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Democratizing Histories: Asia and the World (twice a week, until March)

Vak
2015-2016

Admission requirements

No admission pre-requirements. Students who are interested in taking this course, but who are not admitted to one of the mentioned master programmes are requested to contact their co-ordinator of studies.

Description

What is history, what is it for, and whose is it? While all three of these questions are as old as the discipline of history itself, most recently, it is the last of the three that has increasingly come to occupy global center stage. This development in the writing of history, or historiography, reflects a more general global-historical pattern: Around the world, the last several decades have witnessed both a declining interest in traditional intellectual and political confrontations of “right” and “left” as such, and a dramatic rise in critical discussion and debate of notions that previously inspired little controversy, including modernity, globalization, Western dominance, gender, race, culture, nation-building and national identity.

Such academic shifts in turn reflect recent historical shifts and struggles in the global balance of power, including the decline of Euro-American dominance and the end of the Cold War on the one hand, and, on the other, the increasing global empowerment and assertiveness of groups, peoples and places whose active role in the making (and writing) of history was formerly ignored, denied, or suppressed. Asia, and the writing of modern Asian history, stands at the center and forefront of such developments, which can be summed up in the term “Democratizing Histories.”

This course explores these developments from a variety of methodological, thematic and geographical perspectives. The instructors, specialists in South Asia and East/Southeast Asia respectively, address shared questions of Asia’s history and historiography drawing upon distinct regional perspectives as well as a common theoretical foundation. Themes include the local, the national and the transnational; the relationship between academic and non-academic histories; histories in the vernacular; centers and peripheries; and the possibility of post-Eurocentric histories.

Course objectives

Participants in this course will acquire the following:

  • A critical understanding of contemporary methods/ tools of history writing, alternative approaches, forms of narrativisation, and the ability to apply them in analysis.

  • An understanding of non-Western perspectives on historiography

  • Improved research skills, presentation skills, composition skills, and ability to critically evaluate readings

Timetable

Timetable

Mode of instruction

  • Seminar

Course load

10 EC course:

  • Lectures: 28 hours

  • Studying literature:112 hours ( 4 hours per week)

  • Writing paper and preparing for class presentation: 140 hours

5 EC course:

  • Lectures: 28 hours

  • Studying literature:112 hours ( 4 hours per week)

Assessment method

10 EC course:

  • Presentation/Attendance/Participation: 50%

  • Term Paper (+/- 4,000 words): 50%
    The final paper is written in two stages: a first version which will be commented on and a final version. Students who do not meet the deadline for the first version will lose the right to get comments and will only be graded based on their final version.

5 EC course:

  • Presentation/Attendance/Participation: 50%

  • Webpostings: 50%

Blackboard

Blackboard.

Reading List

To be announced through Blackboard.

Registration

Registration through uSis

Contact

Prof. Dr. N.K. Wickramasinghe-Samarasi
Dhr. Dr. E. Mark