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HIST2411: The Romantic Revolution in Europe, 1770-1840

Please ensure you check the module availability box for each module outline, as not all modules will run in each academic year. Each module description relates to the year indicated in the module availability box, and this may change from year to year, due to, for example: changing staff expertise, disciplinary developments, the requirements of external bodies and partners, and student feedback. Current modules are subject to change in light of the ongoing disruption caused by Covid-19.

Type Open
Level 2
Credits 20
Availability Available in 2024/2025
Module Cap 48
Location Durham
Department History

Prerequisites

  • A pass mark in at least ONE level one module in History.

Corequisites

  • None.

Excluded Combinations of Modules

  • None.

Aims

  • To introduce students to a period of immense cultural vitality in Europe, and to encourage them to consider what sets this period apart;
  • To encourage students to engage with a wide array of different sources, and so challenge them to connect general political history and the history of ideas with specific cultural artefacts;
  • To make students reflect on the different ways in which historians, art historians, musicologists and literary critics approach this period, and to consider the advantages of different methods of analysis;
  • To equip the students with a grasp of classic and more recent historiography on Romanticism, to better understand what has been at stake in studies of this period.

Content

  • The module focuses on a period in European history that arguably sees not only a revolution in politics but also in cultural and intellectual life, and which came to be felt across the whole continent.
  • Romanticism offers an excellent case-study for thinking about the connections between political, commercial and cultural change from the late eighteenth century, and how this varied according to geography and chronology. This module will allow students to reflect upon a movement whose assumptions and whose vocabulary continue to inform much of modern European culture.
  • Often responding directly to the challenge of the French Revolution, Romantic thinkers and artists were hugely influential in reshaping ideas of state and nation in the early nineteenth century. But Romanticism cannot be understood just in texts; it has to be explored in images, in monuments, in music and in objects. So this module asks important questions about how historians periodize and classify different cultural materials, and about the challenges inherent in writing transnational cultural history.
  • Romanticism was also inextricably linked to shifts in historical consciousness, and in how Europeans thought about the passage of time and the burden of the past. .

Learning Outcomes

Subject-specific Knowledge:

  • Awareness of the diverse forms that Romanticism took across Europe, and an understanding of how this diversity was related to different political and social contexts;
  • Understanding of how the key political turning points and social transformations occurring in Europe between 1770-1840 made major impacts on cultural activity;
  • Understanding of changing attitudes to time and history in the decades around 1800, and how these attitudes carried profound intellectual and political implications;
  • Understanding of the relationship the way in which new aesthetic forms connected with a popular revolution in artistic and cultural consumption.

Subject-specific Skills:

  • Building on and developing skills gained at Level 1
  • Deepening and extending historical understanding through focused, concentrated modules
  • Developing precision, depth of understanding, and conceptual awareness

Key Skills:

  • The ability to employ sophisticated reading skills to gather, sift, process, synthesise and critically evaluate information from a variety of sources (print, digital, material, aural, visual, audio-visual etc.)
  • The ability to communicate ideas and information orally and in writing, devise and sustain coherent and cogent arguments
  • The ability to write and think under pressure, manage time and work to deadlines
  • The ability to make effective use of information and communications technology

Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module

  • Student learning is facilitated by a combination of the following teaching methods:
  • lectures to set the foundations for further study and to provide the basis for the acquisition of subject specific knowledge. Lectures provide a broad framework which defines individual module content, introducing students to themes, debates and interpretations. In this environment, students are given the opportunity to develop skills in listening, selective note-taking and reflection;
  • seminars to allow students to present and critically reflect upon the acquired subject-specific knowledge, methodologies and theories, and to identify and debate a range of issues and differing opinions. The seminar is the forum in which students are given the opportunity to communicate ideas, jointly exploring themes and arguments. Seminars are structured to develop understanding and designed to maximise student participation related to prior independent preparation. Seminars give students the opportunity to develop oral communication skills, encourage critical and tolerant approaches to reasoned argument and historical discussion, build the students' ability to marshal historical evidence, and facilitate the development of the ability to summarise historical arguments, think in a rapidly changing environment and communicate in a persuasive and articulate manner, whilst recognising the value of working with others and, occasionally, towards shared goals.
  • Assessment:
  • Students will be examined on subject specific knowledge;
  • Summative essays remain a central component of assessment in history, due to the integrative high-order skills they develop. Essays allow students the opportunity to recognise, represent and critically reflect upon ideas, concepts and problems; students can demonstrate awareness of, and the ability to use and evaluate, a diverse range of resources and identify, represent and debate a range of subject-specific issues and opinions. Through the essay, students can synthesise information, adopt critical appraisals and develop reasoned argument based on individual research; they should be able to communicate ideas in writing, with clarity and coherence; and to show the ability to integrate and critically assess material from a wide range of sources. The additional summative assignments will test knowledge and skills specific to the module, such as analysis of relevant primary sources, or critical engagement with the historiography as demonstrated through book reviews and article abstracts.

Teaching Methods and Learning Hours

ActivityNumberFrequencyDurationTotalMonitored
Lectures1716 in Term 2 and 1 in Term 31 hour17 
Seminars7Term 21 hour7 
Preparation and Reading176 
Total200 

Summative Assessment

Component: CourseworkComponent Weighting: 40%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Coursework assessment consisting of a short essay (max 2,000 words) or assignment of equivalent length e.g., source commentaries2000 words, not including footnotes and bibliography100 
Component: ExaminationComponent Weighting: 60%
ElementLength / DurationElement WeightingResit Opportunity
Examination2 Hours100 

Formative Assessment

Formative work done in preparation for and during seminars, including oral and written work as appropriate to the module. The summative coursework will have a formative element by allowing students to develop ideas and arguments for the examination and to practice writing to similar word limits.

More information

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