Unit name | Brief Encounters: Love, Labour, and Loneliness in Modern London |
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Unit code | HIST20099 |
Credit points | 20 |
Level of study | I/5 |
Teaching block(s) |
Teaching Block 2 (weeks 13 - 24) |
Unit director | Dr. Koole |
Open unit status | Not open |
Pre-requisites |
None |
Co-requisites |
None |
School/department | Department of History (Historical Studies) |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
For urban sociologist Georg Simmel, early twentieth-century cities were places of heightened sensory stimulation and social breakdown. As migration and urban expansion brought more people closer together, those people became emotionally and socially pushed further apart. In James Vernon’s terms, city dwellers became ‘distant strangers’ to one another—and to themselves.
This unit questions Simmel’s account of the modern city as a space of anomie. Focusing on London in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, it instead examines the many new forms of intimacy emerging over this period and how these intimacies shaped broader trends in the history of modern Britain. Using photographs, early films, court records, and other sources, students will explore the histories of public sex, tube and taxi travel, stress and urban neuroses, love letter writing and lonely hearts advertisements, and new spaces of commercialized leisure such as cinemas, nightclubs, and teashops. In so doing, they will examine not only the shifting historical possibilities for intimacy but also how those possibilities reshaped the very nature of love, personal space, and desire.
Successful students will be able to:
1.Identify and analyse a number of key themes and contexts in the history of intimacy in twentieth-century London.
2.Critically engage with contemporary and historical theories of modern selfhood and social relations.
3.Discuss and evaluate the key historiographical debates surrounding the histories of emotion, sexuality, and the senses.
4.Understand and interpret primary sources and select pertinent evidence in order to illustrate specific and more general historical points
5.Present their research and judgements in written forms and styles appropriate to the discipline and to level I.
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 and self-directed exercises with tutor and peer feedback.
1 x 3500-word Essay (50%) [ILOs 1-5]; 1 x Timed Assessment (50%) [ILOs 1-5]
Hayward, Rhodri, ‘Desperate Housewives and Model Amoebae: The Invention of Suburban Neurosis in Inter-war Britain’, in M. Jackson (ed.), Health and the Modern Home (London, 2007), pp. 42-62
Hindmarch-Watson, Katie, ‘Male Prostitution and the London GPO: Telegraph Boys’ “Immorality” from Nationalization to the Cleveland Street Scandal’, Journal of British Studies, 51, 3, (July, 2012), pp. 594-617
Laite, Julia, Common Prostitutes and Ordinary Citizens: Commercial Sex in London, 1885-1960, (Basingstoke, 2012)
Walkowitz, Judith R., Nights Out: Life in Cosmopolitan London, (New Haven: London, 2012)
Vernon, James, Distant Strangers: How Britain Became Modern, (Berkeley, 2014)