- CU5005 - Writing the History of Science
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Ben Marsden
Pre-requisites
Available only at level 5
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to historical research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
Available in first half-session in 2008-2009Overview
The course will emphasise historiographic issues, using numerous examples and case studies to illustrate them. The issues will include questions of religion, spatial location, political orientation, reform and reaction, popularisation and professionalisation, and literary representation, and 'trust'. The case studies will include evolution before and after Darwin, the fashioning of scientific 'lives', and the implementation of particular nineteenth-century technologies.
Structure
10 x 2 hour seminars
Assessment
100% continuous assessment (90% - 1 x 5000 word essay; 10% - tutorial participation)
- CU5010/CU5510 - Trolls, Bruids and the Walking Dead:Imagining the pagan past
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Ralph O'Connor
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Running in second half-session in 2008-2009Overview
The written literatures of mediaeval Iceland and Ireland represent the richest body of textual evidence we have for the beliefs and customs of pre-Christian Europe. This course will explore how mediaeval Irish and Icelandic saga-authors presented and imagined the pagan past from a Christian perspective, looking back several centuries into a world which was both familiar and alien, terrible and admirable. Particular attention will be paid to tales of Otherworld voyages, heathen magic and the conversion to Christianity. The historical functions of these narratives in their authors’ own times will be considered, and the question of cultural exchange between these two bodies of narrative will be addressed.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (one 4,000-word essay – 80%; 1,000-word seminar paper – 20%)
- CU5502 - Cultural History Dissertation I:sources and source criticism
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Ben Marsden
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
NoneOverview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with the member of staff best equipped to advise you on your dissertation topic. It will involve detailed and critical discussion of primary and secondary materials suited to your research interests (as developed over the preceding semester) with the aim of providing the fullest preparation for researching and writing the dissertation in the summer and research beyond.
Structure
One-to-one supervision (no scheduled classes)
Assessment
Continuous assessment – 100% (annotated bibliography – 100%)
- CU5901 - Cultural History Dissertation II: research and writing
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
CU5502 Cultural History Dissertation I: sources and source criticism
Co-requisites
None
Notes
NoneOverview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with a member of staff. Students will be expected to produce a dissertation of 15,000 - 20,000 words.
Structure
4 X 1 hour supervision sessions in total.
Assessment
Continuous Assessment - dissertation (100%)
- HI5016 - Basic Latin for Postgraduates
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Professor Jane Stevenson
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
NoneOverview
This course aims to enable students to analyse simple Latin sentences and stories, make effective use of Latin dictionaries and grammars, and apply their grammatical, lexical and analytical skills to translate simple Latin texts and stories.
Structure
One 1-hour and one 2-hour session per week for 12 weeks
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%) consisting of 2 language exercises
- HI5026/HI5526 - Witchcraft, Traditional Practices and the Rise of a Protestant Culture in Early Modern Scotland
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr. William Naphy
Pre-requisites
Available ony to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
Either HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
Running in first half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course will consider the impact of the importation of ideas about Christianity from the wider Reformed world and their implementation in early modern Scotland. Particular attention will be given to traditional, pre-Reformation practices relating to healing (relics, holy sites, 'magical' cures, etc.), the transitions of life (birth, marriage, death, burial, and commemoration) and wider ideas about 'the world' (the role, place and power of the demonic, angelic and prophetic). Specific areas for examination may include: James VI and his ideas; the North Berwick witch trials; Aberdeenshire witchcraft; feasting & celebrating. Special attention will be given to popular and elite attitudes to traditional practices, superstition, 'latent' Catholicism (and recusancy) and the 'politics' of implementing the Reformation.
Structure
1 x 2 hour seminar per week for 10 weeks
Assessment
Seminar paper (50%), critique of seminar papers (20%), book review (10%), comparative review (10%), seminar participation (10%).
- HI5029 - Medieval Texts and Manuscripts: Interrogating Medieval Evidence
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr R O'Connor
Pre-requisites
Available to student in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Will run in first half-session in 2008-2009Overview
Students will participate in semininars with medievalists currently working in different disciplines within the Schools of History, Divinity & Philosophy and Language and Literature. In each seminar a member of staff will introduce a piece of their own work (that has been pre-circulated), explain the way in which it was developed, the theoretical and methodological techniques applied, the kinds of sources used, and its relationship to more general interpretative traditions. The presenter will then invite students to discuss and critique the work as a group. In this way, students will gain first-hand experience of the writing of different kinds of medieval scholarship.
Structure
10 X 2 hour seminars
Assessment
Continuous Assessment (100%: 1 x 5,000 word essay (90%); and tutorial participation (10%),
- HI5043/HI5540 - End of Empire: Russia, 1900 - 1917
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Tony Heywood
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
Either HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
This course will be available in 2008-2009 in the second half-sessionOverview
Why did the Russian empire succumb to revolution in 1917? This fundamental question of twentieth-century history is explored through analysis of key debates concerning the empire's final crisis. The course makes particular reference to the impacts of the 1905 revolution and the First World War. It encompasses foreign policy as well as the domestic situation, and includes extended discussion of selected prominent individuals such as Tsar Nicholas II and Petr Stolypin (Prime Minister, 1906-11)
Structure
Introductory session, followed by one two-hour tutorial per week for nine weeks.
Assessment
4,000 word essay (80%); 2x500 word book reviews (10%+10%).
- HI5047/HI5547 - Ireland in Revolution, 1880-1925
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Oonagh Walsh
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This course uses a selection of specialised studies of key historical episodes in late nineteenth and early twentieth century Ireland to highlight: (a) the emergence and development of constitutional, cultural and militant nationalism; (b) the emergence and development of constitutional and militant unionism; (c) the changing nature of Anglo-Irish relations.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
Continuous Assessment (100%) 60% - 3,000 word essay; 30% - 1,500 word seminar paper; 10% - 500 word book review
- HI5048/HI5548 - The Troubles: Ireland, 1968-1998
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Micheal O’Siochru
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
Either HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or EL5013 Research Methods in Language and Linguistics
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This course examines developments in Ireland, both North and South of the border, from the outbreak of the Troubles in 1968 until the signing of the Good Friday Peace Agreement in 1998. The first half of the course focuses on competing political interpretations (Unionist, Loyalist, Nationalist, Republican and Marxist etc), and the interrelationship between Ireland, Scotland, England, Europe and the US. The second half of the course concentrates on how poets, novelists and visual artists have responded to the Troubles. Focusing on key events (Bloody Sunday, the Hunger Strikes, the Anglo-Irish Agreements), this half of the course looks at the use (and abuse) of history as a representational strategy, identity politics, and the role of the artist in a divided society.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
Continuous Assessment (100%)
- HI5053 - Introduction to Historical Research
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Karin Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
This course will be available in the first half-session of 2008-2009Overview
This course introduces level 5 students (both taught MLitt and research students) to the opportunities for historical research in Aberdeen, conventions of historical work, IT, bibliographical tools, text preparation, access to sources, databases and libraries, and prepares them for their own work on their dissertation and archival research. The core of the course is built around contact with several historians and archivists, who introduce students to techniques, tools, and approaches which they can then apply to their own special period, subject area and types of history. Several sessions will concentrate on interdisciplinary approaches which can be profitably combined with historical work, the use of visual sources, useful hints about weights, measures and calendars, the role of material culture and museums, electronic aids and the art of bibliographic construction. Students will learn from each other in groups sessions with presentations and specialist advice on their topics
Structure
10 x two-hour seminars
Assessment
100% continuous assessment
- HI5067 - Approaches to Scandinavian Studies
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Professor Stefan Brink
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Will be available in the first half-session of 2008-2009Overview
Content: This course will provide students with an introduction to, overview of, and engagement with, the key methods and generic, transferable, and foundational skills necessary to conduct research at a graduate level in Scandinavian Studies; specialised ‘themed’ work on different chronological periods targeted at the student’s area of interest; presentational skills; editing and writing.
Structure
Teaching: 10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Assessment: continuous assessment 100% (one 5,000-word essay – 100%)
- HI5080 - Old Norse Language and Literature
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Tarrin Wills
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Will be available in the first half-session of 2008-2009Overview
Old Norse is the direct ancestor of modern Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Icelandic and Faroese. It was the lingua franca of Viking-Age Scandinavia, and had a lasting impact on the development of the English language. It was also the primary literary language of the Scandinavian Middle Ages, notably the Icelandic sagas and skaldic and eddic poems. It is, hence, the gateway to a fuller understanding of mediaeval Scandinavia, the “Latin” of the North. This course will provide the basic linguistic tools needed to read Old Norse texts, and some background about the history of the language and its links with other languages. No prior knowledge of Old Norse is assumed.
Mediaeval Scandinavia’s most enduring contribution to world literature is represented by the Icelandic prose sagas and eddic poems. Terse, dramatic and brilliantly imaginative, the sagas tell stirring stories of legendary warriors, the kings of Norway, and events of the Viking Age including the settlement of Iceland and other migrations. The eddic poems, some of which may have been composed in the pre-Christian period, hark back to an earlier age of mythological and legendary history, recounting the Norse creation-myth an heroic exploits. Focusing on key texts in English translation, this course will introduce these various genres; no prior knowledge is assumed. It will also introduce the third major Old Norse literary form, skaldic verse, whose intricate patterns of mythological imagery conceal information about key events in the Viking Age.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (3,000-word essay – 60%; plus eight 10-minute language exercises – 40%)
- HI5082 - Cultural History of Early Modern Science, 1500-1700
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Prof. Mario Biagioli
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This course examines some of the many aspects of the so-called “scientific revolution” across disciplines and national boundaries, paying considerable attention to its intellectual, institutional, religious, gender, material, and methodological dimensions. It covers the work of canonical figures such as Copernicus, Tycho, Kepler, Galileo, Descartes, and Newton, but also patronage dynamics, the place of science at court, the relationship between science and humanism, the emergence of museums and academies, the sites of scientific practice, networks of communication, material culture, the role of artisans, women, and instrument makers, and the development of scientific publications.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (5,000-word essay – 100%)
- HI5095 - Reading Vernacular Manuscripts
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Professor jane Stevenson
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
NoneOverview
Students will be trained in skills and techniques for reading a range of medieval and early modern manuscripts. Elements of the course will be tailred to the chronological and generic interests of individual students.
Students will become familiar with:
- major developments in script history
- different styles of handwriting
- commonly used abbreviations and contractions
- the terminology used to decribe script forms and styles
They will be able to read a range of vernacular manuscripts relevant to their field of interest.
Session 1: Palaeography: Theory and Method.
Sessions 2 - 20: Transcription of a series of manucripts, with weekly homework exercises.Structure
2 x 1-hour seminarts per week for 10 weeks.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%: 8 transcription exercises, 12.5% each).
- HI5096/HI5587 - Peacemaking and Bloodfeud in Scotland, c. 1390-1513
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Jackson Armstrong
Pre-requisites
Programme year 5 or above.
Overview
To develop advanced research skills through historical analysis of the nature and exercise lordship, the judical system, and mechanisms of conflict management in late medieval Scotland, by the evaluation of scholarly debates and the critical examination of primary sources.
The course will contain debate over the extent and role of violent feuding among the nobility, and the relationship between the crown and its magnates, has been fundamental to a generation of scholarship on late medieval Scotland. Focusing especially on the fifteenth century, this course explores the nature and exercise of lordship, changes in and uses of the judicial system, and diverse mechanisms of conflict management, all of which shaped the governance of the realm. evaluating evidence such as bonds of manrent, arbitration and marriage contracts, legal and parliamentary records, and chronicles, the course will examine the roles of law, violence and peacemaming in structuring society. Students will be encouraged to assess the strengths and limits of the exisiting framework of historical analysis.Structure
10 two-hour seminars.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%) (1x 500-word book review(10%); 1x 1,500 word seminar paper (30%); 1x 3000 word essay (60%)).
- HI5097/HI5588 - The Image of 'The North'
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Andrew G. Newby
Pre-requisites
Programme Year 5 or above.
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5001 Approaches to Culture.
Overview
This course has been developed in collaboration with colleagues at the Centre of Nordic Studies (University of Helsinki) and the Nordeurope-institut (Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin). It employs an innovative module/web-ct based teaching delivery (using web-ct based texts, tailor-made introductory essays and asynchronous discussion threads), with colleagues and students from each of the three participating institutions interacting with each other (through the medium of English). As part of a broader, research-led, examination of the place of Scotland within Scadanavian/Nordic cultural zone, this course examines both internal and external perceptions of 'the North' from Tacitus to the present day, using a selection of readings each week to illustrate broader themes. The outline is as follows:
1. Pre-modern (pre-Rudbech/Scheffer) depictions of 'the North', with particular reference to Tacitus
2. Montesquieu and Climate Theory
3. The impact of Ossian
4. 'The North' in Art, with particular reference to National Romantic movements in Europe
5. J.G. Herder and his followers
6. Travel Literature (Arcebi and afterwards)Structure
10 one-hour seminars, plus ten one-hour interactive tutorials.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%) (1x 4000-word essay (80%); 1x 1000 word book review (20%)).
- HI5508 - Irish and Scottish Jacobitism
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Professor Allan Macinnes
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
Jacobitism was a major factor in Scottish politics for almost six decades after the deposition of James VII in 1689, yet appears to have diminished in Ireland as a military and political force during the 1690s. However, Ireland retained a cultural vibrancy and optimism with regard to Jacobitism which was viewed increasingly pessimistically, even fatalistically, in Scotland. This course examines the apparent paradox of Jacobitism as a national endeavour in both countries. Use will be made of Gaelic as well as English sources to establish whether Jacobitism attained the status of a movement in Scotland while remaining a cause in Ireland. Particular reference will be made to the rich collection of Jacobite materials in Special Collections and the Library.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%)
- HI5516 - Intermediate Latin for Postgraduates
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Patricia Clark
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session of 2008-2009Overview
This course aims to enable students to read and analyse medieval Latin texts, make effective use of Latin dictionaries, and apply their grammatical, lexical and analytical skills to translate medieval Latin. By the end of this course students should be able to translate medieval Latin texts and stories at a level of difficulty corresponding to St John’s Gospel.
Structure
5 hours per week for 6 weeks
Assessment
3-hour exam (100%)
- HI5519 - The Scottish and Irish Diaspora 1730-1930
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Marjorie Harper
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme year 5
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Notes
Available in first half-session 2008-2009Overview
Between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries migrants from Ireland and Scotland settled in a range of different environments in Europe, North America, Australasia, India, South Africa and South America. This course will examine the history of Irish and Scottish overseas settlement in a broad comparative context, providing the opportunity to explore the multiplicity and complexity of the emigrant experience. Theories of ethnicity, diaspora and nationalism will assist in determining whether, and under what conditions, those of Irish and Scottish origin came to see themselves as part of an ethnic “diaspora”. This will lead into a consideration of whether Irish and Scottish overseas communities shared similar experiences of modernity, empire and migration, or whether their experiences were fundamentally different.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
5,000 word essay 90%; tutorial participation 10%
- HI5521 - Latin Palaeography
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Prof David Dumville
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5, with a basic knowledge of Latin
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
Students will be introduced to different styles of handwriting used in the writing of different types of later medieval and early modern documents. They will be trained to identify commonly used abbreviations and contractions. Throughout an emphasis will be placed on practical exercises in transcription. Documents considered will be in Latin.
Structure
1 x 1.5 hour seminar per week for 10 weeks.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%) Weekly language exercises
- HI5525 - Scotland and India, c. 1650-1800
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Mackillop
Pre-requisites
Available only to student in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
Either HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
Avaiklable in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course will examine the nature of Scottish involvement in the Empire of the East India Company. Making use of extensive, unpublished archival material, issues for consideration include the commercial, military and medical activities of Scots in the East India Company; cultural interaction between Scots and the indigenous population; comparisons with English and Irish activity in the Company; and the impact on Scotland of those who returned from India, highlighting their often controversial involvement in local and national politics and their plans for economic development of their Scottish estates.
Structure
1 x 2 hour seminar per week for 10 weeks
Assessment
3,00 word essay (50%); 1,000 word book review (20%); 1,000 word primary source analysis (20%); 500 word comparative review (10%).
- HI5529 - Medieval Studies Dissertation I: Sources & Source Criticism
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Downham
Pre-requisites
Available only to student in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
Medieval Studies Dissertation II: Research and Writing
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with the member of staff best equipped to advise the student on her / his dissertation topic. It will involve detailed and critical discussion of primary and secondary materials suited to the research interests of the student (as developed over the preceding semester) with the aim of providing the student with the fullest preparation for researching and writing the dissertation in the summer and research beyond.
Structure
6 X 1 hour supervision sessions per fortnight
Assessment
Continuous assessment - annotated bibliography (100%)
- HI5554 - War and Society in Medieval Scotland
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Aly Macdonald
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
none
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This course seeks to examine, by the use of a range of source materials, the relationship between war and society in medieval Scotland. Students will be invited to consider whether war acted as a significant agent of change in medieval Scotland and what the organisation and conduct of warfare tells us about the nature of Scottish government. The relationship between war and senses of identity will be explored, as will the impact of frequent war in the Scottish borders. Martial and chivalric culture will be examined; so will the impact of war on normally non-combattant groups such as women and the clergy. These themes will be considered in the light of recent international research into medieval war and society.
Structure
10 x 2 hour seminars
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (3,000 word essay 60%; 1,000 word book review 20%; 1,000 word primary source evaluation 20%)
- HI5557 - The European Nobilities, 1500-1800
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Prof. Robert Frost
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
HI 5053
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This course will examine a social group long condemned as declining and decaying in the modern age but which recent research has increasingly revealed as a dynamic force in Europe throughout the early modern period and long after the French Revolution. The landed elites of Europe faced new challenges in the early modern period, from above in the shape of the state, and from below in the shape of challenges from new and larger urban elites, and from an increasingly diversified rural society. Yet across the continent, nobilities and nobles adjusted with some success to the challenges of the period, and the eighteenth century was something of a golden age. This course will examine concepts of nobility and the social position of the British and European landowning elites of the early modern period, beginning with the refinement of the nature of nobility in the Renaissance, and ending with the fundamental changes unleashed by the Enlightenment and French Revolution. It looks at an order which, across the continent, differed widely in composition and juridical position, and is conceived as thematic and comparative. It will explore the great diversity of the landed and noble elites of Europe, looking at their economic base, their corporate identity and self-image, their ideology and political activity, their cultural life and their interaction with other social groups.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (one 5,000-word essay – 100%)
- HI5558 - The Enlightenment in Comparison: Scotland and Central Europe, 1650-1800
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Karin Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research or CU5004 Approaches to Culture
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course examines the emergence and the variations of Enlightenment thinking in Scotland and Central Europe (with particular emphasis on the German and East Central European Enlightenment, to which the Scottish Enlightenment had strong historical links). It emphasises the varieties of the European Enlightenment, against the traditional assumption that the Enlightenment was exclusively 'located' in France. It looks at the definition and the shaping of Enlightenment thought and practice (learned societies, reading clubs, social reform movements, education, freemasonry etc) at the 'peripheries' of an allegedly French-dominated Enlightenment culture (recently re-affirmed by Robert Darnton) by comparing and contrasting various theoretical and practical strands. It invites students to think critically about historiographical debates and to develop skills in using, speaking and writing about theoretical concepts in a clear, comprehensible manner. Seminar topics will focus on major figures and personalities of the Scottish and European Enlightenment, on 'The Catholic Enlightenment', on Enlightenment in practice, 'Enlightenment as Secularisation?', and other themes.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Essay (70%); comparative review (20%); oral presentation (10%)
- HI5565 - The Invention of Irish Nationalism, 1688-1848
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Michael Brown
Pre-requisites
none
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Notes
Available in the second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course examines the origins of Irish nationalism, culminating in the Young Irelanders of the 1840s. It uncovers how the Enlightenment relates to the age of ideologies, and how nationalist movements emerged in the 19th century. It provides a case study of emergent European nationalist ideologies and interrogates the validity of theoretical models for nationalism. It invites students to think critically about historiographical debates and concepts. Seminar topics include 'Colonial nationalism', Jonathan Swift, the antiquarian movement and the 1798 Rebellion. Underpinning these are current theoretical debates conducted by Benedict Anderson, Ernst Gellner, Adrian Hastings and Anthony D. Smith, among others.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
1 x 5,000-word essay (100%)
- HI5566 - Historiography: The Writing of European History from Herodotos to von Ranke
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Prof David Dumville
Pre-requisites
None
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course focuses on the changing nature (in genre and approach) of historiography over time and the culturally specific nature of the activity. It looks at the very different kinds of evidence presented by historical writing, and the different types of qustions asked in historical writing.
Structure
20 x 1-hour seminars (2 per week for 10 weeks)
Assessment
1 x 5000-word essay (100%)
- HI5567 - Researching in the Early Modern
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr. Naphy
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in programme year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course will provide students with an introduction to, overview of, and engagement with, the key skills necessary to conduct historical research at a graduate level. In particular the course will focus on certain specific issues especially relevant for writing generally and dissertation preparation specifically: historiography; source-handling; analysis; construction of arguments; synthesis of ideas.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (1,500-word essay – 30%; 2,000-word dissertation outline – 40%; 1,500-word comparative review – 30%)
- HI5568 - Researching in Modern History
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Heywood
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course will provide students with an introduction to, overview of, and engagement with, the key skills necessary to conduct historical research at a graduate level. In particular the course will focus on certain specific issues especially relevant for writing generally and dissertation preparation specifically: historiography; source-handling; analysis; construction of arguments; synthesis of ideas.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (1,500-word essay – 30%; 2,000-word dissertation outline – 40%; 1,500-word comparative review – 30%)
- HI5569 - Early Germanic Languages: An Overview
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
- Prof. Stefan Brink
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
The Germanic languages have an obvious common background, which can be seen by the runic inscription in the Germanic (Old) Futhark. The course will discuss the development and the splitting up of the Proto-Germanic language into the West-, East- and North Germanic dialects. The comparative method will be discussed, and also the role of etymology, for our understanding and reconstruction of an earlier past.
Structure
Five 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (two language exercises)
- HI5574 - Runes and Place Names: Important Sources for Early Scandinavia
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Tarrin Wills
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This course provides students with a basic knowledge of two sources that are very important for early Scandinavia, namely the runes and the place names. They are important because we more or less lack written sources. Students will gain a basic insight into runology and toponymy, and will be presented with the latest positions in research in these fields.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (one 5,000-word essay – 100%)
- HI5578 - Vikings in Britain and Ireland
-
- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Clare Downham
Pre-requisites
None
Co-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
This is an interdisciplinary study of the turbulent Viking Age, and of the impact that the aggressive clash as well as the more peaceful contact between cultures had on British and Irish society. The course will be themed by region looking at Vikings' relations with the Anglo-Saxons, Gaels, Britons and Picts up to the reign of Cnut (d.1035). Special attention will be given to the development of Viking colonial identity and the cultural and religious influences which Britain and ireland brought to Scandinavia and Iceland.
Structure
10 x 2-hour seminars
Assessment
1 x 5,000-word essay (100%)
- HI5579 - Scandinavian Studies Dissertation I: Sources and Source Criticism
-
- Credit Points
- 10
- Course Coordinator
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with the member of staff best equipped to advise you on your dissertation topic. It will involve detailed and critical discussion of primary and secondary materials suited to your research interests (as developed over the preceding semester) with the aim of providing the fullest preparation for researching and writing the dissertation in the summer and research beyond.
Structure
One-to-one supervision (no scheduled classes)
Assessment
Continuous assessment – 100% (annotated bibliography – 100%)
- HI5581 - Peopling History: Identities, Approaches and Debates
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Louise Carter
Pre-requisites
HI5053 Introduction to Historical Research
Co-requisites
None
Notes
Not running in 2008-2009Overview
This module explores the theoretical and methodological implications of varying historical approaches to studying the people of the past. It introduces students to the changing fortunes of the historical actor within the historical project, and to key historiographical debates, such as the value of a materialist or a discursive approach to historical enquiry. It examines the consequences of a growing emphasis on subjectivity, identities, and the psyche, and questions whether there is a danger that the actual men and women of history become sidelined in the shift towards discourse and mentalities. Social, cultural, quantitative and psycho-historical approaches to history will be amongst those assessed, with the strengths, limitations and implications of each being explored. Questions will include: what makes each approach distinctive? What are its sources? How might this influence the framing of research questions? How does an emphasis on representation or experience change or challenge interpretation? Can or should these approaches be combined in a more holistic fashion? Seminar topics will include: the position of historical actors in research, the rise of social history, the place of quantitative history, the challenge of cultural history, the emergence of identity-based histories of race, class and gender, the development of psychohistory and the possibilities of holistic history. The course invites students to critically engage with historiographical debates and to consider how differing approaches might shape the way that they approach primary sources, the questions they ask, and the kind of historians they become.
Structure
10 x 2-hour classes
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100% (4,000-word essay – 80%; plus two 500-word book reviews – 20%)
- HI5903 - Medieval Studies Dissertation II: Research and Writing
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5 who have successfully completed required level 5 taught courses
Co-requisites
HI5529 Medieval Studies Dissertation I: Sources and Source Criticism
Notes
Available second half-session 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with a member of staff. Students will be expected to produce a dissertation of 15,000 words.
Structure
4 X 1 hour supervision sessions in total.
Assessment
Continuous Assessment - dissertation (100%)
- HI5905 - Early Modern Studies Dissertation
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5 who have successfully completed required level 5 taught courses.
Co-requisites
HI5567 Researching in the Early Modern
Notes
Available in second half-session in 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with a member of staff. Students will be expected to produce a dissertation of 15,000 words.
Structure
4 x 1 hour supervision sessions in total
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%) -dissertation
- HI5906 - Modern Historical Studies Dissertation
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5 who have successfully completed required level 5 taught courses
Co-requisites
HI5568 Researching in Modern History
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one to one supervision with a member of staff. Students will be expected to produce a dissertation of 15,000 words.
Structure
Assessment
Continuous assessment 100%(Dissertation - 100%)
- HI5907 - Scandinavian Studies Dissertation II: Research and Writing
-
- Credit Points
- 60
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 5 who have successfully completed required taught level 5 courses
Co-requisites
HI5579 Scandinavian Studies I: Sources and Source Criticism
Notes
Available in second half-session 2008-2009Overview
The course consists of one-to-one supervision with a member of staff. Students will be expected to produce a dissertation of 15,000 words.
Structure
4 X 1 hour supervision sessions in total.
Assessment
Continuous Assessment - 100%: dissertation (100%)