HHIK09742U HIS 74. Great Britain, The British Empire and the Imperial political and cultural legacy, c. 1500 to Brexit
History
Historical core area 2: Academic writing with focus on source
analysis (HHIK03741E) [Curriculum for Master´s Programme in
History, 2015-Curriculum]
Historical core area 2: Academic writing with focus on source
analysis (HHIK03741E) [Curriculum for the Master’s Minor in
History, 2015-Curriculum]
History (ONLY BA-elective for BA students of
History)
Module T5: Historical elective project (HHIB10511E) [BA-elective
studies, 2013-Curriculum]
Great Britain, The British Empire and the Imperial
political and cultural legacy, c. 1500 to Brexit
The British Empire was the largest global imperial project ever, as
is evident from maps that showed a quarter of the world’s territory
coloured red, indicating dominance over a fourth of the world’s
population as well as over most of its oceans. We begin the course
with an introduction to the early history of the Empire with
English piracy in the Caribbean and conquests and early
colonisation of Ireland, America, India, Africa, Australia and New
Zealand, the Opium Wars, British advances into Africa with
Livingstone, Rhodes and Kitchener at the head, and the Great Game
against the Russians in Central Asia with Afghanistan as the
flashpoint. Leading up to the modern period and current issues such
as devolution and Brexit, we will look at the Boer War, First and
Second World Wars, Commonwealth, Suez-crisis, decolonisation,
Falklands War and the heritage of the Empire in British collective
memory.
By the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897 the British Empire
was at a climax with the Royal Navy and lines of the telegraph
binding it all together, and the Pax Britannica was
considered a civilising force like none other. Yet within the span
of a single lifetime, that of Winston Churchill (1874-1965), the
Empire not only declined and dissolved, but was seemingly more or
less forgotten, with imperialism having become a dirty word.
However, more recent historiography has in the light of
contemporary debates about globalization and the world order
resuscitated the central role of the British Empire in calling
forth many of our present globalised institutions, thus raising
important questions as to the true historical character and import
of British global power.
This course will investigate documentary and non-documentary
sources along with the historiographies treating the cultural and
political contexts of the Empire, its vicissitudes and legacy.
Among main questions to be dealt with in the course are:
- Reasons for the success and subsequent failure of the British
Imperial project.
- Attitudes that drove the Empire and to what extent these were
shared by its citizens and subjects within and outside of Britain.
- How the Imperial experience was and is reflected in popular
culture.
- The concepts of prestige and class as motivating and
consolidating factors of Empire.
- Appraisals of the significance of the Empire in historiography.
- Sources and resources for researching the British Empire.
Course objectives (clarification of some of the
objectives stipulated in the curriculum):
After the course students will be able to:
•
- Category
- Hours
- Class Instruction
- 56
- Exam Preparation
- 129,5
- Preparation
- 203
- Total
- 388,5
[MA] Read more [in Danish only]:
https://intranet.ku.dk/historie_ka/undervisning/historie/Sider/default.aspx
[MA elective] Read more [in Danish only]:
https://intranet.ku.dk/historie_ka/tilvalg/ka-tilvalg/tilvalghistorie/Sider/default.aspx
[BA elective (ONLY BA-elective for BA students of
History)] Read more [in Danish only]:
https://intranet.ku.dk/historie_ba/undervisning/historie/Sider/default.aspx
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Other
- Exam registration requirements
[in Danish only] Aktuelle studieordninger for Historie and Uddannelseshåndbog for Historie; Pensumbestemmelser for kandidatuddannelsen i Historie; Kronologiske spredningskrav for kandidatuddannelsen i Historie
Criteria for exam assesment
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- HHIK09742U
- Credit
- 15 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterFull Degree Master choice,Master’s minor subject
- Duration
- 1 semester
- Placement
- Spring
- Schedule
- See timetable link
- Continuing and further education
- Study board
- Study Board of Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Contracting department
- SAXO-Institute - Archaeology, Ethnology, Greek & Latin, History
Contracting faculty
- Faculty of Humanities
Course Coordinators
- Michael Alexander Langkjær (langkjr@hum.ku.dk)