HIST 395: Topics in Digital History

HIST 395-002: True Crime in Early Modern Europe
(Fall 2023)

03:00 PM to 04:15 PM MW

Horizon Hall 3008

Section Information for Fall 2023

True crime documentaries, podcasts, books, and television shows are a wildly popular modern genre selling in the tens of millions and attracting a large audience. But what you may not know is that it was also a bestselling genre in early modern Europe. Tales of serial killers, werewolves, bandits, and murderous nuns were wildly popular and helped sell chapbooks, broadsheets, and popularize murder ballads, in addition to providing material for moral panics and justification for the criminal justice system. By looking at primary sources, this course will examine true crime and popular culture in early modern Europe as a precursor to the genre today. We will produce a few episodes of a true crime podcast as a class as the final outcome of the course.

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Course Information from the University Catalog

Credits: 3

Introduces students to issues and methods in digital history through study of a particular topic May be repeated within the term for a maximum 15 credits.
Specialized Designation: Topic Varies
Schedule Type: Lec/Sem #1, Lec/Sem #2, Lec/Sem #3, Lec/Sem #4, Lec/Sem #5, Lec/Sem #6, Lec/Sem #7, Lec/Sem #8, Lec/Sem #9, Lecture, Sem/Lec #10, Sem/Lec #11, Sem/Lec #12, Sem/Lec #13, Sem/Lec #14, Sem/Lec #15, Sem/Lec #16, Sem/Lec #17, Sem/Lec #18
Grading:
This course is graded on the Undergraduate Regular scale.

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