Please note: You are viewing the unstyled version of this web site. Either your browser does not support CSS (cascading style ts) or it has been disabled.

Department of Modern History

Local Navigation

Undergraduate

HIST189 The Coming of Modernity: Early Europe 1500-1800

Credits
3 credit points

Lecturer
Associate Professor M Spongberg

Unit Description
The world of early modern Europe has been characterised by historians in terms of sharp contrasts – a world in steeped in antiquity, yet also grappling with modernity; a world where the secularising impulses generated by the Reformation, the broadening of scientific knowledge, increased literacy, and the expansion of empires existed at the same time when thousands of witches were burnt at the stake, ‘men of reason’ debated the existence of monsters and where trials were held to convict werewolves. The historiography of the period too is divided between historians who view the period as a time of rapid and revolutionary change ‘the world turned upside down’ or a as period of stagnation of ‘history standing still’. This unit will examine the Early Modern World focusing particularly on the history of everyday life. Students will be asked to analyse the contradictory impulses that shaped Early Modern Europe, in all its strangeness and its familiarity ‘from below’ that is by examining the daily life of the masses. Through a focus on early modern belief systems, familial relations, social and cultural practices, values and attitudes, work and leisure students will be asked to consider how ‘modern’ were Early Modern Europeans?

 

Go to

 

 

 

Copyright & Site information

  • CRICOS Provider No 00002J, ABN 90 952 801 237
  • Last Updated: 10 Sept 2007
  • Authorised by: Christina Slade