Module Information

Module Identifier
HY39030
Module Title
VICTORIAN VALUES: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE LIVES OF THE BRITISH MIDDLE CLASSES
Academic Year
2008/2009
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 2

Course Delivery

Delivery Type Delivery length / details
Lecture 18 x 50 minute lectures
Seminars / Tutorials 10 x 50 minute seminars plus individual essay tutorials of 10-15 minutes
 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Exam 3 Hours   60%
Semester Assessment 2 x 2,500 words essays  40%

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this module students should be able to:

Demonstrate a firm grounding in the secondary source material and the ongoing debates in the study of the British middle classes in the nineteenth century

Reflect upon and critically analyze secondary and primary sources.

Collect, collate and analyze historical evidence and produce both oral and written arguments.

Work independently and collaboratively (not assessed).

Produce work in a professional manner and demonstrate skills appropriate to the study of history.

Brief description

The middle class has been described by historians as continually rising. But who were they and where were they going? Middle-class values came to dominate Western Europe in the nineteenth century. These values have been understood as rigid, repressive and prudish, yet the middle classes also comprised many daring individuals, sexual perversions, and radical politics. Through reading of primary and secondary sources, we will discuss various ways of understanding class, as a function of economic position, social status and cultural aspiration. We will consider how identity was constructed, and how the middle class came to be a self-conscious group, in spite of great diversity amongst those who identified themselves as such. This module will introduce students to the history and historiography of the nineteenth-century British middle classes. Students will be introduced to a range of concepts in social and cultural history, including class formation and consolidation, the cultural construction of identity, and the intersection of nationality, class and gender in shaping identity and experience. A range of primary and secondary sources will be used for teaching this module, allowing students to develop a range of analytic skills, a familiarity with current historiography and debates, and some knowledge of the sources and research skills of the modern historian.

Aims

This module gives students the opportunity to study the formation and consolidation of the British Middle Classes in the nineteenth century. It introduces students to a range of primary texts, as well as key historiographic debates. The module explores a range of topics including politics, work and leisure, in order to provide a rounded picture of who the middle classes were as well as their (often conflictual) relations with other social classes.

Content

Lectures:
1. Introduction: The `middling sort'
2. Marx and Engels and the class-based society
3. Finding an appropriate terminology
4. Businessmen and professionals
5. The petty bourgeoisie
6. The middle classes and the urban environment
7. National politics and the fight for the vote
8. A culture of clubs and associations
9. Regional variations
10. The urban-rural divide
11. Separating home from work
12. Separate spheres: The myth of the middle class?
13. Bourgeois childhood: a modern invention?
14. The `new woman'
15. Respectable leisure
16. The dark side of middle-class leisure
17. A comparative perspective and the case for a transnational history of class
18. `Conclusions: Are we all middle class now?

Seminars:
1. Introduction to period and themes
2. Class conflict and the difficulty of definition
3. Occupation, wealth and class identity
4. Gaining a voice, gaining a vote
5. Gentlemen's clubs and bourgeois sociability
6. `Home sweet home': private sanctuary or gilded cage?
7. Women finding new roles
8. Shopping for pleasure
9. Holidays by the sea
10. Conclusions and exam revision

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Application of Number
Communication Read a wide range of both primary and secondary texts; improve listening skills during the lectures, and consequently develop skills in note taking; demonstrate and develop the ability to communicate ideas in two essays; skills in oral presentation will be developed in seminars but not assessed.
Improving own Learning and Performance Show awareness of own learning styles, personal preferences and needs; devise and apply realistic learning and self management strategies; devise a personal action plan to include short and long-term goals and to develop personal awareness of how to improve on these.
Information Technology Students will be encouraged to locate suitable material on the web and to apply it appropriately to their own work. Students will also be encouraged to word-process their work. These skills will not be formally assessed.
Personal Development and Career planning Develop awareness of personal skills and qualities in relation to course in progression; plan and prepare for future course/career.
Problem solving Identify problems and factors which might influence potential solutions; develop creative thinking approaches to problem solving; evaluate advantages and disadvantages of potential solutions.
Research skills Understand a range of research methods and plans and carry out research; produce academically appropriate pieces of written work
Subject Specific Skills
Team work Understand the concept of group dynamics; contribute to the setting of group goals; contribute effectively to the planning of group activities; play an active part in group activities (e.g. short group presentations in seminars); exercise negotiation and persuasion skills; evaluate group activities and own contribution.

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6