FPF:FPFVA001 Women and Property in Europe s - Course Information
FPFVA001 Women and Property in Europe since the Middle Ages
Faculty of Philosophy and Science in OpavaSummer 2014
- Extent and Intensity
- 1/1/0. 5 credit(s). Type of Completion: z (credit).
- Teacher(s)
- Univ. Doz. Dr. Dana Cerman-Štefanová (lecturer)
Univ. Doz. Dr. Dana Cerman-Štefanová (seminar tutor) - Guaranteed by
- Univ. Doz. Dr. Dana Cerman-Štefanová
Faculty of Philosophy and Science in Opava - Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
- fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- English in combination with another discipline (programme FPF, N7310 Filo)
- English (programme FPF, N7310 Filo) (2)
- Archaeology (programme FPF, N7105 HiVe)
- Audio-visual Creation (programme FPF, N8203 DrUm)
- History (programme FPF, N7105 HiVe)
- History - Museology (programme FPF, N7105 HiVe)
- Information and Library Studies (programme FPF, N7201 InSK) (2)
- Computer Science and Technology (programme FPF, N1801 Inf)
- Library science with the focus on public libraries of the community type (programme FPF, N7201 InSK) (2)
- Cultural History (programme FPF, N7105 HiVe)
- German in combination with another discipline (programme FPF, N7310 Filo)
- German (programme FPF, N7310 Filo) (2)
- Protection of the Cultural Heritage (programme FPF, N7105 HiVe)
- Computational Physics (programme FPF, N1701 Fyz)
- Theoretical Physics (programme FPF, N1701 Fyz)
- Teacher Training - shared framework (programme FPF, N7504 UcSS)
- Course objectives
- This course is designed to combine lecturing units with units of student presentations and common discussions. On the basis of historical-anthropological approaches and approaches of cultural studies, the course will focus thematically on issues like inheritance and property transfer. It will discuss and evaluate critically the results of research on the economic role of women with regard to property and property devolution in a comparative perspective between different European areas. This course will introduce, for illustrative purposes, relevant primary source material, including narrative sources in foreign language (German).
- Syllabus
- Unit 1: Introducing the topic and the organization of the course, discussion of expectations and interests of students, readings and tasks.
Unit 2: Historical Anthropology and Microhistory as research methods; approaches to critical reading and evaluation of research publications.
Unit 3: Introduction of and critique on European research traditions on topics of family and inheritance. Survey of historiographical developments and current research perspectives and approaches.
Unit 4: Inheritance patterns and women in European history.
Reading: Jack Goody, Inheritance, property and women: some comparative considerations, in: J. Goody, J. Thirsk, E. P. Thompson (eds), Family and inheritance, rural society in Western Europe 1200-1800, Cambridge 1976, 10-36.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 5: Family and property.
Reading: Hans Medick/David Sabean, Einleitung, in: id. (eds.) Emotionen und materielle Interessen: sozialanthropologische und historische Beiträge zur Familienforschung, Göttingen 1984, 27-53.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 6: Strategies of women in property devolution.
Reading: Barbara Todd, Demographic determinism and female agency: the remarrying widow reconsidered ... again, in: Continuity and Change 9 (1994), 421-450.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 7: Property and women in historical practice. Introduction and discussion of selected primary sources.
Unit 8: The myth of unequal inheritance.
Reading: Martine Segalen, "Sein Teil haben". Geschwisterbeziehungen in einem egalitären Vererbungssystem, in: H. Medick/D. Sabean (eds), Emotionen und materielle Interessen, Göttingen 1984, 181-198
Discussion of reading.
Unit 9: Property and women in early modern England: a comparative view.
Reading: Amy Louise Erickson, Property and widowhood in England 1660-1840, Cambridge 1983, 145-163.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 10: Widows in European history.
Reading: Dana Štefanová, Widows: outsiders in rural economy and society in Central Europe?, in: The History of the Family 15 (2010), 271-281.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 11: Widowhood and remarriage: a differentiated view. Introduction and discussion of selected primary sources.
Unit 12: Summary view: patriarchalism triumphant?
Reading: Karl Kaser, Macht und Erbe, Vienna 2000, 27-75.
Discussion of reading.
Unit 13: Concluding discussion, evaluation and critique of the course.
- Unit 1: Introducing the topic and the organization of the course, discussion of expectations and interests of students, readings and tasks.
- Language of instruction
- English
- Further comments (probably available only in Czech)
- The course can also be completed outside the examination period.
- Teacher's information
- Regular attendance and participation: 50%
One in-class presentation / One term paper (5-10 pages): 50%
- Enrolment Statistics (Summer 2014, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.slu.cz/course/fpf/summer2014/FPFVA001