Bachelor of Arts

Interdisciplinary Foundation Subject

100-182: Self and Other

This subject is offered in semester two.

Handbook entry

Subject Description

This subject is concerned with questions of identity and ‘otherness’. In particular, it considers how identities are constructed and maintained through a culturally mediated process in which the dynamic relation between self and other plays a central role. Throughout the subject a range of identity forms – from individual to gender to ethnicity to nation – is examined. First, we consider the myriad cultural demands and devices that figure in constructing our senses of self and other (including language, leisure, musical, and even culinary practices, and beliefs about animals, the body and cleanliness). Second, through systematic exploration of identity and culture in a range of contexts, from pre-Enlightenment Europe to contemporary Australia, we consider various conceptions of self and other and the ways in which these conceptions are constructed and maintained. Finally, we consider how these culturally mediated conceptions of self and other are translated into material practices of inclusion, exclusion, discrimination, violence and criminalisation.

Subject Objectives

Students who complete this subject should:

Interdisciplinary Foundation Skills

Students who complete this subject should: