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History 1060 is an exploration of the ancient, global history of piracy. We will begin in antiquity (Greece
and Rome), when maritime brigands marauded around the Mediterranean. We will continue by studying
the various coastal piracies of the medieval era (Ireland was especially important in this regard), West
Indian buccaneering in the seventeenth century, the "golden age" of Atlantic piracy in the eighteenth
century, North African and Chinese piracy in the nineteenth century, and contemporary piracy in the south
Asia seas.
Using primary historical documents (written by and about pirates) as well as the accounts of modern
historians, we will discuss a range of topics such as the role of piracy in the building of empires, the later
struggle of merchants and their allies to eradicate piracy through bloody campaigns of capital punishment,
and the meanings of the pirate as represented in popular culture through the ages. We will focus
throughout the course on the social and economic causes and consequences of piracy, and we will endeavor
to understand the phenomenon "from the bottom up" - what it meant to the men and women who took
courage in hand and crossed the line into piracy, risking the gallows as they did so. Drawing on creative
recent scholarship on the race, class, and gender of seafaring and pirate communities, our history will
consistently be international, multicultural, and comparative.
In addition to surveying the global history of piracy, this course seeks to teach students to think critically
about the meanings of the past for the present. We will explore different historical interpretations,
analyzing the disputes among historians and judging the merits of various arguments. We will compare
and contrast what have been called "romantic," "criminal," "geopolitical," and "social" interpretations of
piracy. We will pay special attention to recent arguments that pirate ships were floating lower-class
utopias, formed apart from the dominant values of the upper classes of their day. We will ask whether the
utopian element of the pirate ship helps to explain the persistent popularity of pirates in popular culture.
Through lectures, readings, discussions, debates, and in-class role-playing exercises, students will be
encouraged to develop skills of understanding, analysis, and argumentation.
The format of the course includes an occasional lecture, but will consist primarily of readings and
discussion in a colloquial approach. Class participation is crucial to the success of the course, so it is
important that you attend regularly and speak out. Grades will be based on participation (25%), two
quizzes (25%), a journal based on field work (25%), and a final examination (25%).
About the journal: every student in the class will keep a journal for the duration of the voyage, writing in it
reflections on course lectures, readings and discussions, as well as observations to be made in port. It is the
student's task to learn something significant about the history of piracy in each port, and to enter what has
been learned into the journal. Each student should, throughout the voyage, employ a variety of sources as
he/she moves from port to port: written works from libraries, newspaper accounts, folklore, and interviews
that may reveal both information about and attitudes toward piracy. The assignment will allow the student
to explore the place of piracy in the history of each port/nation, and to link what has been learned to the
themes of the course. Each student will be graded on the quality of thought and the quality and variety of
sources that make up the journal.
We will use one primary text, Phillip Gosse, The History of Piracy (1932), which will be supplemented by
articles and documents (hand-outs) throughout the semester. All materials are on reserve in the ship's
library.
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