Department of History

History 601: European Historiography

Charles Rearick

Fall 2007, Thursday 2:30 - 5:00 pm

Synopsis:

This course is designed to introduce graduate students to a variety of the best recent historical writing on modern Europe. The topics range from the French Revolution to recent debates over German history in relation to the Holocaust and global-history perspectives on Europe's past. Included are classic questions such as explaining the French Revolutionary Terror and the rise of the Nazis as well as new inquiries into the history of private life, gender, and collective memory. Besides participating in weekly discussions, each student will write a book review and a review essay, present a commentary on the
readings to the class, and write a paper on a historiographical methodology or style. Students who are not concentrating in European history may learn much that could be useful from the approaches and methodological thinking of leading European historians.

Syllabus: Not available

Course Website: Not available

© 2000-2005 University of Massachusetts, Amherst | College of Humanities and Fine Arts | Site Policies | Site Map | Last Updated: 04-Apr-2007 10:49 AM