Module Information

Module Identifier
GG36220
Module Title
Landscapes of British Modernity
Academic Year
2015/2016
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 1
Pre-Requisite
Normally that students are registered for SH, JH, Major/Minor BA/B.Sc Geography
Other Staff

Course Delivery

Delivery Type Delivery length / details
Lecture 10 x 3 Hour Lectures
 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Assessment 3,000 word research essay  50%
Semester Exam 2 Hours   Unseen written examination  50%
Supplementary Exam 2 Hours   Resit on condoned (medical) grounds  100%

Learning Outcomes

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

Critically evaluate a range of theoretical and empirical writings on the geographies of landscape, modernity and Britishness.

Discuss the geographies of a range of key sites, experiences and subject-positions associated with British modernity in the twentieth century.

Critically evaluate the geographies which are effaced or excluded within prevailing discourses of British modernity.

Demonstrate their competence in undertaking independent research, and constructing a written argument through the completion of an essay and examination.

Critically evaluate a range of written, visual and aural source materials; discussing the significance of these sources with their peers and communicating their views to the class.

Content

  • Introduction: Landscape, modernity and national identity.
  • Landscapes of British modernity before 1900.
  • 'Metroland': the Underground and the growth of suburban London.
  • Modernism, planning and 'preservation', 1918-1939.
  • 'Guide book Britain': leisure, landscape and citizenship, 1918-1970.
  • War and reconstruction: from bomb sites to new towns, 1939-1970
  • Countering British modernity 1: Britishness, dissidence and exclusion.
  • Countering British modernity 2: 'Anti-modern' sentiments.
  • Postmodern landscapes: Britain, 1970-Now

Aims

This new module is designed to widen the range of option modules available to human geography students at Level 3. The module reflects the current research interests of Peter Merriman, who is a new member of academic staff. It also reflects the broader research and teaching themes of other members of the Historical and Cultural Geography Research Group.

Brief description

In this course students will examine the cultural and historical geographies of landscapes of modernity in twentieth century Britain. The module will start with an introduction to contemporary geographical writings on 'landscape', 'modernity', and British national identities, before tracing the geographies of specific sites and subject-positions which have been associated with modern life in twentieth century Britain. Specific lectures will focus on: sites of British modernity before 1900; the expansion of suburbia; the links between countryside preservation and modern planning between the wars; the expansion of leisure and the 'writing' of the landscape through guidebooks; cultures of landscape during World War Two; and the reconstruction of post-war Britain. The module aims to show how particular understandings of Britishness and British modernity (and their common equation with Englishness) have continually been challenged and resisted in different periods through the cultural activities of Welsh, Scottish and Irish subjects. The module will examine various counter-modern practices and sites, from the emergence of 'anti-modern' sentiments associated with particular conservation, organic, environmental and architectural movements, to the geographies of groups who are frequently excluded from hegemonic accounts of Britishness - such as ethnic minority groups, the young, homosexuals, new age travellers, other nationals, and subjects of empire. The final lecture will examine the geographies of 'sites' and 'sensibilities' which have frequently been associated with 'postmodern' geographies, whether they be heritage museums, motorways, airports or shopping centres.

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Application of Number Students may draw upon and analyse numerical information in their assessed essays.
Communication The module will help students to develop their written and oral communication skills. Class discussions will enable students to develop their oral communication skills, and the assessed essay and examination will enable students to practice and enhance their written communication skills.
Improving own Learning and Performance Student attendance and participation in the lectures, and their undertaking of an assessed essay, will help them to enhance a range of learning skills. The module requires students to undertake sixty hours of self-directed study.
Information Technology The assessed essay requires students to undertake independent research using bibliographic search-engines and library catalogues. The module will enable students to enhance their research skills and practise their IT skills when writing the essay.
Personal Development and Career planning The module will help students to develop key transferable skills, in addition to raising important questions about the histories and geographies of Britain which will help them to think about their role as citizens within society. The course discusses themes which will be invaluable for students wishing to undertake postgraduate study in geography.
Problem solving The module will develop students' problem-solving skills in a number of ways. Students will be required to discuss and analyse a range of visual texts, and to complete small problem-solving exercises during the lectures. Students will also have to address problems associated with research design when undertaking their assessed essay.
Research skills Students are required to undertake independent research for their essay which will draw upon and enhance skills they have developed in previous modules. Further research skills will be developed through class-based discussions and problem-solving exercises and further reading they undertake.
Subject Specific Skills The module will enable students to practice subject-specific skills which they have developed in years one and two, including techniques for analyzing historical and cultural texts. Students will develop their analytical skills through class-based discussions and in their assessed essay and examination.
Team work The lectures will include class-based problem-solving exercises and discussions which will provide opportunities for students to develop team-working skills and discuss their thoughts with the class.

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6