Reading, Writing and Criticism
Overview
This unit explores how postmodern practices and ideas can help students become more adventurous with their writing and with their experience of literature. It also examines how theoretical and cultural movements have impacted literary history and how these can be used as play in reading and writing. Techniques examined include sampling, collage, parody and pastiche, fragmented narratives, and stream of consciousness
Requisites
50 credit points
31-May-2026
30-May-2027
Unit learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this unit will be able to:
- Develop a critical research plan for a creative writing project
- Deliver a creative writing project that is contextualised by relevant scholarship with the intention to make a contribution to knowledge
- Participate in discussion that critically evaluates the relationship between creative practice and scholarly research
- Track and reflect critically on the creative process through the production of a writing commentary.
Teaching methods
Hawthorn
| Type | Hours per week | Number of weeks | Total (number of hours) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Live Online Lecture | 1.00 | 12 weeks | 12 |
| On-campus Class | 2.00 | 12 weeks | 24 |
| Online Learning activities | 3.00 | 12 weeks | 36 |
| Unspecified Activities Various | 6.50 | 12 weeks | 78 |
| TOTAL | 150 |
Assessment
| Type | Task | Weighting | ULO's |
|---|---|---|---|
| Written Assignment | Individual | 50% | 2,4 |
| Class Exercises | Individual | 20% | 1,3 |
| Reflective Essay | Individual | 30% | 1 |
Content
- Realism
- Modernism
- Postmodernism
- Hyperreality and the Culture of Simulation
- The Anxiety of Writing
- Disputing Authorship/Ownership: re-mixes, cut-ups and appropriations
- Labyrinths in Literature: non-linear and fragmented narratives
- Theories of Creativity
Study resources
Reading materials
A list of reading materials and/or required textbooks will be available in the Unit Outline on Canvas.