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This course provides students with a framework for structured reflection on the relationship between history, anthropology and sociology.
This course is FRESH, FUNKY and FASCINATING!! It is a ‘hands-on’ introduction to historical inquiry taught through a combination of workshops, tutorials and field trips. Exploring the Past begins with an attempt to find common ground between the disciplines of anthropology and history. We visit two local archives and carry out a structured controversy exercise that seeks to establish whether the two disciplines are fundamentally distinct or share mutual areas of interest. In the class sessions that follow, we explore three case studies: death, museums and film. Our focus here is on (a) ways we might approach the past, including the use of documentary sources, material culture, visual media and oral histories and (b) the kinds of questions that confront those of us engaged in historical work (especially in museums). Who owns the past? Who may interpret the past? Whose story is it? Who should tell it?Some of the topics covered in the course in 2009 will be:The Uses of the PastWhat's in the Archives?Death and MemoryResurrecting the Prehistoric DeadAladdin's Cave: Exotic Story Telling in MuseumsThe Museum as CollectorVoices from the PastThe Past on Film: 'Reel History'?
18 points of Anthropology at 100 level. Students with at least a B average in 36 points of appropriate courses may be admitted with the approval of the Director of the Anthropology programme.
HIST288, SOCI238, SOCI338
HIST288, SOCI238
Lyndon Fraser
Course Reader
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Domestic fee $821.00
International fee $3,464.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
For further information see Language, Social and Political Sciences .