College of Social Sciences and International Studies
The Animal Mirror: Representations of Animality
Module ANTM100 for 2017/8
Module ANTM100 for 2017/8
- Overview
- Aims and Learning Outcomes
- Module Content
- Indicative Reading List
- Assessment
Postgraduate Module Descriptor
ANTM100: The Animal Mirror: Representations of Animality
This module descriptor refers to the 2017/8 academic year.
Module Aims
The module aims
1. to provide students with a detailed and theoretically grounded insight into a wide variety of animal representations in literature, in the arts and in other ‘media’ forms;
2. to enable students to engage critically with the ways such representations relate to, and can inform wider philosophical discussions of contemporary import (such as the environmental crisis and global sustainability);
3. to develop students’ abilities to apply appropriate theoretical models to representations of animals and the ‘nonhuman’.
On successfully completing the programme you will be able to: | |
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Module-Specific Skills | 1. demonstrate a detailed and coherent knowledge of a range of theoretical approaches to the representations of 'animals' and the 'nonhuman' in literature, the arts, and other 'media' or 'cultural' forms; 2. critically evaluate and theoretically analyse the relationships between the representations of animals and the consumption of animal representations; e.g. author / reader, artist / viewer, advertiser / consumer; 3. display an understanding of the ways in which contemporary representations of animals might inform wider theoretical/philosophical debates such as global environmental crisis; |
Discipline-Specific Skills | 4. demonstrate a comprehensive understanding of the importance of 'animals' and 'animality' in the creation of anthropological ideas about self and others; 5. show a clear and detailed understanding of the historical development of theoretical approaches to the representations of animals within the social sciences; 6. demonstrate a reflexive awareness of the socio-cultural influences which lead to particular representations and interpretations of animals within the social sciences; 7. critically scrutinise dominant representations in light of recent theoretical developments in the social sciences; 8. synthesise visual imagery and written text in a coherent and critically analytical manner; |
Personal and Key Skills | 9. engage in independent research and analysis; 10. communicate complex ideas to a diverse audience; and 11. present information utilising a variety of different media, including visual media. |