Cultural Studies (CLST) 201

Cultural Studies and Everyday Life (Revision 1)

CLST 201

Revision 2 is closed for registrations, see current version

Delivery Mode: Individualized study online

Credits: 3

Area of Study: Social Science

Prerequisite: None

Faculty: Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences

Cultural Studies Home Page

CLST 201 has a Challenge for Credit option.

Overview

Cultural Studies 201: Cultural Studies and Everyday Life is a junior-level, three-credit course that takes as its organizing metaphor, Raymond Williams' remark that “culture is ordinary.” This course will provide an introduction to cultural studies by exploring, reflecting on, and evaluating how, on a daily basis, we are immersed in culture.

Course Objectives

  • To demystify the idea of “culture” by showing the ways in which it permeates our everyday lives.
  • To question the distinction between things deemed to be cultural and things assumed to be natural.
  • To explore the ways in which everyday culture can be a site of contestation.

Outline

CLST 201 consist of the following six units.

  • Unit 1: Culture is Ordinary
  • Unit 2: Domestic Cultures
  • Unit 3: Workplace Cultures
  • Unit 4: Recreational Cultures
  • Unit 5: Culture and Community
  • Unit 6: Culture, Experience, Identity

Evaluation

To receive credit for CLST 201, you must achieve a course composite grade of at least a D (50 percent). The weighting of the composite grade is as follows:

Activity Weighting
Assignment 1 25%
Assignment 2 15%
Assignment 3 25%
Assignment 4 35%
Total 100%

To learn more about assignments and examinations, please refer to Athabasca University's online Calendar.

Course Materials

Textbook

Fedorak, Shirley. Pop Culture: The Culture of Everyday Life. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009.

Other Materials

Peter Weir (Director). The Truman Show. Paramount, 1998. (AU Library)

Gurinder Chada (Director). Bend It Like Beckham. 20th Century Fox, 2002. (AU Library)

Kinka Usher (Director). Mystery Men. Universal, 1999. (AU Library)

All other course materials are available online.

Reading the Everyday by Joe Moran

Culture and Everyday Life by David Inglis

Challenge for Credit Overview

The Challenge for Credit process allows you to demonstrate that you 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 about Challenge for Credit can be found in the Undergraduate Calendar.

Challenge Evaluation

To receive credit for the CLST 201 challenge registration, you must achieve a grade of at least C- (60 percent) on the work submitted.

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, March 20, 2012