An exegesis is a form of assessment that generally accompanies a student's creative work, for example, a short film.
An exegesis usually takes the form of a written, audio or video essay and provides a critical explanation of logical thought processes, choice of themes and justifications for the creative decisions made when the creative work was produced.
An exegesis also allows for students to critically examine their creative work in comparison to current theory and practice.
PLEASE NOTE
You may be asked to include other components in your exegesis. The below is a template outline and a general guide to the content to include. Please read your assessment question carefully and check with your lecturer for anything specific you should include.
INTRODUCTION
Here you can describe your work.
What is about? What are the themes?
Why is it important to you and why will it be important to your audience?
Where does your work sit within a broader social, historical or artistic context?
Also identify the discussion points to come, and outline what you will talk about in the body of your exegesis.
BODY
This is where you will delve into analysing your work further.
You may include:
An outline and assessment of the process that you undertook to create the work, also discussing which aspects of the process worked well and which didn't.
Your inspiration, your ideas and the process of moved from ideas to physical works.
The historical and cultural context and significance or your work.
A detailed look at the work itself - each aspect of the work, especially in relation to the above concepts.
CONCLUSION
Here you will sum up your ideas and give a broad overview of the outcomes and discoveries that you discussed above.
Fonts & Paragraphs
For written exegeses use a serif font (such as Times New Roman, Palatino, Garamond). You may use a different sans serif font (for example Helvetica, Arial etc.) for your headings. It's not advisable to use more than two fonts.
For a website use a sans serif font. You can vary the font of headings, but again, it’s not advisable to use more than two fonts on your website.
12 point font preferred. Do not use larger than 12 point, and only use 10 point if the typeface is readable without strain.
Margins
Left & right margins: 3.81cm
Top Margin 5.08 cm; bottom margin 2.54cm
Pagination
Include page numbers for all pages; use roman numerals for Front Matter (e.g. if listing keywords, table of contents, etc.) Your title page is counted as page i, but should not be numbered.