There are only two ways to gain perspective on the world you inhabit, and your own experience of it: travel around the current world, and time travel through past worlds. Our business is the latter. 93% of humans who have ever lived have died. The dead outnumber the living 14-1. History is the single biggest store of knowledge we have. To not study it is the intellectual equivalent of trying to walk in the dark.
Yet, many people currently living pay insufficient attention to the dead, and the lessons we can learn from them, even though the past is really our only reliable source of knowledge about the fleeting present. A great deal of the problems that the world is facing today have happened before in approximate analogous forms. If you want to communicate and problem solve in contemporary local and global contexts, it cannot happen without an understanding of history.
As such, historians are uniquely placed to help answer many pressing problems of the current day using their historical knowledge. In one sentence, our course mission is to study the past to understand the present and help shape a better future.
Foster an understanding of, and continued interest in, learning from the past
Develop historical consciousness on personal, local and global levels, including a sense of chronology and context, and an understanding of different historical perspectives.
Empower students to address problems of the current day using their historical knowledge.
Draw inspiration from the actions of historical figures.
Promote complex analytical and evaluative thinking by wrestling with historical concepts of cause and consequence, change and continuity and diversity of experience.
Develop an appreciation of the power of history to improve your life in the present.
Enjoy studying the past.
The age of the Samurai: The Tokugawa Shogunate
From feudalism to modernity: The Meiji Restoration
From liberalism to totalitarianism: Weimar and Nazi Germany
The 'Hitler of Africa': Idi Amin
El Comandante: Fidel Castro's Cuba
From communism to crony capitalism: The Russian Federation
The age of the Samurai: The Tokugawa Shogunate
From feudalism to modernity: The Meiji Restoration
From liberalism to totalitarianism: Weimar and Nazi Germany
The 'Hitler of Africa': Idi Amin
El Comandante: Fidel Castro's Cuba
The rise of Putin: The Russian Federation
The fall of China's last dynasty from empire to colony: The Qing Dynasty
Fault lines: The Cold War in Asia