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Unit information: Once Upon a Crime: Law and Popular Cultures in the Age of Empire in 2024/25

Please note: Programme and unit information may change as the relevant academic field develops. We may also make changes to the structure of programmes and assessments to improve the student experience.

Unit name Once Upon a Crime: Law and Popular Cultures in the Age of Empire
Unit code HIST30137
Credit points 20
Level of study H/6
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12)
Unit director Dr. Will Pooley
Open unit status Not open
Units you must take before you take this one (pre-requisite units)

None

Units you must take alongside this one (co-requisite units)

None

Units you may not take alongside this one

None

School/department Department of History (Historical Studies)
Faculty Faculty of Arts

Unit Information

Why is this unit important?

Our Special Subjects give you the opportunity to work at an advanced level alongside a single academic and a specialist area of research. Intensively taught through seminars only, they are designed to provide you with hands-on experience of how knowledge is produced in the discipline of History.

How does this unit fit into your programme of study?

Our Special Subjects involve the application of the full spectrum of core historical competencies within a narrower field of study. In this sense, they are designed to prepare you to undertake independent research for yourself by showing you how practicing historians work with sources, historiographies, methodologies, and concepts within a particular specialism.

Your learning on this unit

An overview of content

Criminal justice has played a special role in how historians understand the modern world: at once a tool of social control in both the metropole and the colonies, trials also preserve some of the richest surviving evidence of popular culture. The course explores this relationship from the eighteenth century onwards, drawing on digitised newspapers and criminal trial records from a range of cases, some famous, and others forgotten. Examples the course covers might include Makandal’s conspiracy and voodoo in colonial Saint-Domingue (Haiti, 1750s), Tarot and the celebrity fortune-teller Mademoiselle Lenormand (France, 1790s-1830s), the English ‘Captain Swing’ riots (1830s), the ‘Wizard’ Harrison and the murder of Harriet Dove (1850s), Édouard Buguet and spirit photography (France, 1870s), and Bridget Cleary, fairy belief and murder in Ireland (1890s).

How will you be different as a result of this unit?

Special Subject units will enhance your capacity to build arguments with primary sources, properly located within appropriate theories, concepts, methods, and historiographies.

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this unit, students will be able to:

  1. evaluate the complexities of the relations between law and popular culture in the Age of Empire
  2. explain how ordinary people used the law to assert the value of their own cultures
  3. synthesise and evaluate relevant primary sources to build wider arguments about nature of criminal law and popular culture in the Age of Empire
  4. critically assess existing historical interpretations and independently challenge these using secondary and primary evidence
  5. present their research and judgements in written forms and styles appropriate to the discipline and to level H/6.

How you will learn

Classes will involve a combination of class discussion, investigative activities, and practical activities. Students will be expected to engage with readings and participate on a weekly basis. This will be further supported with drop-in sessions.

How you will be assessed

Tasks which count towards your unit mark (summative):

3,500-word essay (50%) [ILOs 1-5].

Timed Assessment (50%) [ILOs 1-5].

When assessment does not go to plan

When required by the Board of Examiners, you will normally complete reassessments in the same formats as those outlined above. However, the Board reserves the right to modify the format or number of reassessments required. Details of reassessments are confirmed by the School/Centre shortly after the notification of your results at the end of the year.

Resources

If this unit has a Resource List, you will normally find a link to it in the Blackboard area for the unit. Sometimes there will be a separate link for each weekly topic.

If you are unable to access a list through Blackboard, you can also find it via the Resource Lists homepage. Search for the list by the unit name or code (e.g. HIST30137).

How much time the unit requires
Each credit equates to 10 hours of total student input. For example a 20 credit unit will take you 200 hours of study to complete. Your total learning time is made up of contact time, directed learning tasks, independent learning and assessment activity.

See the University Workload statement relating to this unit for more information.

Assessment
The Board of Examiners will consider all cases where students have failed or not completed the assessments required for credit. The Board considers each student's outcomes across all the units which contribute to each year's programme of study. For appropriate assessments, if you have self-certificated your absence, you will normally be required to complete it the next time it runs (for assessments at the end of TB1 and TB2 this is usually in the next re-assessment period).
The Board of Examiners will take into account any exceptional circumstances and operates within the Regulations and Code of Practice for Taught Programmes.

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