The Early Modern World (HIST*1010)
Code and section: HIST*1010*01
Term: Fall 2022
Instructor: Peter Goddard
Details
Course Synopsis:
History 1010 is an introductory-level course about Europe and its interactions with the outside world between the fifteenth and the eighteenth centuries. The course covers many of the major events and movements that influenced the development of so-called Western culture including: the Italian Renaissance and Reformations; the overseas expansion and global imperialism, the emergence of scientific culture, the Enlightenment and the political revolutions of the eighteenth century.
By the end of the course students in History 1010 should have gained a broad sense of historical development and an understanding of how key elements of ‘Western’ culture (e.g. beliefs in liberalism and rationalism) were shaped by key events in early modern European History. Students should have developed an informed historical perspective by critically evaluating traditional narratives of European history.
HIST*1010 F22 is in-person, meeting three times a week on the UG campus.
Methods of Evaluation and Weights:
Document Studies (weekly) - 24%
Research Assignment - 34%
Midterm - 16%
Final Exam - 26%
Texts and/or Resources Required:
Mark Konnert, Medieval to Modern. Early Modern Europe. Oxford and Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2017. E-Book form: ISBN: 978019901849 https://www.redshelf.com/
And, in campus bookstores, bundled with,
Margot Northey, Making Sense. (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2016) ISBN 9780199031603
*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 week of class of the Fall 2022 semester.