2017/18
Course image HI31R:The Elizabethan Reformation 2017/18
 
Course image HI31Z:The Holocaust: An Integrative History 2017/18
 
Course image HI32A:The Politics of Protest in Europe, 1968-1989 2017/18
 
Course image HI32B:Kenya's Mau Mau Rebellion, 1952-1960 2017/18
 
Course image HI33Y:The Historical Film 2017/18
 
Course image HI34C:Building the Future: The Politics of Urban Planning in Europe and European Empires, 1848-1989 2017/18
 
Course image HI34I:Medicine, Empire and the Body, c.1750-1914 2017/18
 
Course image HI153:Making of the Modern World 2017/18
 
Course image HI173:Empire and Aftermath 2017/18
 
Course image HI173:Empire and Aftermath (Occurrence V) 2017/18
 
Course image HI174:The Enlightenment 2017/18
 
Course image HI174:The Enlightenment (Occurrence V) 2017/18
 
Course image HI176:Mind, Body, and Society: The History of Medicine and Health 2017/18
 
Course image HI176:Mind, Body, and Society: The History of Medicine and Health (Occurrence V) 2017/18
 
Course image HI176:Mind, Body, and Society: The History of Medicine and Health (Occurrence V1) 2017/18
 
Course image HI177:A History of Africa from 1800 2017/18
 
Course image HI178:Farewell to Arms? War in Modern European History, 1815-2015 2017/18

In the early twenty-first century, many commentators argue that European societies have broken politically, military, and culturally with a past long shaped by wars and military conflicts. Following the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the ensuing transatlantic dispute, many US conservative commentators argued with Robert Kagan that “Americans are from Mars and Europeans from Venus” (Of paradise and power. America and Europe in the New World Order, 2003). In this view, Europeans would now be both both unwilling and incapable of using war and military power to ensure their security. More recently, historian James Sheehan invited us to rethink modern European history as the painful, cruel, and costly process whereby European societies redefined their relationship to war as an instrument of policy (Where Have All the Soldiers Gone? The Transformation of Modern Europe, 2008). These debates, like the history of warfare, raise a series of ethical, political, and intellectual issues of continuing import and relevance.

 

This team-taught first-year optional module will introduce students to the history of war and conflicts in modern European history (1815-2015). It will consider how war, its conduct and experience, shaped states and societies in Europe. It will also investigate how the transformations of warfare reflected the evolutions of European societies.

The lectures will provide a brief outline of the military conflicts that shaped the experience of Europeans throughout the period. Most importantly however, in conjunction with weekly seminar discussions, they will help students understand how wars affected – and were transformed by – political ideologies and regimes, cultures, understandings of race and gender, economic systems and international relations and institutions.

 
Course image HI203:The European World, 1500-1750 2017/18
 
Course image HI242:Germany in the Age of the Reformation 2017/18
 
Course image HI253:Gender, History and Politics in Britain, 1790 - 1939 2017/18