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GLOBAL STUDIES (L97)  (Dept. Info)Arts & Sciences  (Policies)FL2024

L97 GS 301Historical Methods: Transregional History3.0 Units
SecDays       TimeBuilding / RoomInstructorFinal ExamSeatsEnrollWaits
01--W-F--10:00A-11:20ATBAWattPaper/Project/TakeHome1940
Desc:DECOLONIZATION IN THE 2OTH CENTURY: This course traces the international history of decolonization, that is, the transformation of the system of empires and colonies into the post-1945 world of sovereign nation states. We begin with a brief survey of the history of empire, paying close attention to problems created during colonial rule that were especially vexing during decolonization. Through secondary sources we seek to understand the international context of decolonization, especially the paradox of continued colonial rule in the midst of an international discourse of self-determination and universal human rights. We engage with some of the classic critiques of imperialism including selections by Lenin, Gandhi, Memmi, and Fanon. Through case studies, we evaluate particular problems that emerged as the colonized wrested institutional and legal control over their territories from past rulers. We consider the difference between "decolonization" and "post-colonialism," and explore how some of the problems of past colonial rule continue to trouble our world today. Modern, Transregional.
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02-T-R---10:00A-11:20ATBAHindlePaper/Project/TakeHome15130
Desc:MICROHISTORIES: How much can we learn about the past through the story of a single person, place, object, or event? Since the 1970s, historians have attempted to show that 'microhistories' can powerfully illuminate the grand sweep of history. By narrowing their focus to magnify the small, the particular, and the local, 'microhistorians' have argued that studies of apparently inconsequential subjects can have a major impact on our understanding of the past. This course is based on the intensive reading and discussion of several outstanding examples of the 'micro-historical' study of individuals, families, communities, events, and social interactions. These will be primarily drawn from the literature on early modern Europe, which has a long and continuing tradition of work of this kind. Some, however, are taken from the historiography of Early America and recent approaches to 'Global' history. Particular attention will be paid to questions of evidence and of its potential in the hands of imaginative historians; and to the deployment of particular analytical and narrative techniques in the construction of history. We will often be less concerned with whether the historians we study are 'right' in their arguments than with how they develop and present them. Transregional
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