Invitation to History (Theme: Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Early Modern England) (HIST*1050) | College of Arts

Invitation to History (Theme: Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Early Modern England) (HIST*1050)

Code and section: HIST*1050*01

Term: Winter 2024

Details

Course Description: 

This course will introduce students to the basics of the historian’s craft, including locating, analysing, and interpreting both primary and secondary sources. It will provide you with the skills that you need to be successful in your History major, minor, or area of concentration. 

Topic: 

Focusing on London, England between the years 1550-1680, this course will investigate contemporary understandings of class, race, gender, and sexuality and how these were core to understanding the self and society in the early modern period. Primary sources will include court records, poetry, midwifery guides, artwork, letters, and wills. In addition to historical research skills students will learn to critically assess primary and secondary documents by considering gender and intersectionality as a lens for examining the past. 

Methods of Evaluation and Weights:

  • Class Participation: 20%
  • Research skills assignment: 20%
  • Short Writing Assignment: 20%
  • Project/Essay Proposal: 10%
  • Research Project/Essay: 30%

LEARNING OUTCOMES

  1. You will learn how to manage your time in university for success.
  2. You will learn how to distinguish between important information and unnecessary details.
  3. You will learn how to distinguish between a scholarly and a non-scholarly source.
  4. You will develop effective written and oral communications skills and enhance listening comprehension.
  5. You will learn to analyse and interpret a variety of primary and secondary sources and construct a historical argument.
  6. You will learn how to act with academic integrity.
  7. You will learn how to cite sources appropriately in history classes.
  8. You will learn that historical interpretations change over time and in response to evidence.
  9. You will learn that history is a diverse enterprise which helps us to understand different cultures, regions, and states.

Texts and/or Resources Required:

All readings are available online.

 

*Please note: This is a preliminary web course description only. The department reserves the right to change without notice any information in this description. The final, binding course outline will be distributed in the first class of the semester.

**Please login to WebAdvisor, once the course schedule goes live, for instructor and room information.