Prospectus

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Globalisation in World History

Course
2021-2022

Admission requirements

None.

Description

Globalisation can be defined as 'processes by which localities and people become increasingly interconnected and interdependent'. These processes do not result in homogenisation, but in a world of disjunctive flows with problems and opportunities that manifest themselves in local forms with contexts that are anything but local.
Globalisation is nothing novel nor a phenomenon exclusively tied up with (European) expansion or modernity when the world would also become literally global: Globalisation has its history.

Globalising world history is important because it invites us to study human societies as interconnected and influencing each other from their very beginnings. Historicising globalisation will therefore make us better understand how and when our planet became systematically connected, and how connectivity works as a (historical) process.

In this course we will follow the historical trajectory of globalisation, starting in the Palaeolithic and Neolithic and moving, via the Bronze Age, Antiquity and the Middle Ages, towards the period we call Modernity.
In doing so we will certainly discuss Alexander the Great, Columbus and Captain Cook, but we will mainly focus on objects as history-makers. Objects generate practices and the distribution of objects through Globalisation processes generates networks of practices. We will thus combine globalisation with a focus on objects and the possibilities for human action they provide - something referred to as affordances - and investigate what world history looks like from that perspective.

Many of today’s problems are about globalisation in the sense that they are about making sense of the impact of the ever-widening networks we have become part of. Investigating the big history of globalisation, as we will do in this course, will therefore make you more experienced and knowledgeable in dealing with current societal problems and challenges: studying historical trajectories of globalisation will improve your understanding of the complexities of our 21st century world.

Course objectives

  • Knowledge of and insight into the concept of globalisation;

  • Knowledge of and insight into the debate on historicising globalisation;

  • Understanding of the problems related to the notions of globalisation and historicising globalisation;

  • Understanding of the relation between the history of globalisation and the complexities of our 21st century world;

  • Ability to summarise and reflect on specialist literature with regard to historical examples of globalisation;

  • Ability to report in written format;

  • Ability to conceive of and write a small essay on the subject.

Timetable

Course schedule details can be found in MyTimetable.
Log in with your ULCN account, and add this course using the 'Add timetable' button.

Mode of instruction

  • Lectures;

  • Tutorials.

The meetings are part lecture and part debate about compulsory literature. This literature must be studied in advance; the debate in class will be prepared by means of assignments on this literature.

Course load

  • 6 × 2 hours of lectures (0.8 ec);

  • 300 pages of literature (2.2 ec);

  • Short written assignments (0.5 ec);

  • Final essay of 2,000 words (+/- 10%) (1,5 ec).

Assessment method

  • Short (weekly) written assignments (30%);

  • Final essay (70%);

  • Participation in discussion (0.5 bonus, used to round up final grade).

Prior to class students read the assigned literature and submit discussion points/make the assignment. These must be submitted 2 days before class. In order to pass the course, all written assignments have to be handed in on time.

Compensation is possible according to the OER (Onderwijs- en Examenreglement / Course and Examination Regulations).

There is no retake for the written assignments, only for the final essay (with new topic) if the first attempt has been taken seriously.

If you fail the retake for the final essay, any passes for the short written assignments will no longer count (i.e., grades cannot be used the next year).

Assessment deadlines

All assessment deadlines (exams, retakes, paper deadlines etc.) can be found in MyTimetable.
Log in with your ULCN account, and add this course using the 'Add timetable' button. To view the assessment deadline(s), make sure to select the course with a code ending in T and/or R.

Late submission will result in a lowering of the grade (0.5 point per day).

Reading list

The reading list will be made available on Brightspace or through e-mail.

Registration

Registration in uSis is mandatory. You can register for this course until 5 days before the first class.

Registration in uSis automatically leads to enrollment in the corresponding Brightspace module. Therefore you do not need to enroll in Brightspace, but make sure to register for this course in uSis.

You are required to register for all lectures and tutorials well in time. The Administration Office registers all students for their exams, you are not required to do this in uSis.

Start registration for the BA2 seminars:

  • Series 1: 27 September 2021, 07:00 hrs

  • Series 2: 17 January 2022, 07:00 hrs

  • Series 3: 28 February 2022, 07:00 hrs

Contact

For more information about this course, please contact dr. M.E.J.J. (Marike) van Aerde.

Remarks

Compulsory attendance.