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DEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2007/2008
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Home : College of Humanities and Social Science : School of History, Classics and Archaeology (Schedule E) : Economic and Social History

Community and Society in Britain, 1560-1640 (VS1) (U02473)

? Credit Points : 20  ? SCQF Level : 10  ? Acronym : HCA-3-VS1ComSoc

The course is taught over one semester in 24 class hours, made up of twice weekly 1.5 hour sessions over 8 weeks. The first session of each week is a relatively informal lecture and the second is based on a short student presentation followed by discussion. The course is concerned with popular mentalities, beliefs and attitudes in England and Scotland in the later sixteenth and early seventeenth centureis. Its aim is to examine the ways in which ordinary men and women lived their lives and conceived of their world. Though concerned with a study of society in the round, the main focus is on the experience of those people below the level of the wealthy and educated elite yeomen and husbandmen, craftsmen and women, tradespeople and artisans, labourers and paupers. Themes covered include the social order; rural and urban community; crime and the law; popular protest; family and women.

Entry Requirements

? This course is only available to part year visiting students.

? This course is a variant of the following course : ES0035

? Pre-requisites : Visiting students should normally have 3 to 4 History courses at grade B or above.

? Prohibited combinations : May not be taken together with 'Society and Culture in Britain, 1560-1640'.

Subject Areas

Delivery Information

? Normal year taken : 3rd year

? Delivery Period : Not being delivered

? Contact Teaching Time : 3 hour(s) per week for 8 weeks

All of the following classes

Type Day Start End Area
Lecture Monday 14:00 15:50 Central
Lecture Thursday 14:00 15:50 Central

Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes

- At the end of the course, students should have a strong understanding of the early modern period as a formative and crucial one in shaping some of the developments with which they may be familiar from their study of later centuries.
- Students will gain an appreciation of the ways in which, and with what success, historians have reconstructed the experience of that majority of the population below the level of the social elite at a time when few of them had the ability to record their thoughts and feelings directly.
- Students will have been encouraged to consider some of the issues and the methods which currently concern historians of culture and which are now at the leading edge of research and writing.
- Student-led seminars are intended to develop the presentation and verbal skills of participating students.
- Written assignments are intended to develop the literary skills of students and their ability to construct coherent argument and analysis.

Assessment Information

- one assignment = 25% final mark
- one take-home examination paper in weeks 11-12 = 75% final mark

Contact and Further Information

The Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries.

Course Secretary

Ms Anezka Leskovcova
Tel : (0131 6)50 3843
Email : anezka.leskovcova@ed.ac.uk

Course Organiser

Dr Adam Fox
Tel : (0131 6)50 3835
Email : Adam.Fox@ed.ac.uk

School Website : http://www.shc.ed.ac.uk/

College Website : http://www.hss.ed.ac.uk/

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