Art History (ARHI) 301
Canadian Visual Culture (Revision 1)
Revision 1 is closed for registrations, replaced by current version
Delivery Mode: Individualized study online or individualized study
Credits: 3
Area of Study: Humanities
Prerequisite: Completion of a junior level English, History, or Art History, or Cultural Studies course.
Precluded Course: ARHI 301 is a cross-listed course—a course listed under two different disciplines—with CLST301. ARHI 301 may not be taken for credit by students who have obtained credit for CLST 301.
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences
ARHI 301 has a Challenge for Credit option.
Overview
Using contemporary scholarship, this course reexamines Canadian art history in light of multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary meanings of culture. Using the study of visual language, the examines mass-produced images such as photographs and prints, as well as the technologies of display that influence perceptions of nationhood, citizenship and indigeneity.
Outline
- Unit 1: Introduction: What Is Visual Culture?
- Unit 2: Historical Background: A Survey of Key Events and Themes
- Unit 3: Points of Contact: Early Canadian Settlement
- Unit 4: Frontier/Metropole: Constructing a Visual Identity in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
- Unit 5: Canadian Modernism in the Twentieth Century: Nationalism and the Group of Seven
- Unit 6: Colonialism and Practices of Display
- Unit 7: Representing Nation and Identity Through the Lens
- Unit 8: Post-modern Issues: Race and Gender in Canadian Art
Evaluation
To receive credit for ARHI 301, you must complete six written assignments (four critical responses, a term paper proposal, and a major term paper) and write a final examination. Your final grade is determined by a weighted average of the grades you receive on these activities. You must achieve a minimum of D (50%) on the final examination and an overall grade of “D” (50 percent) for the entire course.
Assign. 1 Critical Response | Assign. 2 Critical Response | Assign. 3 Critical Response | Assign. 4 Term Paper Proposal | Assign. 5 Critical Response | Assign. 6 Term Paper | Final Exam | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5% | 5% | 5% | 10% | 5% | 35% | 35% | 100% |
The final examination for this course must be taken online with an AU-approved exam invigilator at an approved invigilation centre. It is your responsibility to ensure your chosen invigilation centre can accommodate online exams. For a list of invigilators who can accommodate online exams, visit the Exam Invigilation Network.
To learn more about assignments and examinations, please refer to Athabasca University's online Calendar.
Course Materials
Textbook
Belton , Robert J. Sights of Resistance: Approaches to Canadian Visual Culture. Calgary: Calgary University Press, 2001.
Other materials
The course materials include a reading file. All other materials are available online.
Challenge for Credit Course Overview
The Challenge for Credit process allows students to demonstrate that they have acquired a command of the general subject matter, knowledge, intellectual and/or other skills that would normally be found in a university level course.
Full information for the Challenge for Credit can be found in the Undergraduate Calendar.
- Undergraduate Challenge for Credit Policy
- Undergraduate Challenge for Credit Procedures
Challenge Evaluation
To receive credit for the ARHI 301 challenge registration, you must achieve a grade of at least “D” (50 percent) on each part of the examination.
Part 1 Exam (Take Home Essay of 3000 Words) | Part 2 Exam (Invigilated Written Exam) | Total |
---|---|---|
50% | 50% | 100% |
Undergraduate Challenge for Credit Course Registration Form
Athabasca University reserves the right to amend course outlines occasionally and without notice. Courses offered by other delivery methods may vary from their individualized-study counterparts.
Opened in Revision 1, January 27, 2012