Semester 1, 2022 Online | |
Units : | 1 |
Faculty or Section : | Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts |
School or Department : | School of Creative Arts |
Grading basis : | Graded |
Course fee schedule : | /current-students/administration/fees/fee-schedules |
Staffing
Examiner:
Requisites
Enrolment is not permitted in THT1001 if THE1001 has been previously completed.
Overview
The study of the performance event, dramatic texts, and theatre theories, provides insights into human experience and modes of critical thinking that will be useful throughout a student’s program of study and beyond. To do this effectively a student of theatre requires foundational skills in reading, researching and analysing plays, and the ability to formulate and present academic arguments about drama in its historical contexts. A broad knowledge of pre-modern playtexts from the Western classical tradition (from ancient Greece to early modern Europe), is central to the knowledges required for theatre, arts, communication, humanities and education students.
This course offers the student an historical and theoretical journey through theatrical and dramatic literature. Through a contextual study of some of the most read and performed plays from the classical tradition, covering ancient Greek, Shakespearean, and neo-classical drama, this course provides students with foundational techniques in textual analysis, academic debate, research, essay writing and scholarship in drama. It will include a focus on the ways in which these stories continue to be staged, adapted, and re-written in early twenty-first century contexts.
Course learning outcomes
On successful completion of this course students should be able to:
- apply concepts of cultural literacy to explain the way in which drama functions within specific theatrical and social contexts;
- investigate and examine specific dramatic and theoretical texts from Western classical traditions of pre-modern theatre up until the 17th Century;
- analyse the processes which make up the performance event in specific historical contexts;
- apply fundamental principles of scholarly method to the writing of essays;
- interpret and communicate ideas in writing using the essay genre and examination format.
Topics
Description | Weighting(%) | |
---|---|---|
1. | Defining Theatre: How to read a play in context | 10.00 |
2. | The origins of tragic theatre: Sophocles’ Oedipus the King and Euripides’ Medea | 20.00 |
3. | Comedy and patriarchy: Aristophanes’ Lysistrata | 10.00 |
4. | The rebirth of tragedy: Marlowe’s Dr Faustus and Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus | 20.00 |
5. | 'Boundaries’ of the body and identity: Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night. | 10.00 |
6. | Neo-classical formations: Moliere’s Tartuffe | 10.00 |
7. | The classical is contemporary: Dan Evans’ Oedipus doesn’t live here anymore and Spike Lee’s Chi-Raq | 20.00 |
Text and materials required to be purchased or accessed
Student workload expectations
To do well in this subject, students are expected to commit approximately 10 hours per week including class contact hours, independent study, and all assessment tasks. If you are undertaking additional activities, which may include placements and residential schools, the weekly workload hours may vary.
Assessment details
Description | Weighting (%) | Course learning outcomes |
---|---|---|
ESSAY 1: POSITION PAPER | 20 | 1,3,4,5 |
ESSAY 2: RESEARCH PAPER | 40 | 1,2,3,4,5 |
TAKE HOME EXAMINATION | 40 | 1,2,5 |