This course introduces first year History students to important themes in intellectual and cultural history, and challenges them to think critically about the power of knowledge and belief in different cultures over time. It encourages students to explore how ideas have developed and travelled across different social and cultural contexts. It places strong emphasis not only on the ways ideas and beliefs have been formed and propagated by elites, but also on how the hierarchies of power that ideas help to create have been subverted and questioned by a wide range of historically marginalised groups, with a focus on race and gender, and from a global perspective. Students are encouraged to make comparisons that will enable them to deconstruct the simplistic binaries of ‘science’ vs ‘religion’ and ‘modern’ vs ‘traditional’ forms of knowledge, to explore more fully how knowledge exchange occurred between different societies, and to consider the challenges of trying to uncover the full complexity of individual beliefs.
The course material comprises of four interrelated groups of lectures and seminars, each of which explores a theme through the medieval, early-modern and modern periods. The first focuses on how societies and cultures have been shaped by human engagement with the natural world, with a focus on the histories of science, geography and time. We then consider how people in different places and times have understood human existence, often defined against a set of ideas about exoticised ‘others’. Religions and cosmologies, which have always been a major vehicle through which people across different cultures have defined themselves and others, are the theme for block three. We conclude with a series of lectures and seminars on popular culture, dissent and radicalism, to think about the ways ‘official’ forms of knowledge and belief have been questioned by a wide range of historical actors.
Occurrence | Teaching cycle |
---|---|
A | Autumn Term 2020-21 |
The aims of this module are:
¿ To help students understand important ideas in intellectual and cultural history over the past 1500 years
¿ To encourage students to explore intellectual and cultural history from the perspective of a wide range of historical actors across time and place
¿ To familiarize students with the ways in which historians understand intellectual and cultural developments in past societies
¿ To introduce students to many of the different areas of study available to them in Stages 2 and 3.
Students who complete this module successfully will have:
· Acquired a broad knowledge of, and some of the scholarship relating to, political history in Western and non-Western societies;
· Demonstrated an ability to analyse critically, and make connections between, focussed studies from across time and place;
· Practiced core skills necessary to a history degree, notably note-taking, critical analysis, and the ability to form arguments orally and in written work, through effective contributions to seminar activities, oral presentation, essay-writing, and group work
· Demonstrated understanding of, and the ability to construct arguments about, political changes and continuities
Teaching Programme:
Teaching will be in 2 x 1 hour lectures each week, taught over 8 weeks. 1 x 1 hour discussion seminar in Weeks 1, 2, 4, and 6 and 8 and 1 x 2 hour discussion seminar with formative work session in Weeks 3, 5, 7, and 9. Each week students will do reading and preparation in order to be able to contribute to discussion and complete the formative skills tasks.
The provisional outline for the module is as follows:
1. Briefing session
Block 1: Understanding the Natural World
Lectures
1. The Pre-Global Globe
2. New Worlds, Ancient Texts
3. Empire, Time, and Scientific Knowledge
4. Mastering Nature: the Anthropocene as History
Seminars:
1. The ‘Scientific Book’
2. What Time is It?
Block 2: Human Being
5. Translation and Knowledge
6. The Fall of Natural Man: the origins of comparative ethnology
7. Relative Humanity
8. Making ‘New Men’ through Revolution
Seminars:
3. How to Measure Cultural Difference
4. Improving People
Block 3: Religions and Cosmologies
9. Travel and Mission
10. Translating Christianity in an age of Reformations
11. Controversies of Faith, Crises of Power
12. The Rise of Secularism
Seminars:
5. Ethnographies
6. Radical Politics and Religion
Block 4: Popular Cultures, Dissent and Radicalism
13. Popular Movements and Knowledge
14. The Limits of Social Discipline
15. Contesting the Future across Imperial Space
16. Decolonisation and Knowledge: Remaking the World
Seminars:
7. Vernacular Language and Revolt
8. How to Unthink an Empire
Task | Length | % of module mark |
---|---|---|
Essay/coursework Essay 1500 words |
N/A | 100 |
None
Formative work:
Students will complete four formative assessment tasks during the autumn term, comprised of a document analysis; a critical analysis of an assigned work; an annotated bibliography; and an essay plan. These tasks will relate to the essay question assigned to the block.
Students will work in groups to complete these tasks in tutor-led sessions in weeks 2, 4, 6 and 8, for which they will be expected to carry out preliminary reading and preparation.
Summative work:
Students will choose one of the four essay questions and submit a 1,500-word assessed essay in Week 1 of Spring Term. It is worth 100% of the course mark.
Task | Length | % of module mark |
---|---|---|
Essay/coursework Essay 1500 words |
N/A | 100 |
Students will receive verbal feedback during the formative work classes and a short written statement from their tutor within 10 working days of the class. For more information, see the Statement on Feedback.
For the summative assessment task, students will receive their provisional mark and written feedback within 20 working days of the submission deadline. For more information, see the Statement on Assessment.
For term time reading, please refer to the module VLE site. Before the course starts, you might like to look at the following items of preliminary reading:
Daston, Lorraine, Against Nature Cambridge MAss., The MIT Press, 2019.
Whatmore, Richard. What Is Intellectual History? Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016.