Course level

Undergraduate

Faculty

Humanities and Social Sciences

School

Historical & Philosophical Inq

Units

2

Duration

One Semester

Attendance mode

In Person

Class hours

Lecture 2 Hours/ Week
Tutorial 1 Hour/ Week

Assessment methods

Tutorial participation, primary source textual analysis, research paper and take-home exam.

Course enquiries

A/Prof Ian Hesketh

Course description

This history course considers the long-term quest to understand the origins of the human species. When did we originate? Where do we come from? How do we differ from other animals? How do we differ from each other? Where are we going? What is the meaning of our existence? These sorts of questions have been asked at least since the beginning of recorded history but the answers have depended on changing social, cultural, and intellectual contexts. We will therefore consider how the idea of human origins was shaped by religious, scientific, and historical modes of thinking, from the early modern period to the present. Specific subjects to be explored in this context include race, gender, evolution, progress, degeneration, the environment, extinction, the global, and the future. Students will learn to examine how the ideas about human origins were shaped by and reflected different cultural contexts and also how they changed over time.

Archived offerings

Course offerings Location Mode Course Profile
Semester 1, 2023 (20/02/2023 - 17/06/2023) St Lucia In Person Course Profile
Semester 1, 2022 (21/02/2022 - 21/06/2022) External External Course Profile
Semester 1, 2022 (21/02/2022 - 21/06/2022) St Lucia Internal Course Profile