Course overview
- Study period
- Semester 1, 2026 (23/02/2026 - 20/06/2026)
- Study level
- Undergraduate
- Location
- St Lucia
- Attendance mode
- In Person
- Units
- 2
- Administrative campus
- St Lucia
- Coordinating unit
- Historical & Philosophical Inq
Across the long twentieth century, Australian society and culture was transformed. There were dramatic, even spectacular events: Federation; the First World War; the expansion of cities and social worlds in the 1920; the travails caused by the Great Depression; the upheavals of the Second World War; new migrations from the 1950s onwards; the revolutions of the 1960s and 1970s; the rise of an Indigenous protest movement and moves towards Reconciliation, and much more. There were equally significant changes to the way people understood their world, to their thought systems and their beliefs. This course explores these and other events and developments in Australia since 1901, placing an emphasis on their impact on ordinary people and everyday life.
HIST2247 is designed to introduce students to some of the leading scholarship and debates in studies of Australian society and culture. We will also think about ways of writing history, its sources, methods and theories. Together we will explore a period of change and movement, and think about the ways Australia was altered across a tumultuous century, and the impact this has had on the ways we live now. Some of the major themes that run through the course include how national and international events and decisions impacted on everyday people's lives, and how they experienced and influenced the world around them. Indigenous perspectives and experiences are incorporated through much of the course.
HIST2247 is designed to introduce students to some of the leading scholarship and debates in studies of Australian society and culture. We will also think about ways of writing history, its sources, methods and theories. Together we will explore a period of change and movement, and think about the ways Australia was altered across a tumultuous century, and the impact this has had on the ways we live now. Some of the major themes that run through the course include how national and international events and decisions impacted on everyday people's lives, and how they experienced and influenced the world around them.
Course requirements
Assumed background
There is no assumed background for this course.
Incompatible
You can't enrol in this course if you've already completed the following:
HIST7247
Course contact
Course staff
Lecturer
Tutor
Timetable
The timetable for this course is available on the UQ Public Timetable.
Additional timetable information
Lecture recordings which will be available each week from soon after the lecture. These will be supplemented by PowerPointᅠpresentations and other material available on the Blackboard site. However, it is much better for everyone if people physically attend lectures where possible. Tutorials are assessed, and attendance is important for your learning and for your results.
Aims and outcomes
This course aims to:
1) help you appreciate the different perspectives on the past offered by social, cultural and political history;
2) give you a good grasp of the key events, themes and developments in Australian history from 1901 to the present;
3) incite you to think about the relationship between Australian and global history;
4) prompt you to think about the relationship between individuals and the big sweep of history - between micro and macro views;
5) encourage you to reflect on the relationship between ᅠmemory and history, in large part by considering the pros and cons of using memoirs and oral histories as historical sources; and
6) encourage an enhanced understanding of Indigenous experiences and perspectives.
ᅠ
Learning outcomes
After successfully completing this course you should be able to:
LO1.
Understand the complex nature of Australian society, its different elements, and their separate and shared pasts, including Indigenous.
LO2.
Identify, discuss and debate the main issues in twentieth-century Australian history and their importance to Australia today.
LO3.
Reflect on and discuss the different approaches to the past offered by social, cultural and political history, and the place of Indigenous perspectives.
LO4.
Reflect on and discuss the key problems and benefits offered by oral history sources and memoirs for an understanding of the past.
LO5.
Better express yourself in writing and in reasoned discussion with your peers.
LO6.
Demonstrate an ability to identify key ways in which Australian history fits into, or runs counter to, a bigger historical picture.
Assessment
Assessment summary
| Category | Assessment task | Weight | Due date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participation/ Student contribution |
Tutorial Participation
|
10% |
2/03/2026 - 18/05/2026 |
| Examination |
Midterm Exam
|
20% |
15/04/2026 2:00 pm |
| Essay/ Critique | Research Essay | 30% |
15/05/2026 2:00 pm |
| Examination |
Final Exam
|
40% |
End of Semester Exam Period 6/06/2026 - 20/06/2026 |
Assessment details
Tutorial Participation
- In-person
- Mode
- Activity/ Performance, Oral
- Category
- Participation/ Student contribution
- Weight
- 10%
- Due date
2/03/2026 - 18/05/2026
- Learning outcomes
- L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06
Task description
Students are required to attend tutorials across the semester and participate in class discussion. Marks will be awarded for evidence of having completed the required readings for each tutorial and for engaging substantially in class discussions.
NOTE: There are no tutorials in Weeks 1, 7, and 13.
Submission guidelines
Deferral or extension
You cannot defer or apply for an extension for this assessment.
Midterm Exam
- Identity Verified
- In-person
- Mode
- Written
- Category
- Examination
- Weight
- 20%
- Due date
15/04/2026 2:00 pm
- Learning outcomes
- L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06
Task description
Midterm Exam that will be administered during the Week 7 Lecture, testing knowledge of the learning activities of Weeks 1-6.
AI Use: This assessment task is to be completed in-person. The use of generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) or Machine Translation (MT) tools will not be permitted. Any attempted use of AI or MT may constitute student misconduct under the Student Code of Conduct.
Exam details
| Planning time | no planning time minutes |
|---|---|
| Duration | 90 minutes |
| Calculator options | No calculators permitted |
| Open/closed book | Closed book examination - no written materials permitted |
| Exam platform | Paper based |
| Invigilation | Invigilated in person |
Submission guidelines
Deferral or extension
You may be able to defer this exam.
Research Essay
- Mode
- Written
- Category
- Essay/ Critique
- Weight
- 30%
- Due date
15/05/2026 2:00 pm
- Learning outcomes
- L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06
Task description
Due date: 15 May, 2:00pm
Length: 2000 words
In this essay, you are required to examine one identifiable section of Australian society in a specific historical period that came to believe it was being treated unfairly by the broader community, and particularly by government and its agencies.
You must clearly identify both the group and the period you are examining on the cover sheet or title page of your essay (for example: veterans after World War I; Indigenous Australians in the interwar period; gay men in the 1960s and 1970s; single parents in the 1970s).
Your essay should address the following questions:
- What grievances did this group articulate, and how did they understand their treatment as unjust?
- What did they campaign for, and through what means (for example, political activism, lobbying, protest, legal action, or public debate)?
- To what extent were their aims achieved? If their campaigns were unsuccessful or only partially successful, why? If they did achieve their goals, what factors contributed to this outcome?
In answering these questions, you may interpret “section of society” or “group” narrowly (focusing on the group itself) or more broadly, to include its supporters, advocates, and allies.
Referencing Requirements: This is a research essay. You are expected to engage with a substantial body of historical scholarship and primary evidence.
- Your essay must be fully referenced using footnotes (Chicago 17 or 17A) and include a bibliography.
- In-text referencing is not permitted.
- All references to books and journal articles must include specific page numbers (not page ranges). Essays that do not include page numbers may be returned for resubmission and may be penalised.
- Footnotes are not included in the word count unless they are discursive in nature.
For this assignment, you should consult at least ten secondary sources and at least three primary sources. Primary sources should, wherever possible, originate from members of the group you are examining.
Word Limits: A word count that is within ±10% of the set length (word limit) is acceptable. Word count does not include footnotes; however, discursive footnotes are included in the word count. A word count that is outside these 10% will receive a proportionate penalty and will be graded against the grading criteria.
Presentation & Style: Your essay must be written in continuous prose, using a standard essay format (no dot points). The argument should be clearly structured and coherently developed. Please familiarise yourself with the university’s policies on plagiarism. Any essay found to contain evidence of plagiarism will be subject to disciplinary action.
AI Use: This task has been designed to be challenging, authentic and complex. Whilst students may use AI and/or MT technologies, successful completion of assessment in this course will require students to critically engage in specific contexts and tasks for which artificial intelligence will provide only limited support and guidance. A failure to reference generative AI or MT use may constitute student misconduct under the Student Code of Conduct. To pass this assessment, students will be required to demonstrate detailed comprehension of their written submission independent of AI and MT tools. Students must also fill out an AI disclosure sheet and submit it as the cover page for their essay.
Submission guidelines
Submit via Turnitin on Blackboard.
Deferral or extension
You may be able to apply for an extension.
The maximum extension allowed is 28 days. Extensions are given in multiples of 24 hours.
Extension applications must be via my.UQ –> Manage my program - > exams and assessment -> Applying for an extension.
Extension applications must be submitted at least 24 hours prior to the submission date, unless the medical or other circumstances are such that the student cannot reasonably be expected to have applied by the appropriate due date.
Extension requests may take up to 48 hours to be assessed (not including weekends and public holidays).
Late submission
A penalty of 10% of the maximum possible mark will be deducted per 24 hours from time submission is due for up to 7 days. After 7 days, you will receive a mark of 0.
Late submission of assessment will incur a penalty of 10% of the marks available for the assessment item, per calendar day or part-day after the due date, for a maximum of 10 days, after which a mark of zero will be recorded.
Final Exam
- Identity Verified
- In-person
- Mode
- Written
- Category
- Examination
- Weight
- 40%
- Due date
End of Semester Exam Period
6/06/2026 - 20/06/2026
- Learning outcomes
- L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06
Task description
Final exam that will consist of two parts: the first part will test knowledge of Weeks 7 to 13; the second part will be an essay question testing knowledge of the whole course. There will be plenty of choice.
AI Use: This assessment task is to be completed in-person. The use of generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) or Machine Translation (MT) tools will not be permitted. Any attempted use of AI or MT may constitute student misconduct under the Student Code of Conduct.
Exam details
| Planning time | 10 minutes |
|---|---|
| Duration | 180 minutes |
| Calculator options | No calculators permitted |
| Open/closed book | Closed book examination - no written materials permitted |
| Exam platform | Paper based |
| Invigilation | Invigilated in person |
Submission guidelines
Deferral or extension
You may be able to defer this exam.
Course grading
Full criteria for each grade is available in the Assessment Procedure.
| Grade | Cut off Percent | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (Low Fail) | 0 - 24 |
Absence of evidence of achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 1, Low Fail (0-24%), is generally awarded in cases where some assessment has been submitted, but it is of wholly unsatisfactory standard or quantity. In work submitted, however, there is no demonstrated evidence of understanding of the concepts of the field of study or basic requirements of the course. |
| 2 (Fail) | 25 - 44 |
Minimal evidence of achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 2, Fail (25-44%), is generally awarded to work that exhibits deficiencies in understanding and applying the fundamental concepts of the course and field of study, and as such, does not satisfy the basic requirements of the course. Often, one or more major items of assessment will not have been completed. |
| 3 (Marginal Fail) | 45 - 49 |
Demonstrated evidence of developing achievement of course learning outcomes Course grade description: Grade 3, Marginal Fail (45-49%), is generally awarded if a student has submitted work that attempts to meet the knowledge and skill requirements of the course, but is only able to demonstrate a superficial understanding of the fundamental concepts of the course. Students will usually have attempted all major pieces of assessment and show that they have an identifiable, emerging ability to apply basic knowledge and skills. |
| 4 (Pass) | 50 - 64 |
Demonstrated evidence of functional achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 4, Pass (50-64%), is generally awarded where all major items of assessment have been submitted. An adequate knowledge of the fundamental concepts of the course and field of study should be demonstrated and a functional skill level achieved. |
| 5 (Credit) | 65 - 74 |
Demonstrated evidence of proficient achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 5, Credit (65-74%), is generally awarded where all items of assessment have been completed and a substantial understanding of the fundamental concepts of the course and field of study have been demonstrated. |
| 6 (Distinction) | 75 - 84 |
Demonstrated evidence of advanced achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 6, Distinction (75-84%), is generally awarded where all items of assessment have been completed and substantial knowledge of the deeper and more complex aspects of the course and field of study have been demonstrated. |
| 7 (High Distinction) | 85 - 100 |
Demonstrated evidence of exceptional achievement of course learning outcomes. Course grade description: Grade 7, High Distinction (85-100%), is generally awarded where all items of assessment have been completed and there is evidence that the deeper and more complex aspects of the course and field of study have been mastered. |
Additional course grading information
ASSESSMENT CRITERIA
Tutorial Participation Assessment Criteria
Your tutorial participation will be assessed according to the following criteria:
- Evidence of participation in discussions.
- Evidence of preparation for the tutorial, most notably through completing the set readings.
- Quality of contributions to discussions.
- Fostering of group discussions, through courteous and respectful interactions with staff and students.
- Attendance is necessary to fulfill the above criteria, as per the course requirements, but marks cannot be awarded for attendance alone.
To achieve a grade of 7 (High Distinction, 85–100%), your attendance will be flawless and your participation exceptional. This grade reflects exceptional levels of preparation, mastery of course materials, and very high quality contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions. You should be able to engage with your peers very effectively.
To achieve a grade of 6 (Distinction, 75–84) your attendance will be excellent and your participation very substantial. This grade reflects excellent levels of preparation, knowledge of course materials, and high quality contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions. You should be able to engage with your peers effectively.
To achieve a grade of 5 (Credit, 65–74%), your attendance and participation will be good. This grade reflects proficient levels of preparation, good knowledge of course materials, and good quality contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions.
To achieve a grade of 4 (Pass, 50–64%) your attendance and participation will be satisfactory. This grade reflects adequate levels of preparation and knowledge of course materials, and an acceptable quality of contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions.
To achieve a grade of 3 (Marginal Fail, 45–49%) your attendance and participation will be unsatisfactory. This grade reflects irregular attendance and/or participation and superficial knowledge of course materials and basic levels of preparation. However, when in attendance, there is evidence of your ability to demonstrate developing achievement in contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions.
To achieve a grade of 2 (Fail, 25–44%), your attendance and participation will be very unsatisfactory. This grade reflects irregular attendance and/or participation, minimal knowledge of course materials, little evidence of preparation, and mixed to low quality of contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions.
To achieve a grade of 1 (Low Fail, 0–24%), your attendance and participation will be unsatisfactory. This grade reflects irregular attendance and/or participation, an no evidence of preparation, and little or no evidence of quality of contributions to, and fostering of, group discussions.
Essay Assessment Criteria
Your essay will be assessed according to the following criteria:
- Ability to construct a well-reasoned argument.
- Depth and breadth of knowledge and understanding of central issues.
- Ability to form a well-structured essay.
- Engagement with academic sources and evidence.
- Creativity or originality in analysis
- Capacity to produce a coherent and well-written essay using correct grammar and syntax.
- Appropriately referenced, as per discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 7 (High Distinction, 85–100%), your essay will reflect an exceptional level of achievement. It will demonstrate that you have undertaken extensive, high-level research, that you are able to form a very rigorous, well-organised argument, and that your discussion is original and creative. It will also demonstrate that you are able to evaluate and organise data and/or evidence in a critical manner and that you have a sophisticated and insightful understanding of problems and issues. Your essay will be very well written, clear and concise, pay strict attention to discipline conventions and have minimal, if any errors in referencing and expression. Your work must demonstrate your own analysis, argumentation, and use of evidence through thoroughly verified sources. You must demonstrate close engagement with sources in their disciplinary context.
To achieve a grade of 6 (Distinction, 75–84%), your essay will reflect an advanced level of achievement. It will demonstrate that you have undertaken wide research, that you are able to form a rigorous, well-organised argument, and that your discussion is coherent and convincing. It should also demonstrate that you are able to evaluate data and/or evidence in a perceptive manner, and that your understanding of problems and issues is perceptive and insightful. Your essay will be well written, clear and concise, follow discipline conventions and have few errors in referencing and expression. Your work must demonstrate your own analysis, argumentation, and use of evidence through thoroughly verified sources. You must demonstrate close engagement with sources in their disciplinary context.
To achieve a grade of 5 (Credit, 65–74%) your essay will reflect a proficient level of achievement. It will demonstrate that you have undertaken the expected level of research, that you are able to develop or adapt convincing arguments and justify them adequately, that you are able to evaluate data and/or evidence in a proficient manner, and that you have a proficient understanding of problems and issues. The presentation and referencing of your essay will largely follow discipline conventions, perhaps have some errors in expression, and demonstrate your ability to communicate effectively. Your work must demonstrate your own analysis, argumentation, and use of evidence through verified sources. You work will have some inconsistencies or contradictions that fail to demonstrate proficient understanding. You must demonstrate engagement with sources in their disciplinary context.
To achieve a grade of 4 (Pass, 50–64%) your essay should reflect a functional level of achievement. It should demonstrate that you are able to apply fundamental concepts and skills, that you have undertaken a basic level of research and have the basic ability to evaluate data and/or evidence, to identify problems and issues, to offer insights and to develop routine arguments. Your organisation, writing, referencing, and expression will be adequate and use some of the discipline conventions to communicate appropriately. Your work must demonstrate your own analysis, argumentation, and use of evidence through verified sources. Your work will have inconsistencies and contradictions that demonstrate only adequate understanding. You must demonstrate engagement with sources in their disciplinary context.
To achieve a grade of 3 (Marginal Fail, 45–49%), your essay should reflect developing levels of achievement. It should demonstrate that you have a superficial knowledge of fundamental concepts and skills, that you have undertaken a basic level of research, made some attempt to evaluate data and/or evidence, to identify problems and issues, and to offer insights. Your arguments, while underdeveloped, show your emerging ability to apply knowledge and skills. Your organisation, writing, and expression will be adequate, perhaps poor, and your referencing and use of discipline conventions poor/and or inconsistent. Your work will fail to adequately demonstrate independent analysis and argumentation that arises from your own engagement with and synthesis of source materials or assessment stimuli. Your work will have inconsistencies and contradictions. You will demonstrate a mostly stereotypical and/or superficial understanding of concepts, ideas, and source materials/stimuli, failing to demonstrate engagement with sources in their disciplinary context. The overall response will not adequately address the task.
To achieve a grade of 2 (Fail, 25–44%) your essay will reflect deficiencies in skill acquisition and in your understanding of the fundamental concepts of the course. It will demonstrate that you have not undertaken adequate research, that you are unable to evaluate data and/or evidence, to identify problems and issues, or to offer insights adequately. Your arguments will be unsupported and/or inappropriate, your organisation and writing will be poor and/or inappropriate, and referencing and use of discipline conventions poor/and or inconsistent. Your work will fail to adequately demonstrate independent analysis and argumentation that arises from your own engagement with and synthesis of source materials or assessment stimuli. You will demonstrate a mostly stereotypical and/or superficial understanding of concepts, ideas, and source materials/stimuli, failing to demonstrate engagement with sources in their disciplinary context. Your work will have inconsistencies and contradictions The overall response will not adequately address the task.
To achieve a grade of 1 (Low Fail, 0–24%), your essay will reflect that you have failed to meet the minimum learning requirements and skill acquisition for this course. Your essay will demonstrate an absence of research, evaluation of data and/or evidence, and lack argumentation. Use of discipline conventions will be absent, poor or inappropriate, and written expression poor or inappropriate. Your work will show no original analysis or evidence of independent thought, with factual errors and misrepresentation of source material and no meaningful correspondence to the assignment prompt.
Word Limits: A word count that is within ±10% of the set length (word limit) is acceptable. Word count does not include footnotes; however, discursive footnotes are included in the word count. A word count that is outside these 10% will receive a proportionate penalty and will be graded against the grading criteria.
Failing Criteria and Academic Misconduct: Fabrication or misrepresentation of sources will result in an automatic maximum grade of 2 for this assessment, regardless of performance in other criteria. This includes but is not limited to: citing non-existent sources or attributing false quotes to real sources. Such issues demonstrate failure to meet the core learning outcomes for the course and may also be referred for academic misconduct.
Exam Assessment Criteria
Your exam responses will be assessed according to the following criteria:
Short Answer Questions
Students will be assessed on:
- Ability to produce a succinct response to a directed question.
- Knowledge of key themes or ideas.
- Ability to employ relevant terminology, as required.
- Clear and concise written expression, well presented.
Essay Questions
Students will be assessed on:
- Ability to recognize key issues in the question.
- Ability to structure an argument.
- Use of evidence.
- Engagement with academic scholarship and/or debates.
- Clear and concise written expression, well presented.
Unlike formative assessments undertaken during your course (such as book reviews and essays), exam answers are typically marked on right or wrong basis for multiple choice, single word and short answer questions. Individual exam essays and other exam questions are not awarded grades, but are assessed numerically (such as a mark out of five, or a mark out of ten). The overall grade achieved for an exam is arrived at by totalling the marks for the constituent elements of the exam.
To achieve a grade of 7 (High Distinction, 85-100%), your exam will demonstrate an exceptional grasp of terminology, factual knowledge, themes and ideas. You will demonstrate an exceptional level of understanding and rigour in argumentation in responding to short and long answer prompts, showing exceptional clarity of ideas, understanding of issues, organisation of material, and insightful and creative responses. Your responses will be directly relevant to the prompts. The written expression and presentation will be excellent and follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 6 (Distinction, 75-84%), your exam will demonstrate an advanced grasp of terminology, factual knowledge, themes and ideas. You will demonstrate a very good level of understanding and rigour in argumentation in responding to short and long answer prompts, showing very good understanding of issues, organisation of material, and a capable synthesis of ideas. Your responses will be directly relevant to the prompts. The written expression and presentation will be very good and follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 5 (Credit, 65 – 74%), your exam will demonstrate a proficient grasp of terminology, factual knowledge, themes and ideas. You will demonstrate a good understanding and rigour in argumentation in responding to short and long answer prompts, showing good understanding of issues, good organisation of material, and a generally capable synthesis of ideas. Your responses will be indirectly relevant to the prompts. The written expression and presentation will be good and largely follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 4 (Pass, 50 – 64%), your exam will demonstrate a basic grasp of terminology, factual knowledge, themes and ideas. You will demonstrate a basic understanding and rigour in argumentation in responding to short and long answer prompts, showing a basic understanding of issues and adequate organisation of material. Your responses will be indirectly relevant to the prompts with unclear links between the prompts and your answer. Your written expression and presentation will be satisfactory and follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 3 (Marginal Fail, 45 – 49%), your exam will demonstrate an emerging grasp of terminology and factual knowledge that is underdeveloped and falling short of a pass. You will demonstrate a superficial and inadequate understanding in your responses to short and long answer prompts, showing poor argumentation and poor organisation. Your responses will be indirectly relevant to the prompts with unclear links between the prompts and your answer, offering tangential or unrelated information. Your written expression and presentation will be adequate and should attempt to follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 2 (Fail, 25-44%), your exam will demonstrate a limited or partial grasp of terminology and factual knowledge that is deficient and incomplete. Your responses to short and long answer prompts will show a deficient understanding with no attempt engage meaningfully with the prompts. You demonstrate overall deficiencies in fundamental aspects of this course through limited or poor organisation and explanations. Your responses will be unrelated to the prompts, answering only vaguely or tangentially to the prompt. Your writing will be poor and/or inappropriate, and will not follow discipline conventions.
To achieve a grade of 1 (Low Fail, 0-24%), your exam essay will demonstrate that you have failed to meet the minimum learning requirements and skill acquisition for this assessment task. You will have demonstrate little grasp of terminology or factual knowledge. Your responses to short and long answer prompts will demonstrate that you have inadequately understood fundamental aspects of this course. Your responses will be unrelated to the prompts. Your writing will be poorly organised and/or poorly written, and will not follow discipline conventions.
Supplementary assessment
Supplementary assessment is available for this course.
Additional assessment information
- Failure to submit all major assessment items (those worth 15% and above) will result in a maximum grade of 2 (Fail).
- By submitting work through Turnitin you are deemed to have accepted the following declaration:‘I certify that this assignment is my own work and has not been submitted, either previously or concurrently, in whole or in part, to this University or any other educational institution, for marking or assessment’.
- All students must ensure that they receive their Turnitin receipt on every submission of assessment items. YOU MUST CHECK THAT THE RECEIPT CONFIRMS THAT SUBMISSION HAS BEEN SUCCESSFUL.
- A valid Turnitin receipt will be the only evidence accepted if assessments are missing.ᅠWithout evidence, the assessment will receive the standard late penalty, or after 7 calendar days, will receive zero. In the case of a Blackboard outage, please contact the Course Coordinator as soon as possible so that they can confirm the outage with ITS.
- It is the responsibility of the student to ensure that they are submitting assessment items on a device that is capable of the task, and that appropriate internet bandwidth and speed is available. If you cannot be sure that your device or internet will enable you to complete or submit an assessment task, you must come onto campus and use one of the University Computers in the Library or Computer Labs.
- Plagiarism, and asking or paying someone else to do your work is cheating and constitutes academic misconduct. See ECP Section 6.1
- Feedback against the assessment criteria in the form of comments on your script will be provided through Turnitin or on your script directly.
- For information on assessment remarks see: https://my.uq.edu.au/information-and-services/manage-my-program/exams-and-assessment/querying-result
Learning resources
You'll need the following resources to successfully complete the course. We've indicated below if you need a personal copy of the reading materials or your own item.
Library resources
Library resources are available on the UQ Library website.
Additional learning resources information
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Learning activities
The learning activities for this course are outlined below. Learn more about the learning outcomes that apply to this course.
Filter activity type by
Please select
| Learning period | Activity type | Topic |
|---|---|---|
Week 1 (23 Feb - 01 Mar) |
Lecture |
Week 1 Lecture: A New Nation? Australia in 1901 A New Nation? Australia in 1901 Learning outcomes: L01 |
Week 2 (02 Mar - 08 Mar) |
Lecture |
Week 2 Lecture: White Australia and its Mythologies Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 2 Tutorial: Australia Unlimited? Population and Whiteness In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many feared that Australia’s supposedly limitless potential was being threatened by an inability to populate the nation with the “right” kind of people. Too many non-whites would undermine the “British” nature of Australia and create the potential for racial discord and even decline. Not enough “white” Australians would leave the potential of the continent under-exploited and, more seriously, mean that the “British” hold on the continent was insecure through vulnerability to immigration and invasion. One of a multitude of responses was to try and understand why birth rates were falling, and to take appropriate measures to increase them. The most serious attempt to wrestle with the issue was the 1903-4 NSW Royal Commission onto the Decline of the Birth-Rate and on the Mortality of Infants in New South Wales, part of the report of which constitutes your tutorial reading for this week. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings New South Wales Royal Commission on the Decline of the Birth Rate, Report of the Royal Commission on the Decline of the Birth Rate in New South Wales (Sydney: Government Printer, 1904), 14–44. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
|
Week 3 (09 Mar - 15 Mar) |
Lecture |
Week 3 Lecture: Diggers: Black, White and Broken (Associate Professor Martin Crotty) Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 3 Tutorial: War and Trauma The contemporary interest in Anzac Day and the lives of veterans of the Great War tends to both highlight and paradoxically hide the trauma of war itself. Interestingly, oral histories done with WWI veterans in the 1990s showed that they were unsentimental about war and spoke less of the glories than of the horrors of life at the front. It is important therefore to consider the cultural issues of loss, grief and silence experience by both soldiers and those on the home front in Australia, especially in the aftermath of the war itself. This week, we will consider these ideas of war, trauma and grief and the ways they reshaped Australia in the early twentieth century. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Tanja Luckins, “‘A Cruel Purgatory,’” in The Gates of Memory: Australian People’s Experiences and Memories of Loss and the Great War (Fremantle: Curtin University Books, 2004), 25–50. Pat Jalland, “‘The ‘Silent Heartache’ of the Great War,’” in Changing Ways of Death in Twentieth-Century Australia: War, Medicine and the Funeral Business (Sydney: UNSW Press, 2006), 75–105. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
|
Week 4 (16 Mar - 22 Mar) |
Lecture |
Week 4 Lecture: The Stolen Generations Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 4 Tutorial: Indigenous Children In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, all Australian colonies and states passed acts for the “protection” of Aboriginal Australians. This was the legislation that enabled the removal of Indigenous children from their parents in what became known as the “stolen generations”. In this tutorial we examine this legislation, and the experiences of children who were removed to missions and other institutions, and fostered to non-Indigenous families. Their testimony comes in the form of personal narratives delivered to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC)’s National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from their Families. This Commission, established in 1995, delivered its report, commonly known as the Bringing them Home report, in 1997. Despite considerable criticism from some quarters, the report has become the basis for popular understandings of the stolen generations, and for the national apology which was delivered in 2008. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Aborigines Protection Act 1909 (NSW). Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, Bringing Them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families (Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia, 1997), 153–176. David Hollinsworth, “Returns and Reunions: Many Journeys Home,” in Many Voices: Reflections on Experiences of Indigenous Child Separation, ed. Doreen Mellor and Anna Haebich (Canberra: National Library of Australia, 2002), 87–107. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
|
Week 5 (23 Mar - 29 Mar) |
Lecture |
Week 5 Lecture: On the Home Front, in War and Peace Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 5 Tutorial: The Great Depression – Fact or Fiction David Potts’s 2006 book disrupted the historical narrative about the Great Depression in Australia, challenging whether the depression itself was really all that substantial. Potts focuses instead of ideas of happiness, community and resilience, rather than on trauma, fear or hardship. It is interesting to think about Potts's book in terms of the primary evidence. In this tutorial, we will reflect on the nature of oral history and its status as an historical source, in particular in terms of nostalgia. We will also investigate the impact of the Depression on everyday life in 1930s Australia. Some of you may have family stories of great grandparents or great grandparents and their lives in the Depression in Queensland: if so, we’d love to hear their stories in class. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings David Potts, The Myth of the Great Depression (Melbourne: Scribe, 2006), 325–341. Janet McCalman, Struggletown: Public and Private Life in Richmond, 1900–1965 (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1998), 183–213. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06 |
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Week 6 (30 Mar - 05 Apr) |
Lecture |
Week 6 Lecture: Post War Migration (Associate Professor Martin Crotty) Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 6 Tutorial: Migration History and Migrants - A Case Study Australia is often rather self-congratulatory about the manner in which it altered migration policies after WWII and welcomed people from a variety of central, southern and eastern European countries that it had previously excluded. At the time, and in much commemoration since, Australia has been presented as welcoming and generous. Given the horrors of the previous decade, and the staggering persecution of national and ethnic “outsiders” through much of the world in the 1940s, Australian policy and practice can easily be seen as benevolent. But only in relative terms. The three readings this week all come from Alexandra Dellios. The first two show just how tough life was for migrant families in particular. The work contracts that men signed as part of their migration agreement separated them from their wives and children. Mothers found camp life hard, unrelenting and monotonous, and missed the support of their extended families. “Freedom” in Australia meant, for many, indentured labour, and closely supervised and crowded camps. Dellios is herself the granddaughter of Greek migrants who came to Australia as sponsored migrants (meaning that they had a family member or friend already resident in Australia to 'sponsor' their migration). Her family’s migration story sparked an interest in migration history which she began exploring as an undergraduate History student and continued into postgraduate study, then into an academic career. Keenly aware that her family’s story did not fit the simplistic commemorative narratives, Dellios has done much to expose the disjuncture between family and individual memories on one hand, and commemorative narratives on the other, for various waves of migrants. She and her work are thus an interesting case study in how academic history, often seen as elitist, provide an avenue for the voiceless to – eventually – be heard. Dellios is currently a senior lecturer in the Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies at the Australian National University. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Alexandra Dellios, “Displaced Persons, Family Separation and the Work Contract in Postwar Australia,” Journal of Australian Studies 40, no. 4 (2016): 418–432. Alexandra Dellios, “Unsettling Post-war Settlement: Remembering Unassimilable Families in the Space of the Migrant Camp,” in Interdisciplinary Unsettlings of Place and Space: Conversations, Investigations and Research, ed. Sarah Pinto, Shelley Hannigan, Bernadette Walker-Gibbs, and Emma Charlton (Singapore: Springer, 2019), 217–231. Alexandra Dellios, “‘Starting Fresh, Again and Again’: Family Experiences of Multiple Migrations to and From Australia,” in When Migrants Fail to Stay: New Histories on Departures and Migration, ed. Ruth Balint, Joy Damousi, and Sheila Fitzpatrick (London: Bloomsbury, 2023), 161–186. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06 |
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Mid-sem break (06 Apr - 12 Apr) |
No student involvement (Breaks, information) |
Midsemester Break |
Week 7 (13 Apr - 19 Apr) |
Lecture |
Week 7 Midterm Exam Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L04, L05, L06 |
Week 8 (20 Apr - 26 Apr) |
Lecture |
Week 8 Lecture: Youth Culture: The Rise of the Teenager Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 8 Tutorial: Gender and Sexuality in the Fifties - and Beyond In this week’s class, we will explore gender, heterosexuality and homosexuality in the 1950s. The fifties were a period of enormous material prosperity. This is a time of great economic stability: full employment, relatively high wages and the beginnings of the consumer culture. For a generation of people who have lived through the Depression and World War I, this was a golden age. But it was also a time of fear and uncertainty. Many people lived in fear of another Depression after WWII, and there were also broader political fears over communism and the far Left. To counter the fears and menaces of the outside world, the fifties saw a retreat to the home and to domesticity: the idyll of the “suburban dream”. This meant a home in the suburbs, with the wife at home with children, and the husband going out to work to support the family. Not all found this satisfying, however. Many women found themselves isolated within suburbia – more of a nightmare than a dream. And for those who were not heterosexual, the road was even more difficult and complex. Indeed, surveillance over homosexuality (mostly of men) intensified markedly in this period. In the second reading, we will consider the attempted control of homosexual men and women, and the impact this had on their lives. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Reading Lisa Featherstone, “‘Heterosexuality, Homosexuality and the ‘Happy Harmonious’ 1950s,’” in Let’s Talk About Sex: Histories of Sexuality in Australia from Federation to the Pill (Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011), 229–261. Robert Reynolds and Shirleene Robinson, Gay and Lesbian, Then and Now: Australian Stories from a Social Revolution(Melbourne: Black Inc., 2016), pt. 1, “The Veterans” (Merv and Nola). Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
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Week 9 (27 Apr - 03 May) |
Lecture |
Week 9 Lecture: Rebellion in the Sixties and Seventies (Associate Professor Martin Crotty) Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 9 Tutorial: Black Power, Black Rights The late 1960s and 1970s were periods of great cultural and political change in many Western nations, with a raft of social movements attempting to change the social order. These included movements for peace; Black Power; the green movement; feminism and gay rights. In this tutorial, we will examine some aspects of how indigenous Australians experienced this period of so-called revolution. In doing so we will consider a particular problem – how is it that the successful 1967 referendum, which was supposed to improve the lot of Indigenous Australians, was soon followed by the rise of the Black Power movement and the establishment of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy? Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Russell McGregor, “An Absent Negative: The 1967 Referendum,” History Australia 5, no. 2 (2008): 44.1–44.9. Edwina Howell, “Black Power – by Any Means Necessary,” in The Aboriginal Tent Embassy: Sovereignty, Black Power, Land Rights and the State, ed. Gary Foley, Andrew Schaap, and Edwina Howell (Oxford: Routledge, 2014), 67–83. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
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Week 10 (04 May - 10 May) |
Lecture |
Week 10 Lecture: The New Left and Generation Whitlam (Associate Professor Martin Crotty) Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 10 Tutorial: Remembering Vietnam In this tutorial, we consider how different sectors of Australian society remember and historicise the Vietnam War. The Vietnam conflict retains a dogged place in Australian national identity, in particular with regards to its inclusion/exclusion from the Anzac type mythologies. Even at the time, it was an unpopular war, and there was strong opposition to Australian involvement, and the use of conscription. This was heightened by the media presence during the conflict. For many Australians, the Vietnam War marked the first time that the human costs of a distant conflict were encountered with such immediacy. Although earlier wars had been photographed and filmed, Vietnam unfolded in an era of portable cameras, nightly television news, and rapid international distribution of images. Graphic footage of civilian suffering and battlefield casualties appeared regularly in newspapers and on television screens, bringing scenes of destruction into Australian living rooms in ways that had not previously been possible. Certain photographs became indelible. Most famous was Nick Ut’s 1972 image of nine-year-old Phan Thị Kim Phúc fleeing a napalm strike, her body burned and her face contorted in pain. Circulated widely in the Australian press, the photograph etched itself into the national consciousness, crystallising for many the moral and emotional shock of a war that now seemed both distant and uncomfortably close. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Reading Joy Damousi, Living with the Aftermath: Trauma, Nostalgia and Grief in Post-War Australia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 48–63. Mia Martin Hobbs, “‘We Went and Did an Anzac Job’: Memory, Myth, and the Anzac Digger in Vietnam,” Australian Journal of Politics and History 64, no. 3 (2018): 480–497. Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen, “War and Diaspora: The Memories of South Vietnamese Soldiers,” Journal of Intercultural Studies 34, no. 6 (2013): 697–713. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
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Week 11 (11 May - 17 May) |
Lecture |
Week 11 Lecture: National Identity in the 80s and 90s Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 11 Tutorial: Celebrating a Nation? The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries saw a burgeoning of Australian nationalism and a growing number of occasions in which Australia tried to publicly represent itself to both the outside world and its own people. The Bicentenary, marking 200 years of European colonisation, took place in 1988 and was followed 12 years later by the Sydney Olympics, and the year after that the Centenary of Federation. Meanwhile, Anzac Day grew steadily in importance from the late 1980s, and Australia Day from the late 1990s. In this tutorial we consider some of the issues surrounding national celebrations, and in particular who they exclude or marginalise. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Verity Burgmann and Jenny Lee, “Australia Deconstructed?: Assembling a People’s History of Australia since 1788,” Australian Historical Studies 23, no. 91 (1988): 153–161. William Pearson and Grant O’Neill, “Australia Day: A Day for All Australians?” in National Days: Constructing and Mobilising National Identity, ed. David McCrone and Gayle McPherson (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), 73–88. Richard White, “National Days and the National Past in Australia,” Australian Cultural History, no. 22 (2003): 55–72. Fabri Blacklock, “Telling It Our Way: Koori History in NSW,” Australian Cultural History, no. 22 (2003): 155–160. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
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Week 12 (18 May - 24 May) |
Lecture |
Week 12 Lecture: “White Australia has a Black History” (Associate Professor Fiona Foley) Learning outcomes: L01 |
Tutorial |
Week 12 Tutorial: Towards Reconciliation? Following the Bicentenary and the discovery by many that "White Australia has a Black History", the 1990s first raised and then dashed hopes for reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. In this tutorial we will consider three pivotal speeches from three of the key players in the Reconciliation debate - prime ministers Paul Keating and John Howard, and Patrick Dodson, the first Chairman of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation from its establishment in 1991 until he despaired in 1997. Tutorial Discussion Questions
Essential Readings Paul Keating, “Speech at the Australian Launch of the International Year for the World’s Indigenous People, Redfern,” December 10, 1992, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, https://pmtranscripts.pmc.gov.au (accessed January 19, 2024). John Howard, “Opening Address to the Australian Reconciliation Convention, Melbourne,” May 26, 1997, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, https://pmtranscripts.pmc.gov.au (accessed January 19, 2024). Patrick Dodson, “Beyond the Mourning Gate – Dealing with Unfinished Business,” The Wentworth Lecture, May 2000. Learning outcomes: L01, L02, L03, L05, L06 |
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Week 13 (25 May - 31 May) |
Lecture |
Week 13 Lecture: Conclusion and Final Exam Consultation Learning outcomes: L01 |
Policies and procedures
University policies and procedures apply to all aspects of student life. As a UQ student, you must comply with University-wide and program-specific requirements, including the:
- Student Code of Conduct Policy
- Student Integrity and Misconduct Policy and Procedure
- Assessment Procedure
- Examinations Procedure
- Reasonable Adjustments for Students Policy and Procedure
- AI for Assessment Guide
Learn more about UQ policies on my.UQ and the Policy and Procedure Library.