Britain has a wide array of surviving historic buildings that have long fascinated scholars and the public alike, including medieval castles and churches, country houses, workers’ housing, public buildings, factories and prisons. This module provides an introduction to this diversity and considers how we might understand and interpret these buildings today. How can buildings help to illuminate the past and what questions do we choose to ask of them? This can be crucial in evaluating their current significance and the stories that we tell about them in the present.
Students have said that they learned to look at buildings from different perspectives as a result of this module and that there was great interaction with the lecturers who were very helpful and approachable.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
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A | Spring Term 2022-23 |
To train students in the specialised skills required in the interpretation of the historical function and meaning of a range historic building types
To provide students with a critical understanding of the ways in which historic building types can be interpreted
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
Subject content
Analyse and phase the historical development of a range of historic building types
Engage critically with current academic debates about the form, function and meaning of a range of historic building types
Synthesise knowledge of the archaeology of buildings with other areas of archaeological and historical knowledge
Demonstrate the development of transferable skills in small group work and oral presentations
By the end of the module, students should:
Academic and graduate skills
Have developed transferrable skills of independent research, written and verbal communication and small group work and visual/verbal presentation
Other learning outcomes (if applicable)
Understand the range of employment opportunities open to students with buildings analysis skills and the inter-relationship of professions within the field
Buildings can provide insights into many different aspects of the past. Early scholarship often focused on constructing typologies of buildings, now we are often more concerned with exploring gender, class and race. Each week we will focus on a specific type of building, as well as some of the most interesting questions surrounding them. Are castles about defence or symbolism? How did changing church buildings help to structure religious practice? What are the connections between slavery and the British country house? How is power and control manifested in a factory, a prison or a museum? Are domestic buildings public or private and are they gendered space? In the assessment, you are free to focus on the types of buildings and themes that most interest you, with support from the module tutors.
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
None
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Essay/coursework | 100 |
Feedback will be available within 6 weeks
Goodall J (2011) The English Castle 1066-1650. New Haven, London: Yale University Press.
Giles K (2007) 'Seeing and believing: visuality and space in pre-modern England', World Archaeology 39(1): 105-121
Markus T A (1993) Buildings & Power: Freedom and Control in The Origin of Modern Building Types. London: Routledge.