Courses & Units

Age of Revolution and Empire: Britain and France HTA367

Introduction

The late eighteenth century saw the beginning of revolutionary political, economic and cultural change that marked the emergence of modern nation states and cultures. France was site of the first modern political and social revolution, and came to dominate Europe under the leadership of Napoleon. Britain was transformed by war, industrial revolution and the development of a global empire. This unit takes a comparative history approach to studying key aspects of the emergence of Britain and France as modern imperial powers.

Summary

Unit name Age of Revolution and Empire: Britain and France
Unit code HTA367
Credit points 12.5
College/School College of Arts, Law and Education
School of Humanities
Discipline History and Classics
Coordinator Anthony Page
Available as an elective? Yes
Delivered By University of Tasmania
Level Advanced

Availability

This unit is currently unavailable.

Note

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Learning Outcomes

  • Explain the comparative history of British and French society, culture, identities, and imperial and military rivalry between 1745 and 1815
  • Apply advanced skills in researching and understanding the historiography of the age of revolutions
  • Apply an advanced capacity for historical reasoning, analysis and argument
  • Apply advanced skills in communicating according to the conventions of the History discipline

Fee Information

Field of Education Commencing Student Contribution 1,3 Grandfathered Student Contribution 1,3 Approved Pathway Course Student Contribution 2,3 Domestic Full Fee 4
not applicable

1 Please refer to more information on student contribution amounts.
2 Please refer to more information on eligibility and Approved Pathway courses.
3 Please refer to more information on eligibility for HECS-HELP.
4 Please refer to more information on eligibility for FEE-HELP.

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Requisites

Prerequisites

25 credit points at Introductory level or higher

Teaching

Teaching Pattern

On campus

Weekly lectures or equivalent (1.5 hours) & weekly tutorial (1.5 hours)

Off campus

Weekly lectures or equivalent (1.5 hours) & online discussions

 

AssessmentQuizzes (15%)|Short assignment (15%)|Take home exam (30%)|Research essay (40%)
TimetableView the lecture timetable | View the full unit timetable

Textbooks

Required

Required readings will be listed in the unit outline prior to the start of classes.

LinksBooktopia textbook finder

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