, Essay, Reflective response to text
Course enquiries
Doctor Tamlyn Avery (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
Colonial Australia's establishment in 1788 positioned it as a classic Enlightenment project. In addition to solving British population problems, it also became a location of experiment with new environments, populations, and possibilities. Crucially, Indigenous and European cultural practices, perspectives, and traditions came into conflict and had to be negotiated from the outset. Geographically distant from Europe and located with ancient and continuing cultures in the Asia-Pacific region, Australian colonies were places of considerable interest to northern hemisphere philosophers and commentators. This course explores how convictism, distinctive natural environments, and forms of both settler and Indigenous identities were represented and debated in rich written and visual traditions. We draw on a wide range of visual, literary, dramatic, and musical forms produced by First Nations, settler, and external commentators to explore how the Enlightenment project played out in Australia in both its utopian and dystopian forms. The course also examines how contemporary writers and artists continue to engage with foundational texts of the nation and to reinterpret and remake them for new purposes.
Archived offerings
Course offerings | Location | Mode | Course Profile |
Semester 2, 2024 (22/07/2024 - 18/11/2024) | St Lucia | In Person | Course Profile |
Semester 2, 2023 (24/07/2023 - 18/11/2023) | St Lucia | In Person | Course Profile |
Semester 2, 2022 (25/07/2022 - 19/11/2022) | St Lucia | Internal | Course Profile |