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University of the Western Cape WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES DEPARTMENT POSTGRADUATE HANDBOOK 2015
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Page 1: Women's and Gender Studies - University of the Western Cape 2015_1.doc  · Web viewThe Women's and Gender Studies ... Masters students have to submit a research proposal for approval

University of the Western Cape

WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES DEPARTMENT

POSTGRADUATE HANDBOOK

2015

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Postgraduate Studies in the DepartmentThe Women's and Gender Studies (WGS) Department locates gender scholarship within the socio-political, cultural and economic context of national and global changes, through teaching, research, skills development and advocacy. One of the key objectives of the Department is to encourage the development of theory, knowledge and skills for those already working in organizations or institutions directed toward gender transformation and sexual rights, as well as for those intending to work in such fields. A broader objective is to undertake and support research and teaching that innovatively explores the gendered construction of social identities, relationships, beliefs and norms.

Teaching and research in the Department explore gender and sexuality from intersectional, holistic and interdisciplinary perspectives. The study of gender intersects with different power relations, such as those connected to race, class and sexual orientation. Our research and teaching aim to develop and strengthen knowledge about gender within local, national and global cultural and political processes.

The Department fosters interdisciplinary research and teaching; our postgraduate students engage with a range of disciplines in course-work and thesis research offered through the Department, as well as in different departments and faculties at the University.

Course RequirementsPostgraduate study in WGS is multidisciplinary and offers the degrees of Honours and MA by course work (structured) and MA by thesis (unstructured). All our postgraduate degrees are offered on a part-time basis to accommodate students who are in fulltime employment.

Postgraduate study in WGS allows students to select their areas of interest and specialization. Honours and Masters (structured) students have to register for two compulsory core modules and a choice of two electives selected from those outlined in

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this handbook, and others on offer in departments and faculties including Law, the School of Government, Social Anthropology, Sociology and English. In addition Honours students complete a research essay (Code No. WGS 701).

Masters students have to submit a research proposal for approval by the Arts Faculty Post Graduate Board of Studies, by the start of their second year of study, and thereafter have to complete their mini thesis (Code No. WGS 801), preferably in one further year.

Department VisionDeveloping Innovative Teaching and Research on Gender and Sexuality: The Women's and Gender Studies Department is a vibrant site of teaching, learning and research, where local, national and global knowledge is shared and developed. Our primary aim is to support students as critical knowledge producers and practitioners with a wide range of analytical, theoretical and practical skills. Postgraduate students are expected to attend seminars hosted by WGS as well as meetings and workshops designed for postgraduate students to develop writing and research skills, to present research and proposals, and to discuss the work-in-progress of other postgraduates in the department.

Local, National and International Engagement: Historically, the Department has had a particular niche in the Western Cape. We offered the first postgraduate programme in Gender Studies in this region, and have a history of supporting progressive organizational and political processes.

Currently, we continue to have close links with many of the community based and non-governmental organizations dealing with gender justice and sexual rights in the region. We also actively collaborate with departments and scholars focusing on gender at other universities in the country. The Department also has strong international partnerships (including research partnerships, projects funding student and staff research, and staff and teacher exchange programmes) with universities in countries including the United States, Finland and the Netherlands.

Staff in 2015Desiree Lewis (Associate Professor, HOD and Postgraduate Coordinator)

Lindsay Clowes (Associate Professor, Undergraduate Coordinator )

Tamara Shefer (Senior Professor and Deputy Dean of Teaching and Learning)

Sisa Ngabaza (Lecturer)

Mawada Abrahams (Administrator)

Ayesha Ludick & Dawn Bosman (Student Academic Coordinators)

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Anna Strebel (Professor Extraordinaire)

Nadia Sanger: Research Associate

STAFF PROFILE AND RESEARCH INTERESTS

Lindsay Clowes

(PhD in Historical Studies University of Cape Town) After teaching in the History Department at UCT, Lindsay Clowes began lecturing in the Women’s and Gender Studies Department in 2000. Her PhD focused on changing representations of masculinity in Drum magazine between 1951 and 1984. Her more recent work explores questions around masculinity, generation and sexuality. She has also consistently been working in the field of teaching and learning practice and research.

Accidental feminists? Recent histories of South African women van der Spuy, Patricia; Clowes, Lindsay (History Department, University of the Western Cape, 2007)

Coercive sexual practices and gender-based violence on a university campus Clowes, Lindsay; Shefer, Tamara; Fouten, Elron; Vergnani, Tania; Jacobs, Joachim (Taylor & Francis, co-published with Unisa Press, 2009)

“It’s not a simple thing, co-publishing”: challenges of co-authorship between su - pervisors and students in South African higher educational contextsClowes, Lindsay; Shefer, Tamara (UNISA Press, 2013)

'A living testimony of the heights to which a woman can rise’: Sarojini Naidu, Cissie Gool and the Politics of Women’s Leadership in South Africa in the 1920svan der Spuy, Patricia; Clowes, Lindsay (Taylor & Francis, 2012)

Masculinity, matrimony and generation: Reconfiguring patriarchy in Drum 1951- 1983Clowes, Lindsay (Routledge, 2008)

Men and children: Changing constructions of fatherhood in Drum magazine, 1951-1965Clowes, Lindsay (HSRC Press, 2006)

Men in Africa: masculinities, materiality and meaning Shefer, Tamara; Stevens, Garth; Clowes, Lindsay (Elliot & Fitzpatrick Inc., 2010)

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Narratives of transactional sex on a university campus Shefer, Tamara; Clowes, Lindsay; Vergnani, Tania (Taylor & Francis, 2012)

Perceptions of staffriding in Post-Apartheid South Africa: the lethal thrill of speed or the masculine performance of a painful past?Sedite, Dimakatso; Bowman, Brett; Clowes, Lindsay (Elliot & Fitzpatrick Inc., 2010)

Pregnant girls and young parents in South African schools Bhana, Deevia; Clowes, Lindsay; Morrell, Robert; Shefer, Tamara (UNISA Press, 2008)

Risk and protective factors to male interpersonal violence: views of some male university studentsClowes, Lindsay; Lazarus, Sandy; Ratele, Kopano (Medical Research Coun-cil, 2010)

Risk and protective factors to male interpersonal violence: Views of some male university studentsClowes, Lindsay; Lazarus, Sandy; Ratele, Kopano (Medical Research Council, Tygerberg, 2010)

School principals and their responses to the rights and needs of pregnant and par - enting learnersClowes, Lindsay; D’Amant, Toni; Nkani, Vuyo (HSRC Press, 2012)

South African schools' responses to pregnant girls and young parents: a study of some Durban and Cape Town secondary schoolsBhana, Deevia; Clowes, Lindsay; Morrell, Robert; Shefer, Tamara (Unisa Press and Taylor & Francis, 2008)

Talking South African fathers: a critical examination of men’s constructions and experiences of fatherhood and fatherlessnessRatele, Kopano; Shefer, Tamara; Clowes, Lindsay (Sage Publications, 2012)

Desiree Lewis

(MA, Wits; PhD, University of Cape Town)Desiree Lewis is currently the WGS Head of Department and postgraduate coordinator. She has worked as a lecturer and researcher in English and gender studies at the Universities of the Western Cape, the University of Natal and the African Gender Institute at the University of Cape Town. Her research focuses on popular, visual and literary culture in South Africa and postcolonial studies of feminisms, gender and sexualities.

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Selected Publications are:

“The Multiple dimensions of Human Security through the Lens of African Feminist Intellectual Activism in Africa Peace and Conflict Journal, vol 6, 1, 2013.

“Feminism” available at: http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199846733/obo-9780199846733-0116.xml, 2013

“Politics, Freedoms and Spirituality in Alaa Al Aswany’s Yacoubian Building, Journal for Islamic Studies, vol 33, 2013.

With Tigist Hussen and Monique van Vuuren, “Exploring new media technologies among young South African women”, Feminist Africa, Issue 18, 2013.

“The Politics of ‘Doing Gender in South Africa’” in Social Worker Practitioner-Researcher, 24, 1 (March), 2012.

“Aesthetics and Identity in South African Fashion” in Moletsane, R, Mitchell, C and Smith, A, eds. Was it Something I Wore: Dress, Identity, Materiality. Cape Town: HSRC Press, 2012.

Desiree Lewis and Rick Rohde,  “Sophia Klaaste: Self-portraits” in Social Dynamics, 37, 2, 2011.

“Scripted bodies: Introduction”, Social Dynamics, 37, 2, 2011. Desiree Lewis and Mary Hames “Gender, Sexuality and Commodity Culture” in

Agenda, 25, 4, 2011. “Representing African Sexualities” in Tamale, S, ed. African Sexualities: A

Reader. Cape Town, Dakar, Nairobi and Oxford: Pambazuka Press), 2011. “Writing Baartman’s Agency: History, Biography and the Imbroglios of Truth” in

Gordon-Chipembere, N. ed. Representation and Black Womanhood. New York: Palgrave. 2011.

“Discursive Challenges for African Feminisms” in African Feminist Politics of Knowledge: Tensions, Possibilities, Challenges. Eds. Ampofo, Akosua  and Arnfred, Signe, Uppsala: Nordic Africa Institute, 2010

“Gendered Spectacle: New Terrains of Struggle in South Africa” in Body Politics and Women Citizens – African Experiences, ed. Ann Schlyter, Stockholm: SIDA Studies. 2009. “South Africa, African Feminism and Challenges of Solidarity” in Ruiters, G. ed. Gender Activism: Perspectives on the South African transition, institutional Cultures and Everyday Life. Grahamstown: Rhodes University, Institute of Social and Economic Research.

“Feminism and the Radical Imagination” in Agenda, 72, 2007.   Living on a Horizon: the Writings of Bessie Head (Trenton, NJ: Africa World

Press), 2007.

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Sisa Ngabaza

M. ED (UZ) PhD (UWC)Sisa Ngabaza has worked as a lecturer in the department of Women and Gender Studies at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. She has published on school age pregnancy in South Africa and her research interests include gender, youth and adolescent sexuality, adolescent pregnancy, parenting and power relations.

Her recent publications include the following: Policy commitments vs lived realities of young pregnant women and mothers in

school Western Cape South Africa [with Tamara Shefer], Reproductive Health Matters 21(41) 2013

Contestations of meanings of love and gender in a university students’ discussion with Dominic Daniels, Olivia Frank and Rhulani Maluleke. Agenda 2013 Doi.org/10.1080/10130950.2013.822684

Teachers’ responses to pregnancy and young parents in schools with Bhana, D. In R. Morrell, D. Bhana and T. Shefer (eds.), Books and/or Babies. Pregnancy and young parents in school .

Cape Town: Human Science Research Council Press. 2012 Positively pregnant: Teenage women’s experiences of negotiating pregnancy with

their families’, Agenda, 25, 2011 South African teachers’’ responses to teenage pregnancy and teenage mothers in

schools with [ Bhana, D, Morrell R, Shefer T] Culture, Health and Sexuality, 12 (8) 2010.

Tamara Shefer

(MA Psychology, UCT; D Phil, UWC; Research Psychologist) Tamara Shefer is a professor in the Women’s and Gender Studies Department at the University of the Western Cape and currently Deputy Dean of Teaching and Learning in the Faculty of Arts. Her research and publications are primarily in the following areas: discourses of heterosexuality; contemporary and historical narratives of raced, gendered

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and sexualized identities; masculinities; and challenges and innovations in teaching and learning in higher education She is the co-editor of five books, the most recent being Books and/or babies: pregnancy and young parenting in schools (2012); From Boys to Men (2007) and The Gender of Psychology (2006).

Some of her recent publications include: Critical reflections on contemporary responses to gender violence within public,

political, health and research contexts. African Safety Promotion: A Journal of Injury and Violence Prevention: Special Edition on Gender, Violence and Public, Political and Health Promotion Responses., 11(2), 2013.

Deconstructing the ‘sugar daddy’: A critical review of the constructions of men in intergenerational sexual relationships in South Africa [with A. Strebel]. AGENDA26(4), 57-63.DOI:10.1080/10130950.2012.760837

Narratives on teenage pregnancy and parenting at school in contemporary South African school contexts [with D. Bhana & R. Morrell]. Perspectives in Education, 31(1), 1-10, 2013.

Fraught tenderness: Narratives on domestic workers in memories of apartheid. Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 18(3), 307-317, 2012.

Narratives of transactional sex on a university campus [with L. Clowes & T. Vergnani]. Culture, Health & Sexuality: An International Journal for Research, Intervention and Care, 14(4), 435-447, 2012.

AIDS fatigue and students’ talk about HIV risk [with A. Strebel & J. Jacobs]. African Journal of AIDS Research, 11(2), 113-121, 2012.

‘Sometimes taxi men are rough’: Young women’s experiences of the risks of being a ‘taxi queen’. African Safety Promotion: A Journal of Injury and Violence Prevention [with A. Strebel, C. Potgieter, C. Wagner). 9(2), 1-24, 2011.

Racist sexualisation and sexualised racism in narratives on apartheid [with K. Ratele]. Psychoanalysis, culture & society, 16(1), 27-48, 2011.

Narrating gender and sex in and through apartheid divides. South African Journal of Psychology, 40(4), 382-395, 2010.

Anna Strebel (Professor Extraordinaire)(MA [Clinical Psychology], US; PhD, UCT; HPCSA-registered clinical and research psy-chologistAnna Strebel, previously professor in the Department of Psychology at UWC, is currently appointed in the Mellon Visiting and Retired Scholars Mentorship Programme in the Re-search Office at UCT, and based in the Department of Public Health and Family Medicine. She also works as a consultant researcher, conducting and publishing worke-specially in the areas of HIV/AIDS, gender-based violence, transactional and intergenera-tional sexuality, and qualitative methodologies,She is on the editorial board of a number of international and local academic journals.

Nadia Sanger (Research Associate)

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A doctoral graduate of the WGS Department, Nadia Sanger has researched and published on the media, popular culture and representations of the body, and has recently begun work in Critical Animal Studies. Nadia is a Fulbright scholar, having spent some time in the Women’s Studies department at the University of Maryland in College Park, Baltimore. She has worked as a Research Specialist at the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) for nine years, and is currently consulting independently. Her areas of research and writing include qualitative research methodologies, feminist intersectionality theories, and cultural studies.

Selected publications include: Reddy, C and Sanger, N. 2013. “Matters of Age: An Introduction to Ageing, In-

tergenerationality and Gender in Africa”Agenda: Special Issue on Ageing and In-tergenerationality, 94.

Sanger, N. 2013. “Imagining possibilities: feminist cultural production, non-vio-lent identities, and embracing the Other in post-colonial South Africa”, African Identities, DOI: 10.1080/14725843.2013.775841.

Sanger, N. 2011. “Review essay on Oliver Hermanus’ Shirley Adams”, Agenda: Gender, sexuality and commodity culture, 25 (4): 18-23.

Sanger, N. 2010. “‘The real problems need to be fixed first’: public discourses on sexuality and gender in South Africa”, Agenda: Feminisms Today, Special Issue, 24 (83): 114-125.

Sanger, N and Hadland, A. 2009. “Challenging patriarchal scripts? A gender ana-lysis of South Africa's community print media”, Agenda: Community Media, Spe-cial Issue, 22 (77): 4-17.

Sanger, N. 2009. “New women, old messages? Constructions of femininities, race and hypersexualised bodies in selected South African magazines, 2003–2006”, Social Dynamics, 35 (1): 137-148.

Sanger, N. 2008. “’There’s got to be a man in there’: Reading intersections between gender, race and sexuality in South African magazines”, African Identit-ies, 6 (3): 275-291.

Sanger, N. 2008. “Engendering the National Gender Machinery”, New Agenda: South African Journal of Social and Economic Policy Research, 29: 58-61.

Sanger, N. 2007. “’We cannot at any stage be seen to be political, as we are not here to engender change, but to inspire’: magazine editors and notions of objectiv-ity and neutrality”, Journal of Media and Gender Diversity, 3: 104-112.

Sanger, N and Clowes, L. 2006. “Marginalized and demonized: lesbians and equality - perceptions of people in a local Western Cape community”, Agenda, 67: 36-47.

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Useful Contacts for Postgraduates

Dean of Arts Faculty: Prof Duncan BrownSecretary to Arts Faculty Dean: Ms Jill Flusk

Email: [email protected]: 021 959 2235

Senior Arts Faculty Officer: Ms B SaulsEmail: [email protected]

Tel: 021 959 2407

Arts Faculty Officer:Collette Schroeder: [email protected]

Tel:021 595 9261

Arts Faculty Officer responsible for Postgraduate MattersVilleen Beerwinkel: [email protected]

Tel:021 595 9257

Division for Postgraduate Study Director: Prof Lorna HoltmanEmail: [email protected]

Tel: 021 959 2451/3920

Gender Equity Unit: Director: Ms Mary HamesEmail: [email protected]

Tel: 021 959 2813

Chair of Arts Faculty Postgraduate Board: Prof Simon Beck (Philosophy Department)

WGS Departmental Representative on APGB and Post-graduate Coordinator: Desiree Lewis

Email: [email protected]: 021 959 2403/2234

Centre for Humanities Research, focusing on supporting Arts Faculty postgraduates through seminars, conferences and funding.

Director: Prof Premesh LaluSecretary: Ms LameezLalkhen

Email: [email protected]: (021) 959 3162

Fax: (021) 959 1282

COURSES – Honours Note: Honours applicants must confirm that they register for and complete all courses required by the Arts FacultyName of module: Theories of Feminism

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Code: WGS731Semester 1

Lecturer: Associate Professor Desiree LewisDepartment: WGSLevel: Honours (and Masters) The aims of this course are to:

assist students with developing critical tools and frameworks for exploring gender in interdisciplinary ways.

encourage students’ understanding of the relevance and implications of feminist theorizing

encourage debate and critical reflection about gendered relations and dynamics, as well as discourses of gender.

Philosophy:The course aims at stimulating critical reflection about theoretical, political and epistemological issues that have dominated feminist debates and activism, especially since the institutionalization of women’s studies as an academic discipline in the second half of the twentieth century. Classes will focus on participation, discussion, reflection and debate. The value of the classes will therefore depend on students’ full preparation and participation.

Seminar Outline:The course comprises two sections. The first half of the course will provide a “road map” of key feminist theories and traditions that are relevant to South African explorations of gender, sexuality and related power relations and discourses. The second half of the course will explore case studies that are especially relevant to South African contexts in concretising theoretical trends reviewed.

RequirementsStudents will be assessed on the basis of class presentations and participation, long essays and short assignments.

ReadingReading for each seminar is compulsory. A reader will be provided for seminars; further reading (to which students will be directed) will be required for essays. Postgraduates are encouraged to use our resource centre, which has a solid selection of books and journals dealing with gender, feminism and sexuality.

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CORE COURSE - HonoursName of module: Introduction to Feminist ResearchCode: WGS711Semester 1

Lecturer:Prof Tamara SheferDepartment: WGS Level: Honours

Aims of the course: To acquaint students with basic principles of feminist research methodology To unpack feminist perspectives and debates on research methodologies, methods and

techniques; To develop research skills and appropriate knowledge for carrying out a range of

research methods appropriate to feminist research; To facilitate the development of students’ own research projects, in particular the

development of the research proposal and the research report.

Methodology:Seminars and class discussions.

Course content: Introduction to feminist research methodologies, key components and principles. Introduction to contemporary debates within feminist research methodologies,

particularly those pertinent to South Africa. Exploration of the links between feminist, qualitative and participatory

methodologies. Practical skills for writing a research proposal and conducting a research project.

Course requirements:Written assignments; development and presentation of research proposal.

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Readings:A wide range of readings on feminist research methodology and on various research methods will be made available. Students are expected to read prescribed texts available in the course reader, and to read sources recommended by the lecturer. Students must do all reading for each session.

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CORE COURSE – Masters Note: MA candidates must confirm that they register for and complete all courses required by the Arts Faculty. Name of module: Trends in contemporary feminist theory Code: WGS832 Semester 1 &2

Lecturer: Associate Prof.Desiree LewisDepartment: WGSLevel: Masters

Aims of the course: To provide students with an understanding of the implications of globally influential

feminist theories To encourage students’ competence with the concepts, tools and politics associated

with different feminist theories in relation to their MA research To provide students with theoretical concepts and frameworks for MA dissertations

and research projects.

Methodology:Seminars based on readings, weekly written assignments.

Course requirements:Written assignments and long essays; class participation and email contributions.

Readings:A wide range of theoretical readings will be made available for each seminar, based on the course content as outlined above.

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CORE COURSE – MastersName of module: Feminist Research Methodologies Code: WGS806Semester 1

Lecturer: Prof Tamara SheferDepartment: WGS Level: Masters

Aims of the course: To develop a detailed understanding of feminist critiques of traditional research

methodologies, methods and techniques, with particular reference to South African context;

To develop research skills and appropriate knowledge for conducting research on various topics.

To facilitate the development of students’ own research projects, in particular the development of the research proposal and work towards the mini-thesis.

Methodology:Seminars and class discussions.

Course content: Introduction to epistemological issues in research; Review of feminist research practice principles and historical tenets; Exploration of historical and current debates and challenges in carrying out feminist

research; Overview and practice in range of qualitative/feminist research methods including,

participant observation, interviewing, focus groups, participatory action research, life history research, etc.;

Practical skills for generating a research proposal and progressing on the research project for the mini-thesis.

Course requirements:Written assignments; development and presentation of research proposal.

Readings:A wide range of readings on feminist and other critical forms of research methodology and on research methods more broadly will be made available.

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ELECTIVE MODULES

The Department permits postgraduate WGS students to select courses from a range of departments and faculties at the University. Students are encouraged to approach different Arts Faculty departments (and departments in other faculties) to select elective courses in disciplines in which they are interested. Students should confirm the suitability of their choice with the Department and the Arts Faculty (See contact details on page 10).

Note: The WGS department is unable to provide detailed listings each year because course offerings and their teaching times in different departments regularly change. Please consult the 2015 Arts Faculty Yearbook for details.

The following modules have frequently been chosen by our students.

Women’s Health and Well-Being: Transcultural Perspectives Code:Hons:WGS 737; MA: WGS 837 Semester 2 Not on offer in 2015

Lecturers: Profs Vivienne Bozalek and Tamara Shefer Department: Women's and Gender StudiesLevel: Honours& Masters

Aims of the course:The purpose of this module is to create a learning environment that facilitates collaborative transcultural work in an online learning environment from different geographical locations. You are invited to explore the concept of well-being and its associated sets of values in relations to women’s physical, social and mental health, in order to gain a gendered perspective about health issues and how they intersect with power relations in different cultural contexts. You will have the opportunity to compare and contrast your views and experiences on this topic with those of other participants from your own geographic location as well as from other geographic locations. The module will culminate with a collaborative group project in which you will analyze and reflect upon how a particular aspect of Women’s Health and Well-Being is enhanced or compromised in local contexts.

MethodologyThis module will be conducted entirely in an e-learning environment. It is a post-graduate level module and will assume that you have access to a computer and internet connection. During this module you will have the opportunity to interact with your virtual classmates from different countries through synchronous modes (chat) and asynchronous modes (discussion forums and e-mails). You will also engage in research activities related to women's health and well-being.

Module Content Women's health and well-being

o Definitions

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o Personal perspectives o Comparative perspectives

The ways in which women's health and well-being can be:o enhanced o compromised

Conceptualizing and analyzing women's health and well-being in relation to the following parameters: Race; ClassAge/generation; Geographical context; Historical context; Cultural contexts; Sex-ual orientation.

Research Project You will be choosing one of the following topics as a focus for your final group project. You will be working in a small group collaboratively to deepen your knowledge of Women's health and well-being in terms of A, B & C stated above:

Mental Health issues HIV/AIDS Reproductive health and sexuality Women's Bodily Integrity Social well-being

CompetenciesAt the end of this module you should be able to:

1. Assess factors that contribute to or constitute women's physical, social and mental health and well-being in specific localities and across localities.

2. Assess which factors could enhance and/or compromise health and well-being from a gendered perspective in specific localities and across localities

3. Work collaboratively with other students and lecturers/facilitators to develop an awareness of gendered differences with respect to the ways in which health and well-being is constructed across the parameters of difference in historical, cul-tural, generational, racialized, sexualized, classed, political and geographical con-texts.

4. Construct knowledge of how well-being is constructed and experienced through interrogating power relations and values in relation to women’s physical, social and mental health.

5. Develop an interview schedule, conduct a qualitative interview, reflexively en-gage with your own and other’s findings in relation to context and social policy and collaboratively develop themes in relation to the research conducted in one specific area of women’s health and well-being.

AssessmentsAssessment will be cumulative in nature to facilitate independent and group activities that will allow you to generate knowledge, share experiences, and reconstruct knowledge in a collaborative environment. A total of 11 assignments will be conducted that build on each other. The CALENDAR for details and time requirement in these assignments will be available in the course outline and online.

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Name of module: Gender, Development and Public Management

Code: SOG 821 Consult with SOG

Note: Students must register with the School of Government in advance. Dates and information are obtainable from the SOG.

Department: School of Government

Level: Masters.

Aims of the course: To concentrate on gendered understanding of development (and development

management) in national and international context To focus on the ways in which 'neutral' approaches to development are in fact

gendered, as well as the ways in which this hinders the development process in the so-called 'Third' world.

Methodology:The course is divided into three components each presented by a different lecturer: 1) Gender and Socialization 2) Gender and Socio-economic Development 3) Rethinking Gender and Development

Content: How socialized gender roles affect social roles both within the home and work

environments. The impact of socialized roles, derived from both within developing states and

without, on the sound and inclusive development strategies. Gendered understandings of development theory and development management and

their inhibiting effect on inclusive development strategies. The impact of International Governmental Organizations (IGOs) and foreign non-

governmental organizations on gendered understandings of development and socio-economic security.

The deconstruction and reconstruction of gendered understandings of development in the creation of stable long-term development strategies.

Course requirements: Each component is weighted as follows:

Component 1: 15% (based on class evaluation).Component 2: 40% (one short essay, 35%; class presentation, 5%)Component 3: 40% (one short essay, 35%; class presentation, 5%)

Final exam: a policy paper (minimum of 50% for 3 component requirements necessary to write the final exam).

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Name of module: Health in Medical AnthropologyCode: Hons:Soc742, MA: Ant 847Note: Checkdetails with Anthro/Soc Department

Lecturer/s: Diana GibsonDepartment: Medical Anthropology/SociologyLevel: Honours and Masters

Aims of the course:To explore ten different themes within the broad area of Medicine and Health in Africa in order to provide a critical analysis, including a gender analysis, of these areas.

Methodology:Lectures, seminars.

Content: The Anthropology/Sociology of Epidemiology, including gendered patterns of ill

health Mental Health, including cross-cultural and gender issues in the construction of

mental health and illness Applied Health Research Methods The Anthropology/Sociology of the Body, including a Foucauldian analysis of

technologies of the body and the constructed and gendered body Indigenous and alternative health care, including the role of women in care Reproductive Health, e.g. representations of female reproduction, male and female

circumcision, reproductive technologies, adolescent reproductive health, rape and sexual violence

Health Care Institutions Chronic Illness Culturally and context sensitive health promotion Health Programme Design and Policy

Readings:A wide range of readings will be provided for each theme.

Name of module: The Anthropology of Visual Culture

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Code: Hons: Ant 734 MA: SOC 853Note: Check details with the Anthro/Soc Department

Lecturer: Prof Heike BeckerDepartment: AnthropologyLevel: Honours and Masters

What the course is all aboutVisuality and the appreciation of visual representation have been central to anthropology since the beginnings of the discipline. For many decades anthropologists have engaged the part played by visual forms and media in different societies. Anthropology’s own visual practices in film and photography go back to the very beginnings of ethnographic fieldwork, but have recently been critically reflected and re-developed.

The course explores anthropological perspectives on visuality, visual culture, and visual anthropology as representation. It critically engages with the central place given in the contemporary Western-dominated culture to vision as a form of knowing and making sense of the world at the expense of other senses and forms. The course, further, investigates perspectives on visuality and media, such as those that allow us to rethink how processes of modernity and globalisation actually work on the ground. Finally, the course deals with visual anthropology and a critical reflection of visual ethnography. It includes a practical project in visual anthropology.

Why you may be interested in taking itThe course offers postgraduate students the opportunity to theoretically and practically engage with a significant field of anthropology. It will contribute particularly to the training of those postgraduate students who are interested in a career in media, the cultural industry, or research.

Topics that the course deals with* Ways of looking (at the world, at images, and at/in anthropology)* The senses in anthropology* Visuality and surveillance* Visual methods in ethnographic research* Globalization, imagination & media* Malls, memorials & messages: South African visual culture & public spaces* Thinking visual anthropology: representation and histories* Anthropology & photography* Anthropology & film* Contesting images: new forms of representation?* Field project

Details of the project will be announced at the beginning of the course, Last year, the topic was:

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Name of module: Gender in cross-cultural perspective Code: Hons: ANT 733; MA: ANT 850Note: Check details with the Anthropology Department

Lecturer/s: Diana GibsonDepartment: AnthropologyLevel: Honours and Masters

Aims: By the end of this module, a student will be able to:

Identify and analyze current theoretical approaches to the issue of gender in different cultural settings

Understand the development of feminist anthropology from a historical perspective

Identify gender issues at it relates to ideas concerning sexuality in cross-cultural perspective

The gendered nature of institutions and how it affects gender behaviour Understand the effects of ideas concerning gender on individual bodies Recognize the restrictions and freedoms that gender roles place on people

Methodology:Seminars, class discussion, videos

Course content: Contemporary perspectives on gender, identity and sexuality The development of feminist anthropology Bodies and sexualities in cross cultural perspective Cross-cultural meanings and practices attached to masculinities and femininities Transgender

Course requirements: Written assignments, class presentations

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Name of module: Gender and Nationalism Codes: Hons: HIS 742; MA:HIS 842Note: Check details with History Department

Lecturer/s: Prof Patricia HayesDepartment: HistoryLevel: Honours and Masters.

This course focuses largely on Africa, but is not confined to the continent. It explores the insights brought by the study of gender to the discipline of history. Feminist scholarship has challenged social history in particular, firstly through the impetus of Marxist feminism and more lately through post-structuralist influences.

The course explores this historiography, from the critique of Marxist androcentrism through to the study of how gendered subjects and subjectivities (including masculinities) are historically made. The central aim is not only to acquaint postgraduate students with these critical literatures, but also to develop the skills needed to make gendered readings of ‘raw’ historical texts during research work. Accordingly, time will be spent examining archival and other ‘primary’ texts for their gender implications, and such practical research examples will also be used to engage with the historiographical debates.

The intention of this course is to produce historians capable of bringing a rigorous gendered perspective to the study of the past, which in turn makes it possible to critique the workings of the discipline.

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Postgraduate Research and Writing

General

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Postgraduate study presents different challenges from undergraduate study mainly because postgraduates are expected to work far more independently, especially in reading widely and expressing ideas in writing. Postgraduate students should not expect to be reminded or prompted about course requirements and required reading.

Postgraduate study requires much more reading, reflection and discussion, and less conventional teaching time than undergraduate study. It is vital that you keep up with recommended reading in the case of course work, and that you read as widely and extensively as possible in the case of preparing for your thesis proposal and thesis. It is also imperative that students, including Honours, Masters and PhD students working on proposals or long research projects, write frequently and consistently.

It is crucial for postgraduates to write frequently to build up a momentum; it is only possible to develop ideas once you put something down on paper. Procrastinating and fixating on extensive reading before writing is likely to make the writing process overwhelming. You or your supervisor are unlikely to be satisfied with early drafts, but these are essential to the writing process and development of your ideas.

The following are guidelines for honours, Masters and PhD students’ research proposals and essays/theses.

Recommendations for Working towards Honours Research Report (Note: The information below should be used as a guide, and will vary according to your topic.)

March By the beginning of March you should begin general thinking and reading about

your topic, and finalise who your supervisor will beApril

By early April you should finalise your research topic and develop your research question and aims

Once you have finalised your research question you need to start reading around your topic. Summarise the key issues raised in the important readings. You should identify at least 12 key readings, which you should have a thorough knowledge of. Draw on the Library Research Skills meeting to help you find relevant read-ing. What are the key ideas? What are the main research areas? Who are the key theorists? Where and how does your research question fit into this academic ter-rain?

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Start a bibliography of these readings on RefWorks and keep adding to this as you find relevant readings.

May Early May put your literature review through Turnitin, submit the first draft of

your literature review (4-10 pages). Start working on your methodology and or theoretical and conceptual framework

Late May put your methodology through Turnitin, submit the first draft of your methodology section to your supervisor, start working on your interview sched-ule, or draft data analysis or case study. At this time you should also develop your literature review and update RefWorks

June Early June submit your draft interview schedule or data analysis, or case study

and the 2nd version of your literature review to your supervisor, start reworking your methodology section; rework your interview schedule; start planning your interviews

Late June submit the 2nd version of your methodology or theoretical and concep-tual framework section; update RefWorks

July Conduct interviews, transcribe interviews and begin data analysis/ develop basic

draft data analysis or case study Fine tune literature review and methodology; update RefWorks

August Early August submit first draft of data analysis or case study Continue fine tuning literature review and methodology/ theoretical and concep-

tual framework Mid-August start working on 2nd draft of the data analysis/ case study

September Early September submit 2nd draft of data analysis/ case study Late September submit 3rd draft of data analysis/ case study

October Early October submit first complete draft to Turnitin and then to your supervisor Mid October work on changes to first draft End of October submit final draft to Turnitin and submit your study for examina-

tion.

The deadline for graduation in March 2016 is November 2015

Research Proposals for Masters and PhD: (See information available from the Division for Postgraduate Study: http://www.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=cms&action=showfulltext&id=gen20Srv23Nme0_9922_1258366986&parent=gen11Srv7Nme54_2430_1210050416&menustate=pet)

Purpose of ProposalBroadly, a research proposal does the following:

Describes the research problem

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Explains the significance of the problem or topic and rationalizes the research Reviews literature and sources relevant to your topic Explains the theoretical, conceptual and methodological approaches you will use

to explore your topicNote that these often overlap.

Research proposals allow you to plan the intellectual journey that will allow you to arrive at certain goals. Even if your eventual research changes from your proposal in certain ways, the initial research proposal is an important starting point, and allows you to focus your reading and writing.

The proposal also:

Shows your supervisor that you are adequately informed about your topic to pursue the research

Demonstrates to the Arts Faculty Postgraduate Board (and a broader academic community that may not have the specialized knowledge of your field that your supervisor has) that you are intellectually prepared to undertake the research, hat the research is feasible and appropriate to your level of study, and that you have done adequate thinking about the topic and sufficient preparation for the study.

Submission of ProposalsMasters by coursework and minithesis: After completing coursework, usually after the first year, you need to submit a research proposal to the Arts Faculty. Once it has gone through both the faculty and Senate Higher Degrees Committees, your minithesis title will be registered for a period of three years. (Note: your title is registered for three years, but you need to register as a Masters student at the beginning of every year.)

Rule A 19.3.2: The title of a thesis/ minithesis is approved for a period of three years, after which the student shall apply to Senate for an extension of time.

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Masters by full thesis: The last day for registration is usually towards the end of March. You may only register if the department has accepted you as a full thesis student, and – usually -- once it’s been confirmed who will supervise you.

The University requires that you submit a proposal to the Arts Faculty Postgraduate Board by the end of the academic year. Once the proposal has gone through both the faculty and Senate Higher Degrees Committees, your thesis title will be registered for a period of three years. (Note: your title is registered for three years, but you need to register as a Masters student at the beginning of every year.)

Rule A 19.3.1: The maximum period of study is three years. Extensions may be granted by Senate only in exceptional cases on submission of a motivated application by the student and a recommendation of the head of the department.

Doctorate:PhD candidates need to submit a proposal to the Arts Faculty Postgraduate Board by the end of the academic year; your thesis title is registered for a period of five years.

Rule A 23.1: The approval of the relevant head of department has to be obtained before a candidate is allowed to register. The proposed title of the thesis, as well as the supervisor must be approved by the Senate before the end of the first year of registration.

Format and Length of Proposal Note that research proposal formats do not need to be the same, but generally require the following:

Cover page indicating your name, the department in which you are registered, the degree for which you are registered and the name of your supervisor

Abstract (on separate page) Title 10 key words (or composite words) Aims of the research Rationale and Background Literature review Research problem / hypothesis Theoretical and conceptual framework Methodology, including, where necessary, ethics statement. Chapter outline/Thesis structure Preliminary Bibliography

Proposal Length: Masters’ proposals should be between 12 and 15 double-spaced pages. Doctoral proposals should be between 15 and 20 double-spaced pages.

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THE THESISAs the writer of the thesis, the student is responsible both for the main text and presenting it in accordance with university requirements. Except for honours long essays, all theses should include the following:

Preliminary Sections, pages numbered in Roman numerals (i, ii, iii, iv, etc). Title page Keywords Abstract Declaration Acknowledgements (optional) Contents Main text divided into numbered chapters with headingsNotesBibliographyAppendices (optional)

Title PageThis should include the following:

the full (registered) title of the thesis

the full names of the author

the following statement:

A minithesis submitted in (partial, in the case of structured MAs)fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts/ Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies, University of the Western Cape.

date submitted for examination. name(s) of supervisor(s)

DECLARATION The following declaration must be made. It must stand on a page by itself under the heading, DECLARATION: I declare that ... (full title of thesis, in italics) is my own work, that it has not been submitted for any degree or examination in any other university, and that all the sources I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by complete references. Full name.................................... Date.................................. Signed.........................................

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Referencing and Plagiarism With scope for plagiarism increasing because of the wide availability of different kinds of information, the identification of plagiarism – with software, by supervisors, by univer-sity committees and by examiners, has become a major concern. Note that plagiarism will not only lead to failure, but will prevent you from re-registering, and will have far-reach-ing consequences for your career as a student, or prospective employee. All draft and fi-nal work submitted by postgraduate students must be put through Turnitin.

Whenever phrases and important ideas taken from a text are used, their source must be acknowledged. Direct use of others’ words requires that you put these in quotation marks, even if you have indicated the source used. Quotations longer than three lines must be indented. Note that the use of others’ words and phrases is plagiarism. (Students often use others’ phrases and simply acknowledge the source, and not that they have used words from the source; this is plagiarism.)You need to acknowledge sources of borrowed ideas even when you do not use the words of the text from which you borrow. When you use your own words to express the ideas of someone else, you must still quote the source, even though you do not have to use quota-tion marks.

Remember to note all your references, and keep a list as you proceed with your proposal or thesis. This will prevent you from losing track and leading you to panic when you are finalizing your proposal or thesis.

Referencing and BibliographiesVarious styles and conventions are used for academic writing generally and thesis writ-ing specifically. One of the most popular, recommended to WGS students, is the “author-date” or Harvard style for citations and reference lists/ bibliographies.Generally, how-ever, consistency in presentation is important, and external examiners often pay particular attention to citations and references.

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Citing sources within the text Indicate that you have borrowed words or ideas from a source. 1. When the name(s) of the quoted author(s) form part of a sentence, the reference indica-tor consists of the date and the page on which that quotation appears. For example: In dealing with feminist fiction, Carol Boyce Davies (1995: 34) describes themovement beyond boundaries of much women’s writing.

When the author is not referred to in your sentence, indicate the name within the refer-ence indicator after your sentence:

It has been argued that feminist fiction moves beyond boundaries determined by domi-nant traditions (Davies, 1995: 34).

List of references at the end of the text The bibliography provides full details of all quoted sources and references in your text, and needs to provide the reader with all publishing details.

Davies, CB. 1995. Moving Beyond Boundaries: Black Women’s Diaspora. London: Pluto.

If a sourcedoes not specific an author or organization, the alphabetic arrangement is ac-cording to the name of the editor(s) or by the first main word of the title. If you are using more than one source - by the same author – published in the same year, use “a”, “b” etc directly after the year both in your text reference and in the reference list at the end.

Bennet, J. 2000a. "Gender-based Violence in South Africa". AGI Newsletter, vol 6. Bennett, J. 2000b. Southern African Higher Educational Institutions Challenging Sexual Harassment/Sexual Violence: A Handbook of Resources. Cape Town: African Gender Institute. 

Titles of all published materials are listed using italic type or by underlining and not both.

The edition should be mentioned unless it is the first edition. When there is no edition statement, you may assume that the work is a first edition.

Examples of references to books: Examples of how to cite: A book by a single author: Butler, J. 1990. Feminism and the subversion of Identity. London:Routledge.A book with more than one author: Mager, A and Blake, M. 2001. Masculinities in the Making of Gendered Identities: A Getnet Guidebook for Trainers. Cape Town: GETNET.

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A book produced by an editor rather than an author: Turshen, M. Ed. 2001. The Aftermath: Women in Post-Conflict Transformation. London and New York: Zed.

An edition of a book other than the first: Visser, N. 1992. Handbook for writers of essays and theses. 2nd ed. Cape Town: Maskew Miller Longman.

A chapter in a book: Taylor, H. 2005. Gender, Power, Culture. In Gender and SocialOrganization theory: Se-lected readings. 2nd ed. Edited by J. A. Burrows. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. 60 75.

A paper from a conference publication: Pillay, D. 2004.Exploring Gender in the Classroom: A Guateng Study. Proceedings of the Conference on Gender and Performance. 8-13 November. Dale House, University of York. 50-61.

Citing journal articles Articles are listed according to the surname of the first author that appears on the article. If there are more than three authors, you may give the name of the first author only, fol-lowed by “…[et al.]”.

The title of the journal is italicized.

Provide the volume and issue numbers of the journalfollowed by the start and end page numbers of the complete article. Some journals have volume or issue numbers only and not both.

Examples of references to journals: Kiondo, E. 1999. Access to gender and development information by rural women in Tan-zania. Innovation. 19:18-27. Rasebotsa, N, Molema, L and Lederer, M. 2000. Women Writing Africa. Feminist Fo-rum. 23 (2):89-97.

Citing a thesis or an unpublished discussion The titles of unpublished works are not underlined or italicised.

Examples of references to unpublished sources Makhubela, P.M. 1998. Public libraries in the provision of adult basic education pro-grammes: the case of the Western Cape Province, South Africa. D.Bibl. Thesis. Depart-ment of Library and Information Science, University of the Western Cape. Thapisa, A.1998. Co-operation with the University of Botswana. [Personal interview, 10 March]. Cape Town. (Unpublished).

Citing electronic sources

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Citations for electronic sources are as important as those for print sources. Readers re-quire clear indications about how and whereto find sources. Because electronic data may be moved and documents sometimes disappear, it is important to indicate the date on which you referred to a source to indicate when the link functioned.

When electronic sources are also available in print, give the print source as well since electronic sources may not be adequately archived.

Any citation to an electronic source should conform to your chosen citation style and should contain:

an author if this information is available

the date on which the document was produced or updated

the title of the electronic document

the medium, which may be “Online” or “CD-Rom” in square brackets, or you may use “Electronic” if you are not sure whether the source is online or networked CD-Rom

the uniform resource locator (URL) which may sometimes be given between angle brackets (<>). If the URL is very long, it may be written on two lines, but try to break a line only where a punctuation mark occurs and do not add a hyphen, as this will alter the URL.

the date, in square brackets,on which the document was last accessed.

Examples of how to cite an electronic journal: Aird, A. 2001. E-commerce in higher education: can we afford to do nothing? Ariadne. 26. [Online]. Available: http://ariadne.ac.uk/issue26/e-commerce/intro.htm [2001, March 8].

Smith, A.G. 1997. Testing the surf: criteria for evaluating Internet information resources. The public-access computer systems review 8(3). [Online]. Available: http://in-fo.lib.uh.edu/pr/v8/n3/smit8n3.html [2002, September 12].

A journal article available in both electronic and print formats: Pereira, C. 2005. Zina and Transgressive Sexuality in northern Nigeria. Feminist Africa, 5: 36-45. [Electronic]. Available: EBSCOHost: Academic Search Premier. [2008, No-vember 15].

Articles from the World Wide Web: Standler, R.B. 2000. Plagiarism in colleges in the USA. [Online]. Available: http://www.rbs2.com/plag.htm [2002, September 11].

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Walker, J. 1997. Intellectual property in the information age: a classroom guide to copy-right. [Online]. Available: http://www.cas.usf.edu/english/walker/papers/copyright/ip-dummie.html [2002, September 11].

NOTES

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