Department: DCSG
Scientific area: History
Total contact time: 15
Religion
Early Modern History
Milenarism
Within the time-arch of 16th – 18th centuries this CU aims to:
- Percept individualism and its religious expression;
- Explain the way a critical sensibility and a Christian conscience were built;
- Analyze the way the Catholic Europe dialogued with Eastern Christianity;
- Problematize the function of religious minorities in a significative timeline - Modernity;
-Confront the paths of mysticism and of several anti-clerical movements;
Synthetize the way millenarianism echoes in the idea of Progress
Synthesize briefly the feminine in the cultural and religious contexts.
1.1. The Great Schism and the different religious councils
1.2. The Reform and the Counter-Reformation: brief overview
1.3.The individualism and its religious expression
1.4.The Press and the Universities
1.5.The critical spirit and the Christian conscience
2. In a space of Classicism
2.1.the religious borders
2.2.The Protestant Europe
2.3.The anti-trinitarianism
2.4 The Catholic Europe and Eastern Christianity
3.Academy and Encyclopedism
3.1.The relationship with God in the discovery of the divinity laws
3.2. The paths of mysticism, the anti-clericalism
3.3 The millenarianism and the progresso
4. The feminine: Evolutions in the cultural and religious contexts
Delumeau, Jean, Mil Anos de Felicidade, Lisboa, Terramar, 1997.
Duby, Michel e Michelle Perrot, História das Mulheres no Ocidente,3, Lisboa, Edições Afrontamento, 1994
Molas P. et al., Manual de Historia Moderna, Barcelona, Ariel , 2000
Students have to perform the tasks requested by the teacher: essays, critical recensions, reports, protocols, etc. All works will be evaluated and/or classified.
Continuous assessment is privileged: 2 digital written documents (e-folios) during the semester (40%) and a final digital test, Global e-folio (e-folio G) at the end of the semester (60%). In due time, students can alternatively choose to perform one final exam (100%).