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77988-01 - Übung: Everyday Violence. Historical & Socio-Cultural Approaches (3 KP)

Semester Frühjahrsemester 2026
Angebotsmuster einmalig
Dozierende Marie Muschalek (marie.muschalek@unibas.ch, BeurteilerIn)
Inhalt Whether extreme and belligerent or more diffuse and mundane in nature, violence is, and has been, present in all societies. It seems to be a fundamentally human fact. This course offers an introduction into the study of the complex and vexing issue of violence. Yet, not war and mass murder, but everyday, that is, “normal” or normalized forms of violence will be the object of interest: the physical confrontations, abuses, and harms of daily life in peacetime societies.
In this class, we will account for different perspectives – be it of the victim, the bystander, or the perpetrator, but also of the witness, the reporter, or the researcher. And we will touch upon the multiple ways in which people deal with and behave within violent situations – the range of their emotions, their lines of reasoning, their bodily movements, etc. However, violence always also has a context (social, cultural, and historical). We will therefore engage with a number of concrete case studies from disparate areas of the world and different time periods that will help us carve out further the specificities of cultures of violence and their broader (ethical and political) implications.
Throughout the course, we will look at various types or “problems” of violence. We will deal with different violent actors: criminal organizations or the state, for instance, but also individuals. We will inquire into different sites of violence: family homes, workplaces, the streets, and others. And we will ask about different dynamics and functions of violent practices: their ritualized, productive, disruptive, or performative character, for example.
Attempting to understand violence and telling stories or drawing images about violence are closely related endeavors. Both are tightly linked to making sense of violence, and thus to questions of ethics and politics, to the critique or justification, sometimes glorification of violence. We will thus discuss violence also in connection with its representation. What are the accounts and images on which we draw in order to study violence? What do the various kinds of representation and narration tell us about the ways in which individuals relate to and attempt to rationalize violence?
Literatur Dwyer, Philip, and Joy Damousi. “Theorizing Histories of Violence.” History & Theory 56, no. 4 (2017): 3–6.
Edwards, Louise, Nigel Penn, and Jay Winter (eds.). The Cambridge World History of Violence. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Fitzpatrick, Matthew P., and Catherine Kevin. “Theorising the History of Violence after Pinker.” Rethinking History 24, nos. 3–4 (2020): 332–50.
Lawrence, Bruce B. (ed.). On Violence: A Reader. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.
Scheper-Hughes, Nancy, and Philippe Bourgois (eds.). Violence in War and Peace: An Anthology. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers, 2004.

 

Teilnahmevoraussetzungen Studierende der Geschichte aller Studienstufen sowie Studierende anderer Studienfächer, in deren Module die Übung verknüpft ist. Bei Überbelegung werden Studierende der Geschichte bevorzugt zugelassen.
Unterrichtssprache Englisch
Einsatz digitaler Medien kein spezifischer Einsatz

 

Intervall Wochentag Zeit Raum
wöchentlich Dienstag 12.15-14.00 Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4

Einzeltermine

Datum Zeit Raum
Dienstag 17.02.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 24.02.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Fasnachtsferien
Dienstag 03.03.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 10.03.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 17.03.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 24.03.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 31.03.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 07.04.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 14.04.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 21.04.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 28.04.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 05.05.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 12.05.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 19.05.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Dienstag 26.05.2026 12.15-14.00 Uhr Departement Geschichte, Seminarraum 4
Module Modul: Archive / Medien / Theorien (Bachelor Studienfach: Geschichte)
Modul: Europäisierung und Globalisierung (Masterstudium: European Global Studies)
Modul: Fields: Knowledge Production and Transfer (Master Studiengang: African Studies)
Modul: Reflexion, Methodik, Praxis (Master Studiengang: Europäische Geschichte in globaler Perspektive )
Modul: Research Skills (Master Studiengang: African Studies)
Modul: Sachthemen der Ethnologie (Bachelor Studienfach: Ethnologie)
Modul: Theorie (Master Studienfach: Geschichte)
Vertiefungsmodul Global Europe: Staatlichkeit, Entwicklung und Globalisierung (Masterstudium: European Global Studies)
Prüfung Lehrveranst.-begleitend
An-/Abmeldung zur Prüfung Anmelden: Belegen; Abmelden: nicht erforderlich
Wiederholungsprüfung keine Wiederholungsprüfung
Skala Pass / Fail
Belegen bei Nichtbestehen nicht wiederholbar
Zuständige Fakultät Philosophisch-Historische Fakultät, studadmin-philhist@unibas.ch
Anbietende Organisationseinheit Departement Geschichte

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