HIST 6338: Issues In Transatlantic History

Instructors: Buisseret, Narrett, Reinhardt, Reinhartz

Course Description This course will provide students entering the Ph.D. program with an introduction to Transatlantic History by emphasizing the interchange among the peoples of the continents bordering the Atlantic Ocean from the earliest contacts until the present. Taught by four different instructors, the course will survey the major themes that students will explore in greater depth in the colloquium courses 6301 and 6302.

Goals and Objectives This core course will introduce students to the main concepts in the study of Transatlantic History. Here they will consider the nature of African, American, and European societies on the eve of expansion, study the motivation and the means used by Europeans in their expansion to the New World, and then survey the immediate and long-term effects of the encounters in different parts of the Americas. This course will also examine theories about syncretic developments, variously described as "acculturation" and "creolization."

Examples of Readings

Exploration and Discovery

Natives and Settlers on the Eve of European Expansion

Transatlantic Navigations

History of Cartography

Migrations and Colonization

Immigration, Cultural Persistence and Change

Slavery & Race

Religion and Cultural Identity

Comparative Frontiers

Into the Modern World

Imperialism

 

Revolutions, World Wars and Cold Wars