HIST11026 In Search of Australia:Historical Perspectives
Course Description
This course includes both a survey of selected themes in Australian history and also an introduction to the ways in which historians analyse and interpret history. This involves a continuing search for answers to the questions of what it means to be Australian and how successive Australians - from the Aborigines in pre- European times to the most recent waves of migrant people - have contributed to the emergence of contemporary Australia. Some of the themes examined are the relationship between Aboriginal Australians and their natural environment; the convict system; origins of the bush ethos in a predominantly urban Australia; women; wars; and Australia's economic, social and political development.
Course at a glance
| Faculty: | Faculty of Arts, Health and Sciences | 
| Career: | Undergraduate | 
| Credit points: | 6 | 
| Requisites: | This course has no pre/co-requisites | 
| HECS Banding: | 1 | 
| EFTSL | 0.125 | 
Course Availability
| Term | Campuses | 
|---|---|
| T3 | BDG: FLEX: MKY: ROK | 
| T5 | FLEX |