Module Identifier HY33720  
Module Title THE STUDY OF SLAVERY: MATERIALS AND METHODS  
Academic Year 2001/2002  
Co-ordinator Dr Robert Harrison  
Semester Semester 2  
Mutually Exclusive HY33220 Single or Joint Honours History students only, HY33320 , HY33620 , HY33820 , HY34320  
Course delivery Seminars / Tutorials   20 Hours 10 x 2 hours  
Assessment Assignment   1 x 5,000 word project   60%  
  Essay   2 x 1,500 word essays   40%  

Learning outcomes


On completion of this module, students should be able to:
a) Demonstrate familiarity with a wide range of knowledge relating to the history of slavery in antebellum America
b) Demonstrate familiarity with comparative perspectives on the history of slavery
c) Demonstrate an understanding of a range of approaches to the study of social history.
d) Explore the relationships between history and other disciplines, particularly ………
e) Read, analyse and reflect critically on primary texts
f) Gather, sift and critically assess both primary and secondary source materials
g) Work both independently and collaboratively and to participate in group discussion

Brief description


This module is designed to develop students' critical awareness of historical sources and methodology through a detailed examination of the sources and techniques employed in the study of slavery in the American South. It examines the various documentary sources, as well as other materials exploited by historians of slavery, including oral testimony, folklore, anthropometric measurements and archaeological remains, and considers the contribution of quantitative techniques, literary analysis and the comparative method to the study of slavery.

Reading Lists

Books
** Recommended Text
Edward D.C. Campbell and Kim S. Rice (eds.),. Before Freedom Came : African-American Life in the Antebellum South.
Charles T. Davis and Henry L. Gates, Jr.,. The Slave's Narrative.