Course Description
-
Course Name
History and Ethnography
-
Host University
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
-
Location
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
-
Area of Study
History
-
Language Level
Taught In English
-
Course Level Recommendations
Upper
ISA offers course level recommendations in an effort to facilitate the determination of course levels by credential evaluators.We advice each institution to have their own credentials evaluator make the final decision regrading course levels.
-
Recommended U.S. Semester Credits3
-
Recommended U.S. Quarter Units4
Hours & Credits
-
Overview
Course Objective
This course is designed from an interdisciplinary perspective so that students learn how empirical qualitative methods from social sciences contribute to history and historical research:
1- Learn ethnographic methods (interviewing, observation-participation, visual analysis/photo-elicitation) and their applications in (oral) history.
2- learn the difference between Emic and Etic within knowledge production
3-Aquire storytelling/writing skills by knowledge of past (history) to contemporary.
4- Gain familiarity with interdisciplinarity and decolonial collaborative knowledge production
Course Content
Some historians insist a historian comes to know the past by literally rethinking the ideas of historic figures. Therefore, all history becomes the history of thought (Flynn 1974). Although, social sciences investigate phenomena through methods/methodologies and fieldwork that yield empirical evidence. In other words, social scientists look at phenomena by following perceptions, while historians look through them by rethinking what was perceived.
This course, as a skill-learning course, introduces students to ethnography, its interdisciplinary use, and how ethnography can be included in historians' toolboxes.
Teaching Methods
Twice every week (interactive lectures/seminars)
Individual Expriemnetion [finding archived images/maps/product designs/sounds/smells and connecting them to contemporary issues)
Type of Assessment
Active Participation (10%, this includes attendance and active contribution to class discussion)
Ethnographic Observation and Storytelling via objects (30%)
Visual Essay (30%)
Ethnography of Objects (30%)
Course Disclaimer
Courses and course hours of instruction are subject to change.
Some courses may require additional fees.