David Campion





List of female convicts transported aboard HMS Lady Penrhym, 1788 © New South Wales State Archives

MAIN PAGE COURSE REQUIREMENTS ASSIGNMENTS BIBLIOGRAPHICAL CHECKLIST RESEARCH GUIDE

SCHEDULE OF CLASSES

FALL 2025

Week ISep 3 Introduction | Libraries
Week IISep 8-10Bibliographies and Citations
Week IIISep 15-17Special Collections and Archival Research
Week IVSep 22-24History before Print
Week VSep 29-Oct 1Government and Online Sources
Week VIOct 6-8Organized Religion and History
Week VIIOct 13-15Oral History and News Media
Week VIIIOct 20-22The Living and the Dead
Week IXOct 27-29History across Space
Week XNov 3-5Art and Archaeology
Week XINov 10-12Images and Artifacts
Week XIINov 17-19Oral History Presentations
Week XIIINov 24-26Oral History Presentations continued
Week XIVDec 1-3Final Editing Project Presentations
Week XVDec 8-10Conclusion



Week I: Introduction | Libraries

Sep 3: Introduction: What is history and what is it good for?
-------- —meet in Watzek Library at main reference desk


Reading:
Maza, 1-44
Kyvig and Marty, 1-48




Week II: Bibliographies and Citations

Sep 8: Library resources (with E.J. Carter, history reference librarian)
Sep 10: Introduction to bibliographies and citations


Reading:
Maza, 45-82
Turabian, 139-289 (Part II: Source Citation)




Week III: History before Print

Sep 15: Manuscripts, paleography and codicology (with Hannah Crummé, Head of Special Collections)
-------- —meet in Watzek Library, Special Collections
Sep 17: The dating game: chronology and history


Reading:
Maza, 83-117
Alison Flood, "Messy Handwriting Reveals Mystery Translator" The Guardian, Nov 2019

Website:
National Archives of Britain, Paleography Tutorial




Week IV: Archival Research and Special Collections

Sep 22: Introduction to archives (with Hannah Crummé)
-------- —meet in Watzek Library, Special Collections
Sep 24: Special collections and exhibition curation (with Hannah Crummé)
-------- —meet in Watzek Library, Special Collections


Reading:
Maza, 188-156
Kyvig and Marty, 73-92
Ann Laura Stoler, "Colonial Archives and the Arts of Governance," Archival Science (2) 2002
Ian Cobain, "Lying about Our History?" The Guardian, June 2020

Websites: Selection of archives online

Suggested films: Das Leben der Anderen | The Lives of Others (2007),
Das Schreckliche Mädchen | The Nasty Girl (1990)




Week V: Government and Online Sources

Sep 29: Books and primary sources online
Oct 1: Government records (with E.J. Carter) —meet in Watzek Library classroom


Reading:
Maza, 157-198
Kyvig and Marty, 49-72
Barbara Weinstein, "Let the Sunshine In: Government Records and National Insecurities" AHA Perspectives (45:4) 2007




Week VI: Organized Religion and Demography

Oct 6: Parish and missionary records as historical sources
Oct 8: The census and history


Reading:
Maza, 199-240
Eamon Duffy, "Preface" in The Voices of Morebath: Reformation and Rebellion in an English Village, 1-47
Peter Laslett, "Births, Marriages, and Deaths" in The World We Have Lost, 106-121
Cassandra Berman, "Slavery's Archives: Confronting Jesuit Slaveholding at Georgetown University" AHA Perspectives (60:7) 2022


EDITING PROJECT PROPOSAL DUE OCT 6



Week VII: Oral History and News Media

Oct 13: Newspapers, journals, and periodicals (with E.J. Carter) —meet in Watzek Library classroom
-------- Film: The Fog of War, 7-10 pm, Miller 102
Oct 15: Living memory and history; an introduction to oral history


Reading:
Kyvig and Marty, 93-108
"Deathly Archive: Terrorists and Historians," The Economist, Jan 2012
Studs Terkel, "Introduction" in "The Good War": An Oral History of World War II, 3-16
Haruko and Theodore Cook, "Introduction to a Lost War" in Japan at War: An Oral History, 5-20

Video:
PBS NewsHour, "The Belfast Project"

Required film: Errol Morris: The Fog of War (2003)
Suggested films: Errol Morris: The Thin Blue Line (1988), Ken Burns: The War (2007)




Week VIII: The Living and the Dead

Oct 20: Cemeteries, monuments and memorials
Oct 22: Cemeteries, monuments and memorials (cont.)


Reading:
Kyvig and Marty, 147-160
Jonathan Schneer, "London in 1900" in London 1900: The Imperial Metropolis, 3-36
David Crane, "Prologue" and "The Making of a Visionary" in Empires of the Dead: How One Man’s Vision Led to the Creation of WWI’s War Graves, 1-29

Video:
Arthur Cauty, "The Felling of Colston" (2020)

Memorial:
Commonwealth War Graves Commission




Week IX: History across Space

Oct 27: Mapping history: cartography, geography, and historical research
Oct 29: Architectural, urban, and environmental history


Reading:
Kyvig and Marty, 161-178
Matthew Edney, "The Ideologies and Practices of Mapping and Imperialism" Mapping an Empire: The Geographical Construction of British India, 1765-1843, 1-36
Thomas Metcalf, "New Delhi: The Beginning of the End" in An Imperial Vision: Indian Architecture and Britain’s Raj, 211-239




Week X: Art and Archaeology

Nov 3: Archaeology, anthropology, and history
Nov 5: Methods in art history (with Prof. Ben David, Department of Art)


Reading:
Bernard Cohn, "An Anthropologist among the Historians: A Field Study," South Atlantic Quarterly (61:1) 1962, 1-49
Alan Mayne, "On the Edges of History: Reflections on Historical Archaeology," American Historical Review (113:1) 2008
"Nasty, Brutish and not that Short" The Economist, Dec 2010
Jason Farago, "The Myth of North America in One Painting" in New York Times (2020)

Suggested film: The Rape of Europa (2006)


EDITING PROJECT INTRODUCTION AND BIBLIOGRAPHY DUE NOV 5



Week XI: Images and Artifacts

Nov 10: Using photographic records
Nov 12: Material culture as historical evidence


Reading:
Kyvig and Marty, 109-146
"A New Roman 'Emperor'" The Economist, Nov 2022

Video:
Tobias Capwell, Agincourt: Myths and Misperceptions, Wallace Collection, London

Suggested films: Le Violon Rouge [The Red Violin] (1998), Standard Operating Procedure (2008)




Week XII: Oral History Presentations

Nov 17: Presentation of oral history projects
Nov 19: Presentation of oral history projects


ORAL HISTORY PROJECT DUE NOV 17



Week XIII: Oral History Presentations continued

Nov 24: No class meeting (optional meeting with instructor)
Nov 26: THANKSGIVING (NO CLASS)




Week XIV: Final Editing Project Presentations

Dec 1: Presentation of final editing projects
Dec 3: Presentation of final editing projects




Week XV: Conclusion

Dec 8: No class meeting (optional meeting with instructor)
Dec 10: Conclusion and final discussion


FINAL EDITING PROJECT DUE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11




The Bayeux Tapestry chronicling the events leading up to the Norman invasion of England in 1066; Bayeux, Normandy, France. Exact date of origin unknown, believed to have been woven in England

Created by campion@lclark.edu | Updated May 2025