Level 1
- HI 1011 - EUROPE IN THE 20TH CENTURY
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Dartmann
Pre-requisites
None
Overview
Major events in European history and structures in European societies will be examined thematically. Topics covered include war and peace, democratic and totalitarian regimes, including the rise and fall of communism in Eastern Europe; the Holocaust and ethnic cleansings; the comparative role of women and the family in European societies; the World Depression; social policies and the emergence of welfare states and consumer societies.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%) and in-course assessment (50%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 1018 - VIKINGS!
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr R O'Connor
Pre-requisites
None.
Overview
Vikings (Scandinavian pirates, traders, and migrants) emerge into history in the last decade of the eighth century AD. Their activities extended westwards to North America, eastwards to Russia, and southwards to the Black Sea, Istanbul, and the Mediterranean Basin. They established colonies in many places: in Iceland they created a republic which has remained Scandinavian in culture; elsewhere they adopted and modified the host-culture, as in (for example) Ireland, Britain, France, Russia, and Ukraine. By the twelfth century Christian national kingdoms had been created in Scandinavian and the Viking-Age came to an end.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written exaination (50%); continuous assessment (50%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 1520 - AN INTRODUCTION TO SCOTTISH HISTORY
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Mackillop
Pre-requisites
None.
Notes
This course will not be running in 2007/08.
Overview
The course will comprise the following themes taught via a 'Medieval', 'Early Modern' and 'Modern' lecture 1. Chronologies: 2. Land: 3. People: 4. Politics: 5. Economics: 6. Social Structures: 7. Religion: 8. The Highlands (or The Regions): 9. Towns: 10. Emigration/Immigration: 11. Art. Each theme has a dedicated tutorial in the week following the three lectures.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (50%) and in-course assessment (50%).
Resit: 1 two-hour written examinatoin (100%).
- HI 1521 - RENAISSANCES AND REFORMATIONS, C. 1450-C. 1750
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
None.
Overview
The course provides a broad overview of the changes which the Renaissance and Reformations introduced to European culture, politics, religion, society and people's understanding of their role in the world. It traces these developments in a comparative way, from Europe's Atlantic cost to East Central Europe and Russia, throughout the time of unrest brought on by the European Reformations, radicalism, the scientific revolution, the growth of monarchies and republics, and the wars of religion of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (50%); examination (50%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
Level 2
- HI 2012 - POWER AND PIETY: MEDIEVAL EUROPE, 1100-1500
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M-L Ehrenschwendtner
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 2 or above.
Overview
Between 1100 and 1500 western Europe was undergoing fundamental transformations: new technical, economic and political challenges, fresh developments in religious and intellectual life and catastrophes like wars, diseases and climate change fundamentally shaped European societies for centuries to come. This course offers a thematic survey of medieval western societies with lectures and tutorials focussing on religion, kingship and warfare, economy and environment, cultural renaissances and intellectual novelties, the emergence of national states and identities and the discovery of new worlds.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (60%); examination (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 2018 - BIRTH OF MODERNITY: POLITICS, CULTURE AND SCIENCE IN EUROPE, 1700-1870
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Brown
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 2 or above.
Overview
This course introduces students to the crucible of the modern age. Hinging on the American, French and 1848 Revolutions, it explores how men and women in elite and popular communities generated new modes of living, experience and expression and how they understood and manipulated the natural world. Attention will be given to the Enlightenment, Empire, Romanticism and Ideology with interrelated developments in politics, culture, science and the world beyond Europe also being explored. Students will be introduced to the works of figures such as Newton, Voltaire, Paine, Goethe, Marx, Darwin and Nietzsche. Topics will include Salons, the Terror, nationalism, colonialism and secularisation.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (60%); examination (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 2515 - MAKING SEX: CONSTRUCTING MEN AND WOMEN, 1750 TO THE PRESENT
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Macknight
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 2 or above.
Overview
What does it mean to be a 'man' or a 'woman' in Western societies and how have the definitions and expectations of 'manliness' and 'womanliness' changed over time? This course addresses those questions for the period from 1750 to the present. It begins with the late eighteenth-century transition in scientific understanding from the one-sex to the two-sex model of human biology. Students are then introduced to the use of gender as a tool of historical analysis through chronological case studies drawn chiefly from Europe, Britain, and America. The course concludes with an examination of sex and gender issues in Scotland today.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial (to be arranged) per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (60%); examination (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 2516 - FROM SLAVERY TO SPUTNIK: THE FIRST SUPERPOWERS, C. 1860-1991
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Heywood
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 2 and above.
Overview
This will provide students with a broad comparative understanding of the emergence of the United States and the Soviet Union as the first two global superpowers by 1945 and their subsequent Cold War confrontation. It concentrates on seven main sections (the Age of Empire; World War I and the Russian Revolution; Economic Crisis and the Crisis of Imperialism; World War II; the Cold War; Détente; the Triumph of the West?) introducing essential knowledge and key concepts concerning the development of their military and economic strength, together with their respective ideologies of capitalism and communism.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (60%); examination (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
Level 3
- HI 301A / HI 351A - GERMANY, 1516-1806: REFORMATION, EMPIRE AND ENLIGHTENMENT
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the second half-session of 2009/10 as HI 351A.
Overview
Composed of hundreds of principalities, cities, bishoprics and other territories, the ‘Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation’ seemed an incoherent patchwork, but functioned as a political entity for centuries. This course studies the diversity of German history at a time of profound transformation, from the Reformation to Napoleon’s destruction of the Empire in the early nineteenth century. Topics covered include religious conflict, social rebellion, warfare, the role of cities, the relationship between Empire and territorial states, Baroque culture, the impact of the early Enlightenment, the changing idea of Empire and the development of early national identity.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture per week; 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 301B / HI 351B - GERMANY, 1806-1914: MAKING THE EMPIRE
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr K Friedrich
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
Modern Germany has often been called the ‘belated’ nation-state. During the first half of the nineteenth century three main political ideologies proved influential: liberalism, socialism and nationalism. Prussia’s successful domination of German politics led to the creation of the ultimately ill-fated German Empire in 1871. This course analyses the Empire’s political structures and institutions, the influence of the Kaiser and his ‘court camarilla’, the military, the composition of imperial German society, its unprecedented industrial and economic expansion in the 1890s, and the origins of the First World War, with particular emphasis on the lively fin-de-siècle culture, the history of ideas and political and social movements.
Structure
2 x 1-hour lectures per week; 1 x 1-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Atttempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 301C / HI 351C - THE MAKING OF ENGLAND, A.D. 597-927
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor D Dumville
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the second half-session of 2009/10 as HI 351C.
Overview
The English arrived in Britain in the fifth and sixth centuries. But English history (as opposed to prehistory) traditionally begins with the arrival of Christian missionaries from Rome in 597; and the kingdom of England was not created until 927. The three intervening centuries saw the building of a new culture in ‘South Britain’ (including a large part of what is now Scotland) which laid the foundations for the English nation-state. We study all this with close reference to original source-materials.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture per week; 1 one-hour tutorial per week; 1 one-hour source-class per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (100%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 301D / HI 351D - INTERWAR EUROPE: COMPARATIVE ASPECTS OF DOMESTIC POLICIES IN GERMANY, FRANCE AND BRITAIN
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Dartmann
Pre-requisites
Avaialble only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session 2009/10 as HI 301D.
Overview
Some selected major issues of domestic policies, important in a common way to the three countries, will be examined in a comparative way. Themes may include: social policies, threat of instability/civil war, political parties, experiences of demobilisation and mobilisation, reactions to the world depression, reactions to international developments, in particular eg the Spanish Civil War, developments in art.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%) NB new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 301E / HI 351E - MEN, WOMEN AND EUNUCHS: GENDER AND IDENTITY IN LATE ANTIQUITY
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor J Stevenson
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 301E.
Overview
1. Introduction
2. Library session
3. what was a man? legally, socially and culturally
4. What was a woman? legall, socially and culturally
5. Medical theories of gender and sexuality
6. Christianity and sexuality
7. Case study: St Augustine's Confessions
8. Sex and sainthood
9. Virgins: a 'third sex', or superwoman?
10. Subwomen: prostitutes, actresses
11. Eunuchs, legally, socially and culturally
12. Eunuchs in fantasy: Case study: Claudian, In Eutropium
13. Eunuchs in fact
14. 'Eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven'
15. Angels
16. The Virgin Mary
17. Motherhood
18. 'Transcending her sex'
19. Basileus/basilissa: women as rulers
20. 'Passing for a man'
21. Case study: Perpetua's Prison Diary
22. Male homosexuality
23. Lesbianism
24. Deviance and Identity
Both selections from primary texts (in translation) and visual material (slides of portraits, coins, mosaics, statues, ikons, etc) will be used throughout.Structure
1 one-hour lecture, 1 two-hour lecture and seminar.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (100%).
Resit: 1 essay (5,000 words).
- HI 301F / HI 351F - A MILITARY REVOLUTION? WAR, STATE & SOCIETY IN EUROPE, C1500-C1789
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor R Frost
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
The course will look at the development of warfare in early modern Europe in the light of the theory that Europe in this period saw a military revolution which had profound effects not just on the way wars were fought, but on European state formation and social development. It will look at the supporters and opponents of the theory, examine the technological changes seen in warfare in this period, and look at the conduct of war at the tactical and strategic levels, before going on to examine the changing culture of war and its impact on state and society. The course will consider a range of military conflicts across the whole continent of Europe, and will also consider the impact of European warfare outside Europe in the first great age of European imperial expansion.
Structure
Two seminars of one and a half hours each per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (100%).
- HI 301H / HI 351H - CONFLICT AND ITS LEGACIES: FRANCE 1900-2007
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Macknight
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
Experiences and memories of conflict have played an important role in shaping the development of France from 1900 to the present. This period of French history is marked by two world wars, Occupation and Liberation, colonial wars in Indochina and Algeria, the student revolt of May 1968, the strike wave of 1995, and the riots of November 2005. In this course we study the underlying causes and nature of the wars and civil unrest. We investigate links between conflict, cultural production, and social change; and we examine the legacies of conflict in debates about what it means to be 'French' and France's relationships with other parts of the world.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%); continuous assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 301J / HI 351J - THE ENGLIGHTENMENT IN FRANCE, BRITAIN AND IRELAND
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Mr M Brown
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
The Enlightenment represents a key moment in the emergence of a recognisable modernity. Thinkers like Voltaire, Rousseau, Hume, Smith and Burke provide a distinct approach to society, politics, gender, culture and ethics. Celebrated and condemned, Enlightenment still remains a hotly contested term. This course investigates the Enlightenment across a series of national contexts. It highlights similarities in thought while remaining sensitive to regional variation. The course introduces students to the main thinkers and themes, and examines current debates about the content and legacy of the movement. Lecture topics include anti-clericalism, coffee shop culture, rethinking domestic life, and Enlightenment and Revolution.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous Assessment (100%).
Resit: Continuous Assessment (100%).
- HI 301L / HI 351L - THE HOLOCAUST: ISSUES AND DEBATES
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Dartmann
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
This course may not be included in a graduating curriculum with HI 3049 / HI 3549. Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This history of the Holocaust will be studied through a detailed analysis of contemporary sources, as well as of the major debates and analyses since 1945. Specific emphasis will be placed on the historiographical development of the subject.
Structure
Two 1½-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%) NB new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 301M / HI 351M - AFTER ROME: BYZANTIUM AND THE WEST, 400-1000
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Stevenson
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course introduces students to the formation of Europe, analysing how, in the East, the Roman Empire became the Byzantine Empire and how modern political units such as Spain, France and Germany came to exist in the West. The Roman Empire was bureaucratic, centralised and highly organised. In the West, its collapse and the developments which followed eventually produced what is now called the Middle Ages, and also the forms and foundations of the modern world.
Structure
2 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%).
- HI 301N / HI 351N - AMERICAN SLAVERY, AMERICAN FREEDOM: US HISTORY 1800-1870
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor T Bartlett
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
This course offers a study of the main political, constitutional, social and economic developments in the history of the United States from the ratification of the US constitution in 1787 to reconstruction after the Civil War in 1870. Within these broad themes, special attention will be devoted to the paradox of the existence of slavery in a nation dedicated to freedom and to the huge sectional tensions, ending in Civil War, that these gave rise to. Detailed attention will also be paid to the Civil War itself: was this the real American Revolution?
Structure
1 one-hour lecture per week; 1 one-hour tutorial per week; 1 one-hour source-class per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and course work (40%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 301P / HI 351P - POWER AND TRADITIONS: FRANCE 1799-1900
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Macknight
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 301P.
Overview
Questions about who exercised power and why resonated at every level of nineteenth-century French society. The Revolution of 1789 had brought about fundamental reforms to the political and social order in France. It set down the roots of the French republican tradition whose supporters became locked in an ongoing ideological struggle against conservative political and social elites. This course examines the myriad forms that power took in French society, from Napoleon's coup d'état of 18 Brumaire to the early Third Republic. It deals with the power of political and military leaders to legislate and lead armies. It investigates the gendered implications of power operating within families and between men and women. It also unpacks the ways in which class shaped power relations, and the significance of class-based traditions, within the social fabric of nineteenth-century France.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%); continuous assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 301Q / HI 351Q - BACK IN THE VIKING HOMELANDS
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor S Brink
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course offers a study of the society, culture and religion in Viking Age Scandinavia. Within these broad themes, special attention will be devoted to the impact from the continent and the Isles, especially regarding the change of religion, the introduction of literacy and the social links between Scandinavia and the rest of Europe. Detailed attention will also be paid to the Christianization process.
Structure
2 hours of lecture contact and 1 hour of tutorial contact per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (100%).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 301U / HI 351U - IMPERIAL RUSSIA, 1801-1917
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Heywood
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in the second half-session of 2009/10.
Overview
This course examines the main political, social and economic problems confronting the Russian Empire in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: should government be by an enlightened bureaucracy or by representative institutions? To what extent is modern warfare, which seemingly demands the mobilisation of the whole population, compatible with an autocratic framework? Is democracy a stimulus or a handicap to rapid industrialisation? How important are individual/social/moral values to the modern state? The format of the course is chronological but these and similar questions constantly recur.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Primary source exercise (1,500 words) (20%); Annotated bibliography (1,500 words) (20%); Essay (4,500 words) (60%).
Resit: Primary source exercise (1,500 words) (20%); Annotated bibliography (1,500 words) (20%); Essay (4,500 words) (60%).
- HI 301V / HI 351V - SOVIET RUSSIA, 1917-1991
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be confirmed
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
Initial discussion will focus on the revolutions of February and October 1917, the ensuing Civil War and foreign intervention. Thereafter attention will shift to the emergent Soviet state: its institutions, the New Economic Policy, and the leadership struggle, which paved the way for Stalin’s assumption of power. Stalin’s regime and its policies within Russia, including collectivization, industrialisation and terror, will be analysed before the focus shifts to the Second World War (the Red Army after the purges, the Nazi-Soviet Pact, and Soviet Russia’s prosecution of ‘total war’). The final topics to be addressed will include the Cold War, social economic and political developments during the Khrushchev-Brezhnev years and the rise and fall of Gorbachev.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Presentation (10%); portfolio based on the presentation (10%); essay (2,500 words maximum) (30%); essay, (3,500 words maximum) (50%).
- HI 302A / HI 352A - CLASS, IDENTITY & NATIONALSIM IN SCOTLAND, 1832-1914
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Newby
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Overview
This course will examine the way in which various forms of identity developed in Scotland after the extension of the franchise in 1832. This will include political identities - in particular regional identification and forms of nationalism and unionism - as well as gender- and class-based identify, as manifest through popular protest, political participation, sport, leisure, and various areas of civil society. Furthermore, there will be an examination the construction of identity in Scotland, through art, archaeology and antiquarianism, literature (including travel literature) and the development of 'scientific' historical writing. Students will also be invited to consider how these nineteenth century identities survived and made and impact in the twentieth century, and indeed in the present day.
Structure
2 one and a half hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: In-course assessment (100%), includes book review (25%), 3000 word essay (75%).
Re-sit: In-course assessment (100%), includes book review (25%), 3000 word essay (75%). - HI 302B / HI 352B - LATE MEDIEVAL ENGLAND: POLITICS AND SOCIETY 1272-1509
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Armstrong
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course will examine the diverse political and social changes that shaped England in the later middle ages. It will explore topics including crown and nobility, lordship and social structures, law and peacekeeping, war and diplomacy, and national and regional identities. Presented within a chronological framework, major units of study will concern war with France and within the British Isles, experimentation with and development of parliament and other mechanisms of governance, the impact of the Black Death and the Peasants' Revolt, the role of the church in society, dynastic usurpations and constitutional change.
Structure
Two 1½-hour seminars per week (times tba).
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%); continuous assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (100%).
- HI 302C / HI 352C - RULE, RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION IN SCOTLAND, 1406-1603
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Armstrong
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course examines Scotland in the last two centuries of its dynastic independence. Organised chronologically, it will address national and regional identities as well as war, truce and peace with England, and relations with France and other European powers. It will examine regicide, regency, and resistance, the relationship between crown, church and nobility, and the development of governmental institutions and offices. It will also explore social and cultural change, especially with regard to education and literature, population growth, and rural and urban life. The origins, process and consequences of the Scottish Reformation will form a major theme of the course.
Structure
Two 1½-hour seminars per week (times tba).
Assessment
1st attempt: one 3-hour examination (60%); continuous assessment (40%).
Resit: One 3-hour examination (100%). - HI 302D / HI 352D - DECOLONIZATION: THE BRITISH EXPERIENCE
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Andrew Dilley
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course will examine the decline of British imperialism in the twentieth century. It will consider the nature of that decline from a number of perspectives, and consider the different meanings and timings of decolonization in different regions of the empire. The course will also consider the effects of decolonization for both Britain and its former colonies. The course will draw widely on secondary and primary source material, especially BDEEP (British Documents of the End of Empire Project).
Structure
Two 1.5-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%).
- HI 302E / HI 352E - AZTECS, MAYAS & INCAS: EMPIRES ON THE EVE OF APOCALYPSE
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor William G Naphy
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course will examine the economies, cultures, religions, and socio-political structures of the three 'great' civilizations of Meso- and South America: Aztecs, Mayas, and Incas. Their concepts of wealth, civilization, history, and overall worldviews will be examined in detail. The course will close by considering the status of these empires on the eve of contact with Europeans and the extent to which inherent factors within the empires may have contributed to their collapse and subsequent conquest by the Spanish.
Structure
Two 1.5-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%).
- HI 302F / HI 352F - SATAN, SORCERY & SABBATHS: WITCH-HUNTING IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE, C. 1450-1700
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor William G Naphy
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course will examine the beginnings of the 'witch panic' in the mid-fifteenth century. The relationship between religious change during the Reformation and developing ideas about witchcraft, magic and the demonic will also be considered. Finally, the course will consider reasons why witch-hunting ceased in Europe during the course of the seventeenth century.
Structure
Two 1.5-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
Continuous assessment (100%).
- HI 302G / HI 352G - SEX AND VIOLENCE IN COLD CLIMATES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr Karen Bek-Pedersen
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course offers a chance to get to grips with one or two stereotypes concerning the Vikings by exploring the culture and literature of early medieval Iceland. It provides an overview of early Icelandic history from the time of the settlement through the adoption of Christianity and into the medieval period. An important component of this will be an introduction to the famous saga literature which describes life amongst the first settlers who came to Iceland during the Viking Age with its emphasis on law, lawlessness and bloodfeuds alongside marriage, adultery and sexual insult. The course will also provide insights into the ritual life and religious beliefs of the early Icelanders by way of exploring Old Norse mythological texts.
Structure
Two 1.5-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: Continuous assessment (100%).
Resit: Examination (100%). - HI 302J / JI 352J - RENAISSANCE, REFORMATION AND RESISTANCE, 1500-1610
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Erskine
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course will examine the changes that the revival of classical and biblical scholarship connected with the Renaissance and Reformation wrought upon Europe. In particular, it will consider resistance against monarchs or other civil leaders who were accused of being tyrannical or heretical. Successive weeks of study will move chronologically and geographically through Reformation Europe, from Geneva to the Scottish and English Reformations, to the French Wars of Religion and the Dutch Revolt. The focus will be upon contexts where the depositions and assassinations of monarchs took place, and upon the ideas used to justify or oppose these actions.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%); continuous assessment (40%): The ASC has previously approved the capping of level 3 options in History.
Assessment format:
- oral participation (10%);
- essay of 3,000-3,500 words (30%);
- end of course, three-hour examination (60%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (100%).
- HI 302K / HI 352K - BARACK OBAMA AND RACE IN THE UNITED STATES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr G D Smithers
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course examines the historical significance of race and racism in modern America. A flurry of recent scholarship and journalistic reporting has suggested that the United States has entered a new post-racial era in its history. The election to the presidency of Barack Obama has thus unleashed a wave of optimism about the end of racism in American society and history. This course will use Barack Obama's rise to the presidency as the focal point for historically analyzing race and racism in American society. What made Obama's rise (and that of other black politicians) possible? Ca the election of black officials to the highest offices in the nation be used as evidence that the United States is now a post-racial nation? What, indeed, is post-racialism?
Structure
Two 1½ hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (100%); assessed essay (3,500 words (50%)); comparative review of journal articles (1,500 words (20%)); Portfolio of documentation arising from the presentation with self-evaluation (1,500 words (20%)); Presentation (10%; of which 5% is by the course co-ordinator and 5% from peer assessment).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 302L / HI 352L - THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION IN AMERICAN HISTORY, 1861-1877
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr G D Smithers
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course examines the American Civil War (1861-1865) and the subsequent era of 'Reconstruction' (1865-1877). This was one of the most turbulent eras in American history; it was also one of the most important. We will examine the causes of the Civil War, the major political and military turning points in the war, and look closely at the often bloody efforts to rebuild the South during 'Reconstruction' (1865-1877). We will also examine Native American and African-American involvement in the Civil War and Reconstruction, and consider the diplomatic role played by Great Britain during this most turbulent era in American history.
Structure
Two 1½ hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (100%); Assessed essay (3,500 words) (50%); Comparative review of journal articles (1,500 words) (20%); Portfolio of documentation arising from the presentation with self-evaluation (1,500 words) (20%); Presentation (10%; of which 5% is by the corse co-ordinator and 5% from peer assessment).
Resit: Examination (100%).
- HI 302M / HI352M - JIM CROW AMERICA, 1890s - 1960s
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr G D Smithers
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course examines the rise and fall of Jim Crow segregation in the United States between the 1890s-1960s. De facto segregation had existed in the North prior to the 1890s, but it was the American South and West that a legal (or de jure form of segregation emerged. This module will examine the political, legal and sociocultural basis for Jim Crow segregation. We will examine the impact of de jure segregation on race relations in the South and West, and we will ask how African-Americans responded to Jim Crow segregation.
Structure
2, one and one-half hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: 100% continuous assessment: Assessed essay (3,500 words; 50%), comparative review of journal articles (1,500 words; 20%), portfolio of documentation arising from the presentation with self-evaluation (1,500 words; 20%), presentation (10%; of which 5% is by the course co-ordinator and 5% from peer assessment) .
Resit: 100% exam. - HI 302N / HI 352N - MIXED-RACE AMERICA, 1619 TO 1789
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr G D Smithers
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to the approval of the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
Recent scholarship has focused attention on the presence, and role of, mixed-race people and mixed-race communities in the American colonies and United States. Gary Nash, for example, argues that the American republic was a mixed-race nation because of the interracial mixing tha occurred in colonial America. This course examines race-mixing in the Americas from 1619 to 1789. Students will examine the different types of race-mixing - sexual, social, and political - that occurred in the Americas, and be urged to investigate why some forms of 'race-mixing' were encouraged, while others were frowned upon.
Structure
2, one and one-half hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: 100% continuous assessment: Assessed essay (3,500 words; 50%), comparative review of journal articles (1,500 words; 20%), portfolio of documentation arising from the presentation with self-evaluation (1,500 words; 20%), presentation (10%; of which 5% is by the course co-ordinator and 5% from peer assessment).
Resit: 100% exam. - HI 302P / HI 352P - The Rise and Fall of Collective Security: International Relations, c. 1880 - c. 1933
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Weber
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course seeks to investigate whether the international system was by and large the source of relative stability in the era between the Crimean War and 1933 or whether the international system made the outbreak of the First World War and the advent of totalitarian fascist and communist regimes all but inevitable. What strategies of collective security were employed during this period? What role did the "rise and fall of great powers (P. Kennedy) play in upsetting the international system? What were the underlying mentalities in the pursuit of foreign policy, i.e., what was the role of, e.g., social Darwinism, rising nationalism in a world of multi-ethnic empires, the emerging Wilsonian model of international relations, or of militarism in shaping the international system of this era? Did economic and financial considerations lead to the collapse of the system? Did the world experience a first era of globalisation (and if it did how did globalisation affect international relations?) Why did globalisation sink? Does John Mearsheimer's brand of realism capture realities between 1880 and 1933 successfully? What was the link between public opinion and the formulation of foreign policy (primacy of domestic or of foreign policies)? Is the period of 1880 to 1933 best described as an era with a lack of collective security?
Structure
2 one-and-a-half-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: 60% one three-hour examination; 40% continuous assessment (30% 3,000 word essay; 5% oral contribution; 5% presentation).
Resit: 100% three-hour examination. - HI 302R / HI352R - The West, the Jews, and Israel, 1789-2009
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Weber
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 of above.
Notes
Admission subject to approval by the Head of School. This course will be available at the discretion of the Department of History.
Overview
This course explores anti-Semitism and philo-Semitism in Europe and North-America from the age of the French revolution to the present. At the core of the course is the question of how prejudice against Jews (and since 1948 also against Israel) has been tied to the fate of Liberalism and 'Progressive' Thought in Europe and North-America. The first half of the course examines the development of Jewish-gentile relations until the Holocaust. We will, however, try to avoid applying a teleological approach to the period between 1789 and 1941 that reduces the history of gentile attitudes towards Jews to a pre-history of the Holocaust. The second half of the course examines attitudes towards Jews since 1945 in a Europe without a sizeable Jewish community but with an increasingly assertive Jewish Community in America. The course finishes by looking at the 'New Anti-Semitism' and by the involvement of the West in the Middle East Conflict since 1967. The course asks the question whether attitudes and policies towards Israel are best understood in terms of the 'New Anti-Semitism' or in terms of a post colonial sentiment.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st attempt: 60% one three-hour examination; 40% continuous assessment (30% 3,000 word essay, 5% oral contribution, 5% presentation).
Resit: 100% three-hour examination. - HI 3049 / HI 3549 - THE THIRD REICH
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Dartmann
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10. This course may not be included in a graduating curriculum with HI 301L / HI 351L.
Overview
To study the on-going historical debates on the Third Reich. In this course we will study political, social, and economic aspects of the history of Germany between 1933 and 1945, and put them into a historical, comparative, and European background. Recent historiographical trends and conceptual attempts to grasp the history of the Third Reich will form an integral part of this course.
Structure
2 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3051 / HI 3551 - WAR AND PEACE: ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND c1072-1560
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Macdonald
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course seeks to investigate Anglo-Scottish relations in the period between Malcolm III’s enigmatic submission to William the Conqueror in 1072 and the Anglo-Scottish treaty of 1560. The emphasis will be on political and diplomatic developments, especially those of the mid-thirteenth to early sixteenth centuries, but attention will also be given to economic, social, religious and cultural interaction between the two kingdoms, especially those which occurred in the frontier regions.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3052 / HI 3552 - AMERICAN HISTORY 1828-1898
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
This course examines the political, social and diplomatic history of the United States from the Age of Jackson to the Spanish-American War. Major themes will include: the rise and fall of political parties; the impact of key Supreme Court decisions; sectionalism, expansion and the frontier thesis; the causes and consequences of the Civil War; slavery, abolition and changing race relations; military and naval affairs; foreign relations and changes in the diplomatic policy and international standing of the United States.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3056 / HI 3556 - AMERICAN MILITARY AND NAVAL HISTORY
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
The nature and problems of military and naval history with special reference to the United States. The European military background. Technological impact. The US military and naval experiences wars covered include:
Indian and colonial wars; War of Independence; Barbary Wars; War of 1812; Mexican War; The American Civil War; Spanish-American War; 19th century Indian Wars; World Wars I and II; Korea; Vietnam; and the Gulf War.
There will be stress on the “New Military History” involving an examination of the role of the military in American society and economy.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour tutorial per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3059 / HI 3559 - KINGDOM OR COLONY: EARLY MODERN IRELAND
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be not available in session 2009/10.
Overview
The course examines the politics, economy and culture of Ireland at the end of the Middle Ages; the impact of the Protestant reformation and counter reformation; the wars and rebellions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; ‘colonisation’ and ‘civilisation’ of Ireland by the English and the Scots; the Cromwellian and restoration land settlements; the ‘Protestant Ascendancy’; the Formation of ‘Irish’ and ‘British’ national identities; Anglo-Irish and Anglo-Scottish relations; and the demise of Gaelic Ireland.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half to two-hours seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%). NB: New in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3063 / HI 3563 - COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL MONARCHY
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Macdonald
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course seeks to examine the practice and concept of kingship and queenship, between the dark ages and the renaissance. Lectures will concentrate on the exercise of monarchical power, as exemplified by kings and queens in the British Isles, and associated historiographical issues. Seminars will address the subject through a study of the expectations of contemporaries making use of visual representations (in the form of painting, seals and architecture) and written evidence (including the bible, chronicles, biographies, literature and theoretical tracts).
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: Examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3068 / HI 3568 - LAW, SEX, MARRIAGE AND THE FAMILY IN THE MIDDLE AGES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr F Pedersen
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 3068.
Overview
This course is divided into four sections. The first examines medieval attitudes to sex, marriage and the family while consideration during the second is devoted to the church and the law of marriage in the middle ages. These are followed by an exploration of sex roles and sexual differences, including discussion of prostitution, homosexuality and the concept of childhood. The course concludes with an examination of modern interpretations of the medieval evidence.
Structure
2 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3069 / HI 3569 - HISTORY OF POPULAR CULTURE IN MODERN AMERICA
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
This course will examine the development of popular culture in the US since c1865. It will investigate changing attitudes to race and gender and the later growth of a youth culture (or counter-culture). Attention will be given to the growth of sport and recreation (and the roles of race and gender therein); to the history of entertainment as a reflection of and influence upon society (including the circus/Wild West show, radio and TV, the movies) to the growth of a popular press and advertising; to fashion; to the rise and fall of popular heroes/heroines; to popular religion. Also the American fascination with technology and its effects on popular culture will be discussed - the bicycle craze, automobiles, the telephone, etc.
Structure
2 one and a half to two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Continuous assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment: 2 essays of c3000-3500 words each (100%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3074 / HI 3574 - WAR AND SOCIETY IN THE LATER MIDDLE AGES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Macdonald
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 3074.
Overview
This course seeks to investigate the impact of war on society in the medieval west between c1300 and c1450. Those were years when warfare was frequent and its impact profoundly altered the societies of western Europe. Emphasis will be placed on the experience of war in Scotland, England, France, Spain and Ireland, although not exclusively on those areas. The course will seek to explore the impact of war physically and mentally on the people who had to endure it. Cultural developments, concepts of national identity and collective mentalities will be explored, as well as more conventional societal developments.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3075 / HI 3575 - EMIGRANTS AND IMMIGRANTS, c1700-1970
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Harper
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
Large-scale demographic upheaval has been a major feature of the social, economic, political and cultural history of the modern world. This course examines the causes and repercussions of emigration and immigration over more than two centuries, looking primarily at the British Isles, but also considering other European countries. Particular attention will be paid to the expectations and experiences of participants, and themes to be examined include exploration, military service, the transportation of convicts, indentured servitude, persecution and migration, famine-induced migration, and the impact of immigration on Britain since the late 19th century.
Structure
2 two-hours seminars weekly.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (50%) and in-course assessment (50%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3078 / HI 3578 - THE SCOTTISH HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS, c1850-1950
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Harper
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session 2009/10 as HI 3078.
Overview
Although clearance policies were effectively over by the 1850s, the ‘Highland Problem’ re-emerged in the 1880s, with the Crofters’ War and the appointment of a Royal Commission of Enquiry. The course covers a period of unprecedented government investigation and legislation in respect of the Highlands and Islands, and detailed attention will be paid to the effects of this involvement on economic and social developments in the region. Themes to be examined include land legislation, fishing, industrial developments, tourism, transport, migration and emigration.
Structure
2 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (50%) and in-course assessment (50%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3085 / HI 3585 - MEDICINE IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Smith
Pre-requisites
Only available to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course will focus on the history of medicine during the twentieth century, and will cover such topics as the shaping of the health services, successive therapeutic revolutions, medicine and war, the eugenics movement, the sciences of food and food safety, the rise of patient power and developments in medical ethics, and the trend towards alternative approaches to medicine. A variety of recent approaches to the history of medicine will be discussed.
Structure
2 one-hour lectures and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3091 / HI 3591 - RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION c1500-1600
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be advised
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course seeks to provide an introduction to two important related phases of continental European intellectual history, the Renaissance and Reformation, with particular attention to the century around 1500. The series of specific movements discussed include Renaissance humanism, Florentine Neo-Platonism, Erasmus and Northern Humanism, Luther, the radical reformation, and the civic reformations of Zwingli and Calvin. Comparison and contrast of these movements is facilitated by focussing on certain aspects common to each, including their differing social context, their conceptions of human nature, reformation, and the past as well as their expectations for the future.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half to two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment: 1 essay (30%), 1 documentary commentary (10%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3092 / HI 3592 - ORAL HISTORY: PRACTICE AND THEORY
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- To be confirmed
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
The course will provide a basic training in the practice of oral documentation. It will include a practical exercise in the researching, recording and processing of interviews. Practical work will be set in the context of discussions about the history of oral history, about its relationship to historiography more generally, and about relevant, current, theoretical and ethical issues (such as: public and private memory, mythology and false narrative, ideology and social purpose, personal and collective identity).
Structure
2 two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%).
- HI 3093 / HI 3593 - THE MAKING OF MODERN IRELAND, 1800-2000
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Brown
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in 2009/10.
Overview
This lecture and seminar course offers a chronological survey of Ireland’s political, social and economic history from the Union with Britain. It will focus on a number of issues: how confessional differences, especially between Catholics and Protestants, have influenced the course of Irish history; the slippery concept of Irish national identity; Anglo-Irish relations; the rise of Irish nationalism; and finally the role of the Irish migrant, especially in America.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment: (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment: (100%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3094 / HI 3594 - WORLD WAR ONE : INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr T Weber
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the second half-session of 2009/10 as HI 3594.
Overview
This course offers students an opportunity to study World War One in a comparative context. Following a series of introductory lectures on various aspects of the causes, course and consequences of the war, a series of seminars will enable students to analyse either specialised themes or particular perspectives which may include Britain, France, Germany, the United States, and Russia.
Structure
12 x 1-hour lectures in weeks 1-4 and 10 x 2-hour seminars in weeks 5-12.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%).
- HI 3095 / HI 3595 - THE THIRTY YEARS WAR
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Professor R Frost
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
The Thirty Years War was one of the most protracted and devastating conflicts played out in central Europe before the twentieth century. Its conclusion in the Peace of Westphalia (1648) marks the single greatest watershed between the Reformation and the French Revolution, neatly dividing the early modern period of European history in half. This course will examine the causes, course and consequences of this great conflict, placing each of these topics in a broad chronological, geographical and thematic framework. Particular attention will be given to exploring the international ramifications of the conflict on politics, society and culture.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%). NB: new in-course assessment work must be submitted.
- HI 3096 / HI 3596 - HISTORICAL RESEARCH FOR VISITING STUDENTS
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Dartmann
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
Detailed research on an historical topic agreed by the School and the home university.
Structure
4 one-hour supervision sessions.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
- HI 3097 / HI 3597 - CULTURAL HISTORY OF SPORT
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Macdonald
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will not be available in session 2009/10.
Overview
This course invites students to consider the study of sport as a way of trying to understand the past. A broad chronological framework is adopted, tracing sporting activity and pastimes from the medieval period to contemporary times. The geographical scope is also wideranging, covering developments in Scotland, and elsewhere in Europe, as well as the relevance of sport to the British Empire and to twentieth-century American society. Issues addressed include social class, gender, race, morality and the efforts of various governments to control and use sport for political purposes.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (60%) and in-course assessment (40%).
Resit: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 3098 / HI 3598 - THE EMPIRE IN THE ORIENT: ENGLISH, SCOTS, IRISH AND THE MAKING OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE IN ASIA c1600-1858
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A MacKillop
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 3098.
Overview
This course examines the development of British imperial interests in Asia. It begins by charting the development of the East India Company, examining its commercial activities and its impact on England. The Company was then colonised by Scots and Irish, whose contribution and impact will be considered in detail. Gradually the Company's Empire developed territorial interests and these, together with imperial interests in the Persian Gulf, Indonesia and China, are discussed. The final part of the course involves consideration of the impact of this Asiatic Empire on the politics, economy and society of the British Isles.
Structure
1 one-hour lecture and 1 two-hour seminar per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%).
- HI 3099 / HI 3599 - WORLD WAR TWO: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Newby
Pre-requisites
Available only to students in Programme Year 3 or above.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching. This course will be available in the first half-session of 2009/10 as HI 3099.
Overview
This course offers students an opportunity to study World War Two in a comparative context. Following a series of introductory lectures on various aspects of the causes, course and consequences of the war, a series of seminars will enable students to analyse either specialised themes or particular perspectives which may include Britain, France, Germany, the United States, the Soviet Union and Japan.
Structure
12 one-hour lectures in weeks 1-4 and 10 two-hour seminars in weeks 5-12.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit: In-course assessment (100%).
Level 4
- HI 4015 - SPECIAL SUBJECT I
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Mackillop
Pre-requisites
Available only to Senior Honours candidates in History.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
An intensive study of a limited historical theme, problem or period on the basis of prescribed primary sources and other materials. Precise details of the subjects available reflecting current research interests of staff, will be announced to Honours candidates during the preceding session. Topics covered in previous years include: Vikings c800-1200; Canon Law and Lawyers in the Middle Ages; Scotland, England and Ireland 1286-1329; The Anglo-Scottish Frontier in the Later Middle Ages; The Revival of Millenariansism in Post-Reformation Britain, Europe & America; Irish Political Thought; Scotland, England and The Acts of Union, 1707; The American Revolution; The French Revolution; The Scot in Canada; The Indian Mutiny, 1857; Women, Work and Welfare in Europe c1918-39; The USA in the 1920s; Politics and Culture during the Wilson Years: Britain c1956-76.
Structure
2 one-and-a-half to two-hour seminars per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 three-hour written examination (100%).
- HI 4512 - SPECIAL SUBJECT II
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Ehrenschwendter
Pre-requisites
Available only to Senior Honours candidates in History.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
A dissertation of about 10,000 words on a topic normally related to that studied in HI 4015.
Each student will be assigned a supervisor, who will make available regular consultation times.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Dissertation (100%).
- HI 4514 - GENERAL HISTORICAL PROBLEMS
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr E Macknight
Pre-requisites
Available only to Senior Honours candidates in History.
Notes
Students are not permitted to register for this course after the end of week 2 of teaching.
Overview
Problems of historical scholarship including the history of historical research, historiography, philosophy of history, links with other academic disciplines, and the relevance of history to the outside world.
Structure
6 two-hour seminars.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination (40%) and continuous assessment (60%).