Disease and History (HIST*3310) | College of Arts

Disease and History (HIST*3310)

Code and section: HIST*3310*01

Term: Winter 2020

Instructor: Tara Abraham

Details

Course Synopsis:

This course will focus on the complex roles that disease has played in human history since the Middle Ages. We will concentrate on how concepts of health and disease have changed over time. In doing so, we will examine not only how they are shaped by social, cultural, and political contexts, but also how these spheres are in turn shaped by disease. Through close analysis of both primary and secondary readings, we will pay attention to the interplay between social and cultural responses to disease and the professional and institutional contexts of medicine and medical knowledge. Through case studies of epidemic diseases, we will observe how they have divided human populations and cultures, but also tied human populations together. Topics will include social diseases, disease and colonialism, disease and commerce, madness, public health, the rise of scientific medicine, disease and war, global health, and disease and women.

Learning Outcomes:

  1. Through lectures, readings, and discussions, to understand the complex relations between epidemic disease, medical practitioners, and society throughout history.
  2. Through independent research and writing, to develop skills in critical and creative thinking and written communication of ideas about disease and history.
  3. Through class discussions and presentations, to gain skills in oral communication and presentation of scholarly work.
  4. To appreciate the temporal dimensions of epidemic diseases according to place and context.
  5. To understand the central tools and techniques in the discipline of history broadly.

Prerequisites:

None.

Method of Evaluation and Weights:

  • Class Participation - 15%
  • Critical Evaluation Assignment (in pairs) - 15%
  • Research Paper Proposal    - 5%
  • Book Critique - 10%
  • Research Paper - 25%
  • Take-Home Final Exam - 30%

Texts Required:

Mark Harrison, Disease and the Modern World, 1500 to the Present Day (Polity, 2004).
A set of online readings through Ares, the University of Guelph’s online Course Reserve system.

*Please note: This is a preliminary website 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.

 

Syllabus