Unit convenor and teaching staff |
Unit convenor and teaching staff
Moderator
Nicole Matthews
Contact via nicole.matthews@mq.edu.au
Unit Convenor
Lara Palombo
Contact via lara.palombo@mq.edu.au
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Credit points |
Credit points
3
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Prerequisites |
Prerequisites
12cp
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Corequisites |
Corequisites
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Co-badged status |
Co-badged status
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Unit description |
Unit description
What does it mean to be 'healthy'? This course will critically examine the relationship between the way we understand and imagine 'health' and a range of practices, institutional frameworks and ways of bodily being. Contemporary debates such as those around smoking, obesity, sexual health and mental illness will be interrogated. We will explore how categories of 'health' and 'illness' play out in ethical and political decision making. How are ideas about 'normal' or 'pathological' bodies and identities tied into concepts of 'health'? And how does the idea that 'wellness' is an individual's responsibility play out in public policy and peoples' ways of understanding and managing their own bodies?
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Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
Name | Weighting | Due |
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Reading summaries | 10% | 3,4,8,9,12 |
take-home exam | 25% | 9.30 am -2 May 2014 |
essay plan | 20% | 9.30 am- 30th May, 2014 |
Essay | 35% | 4.30 pm, 17 June 2014 |
Participation | 10% | ongoing |
Due: 3,4,8,9,12
Weighting: 10%
Students must submit and discuss in tutorial class a summary of the essential readings in weeks 3, 4, 8, 9, and 12 (i.e. 5 in all). Summaries must be typed, submitted and discussed in tutorial class on the readings from previous week. Summaries that are submitted late will not be marked and will be awarded an 'F' (Fail).
Due: 9.30 am -2 May 2014
Weighting: 25%
The take-hom exam will require students to provide defintions and critiques of 'everyday' terms, and also to explain key concepts.
The Exam will be released in iLearn at 9 am of Thursday 17 April. The Exam is due back on Friday 2 April 9.30 am. The paper must be submitted in Turnitin and handed in hard copy at the Lecture. Papers will not be marked if submission procedure is not followed correctly and will be awarded an ‘F’ (Fail).
Please note that this is an exam. Extensions cannot be granted and no late papers will be accepted. Students will need to apply for Special Consideration to avoid an automatic Fail (0 grade).
Due: 9.30 am- 30th May, 2014
Weighting: 20%
Students will submit a plan of 1000 words for the final essay. A copy of the essay plan format used for this task will be made available in iLearn and discussed in class.
The Plan must be submitted in Turnitin and handed in hard copy at the Lecture by 9.30 am. Papers wont be marked if submission procedure is not followed correctly. Extensions must be organised Prior to due date. Late papers will receive a 5% penalty per every late day. After 7 days the paper wont be marked and will receive a Fail (0 grade).
Due: 4.30 pm, 17 June 2014
Weighting: 35%
Students are required to write a 3,000 word essay.
Students are required to write a 3,000 word essay. Questions will be posted in iLearn and distributed in class. The essay must be submitted in Turnitin and handed in hard copy at the MQC front desk by 4.30 pm. Papers wont be marked if submission procedure is not followed correctly.
Please note that this is in lieu of exams and extensions cannot be granted. Late papers wont be accepted and the essay will receive an automatic Fail (0 grade). Students will need to apply for Special Consideration to avoid an automatic Fail.
Due: ongoing
Weighting: 10%
Students are required to attend and participate in this unit via in-class discussion (in tutorials). Students will be graded on the basis of the quantity and the quality of participation.
What is expected of students: Participate in class based and smaller groups discussions. Read in advance and be prepared to share your work with the class.
The only exception to not sitting an in-class test or examination at the designated time is because of documented illness or unavoidable disruption. In these circumstances you should consider applying for Special Consideration otherwise you will not receive any mark for this component of assessment.
It is a course requirement that students attend 80% of classes to avoid an automatic Fail. It is an assessment requirement of this unit that students be punctual, attend classes, come prepared and participate in class work and discussions. The roll will be called 10 mins from start of class and late students will be marked as Absent.
Irrespective of the total marks scored in the unit, students MUST submit all the tasks to gain a passing grade in this unit.
This unit is available via iLearn. Assessments must be handed in by the due date unless a student has been granted Special Consideration. Take Home Exam and Final Essay will receive an automatic fail if they are not submitted by due date. Summaries cannot be submitted by email or after due date as they must be presented and discussed in class. Please read carefully details of individual tasks.
Week 1: Introduction: What is ‘health’?
Essential reading:
· Klein, Richard (2010) ‘What is Health and How Do You Get it?’ in Metzl, Jonathan & Anna Kirkland (eds.) Against Health: How Health Became the New Morality, New York: NYUP, pp.15-25.
Week 2: Health promotion and health identities
Essential readings:
· Lupton, Deborah (1995) ‘Technologies of Health: Contemporary Health Promotion and Public Health’, in The Imperative of Health: Public Health and the Regulated Body, London: Sage, pp.48-75.
· Fox, Nick J & and Katie J. Ward (2008) ‘What are health identities and how may we study them?’, Sociology of Health & Illness, 30:7, 1007-21.
Further readings:
· Williamson, Deanna & Jeff Carr (2009) ‘Health as a resource for everyday life: advancing the conceptualization’, Critical Public Health, 19:1, 107-122.
· Petersen, Alan & Deborah Lupton (1996) The New Public Health: Health and Self in the Age of Risk, London: Sage.
· Ayo, Nike (2012) ‘Understanding health promotion in a neoliberal climate and the making of health conscious citizens’, Critical Public Health, 22:1, 99-105
· Gillick, Muriel (1984) ‘Health Promotion, Jogging and the Pursuit of the Moral Life’, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 9:3, 369-87.
· Gastaldo, Denise (2000) ‘Is Health Education Good for You? Rethinking health education through the concept of biopower’, in A. Petersen and R. Bunton (eds.) Foucault, Health and Medicine, London: Routledge, 113-33.
Week 3: Health, illness and medicalization
Essential readings:
· Conrad, Peter & Kristin K. Barker (2010) ‘The Social Construction of Illness: Key Insights and Policy Implications’, Journal of Health & Social Behavior, 51:S, 67-79.
· Halfmann, Drew (2011) ‘Recognizing Medicalization and Demedicalization: Discourses, Practices, and Identities’, Health, 16:2, 186-207.
Further readings:
· Conrad, Peter and Joseph W. Schneider (1992) Deviance and Medicalization: From Badness to Sickness, Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Week 4 (beginning 19 August): Biopolitics and disciplinary medicine
Essential readings:
· Foucault, Michel (1980) “The Politics of Health in the Eighteenth Century” in Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews and Writings 1972 – 1977 (edited by Colin Gordon) New York: Pantheon Books, pp 166 – 182
· Renault, E. (2006) Biopolitics and Social Pathologies, Critical Horizons, 7 (1), pp 159 – 177
Further Readings:
· Armstrong, D. (1995). The Rise of Surveillance Medicine. Sociology of Health & Illness, 17(3), 393 – 404.
· Delaporte, Francois (1994) ‘The History of Medicine According to Foucault’, in J. Goldstein (ed.) Foucault and the Writing of History, Oxford: Blackwell.
· Foucault, M. (2003). The Birth of the Clinic: An Archaeology of Medical Perception (A. M. Sheridan, Trans.). London: Routledge
· Jones, Colin and Roy Porter (eds.) (1994) Reassessing Foucault: Power, Medicine and the Body, London: Routledge.
· Petersen, Alan and Robin Bunton (eds.) (1997) Foucault, Health and Medicine, London: Routledge.
· Scambler, Graham and Paul Higgs (1998) Modernity, Medicine and Health: Medical Sociology Towards 2000, New York: Routledge.
· Turner, Bryan (1987) Medical Power and Social Knowledge (2nd Edition), London: Sage.
Week 5: Take Home exam posted in Ilearn 17 April 9 am. Good Friday- No lecture or Tutorial
Week 6: Working on Take Home exam. Anzac day - No lecture or Tutorial
Week 7: Tutorial Risk, (in)security, and responsibility
Essential readings:
Further readings:
Week 8: Morality and maternity
Essential readings:
· Lupton, Deborah (2012) ‘”Precious Cargo”: foetal subjects, risk and reproductive citizenship,’ Critical Public Health, 329-40.
· Macvarish, Jan (2010) ‘The effect of ‘risk-thinking’ on the contemporary construction of teenage motherhood’, Health, Risk & Society, 12:4, 313-322
Further readings:
· Salmon, Amy (2011) ‘Aboriginal Mothering, FASD Prevention and the Contestations of Neoliberal Citizenship’, Critical Public Health, 21:2, 165-78.
· Faircloth, Charlotte (2010): ‘”If they want to risk the health and well-being of their child, that's up to them”: Long-term breastfeeding, risk and maternal identity’, Health, Risk & Society, 12:4, 357-367.
· Knaak, Stephanie J. (2010) ‘Contextualising risk, constructing choice: Breastfeedingand good mothering in risk society’, Health, Risk & Society, 12:4, 345-35
· Ryan, Kath, Paul Bissell & Jo Alexander (2010) ‘Moral Work in Women’s Narratives of Breastfeeding’, Social Science & Medicine, vol. 70, 951-8.
· Leppo, Anna (2012) ‘The emergence of the foetus: discourses on foetal alcohol syndrome prevention and compulsory treatment in Finland’, Critical Public Health, 22:2, 179-191
· Lowe, Pam K. & Ellie J. Lee ((2010) ‘Advocating alcohol abstinence to pregnant women: Some observations about British policy’, Health, Risk & Society, 12:4, 301-311
· McNaughton, Darlene (2011) ‘From the womb to the tomb: obesity and maternal responsibility’, Critical Public Health, 21:2, 179-190
· Bell, Kristen, Darlene McNaughton & Amy Salmon (2009) ‘Medicine, morality and mothering: public health discourses on foetal alcohol exposure, smoking around children and childhood overnutrition’, Critical Public Health, 19:2, 155-170
· Ristovski-Slijepcevic, Svetlana, Gwen E. Chapman and Brenda L. Beagan (2010) ‘Being a “good mother”: Dietary governmentality in the family food practices of three ethnocultural groups in Canada’, Health, 14:5, 467-83.
· Keenan, Julia & Helen Stapleton ((2010) ‘Bonny babies? Motherhood and nurturing in the age of obesity’, Health, Risk & Society, 12:4, 369-383.
· Wolf, Joan B. (2010) ‘Against Breastfeeding (Sometimes)’, in J. M. Metzl & Anna Kirkland (eds.) Against Health: How Health Became the New Morality, New York: New York University Press, 83-92.
Week 9: Men’s health
Essential readings:
· Cranshaw, Paul (2009) ‘Critical Perspectives on the Health of Men: lessons from medical sociology,’ Critical Public Health, 19:3-4, 279-85.
· O’Brien, R., K. Hunt & G. Hart (2009) ‘”The average Scottish man has a cigarette hanging out of his mouth, lying there with a portion of chips”: prospects for change in Scottish men’s constructions of masculinity and their health-related beliefs and behaviours’, Critical Public Health, 19:3-4, 363-81.
Further readings:
· Cranshaw, Paul (2007) ‘Governing the healthy male citizen: men, masculinity and popular health in Men’s Health magazine’, Social Science & Medicine, 65:8, 1605-18.
· Broom, Alex & Philip Tovey (eds.) (2009) Men’s Health: Body, Identity, and Social Context, London: Wiley-Blackwell.
· Kampf, Antje, Barbara L. Marshall & Alan Petersen (eds.) () Ageing Men, Masculinities and Modern Medicine, London: Routledge.
· Clarke, Juanne N. (2009) ‘The Portrayal of Depression in Magazines Designed for Men (2000-2007)’, International Journal of Men’s Health, 8:3, 202-212.
· Scott-Samuel, Alex, Debbi Stanistreet & Paul Crawshaw (2009) ‘Hegemonic masculinity, structural violence and health inequalities’, Critical Public Health, 19:3-4, 287-292
· Monaghan, Lee F. & Michael Hardey (2009) ‘Bodily sensibility: vocabularies of the discredited male body’, Critical Public Health, 19:3-4, 341-362
· Kampf, Antje (20120) ‘Tales of Healthy Men: Male Reproductive Bodies in Biomedicine from “Lebensborn” to Sperm Banks”, Health, 17:1, 20-36.
Week 10: Pleasures and dangers 1: smoking
Essential readings:
· Mair, Michael ((2011) ‘Deconstructing behavioural classifications: tobacco control, ‘professional vision’ and the tobacco user as a site of governmental intervention’, Critical Public Health, 21:2, 129-140.
· Frohlich, Katherine L., Eric Mykhalovskiy, Blake D. Poland, Rebecca Haines-Saah, and Joy Johnson (2012) ‘Creating the Socially Marginalised Youth Smoker: the role of tobacco control’, Sociology of Health & Illness, 34:7, 978-93.
Further readings:
· Bond, Chelsea, Mark Brough , Geoffrey Spurling & Noel Hayman (2012) ‘”It had to be my choice”: Indigenous smoking cessation and negotiations of risk, resistance and resilience’, Health, Risk & Society, 14:6, 565-581
Week 11: Pleasures and dangers 2: drinking (and alcoholism)
Essential readings:
· Keane, Helen ((2009) ‘Intoxication, harm and pleasure: an analysis of the Australian National Alcohol Strategy’, Critical Public Health, 19:2, 135-142
· Jarvinen, Margaretha ((2012) ‘A will to health? Drinking, risk and social class’, Health, Risk & Society, 14:3, 241-256
Further readings:
Week 12: Pleasures and dangers 3: eating (and obesity)
Essential readings:
· Schneider, Tanja & Teresa Davis (2010) ‘Fostering a Hunger for Health: Food and the Self in Australian Women’s Weekly’, Health Sociology Review, 19:3, 285-303.
· LeBesco, Kathleen ((2011) ‘Neoliberalism, public health, and the moral perils of fatness’, Critical Public Health, 21:2, 153-164
Further readings:
· Rich, Emma (2011) ‘”I see her being obesed!”; public pedagogy, reality media and the obesity crisis’, Health, 15:1, 3-21.
· Lake, Jeffrey (2009) ‘The development of surveillance and screening for childhood obesity in the UK’, Critical Public Health, 19:1, 3-1
· Grønning, Ingeborg, Graham Scambler & Aksel Tjora (2012) ‘From Fatness to Badness: The modern morality of obesity’, Health, 17:3, 266-83.
· Spoel, Philippa, Roma Harris and Flis Henwood (2012) ‘The moralization of healthy living: Burke's rhetoric of rebirth and older adults' accounts of healthy eating’, Health, 16:6, 619-35.
· Gough, Brendan & Gareth Flanders (2009) ‘Celebrating ‘Obese’ Bodies: Gay ‘Bears’ Talk about Weight, Body Image, and Health, International Journal of Men’s Health, 8:3, 235-53.
· Badger, Shirlene (2010) ‘”Where the Excess Grows”: Demarcating “Normal” and “Pathologically” Obese Bodies’, in E. Ettorree (ed.) Culture, Bodies and Sociology of Health, Farnham: Ashgate, 137-54.
· Berlant, Lauren (2010) ‘Risky Bigness: On Obesity, Eating, and the Ambiguity of “Health”’, in J. M. Metzl & Anna Kirkland (eds.) Against Health: How Health Became the New Morality, New York: New York University Press, 26-39.
· Koteyko, Nelya (2010) ‘Balancing the Good, the Bad and the Better: A discursive perspective on probiotics and healthy eating’, Health, 14:6, 585-602.
· Murray, Samantha (2009) ‘Marked as “Pathological”: “Fat” Bodies as Virtual Confessors’, in J. Wright and J. Harwood (eds.) Biopolitics and the ‘Obesity Epidemic’, London: Routledge, 78-90.
Week 13: Pleasures and dangers 4: sex (and contagion)
Essential readings:
· Gagnon, Marilou, Jean Daniel Jacob & Dave Holmes (2010) ‘Governing through (in)security: a critical analysis of a fear-based public health campaign’, Critical Public Health, 20:2, 245-56.
· Polzer, Jessica C. & Susan Knabe (2012) ‘From Desire to Disease: Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) and the Medicalization of Nascent Female Sexuality’, Journal of Sex Research, 49:4, 344-52.
Further readings:
· Marshall, Barbara (2012) ‘Medicalization and the Refashioning of Age-Related Limits on Sexuality’, Journal of Sex Research, 49:4, 337-343
· Giami, Alain & Christophe Perrey (2012) ‘Transformations in the Medicalization of Sex: HIV Prevention between Discipline and Biopolitics’, Journal of Sex Research, 49:4, 353-361
· Connell, Erin & Alan Hunt (2010) The HPV Vaccination Campaign: A Project of Moral Regulation in an Era of Biopolitics’, Canadian Journal of Sociology, 35:1, 63-82.
· Kim, Eunjung (2010) ‘How Much Sex is Healthy? The Pleasures of Asexuality’, in J. M. Metzl & Anna Kirkland (eds.) Against Health: How Health Became the New Morality, New York: New York University Press, 157-69.
Macquarie University policies and procedures are accessible from Policy Central. Students should be aware of the following policies in particular with regard to Learning and Teaching:
Academic Honesty Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/academic_honesty/policy.html
Assessment Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/assessment/policy.html
Grading Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/grading/policy.html
Grade Appeal Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/gradeappeal/policy.html
Grievance Management Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/grievance_management/policy.html
Disruption to Studies Policy http://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/disruption_studies/policy.html The Disruption to Studies Policy is effective from March 3 2014 and replaces the Special Consideration Policy.
In addition, a number of other policies can be found in the Learning and Teaching Category of Policy Central.
Macquarie University students have a responsibility to be familiar with the Student Code of Conduct: https://students.mq.edu.au/support/student_conduct/
Macquarie University provides a range of support services for students. For details, visit http://students.mq.edu.au/support/
Learning Skills (mq.edu.au/learningskills) provides academic writing resources and study strategies to improve your marks and take control of your study.
Students with a disability are encouraged to contact the Disability Service who can provide appropriate help with any issues that arise during their studies.
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For help with University computer systems and technology, visit http://informatics.mq.edu.au/help/.
When using the University's IT, you must adhere to the Acceptable Use Policy. The policy applies to all who connect to the MQ network including students.
We want our graduates to have emotional intelligence and sound interpersonal skills and to demonstrate discernment and common sense in their professional and personal judgement. They will exercise initiative as needed. They will be capable of risk assessment, and be able to handle ambiguity and complexity, enabling them to be adaptable in diverse and changing environments.
This graduate capability is supported by:
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This graduate capability is supported by:
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This graduate capability is supported by:
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This graduate capability is supported by:
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This graduate capability is supported by:
As local citizens our graduates will be aware of indigenous perspectives and of the nation's historical context. They will be engaged with the challenges of contemporary society and with knowledge and ideas. We want our graduates to have respect for diversity, to be open-minded, sensitive to others and inclusive, and to be open to other cultures and perspectives: they should have a level of cultural literacy. Our graduates should be aware of disadvantage and social justice, and be willing to participate to help create a wiser and better society.
This graduate capability is supported by: