• Class Number 3061
  • Term Code 3530
  • Class Info
  • Unit Value 6 units
  • Mode of Delivery In Person
  • COURSE CONVENER
    • Prof Martin Thomas
  • LECTURER
    • Prof Martin Thomas
  • Class Dates
  • Class Start Date 17/02/2025
  • Class End Date 23/05/2025
  • Census Date 31/03/2025
  • Last Date to Enrol 24/02/2025
SELT Survey Results

This course examines the intersections between concepts of nation and practices of memory in a series of case studies spanning from the legacies of imperialism and colonisation through to impact of social movements and digital media in interrogating national identities and public memorialisation. Working across diverse case studies, including Nazism, settler colonialism, and military commemoration, we will work with a diverse range of historical evidence to assess the ways in which understandings of nation have been shaped and contested through collective memory and memorialisation. Through an examination of public ceremony and commemoration, educational intervention and institutional design, trials, museum exhibitions, individual memory, literature, popular culture and historiography, we will examine how the memory and representation of national identities have been debated and transformed. At a time of heightened political engagement with questions of recognition in public culture, and the power of testimony in challenging collective representation, this course will encourage reflection on the particular and contestable power of 'the nation' in framing what is remembered and what is forgotten.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion, students will have the knowledge and skills to:

  1. demonstrate a knowledge of the remembrance, historicisation and memorialisation of the nation;
  2. identify and analyse the key concepts in the study of historical memory;
  3. critically analyse the representation of the past in a variety of different media; and
  4. undertake a research project evaluating the efficacy of a particular representation of the nation and its past

Research-Led Teaching

This course consists of a serries of case-studies drawing on areas of active research by members of the School of History. In many cases, the staff contributing to the course has also applied experience in the areas they will be covering. The case studies have also been selected to reflect different forms of memorialisation, and different modes in the mobilisation of memory. The assessment program is built around preparing students for a research-led enquiry of their own selection, guided by the convenor.

Field Trips

NA

Additional Course Costs

NA

Examination Material or equipment

NA

Required Resources

NA

Whether you are on campus or studying online, there are a variety of online platforms you will use to participate in your study program. These could include videos for lectures and other instruction, two-way video conferencing for interactive learning, email and other messaging tools for communication, interactive web apps for formative and collaborative activities, print and/or photo/scan for handwritten work and drawings, and home-based assessment.

ANU outlines recommended student system requirements to ensure you are able to participate fully in your learning. Other information is also available about the various Learning Platforms you may use.

Staff Feedback

Students will be given feedback in the following forms in this course:

  • written comments
  • verbal comments
  • feedback to whole class, groups, individuals, focus group etc

Student Feedback

ANU is committed to the demonstration of educational excellence and regularly seeks feedback from students. Students are encouraged to offer feedback directly to their Course Convener or through their College and Course representatives (if applicable). Feedback can also be provided to Course Conveners and teachers via the Student Experience of Learning & Teaching (SELT) feedback program. SELT surveys are confidential and also provide the Colleges and ANU Executive with opportunities to recognise excellent teaching, and opportunities for improvement.

Other Information

The information published in this Class Summary may be subject to change, any changes in assessments or other course details will be communicated via Wattle and during the first week of the Semester. Any questions or concerns should be raised with the course convenor/lecturer as soon as possible.

Class Schedule

Week/Session Summary of Activities Assessment
1 Introduction: Benedict Anderson and the Imagined Community - Martin Thomas
2 History and Memory debated - Maria Nugent
3 Memorialisation of the Persian Wars - Peter Londey
4 Defeat, democracy, and hegemony: forgetting, remembering, and making things up in 4th century BC Greece - Peter Londey
5 Memory and political power in Rome
6 Politics of commemoration - Maria Nugent
7 Research Essay consults
8 Tartan and Tradition: ‘Highlandism’ and the Fashioning of Scottish Identity in Georgian Britain - Alex Cook
9 Remembering the French Revolution: Then and Ever Since - Alex Cook Essay Proposal due
10 Memorialising the campaign for women’s suffrage in Britain - Béatrice Bijon
11 Nations and First Nations - Martin Thomas
12 Conclusion: What have we remembered, what have we forgotten?

Tutorial Registration

ANU utilises MyTimetable to enable students to view the timetable for their enrolled courses, browse, then self-allocate to small teaching activities / tutorials so they can better plan their time. Find out more on the Timetable webpage.

Assessment Summary

Assessment task Value Due Date Learning Outcomes
Historiographical Review 30 % 31/03/2025 1,2,3
Essay Proposal 10 % 28/04/2025 4
Research Essay 50 % 10/06/2025 1,2,3,4
Participation 10 % * 1,2,3

* If the Due Date and Return of Assessment date are blank, see the Assessment Tab for specific Assessment Task details

Policies

ANU has educational policies, procedures and guidelines , which are designed to ensure that staff and students are aware of the University’s academic standards, and implement them. Students are expected to have read the Academic Integrity Rule before the commencement of their course. Other key policies and guidelines include:

Assessment Requirements

The ANU is using Turnitin to enhance student citation and referencing techniques, and to assess assignment submissions as a component of the University's approach to managing Academic Integrity. For additional information regarding Turnitin please visit the Academic Skills website. In rare cases where online submission using Turnitin software is not technically possible; or where not using Turnitin software has been justified by the Course Convener and approved by the Associate Dean (Education) on the basis of the teaching model being employed; students shall submit assessment online via ‘Wattle’ outside of Turnitin, or failing that in hard copy, or through a combination of submission methods as approved by the Associate Dean (Education). The submission method is detailed below.

Moderation of Assessment

Marks that are allocated during Semester are to be considered provisional until formalised by the College examiners meeting at the end of each Semester. If appropriate, some moderation of marks might be applied prior to final results being released.

Assessment Task 1

Value: 30 %
Due Date: 31/03/2025
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3

Historiographical Review

Word limit: 2000 words


Write a historiographical review of the academic literature on a topic of your choosing. You may choose a theme from the weekly seminars, or you may choose a relevant topic related to your research project. If you do the latter, please be aware that you cannot cut and paste entire sections of your historiographical review into the final research paper. A historiographical review should consider several works or articles, but may decide to focus in particular on two or three.

 

A historiographical review is intended to be a critical evaluation of the secondary literature on a particular topic. It should survey the different approaches to a topic or theme, identify the questions the secondary literature is attempting to answer, and evaluate the answers provided. A historiographical review should make an argument about this literature: its strengths and weaknesses, questions it leaves unanswered, or significance.

 

The reviews will be evaluated on depth of knowledge of the topic, ability to present the literature clearly and concisely, critical evaluation of the historiography, structure of the essay and quality of the writing.

-      Please submit your assignment via Turnitin on Wattle. No hard copy is required

-      Late essays will be penalised at the rate of 5% per working day or part thereof.

-      If you require an extension, you must ask the Convenor before the date the assignment is due.

-      Over-length assignments will be penalised according to CASS policy, which states that a 10% penalty will be applied to essays that exceed the specified word limit over a 10% buffer. Footnotes and bibliographies are not included in the word limit.

- No assignment will be assessed after the return of assignments to other students.

- All references should be footnoted in Chicago format (notes and bibliography). See the quick guide here: http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html

Assessment Task 2

Value: 10 %
Due Date: 28/04/2025
Learning Outcomes: 4

Essay Proposal

Word Limit: 500 words.


Identify a topic of research relating to themes of nation, memorialisation and memory, and develop in consultation with the course convenor a question that you intend to ask about that particular topic. Include a brief outline of the historiography and wider debates within which your essay will be placed, and explain how your question will fit into these debates. Indicate what primary sources you will be using to answer your question. 

Include a bibliography of around 10 items.


The proposal will be evaluated on:

-      How effectively it develops a research question

-      How well the question is integrated into a sense of the historiography and broader theoretical and historiographical issues.

-      The sources identified to develop the research essay.

Assessment Task 3

Value: 50 %
Due Date: 10/06/2025
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3,4

Research Essay

Research Project (4000 words).


Instructions: 

Building on your Historiographical Review and Essay Proposal, write a research paper on the question you have developed. You should identify a particular aspect of the course themes and a particular practice (for example: an exhibition, a controversy, a book, a film, a tv show, a monument, a novel, trial, newspaper reportage, memoirs, letters and diaries, oral histories and so on), then contextualise and critically analyse its representation of the past. The essay will be assessed on 1) the quality of the argument 2) the analysis of primary sources 3) the integration of the analysis into the themes raised in the course and 4) writing and presentation.

Assessment Task 4

Value: 10 %
Learning Outcomes: 1,2,3

Participation

Participation in the seminar is assessed and worth 10% of the final grade.

Academic Integrity

Academic integrity is a core part of the ANU culture as a community of scholars. The University’s students are an integral part of that community. The academic integrity principle commits all students to engage in academic work in ways that are consistent with, and actively support, academic integrity, and to uphold this commitment by behaving honestly, responsibly and ethically, and with respect and fairness, in scholarly practice.


The University expects all staff and students to be familiar with the academic integrity principle, the Academic Integrity Rule 2021, the Policy: Student Academic Integrity and Procedure: Student Academic Integrity, and to uphold high standards of academic integrity to ensure the quality and value of our qualifications.


The Academic Integrity Rule 2021 is a legal document that the University uses to promote academic integrity, and manage breaches of the academic integrity principle. The Policy and Procedure support the Rule by outlining overarching principles, responsibilities and processes. The Academic Integrity Rule 2021 commences on 1 December 2021 and applies to courses commencing on or after that date, as well as to research conduct occurring on or after that date. Prior to this, the Academic Misconduct Rule 2015 applies.

 

The University commits to assisting all students to understand how to engage in academic work in ways that are consistent with, and actively support academic integrity. All coursework students must complete the online Academic Integrity Module (Epigeum), and Higher Degree Research (HDR) students are required to complete research integrity training. The Academic Integrity website provides information about services available to assist students with their assignments, examinations and other learning activities, as well as understanding and upholding academic integrity.

Online Submission

You will be required to electronically sign a declaration as part of the submission of your assignment. Please keep a copy of the assignment for your records. Unless an exemption has been approved by the Associate Dean (Education) submission must be through Turnitin.

Hardcopy Submission

For some forms of assessment (hand written assignments, art works, laboratory notes, etc.) hard copy submission is appropriate when approved by the Associate Dean (Education). Hard copy submissions must utilise the Assignment Cover Sheet. Please keep a copy of tasks completed for your records.

Late Submission

Individual assessment tasks may or may not allow for late submission. Policy regarding late submission is detailed below:

  • Late submission not permitted. If submission of assessment tasks without an extension after the due date is not permitted, a mark of 0 will be awarded.
  • Late submission permitted. Late submission of assessment tasks without an extension are penalised at the rate of 5% of the possible marks available per working day or part thereof. Late submission of assessment tasks is not accepted after 10 working days after the due date, or on or after the date specified in the course outline for the return of the assessment item. Late submission is not accepted for take-home examinations.

Referencing Requirements

The Academic Skills website has information to assist you with your writing and assessments. The website includes information about Academic Integrity including referencing requirements for different disciplines. There is also information on Plagiarism and different ways to use source material. Any use of artificial intelligence must be properly referenced. Failure to properly cite use of Generative AI will be considered a breach of academic integrity.

Extensions and Penalties

Extensions and late submission of assessment pieces are covered by the Student Assessment (Coursework) Policy and Procedure. Extensions may be granted for assessment pieces that are not examinations or take-home examinations. If you need an extension, you must request an extension in writing on or before the due date. If you have documented and appropriate medical evidence that demonstrates you were not able to request an extension on or before the due date, you may be able to request it after the due date.

Privacy Notice

The ANU has made a number of third party, online, databases available for students to use. Use of each online database is conditional on student end users first agreeing to the database licensor’s terms of service and/or privacy policy. Students should read these carefully. In some cases student end users will be required to register an account with the database licensor and submit personal information, including their: first name; last name; ANU email address; and other information.
In cases where student end users are asked to submit ‘content’ to a database, such as an assignment or short answers, the database licensor may only use the student’s ‘content’ in accordance with the terms of service – including any (copyright) licence the student grants to the database licensor. Any personal information or content a student submits may be stored by the licensor, potentially offshore, and will be used to process the database service in accordance with the licensors terms of service and/or privacy policy.
If any student chooses not to agree to the database licensor’s terms of service or privacy policy, the student will not be able to access and use the database. In these circumstances students should contact their lecturer to enquire about alternative arrangements that are available.

Distribution of grades policy

Academic Quality Assurance Committee monitors the performance of students, including attrition, further study and employment rates and grade distribution, and College reports on quality assurance processes for assessment activities, including alignment with national and international disciplinary and interdisciplinary standards, as well as qualification type learning outcomes.

Since first semester 1994, ANU uses a grading scale for all courses. This grading scale is used by all academic areas of the University.

Support for students

The University offers students support through several different services. You may contact the services listed below directly or seek advice from your Course Convener, Student Administrators, or your College and Course representatives (if applicable).

  • ANU Health, safety & wellbeing for medical services, counselling, mental health and spiritual support
  • ANU Accessibility for students with a disability or ongoing or chronic illness
  • ANU Dean of Students for confidential, impartial advice and help to resolve problems between students and the academic or administrative areas of the University
  • ANU Academic Skills supports you make your own decisions about how you learn and manage your workload.
  • ANU Counselling promotes, supports and enhances mental health and wellbeing within the University student community.
  • ANUSA supports and represents all ANU students
Prof Martin Thomas
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m.thomas@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Australian and international history; oral history; exploration; Indigenous history; cross-cultural encounter

Prof Martin Thomas

Tuesday 12:00 15:00
Tuesday 12:00 15:00
By Appointment
Prof Martin Thomas
61252720
m.thomas@anu.edu.au

Research Interests


Prof Martin Thomas

Tuesday 12:00 15:00
Tuesday 12:00 15:00
By Appointment

Responsible Officer: Registrar, Student Administration / Page Contact: Website Administrator / Frequently Asked Questions