Students

MHIS264 – Travel, Tourism and Cultural Production

2012 – D2

General Information

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Unit convenor and teaching staff Unit convenor and teaching staff Unit Convenor
Hsu-Ming Teo
Contact via hsuming.teo@mq.edu.au
W6A 403
Make an appointment
Credit points Credit points
3
Prerequisites Prerequisites
12cp or (3cp in HIST or MHIS or POL units)
Corequisites Corequisites
Co-badged status Co-badged status
Unit description Unit description
Tourism is the world's single largest industry today. This unit explores the history, meanings and experiences of travel and tourism from late antiquity to the present day through themes such as gender, class, race, imperialism, war, sexuality, modernity, post-modernity and consumption. It considers the historiography of travel as well as the uses of history in inspiring or selling travel and tourism. Topics include: how we define travel and tourism; the medieval pilgrimage; the age of exploration; the Grand Tour; travel and cultural production in the Age of Empire; exoticism and primitivism; battlefield tourism; eco-tourism; sex tourism; Third World travel and cultural imperialism.

Important Academic Dates

Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment Tasks

Name Weighting Due
Tutorial participation 10% Weekly
Tutorial report 10% Weekly
Literature Report 20% Friday, 31 August
Research project 30% Friday, 12 October
Unit review 30% Friday, 9 November

Tutorial participation

Due: Weekly
Weighting: 10%

Attending and participating in tutorials or seminars in class or online


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills

Tutorial report

Due: Weekly
Weighting: 10%

Weekly report on tutorial readings


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills

Literature Report

Due: Friday, 31 August
Weighting: 20%

Analytical report of set readings


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Research project

Due: Friday, 12 October
Weighting: 30%

2500 word research essay


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Unit review

Due: Friday, 9 November
Weighting: 30%

1500 word evaluation of course content


On successful completion you will be able to:
  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Delivery and Resources

Classes

Lecture 1: Mondays 10-11am, E7B 100; followed by one-hour tutorial

Lecture 2: Thursday 9-10am, W5C 220; followed by one-hour tutorial

 

Delivery of resources

All lectures will be recorded and uploaded onto the MHIS264 iLearn site for external students. Lecture notes on Powerpoint slides will accompany these lectures.

 

Unit material

There is no textbook for this unit. However, students will need to purchase the 2012 MHIS264 Travel, Tourism and Cultural Production Unit Reader from the University Co-op Bookshop. All readings for tutorial discussions are contained in this unit reader.

Details of tutorial topics and assessment tasks can be found on the MHIS264 iLearn site: https://ilearn.mq.edu.au/login/MQ/ 

Unit Schedule

 

 

Week

Date

Lecture

Tutorial

Assessment

1

30 Jul

2 Aug

·         Introduction

·         Travel in the ancient world

Introduction

 

2

6 Aug

9 Aug

·         The medieval pilgrimage

·         Crusades & courtly travel

Thinking about travel & tourism

 

3

13 Aug

16 Aug

·         Maps and Monsters

·         The Age of Exploration

Travel in the ancient world

 

4

20 Aug

23 Aug

·         The Grand Tour (1)

·         The Grand Tour (2)

The medieval pilgrimage

 

5

27 Aug

 

30 Aug

·         Cultural production & consumption

·         Romanticism and travel

Monsters and exotic explorations

Report due Friday, 31 August

6

3 Sep

 

6 Sep

·         Thomas Cook & the rise of tourism

·         Orientalism

The Grand Tour

 

7

10 Sep

13 Sep

·         Travel in the age of empire

·         Women travellers & lady tourists

Orientalism

 

Semester Break: 17 September – 2 October

 

8

4 Oct

Reading week

No tutorial

 

9

8 Oct

11 Oct

·         Mass tourism & backpackers

·         Third World tourism

Imperialism

Research essay due Friday, 12 October

10

15 Oct

18 Oct

·         Film: The Beach – Part 1

·         Film: The Beach – Part 2

Backpackers and The Beach

 

11

22 Oct

25 Oct

·         Sex and tourism

·         History and tourism: war

Sex tourism

 

12

29 Oct

 

1 Nov

·         History and tourism: theme parks

·         Postmodernism and post-tourism

History and tourism: Auschwitz and theme parks

 

13

5 Nov

8 Nov

·         Overview of unit

·         No lecture

No tutorial

Unit review essay due Friday, 9 November

 

For further details, log on to the MHIS264 iLearn site: https://ilearn.mq.edu.au/login/MQ/ 

Policies and Procedures

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://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/academic_honesty/policy.html

Assessment Policy  http://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/assessment/policy.html

Grade Appeal Policy http://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/gradeappeal/policy.html

Special Consideration Policy http://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/special_consideration/policy.html

In addition, a number of other policies can be found in the Learning and Teaching Category of Policy Central.

Student Support

Macquarie University provides a range of Academic Student Support Services. Details of these services can be accessed at: http://students.mq.edu.au/support/.

UniWISE provides:

  • Online learning resources and academic skills workshops http://www.mq.edu.au/learning_skills/
  • Personal assistance with your learning & study related questions.
  • The Learning Help Desk is located in the Library foyer (level 2).
  • Online and on-campus orientation events run by Mentors@Macquarie.

Student Services and Support

Students with a disability are encouraged to contact the Disability Support Unit who can provide appropriate help with any issues that arise during their studies.

Student Enquiries

Details of these services can be accessed at http://www.student.mq.edu.au/ses/.

IT Help

If you wish to receive IT help, we would be glad to assist you at 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 and it outlines what can be done.

Graduate Capabilities

Capable of Professional and Personal Judgement and Initiative

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:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial participation
  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Commitment to Continuous Learning

Our graduates will have enquiring minds and a literate curiosity which will lead them to pursue knowledge for its own sake. They will continue to pursue learning in their careers and as they participate in the world. They will be capable of reflecting on their experiences and relationships with others and the environment, learning from them, and growing - personally, professionally and socially.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial participation
  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Discipline Specific Knowledge and Skills

Our graduates will take with them the intellectual development, depth and breadth of knowledge, scholarly understanding, and specific subject content in their chosen fields to make them competent and confident in their subject or profession. They will be able to demonstrate, where relevant, professional technical competence and meet professional standards. They will be able to articulate the structure of knowledge of their discipline, be able to adapt discipline-specific knowledge to novel situations, and be able to contribute from their discipline to inter-disciplinary solutions to problems.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial participation
  • Tutorial report
  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Critical, Analytical and Integrative Thinking

We want our graduates to be capable of reasoning, questioning and analysing, and to integrate and synthesise learning and knowledge from a range of sources and environments; to be able to critique constraints, assumptions and limitations; to be able to think independently and systemically in relation to scholarly activity, in the workplace, and in the world. We want them to have a level of scientific and information technology literacy.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial report
  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Problem Solving and Research Capability

Our graduates should be capable of researching; of analysing, and interpreting and assessing data and information in various forms; of drawing connections across fields of knowledge; and they should be able to relate their knowledge to complex situations at work or in the world, in order to diagnose and solve problems. We want them to have the confidence to take the initiative in doing so, within an awareness of their own limitations.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Analyse key debates, themes and events in the history of European travel and tourism
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Creative and Innovative

Our graduates will also be capable of creative thinking and of creating knowledge. They will be imaginative and open to experience and capable of innovation at work and in the community. We want them to be engaged in applying their critical, creative thinking.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing

Assessment tasks

  • Research project
  • Unit review

Effective Communication

We want to develop in our students the ability to communicate and convey their views in forms effective with different audiences. We want our graduates to take with them the capability to read, listen, question, gather and evaluate information resources in a variety of formats, assess, write clearly, speak effectively, and to use visual communication and communication technologies as appropriate.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Find, assess, and analyse different kinds of historical evidence, including visual and textual sources
  • Create a research project, synthesising your research findings into a simple, logical and coherent argument to be presented orally or in referenced, grammatically-correct writing
  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial participation
  • Tutorial report
  • Literature Report
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Engaged and Ethical Local and Global citizens

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:

Learning outcomes

  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Tutorial participation
  • Research project
  • Unit review

Socially and Environmentally Active and Responsible

We want our graduates to be aware of and have respect for self and others; to be able to work with others as a leader and a team player; to have a sense of connectedness with others and country; and to have a sense of mutual obligation. Our graduates should be informed and active participants in moving society towards sustainability.

This graduate capability is supported by:

Learning outcomes

  • Engage with staff and students, and give and receive feedback in order to improve your historical skills
  • Evaluate how European travel and tourism have affected the extra-European world, and vice-versa

Assessment tasks

  • Research project
  • Unit review