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CWR2001 Fairy Tales and Other Forms

Units : 1
Faculty or Section : Faculty of Business, Education, Law and Arts
School or Department : School of Humanities & Communication
Grading basis : Graded
Course fee schedule : /current-students/administration/fees/fee-schedules

Requisites

Pre-requisite: CWR1001 and CWR1002

Overview

Students need to comprehensively and critically engage with the ways that writers and writing impact on and respond to changes in the national and international fields of writing and publishing. A close study of the writing, publishing and production of fairy tales, both historically and in the contemporary context, enables students to develop a range of skills for writing engaging narratives informed by the history of culturally iconic narratives and narrative tropes, and a deeper understanding of how the history of narrative forms is reflected, developed and subverted in contemporary writing and publishing practices. Students need to consider writing within a global, multi-lingual, multicultural context and engage with issues of translation and appropriation, cross-cultural and intercultural writing, storytelling, and publishing.
This course is included in the Creative and Critical Writing major within the Bachelor of Arts program.
This course contributes to development of the Creative and Performing Arts Threshold Learning Outcomes, and USQ Graduate Capabilities.

This course will equip students with a range of skills required in the workforce, and in professional writing practice, including interpreting and responding to market submission guidelines, meeting deadlines, and writing to purpose. Through close study of a suite of folk and fairy tales, this course will equip students with a deep understanding of how writers draw on traditional forms to create dynamic and engaging contemporary works of fiction. The course is designed to emphasise the dynamic relationship between reading the works of other writers, and developing personal writing skills and techniques.

During the course, students will read, analyse, and write folk and fairy tales. Students will examine a range of traditional tales - including works collected by the Brothers Grimm, tales written by Hans Christian Andersen, and tales from the French contes de f茅e tradition - as well as contemporary retellings and original works. Students' own original or retold fairy tales will draw on this rich tradition.

Course offers

精东传媒app period Mode Campus
Semester 1, 2022 On-campus Toowoomba
Semester 1, 2022 Online
Date printed 10 February 2023