Theatre & Performance Studies - THSTA23408
Stream Summary
Faculty: Faculty of Arts&Social Science
School: School of the Arts and Media
Contact: School of the Arts and Media
Program: 3408 - Arts (Dance) Education
Award(s):
Bachelor of Arts (Dance) Bachelor of Education (Minor)
Information valid for students commencing 2013.
Students who commenced prior to 2013 should go to the Handbook's Previous Editions
Stream Outline
The Minor in Theatre and Performance Studies (TPS) covers the theoretical and historical study of a wide range of human performance in the arts with a focus on contemporary forms of theatre and dance in Europe and Australasia. It is distinguished by an emphasis on engaging with disparate modes of performance – theatrical and cultural, European and Asian, contemporary and historical, text and non-text based, low and high culture – through a combination of both concept-driven and experiential learning.
While the primary objects of study in the Minor are theatre and dance, they are regarded in terms of their production of meanings, subjects, and social relations. Practical work is therefore undertaken in the BA program not to train students as professional practitioners, but in order that they may develop an informed critical language for the discussion and analysis of theatre and dance as areas of performance and reach a fuller appreciation of the production process and construction of meaning in the respective media.
The subject-specific aims of the BA Minor in TPS are:
- to foster the ability to describe, interpret and evaluate performance as events producing social meanings, subjects and relations;
- to develop the ability to theorise diverse performance from a range of critical perspectives;
- to generate analytical and embodied understanding of historical and contemporary performance making processes and skills:
- to develop competence in reading and realising the performance possibilities implied by a script, score and other textual or documentary source;
- to develop skills in group-based learning and ethical engagement with collaborators and receivers;
- to foster an understanding of the cultural and historical specificity of theatre and performance as well as an appreciation of the global nature of performance knowledges and practices;
- to encourage reflection on the nature and functions of live art in the contemporary world
Stream Structure
Students must complete the core course:
- ARTS2121 Critical Perspectives (6 UOC)
- ARTS2120 Writing for Performance (6 UOC)
- ARTS2122 Performance Production 1 (6 UOC)
- ARTS2123 Performing Popular Culture (6 UOC)
- ARTS2124 Staging Australia (6 UOC)
- ARTS2125 Theories of Acting (6 UOC)
- ARTS3123 Solo Performance (6 UOC)
- ARTS3124 Performance Production 2 (6 UOC)
- ARTS3125 Multimedia Performance (6 UOC)
- ARTS3126 Theatre History (6 UOC)