History
History Thematic Course: The Enlightenment
Module code: V1345
Level 6
30 credits in spring semester
Teaching method: Lecture, Seminar
Assessment modes: Coursework
The legacy of the Enlightenment is fiercely contested. Many view the Enlightenment as a source of modern ideas of equality, individual liberty, democracy, global cosmopolitanism and human rights. Others blame the Enlightenment for the evils of empire, racism, and even the totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century.
In this module we will examine why the Enlightenment's legacy continues to shape modern debates, but we will also seek to understand the Enlightenment period (between the late seventeenth and late eighteenth centuries) historically. The module is primarily concerned with the Enlightenment’s modes of thought – its ideas.
We will discover how people sought to formulate new theories of human nature and anthropology, how they grappled with the challenges of progress and decline, and how they understood the emerging world of luxury goods and commercial society. We shall also consider new languages of human freedom, autonomy, and individuality, the relationship between religious and secular life, the role of women (both as bearers of rights and as agents of civilization), and controversies about empire, race, and slavery.
These ideas, however, can only be understood in their social, political, and cultural contexts, and the module will therefore pay due attention to the actual locations in which the Enlightenment took place, both across Europe and in national and local environments, including coffee-houses, salons, royal courts, cities, and universities.
Module learning outcomes
- Evaluate a historical question thematically.
- Compare and contrast a situation in different social and historical settings using a variety of source materials, and locate their analysis and conceptual awareness within an overall understanding of historical chronology.
- Communicate research findings and construct a coherent argument in a range of formats.