131-472 Forbidden Pleasures: Europe 1450-1550 | |
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Availability | 4th year |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
Coordinator | Dr Catherine Kovesi |
Prerequisites | Usually admission to the postgraduate diploma or fourth year honours in history. |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | A 2-hour seminar per week |
Subject Description | Seen by many as the beginnings of modern consumer society, Europe in the period 1450 to 1550 witnessed an unprecedented level of expenditure on a wide variety of new luxury goods. These goods, in turn, stimulated new avenues for ritual practice and display, and were seen by some to lead to dissolute habits and 'unnatural' sexual practices. This seminar examines the social, political, economic and theological impact of new objects of desire, together with the variety of responses that attempted to contain, justify or condemn the new pleasures. Students should complete the seminar with an understanding of the origins of consumer society and the dialectic that this society's practices engendered. Each year that it is offered, this seminar will focus on one or more areas of Europe. |
Generic Skills |
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Assessment | A seminar presentation of 1000 words 20% (due the week of the presentation) and a 4000 word research essay 80% (due end of semester). |
Prescribed Texts | A subject reader will be available |
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