Module Information

Module Identifier
HY13220
Module Title
Britain and the First World War
Academic Year
2016/2017
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 2
Other Staff

Course Delivery

Delivery Type Delivery length / details
Seminar 5 x 1 Hour Seminars
Lecture 18 x 1 Hour Lectures
 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Assessment 1 x 2,500 word essay  30%
Semester Exam 2 Hours   (1 x 2 hour exam)  70%
Supplementary Assessment 1 x 2,500 word supplementary (resit) essay  30%
Supplementary Exam 2 Hours   1 x 2 hour supplementary (resit) examination  70%

Learning Outcomes

On completion of this module, students should be able to:
a) Identify and explain the key historiographical debates concerning the British experience of the First World War
b) Demonstrate their knowledge of the principal political, social, cultural and military developments of the period
c) Reflect critically on the impact of the war on key areas of British society and politics
d) Analyse and evaluate a range of primary sources (including press coverage, diaries and memoirs, newsreels and oral reminiscences) related to the British domestic experience of war 1914-1918
e) Gather and sift appropriate items of historical evidence
f) Develop and sustain historical arguments ? in both oral (not assessed) and written work
g) Work both independently and collaboratively whilst being able to participate in group discussions (not assessed).

Brief description

This course will introduce students to the social and political history of twentieth -century Britain by an in-depth study of Britain during the Great War. It will consider the reasons behind Britain's involvement in the war and outline the main features of the military conflict. It will then focus primarily on the social and political history of the period : the military, industrial and political mobilisation of the nation towards 'total war', and the ways in which the war affected ordinary civilian life. Specifics topics to be covered will include the rise of Lloyd George to the Premiership, the wartime industrial unrest in Scotland and Wales, the impact of the war on the lives of British women, and the enduring legacy of the 'lost generation'. Comparison will also be made between the British experience of the Great War and that of the other major belligerents, France, Germany, Russia and the USA. Throughout the semester, students will be encouraged to evaluate the 'war and social change' thesis propounded by Marwick and others, and the course will end by assessing the extent to which the Great War marked a 'watershed' in modern British history.

Content

LECTURES
1. Introduction
2. August 1914 (i): the outbreak of war
3. August 1914 (ii): 'war enthusiasm'
4. European war to world war
5. British politics and the war
6. Mobilising the economy
7. Mobilising minds; the propaganda war
8. The soldiers
9. Women at war
10. Film screening: The Battle of the Somme (1916)
11. From music hall to women's football: leisure and entertainment in wartime Britain
12. Heath, welfare and the impact of war
13. Armistice and after
14. The 1918 General Election and post-war politics
15. Versailles and after: Britain and the world after WWI
16. The 'Lost Generation' (i): commemorating the dead in post-war Britain
17. The 'Lost Generation' (ii): the Great War in inter-war literature and popular culture
18. The First World War and popular memory

SEMINARS
1. War enthusiasm
2. War leadership: Asquith and Lloyd George
3. Men at war
4. Women at war
5. The Great War, myth and memory

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 4