Course Overview
Course Title: The Urban Management for Port Cities in the 19th and 20th Centuries
Relevant SDGs: Sustainable Cities and Communities; Good Health and Wellbeing
Credit(s): 3 Credits
Course Description:
This course aims to answer the question of how modern port cities managed themselves in the 19th and 20th centuries and created an intercultural sphere for global inhabitants. The core of this course focuses on East Asian port cities which were opened by the “unequal treaties” with the foreign powers in the mid-19th century. The opening of the port cities in East Asia also provided the world with an access to settle down in these treaty ports and provided China, Japan and Korea with an opportunity to observe and learn from the West. Because of the cultural gap between the East and the West, the port cities naturally built up settlements and concessions for dividing various communities. The design of which could decrease the potential tensions between ethnicities or nationalities but it could not stop the following issues of globalisation, such as the spreading of diseases, crimes, pollution, etc. Thus, these port cites then had to work out solutions for communicating different concessions and settlements.
The other focus of this course is to bring in specialists who study other continents’ port cities, such as in North America and Continental Europe, and to provide students with a comparative perspective for advanced knowledge of the urban issues shared by all port cities. This course then focuses on the shared issues, such as cultural preservation, migration, crimes, diseases, pollution, inflation, etc., in American and European port cities. Thus, Professors Lockley, Purseigle, Perez-Garcia and Du are invited to demonstrate their knowledge about port cities in North America and Europe. Students can then understand how the shared challenges affected global port cities in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Academic Team
PI:
- Manuel Perez-Garcia, School of Humanities, SJTU, mpergar@sjtu.edu.cn
Collaborators:
- Tim Lockley (Warwick University) T.J.Lockley@warwick.ac.uk
- Pierre Purseigle (Warwick University) p.purseigle@warwick.ac.uk
TA:
- Enchao Yang (SJTU) yec2013@sjtu.edu.cn
What skills will students get?
- Advance students’ understanding of global port cities’ historical backgrounds
- Provide students with an analytical framework for ethnic issues in global port cities
- Hammer out solutions for addressing ethnic and other issues in global port cities
- Advance students’ understanding of the impact of globalization to port cities
- Hammer out solution for tackling globalization
Mode of Teaching
Synchronous. Online Lecture + group discussion + group project.
Grading
- Attendance: 10%;
- Class performance: 10%;
- Break-up Room Discussion: 20%;
- Preparation for Final Group Discussion: 20%;
- Final Group Presentation: 40%
Course-specific Restrictions
None.
Class Schedule
Week |
Date |
Week Day |
Time (UTC+8) |
Topic |
Credit hours |
Teaching mode |
Instructor in charge |
1 |
2024/06/24 |
Mon |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Introduction: Welcome to the SJTU/Warwick Global Challenge |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Manuel |
1 |
2024/06/25 |
Tue |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Vulnerabilities, disasters, and resilience in modern port-cities |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Pierre Purseigle |
1 |
2024/06/26 |
Wed |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Mortality in Savannah |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Tim Lockley |
1 |
2024/06/27 |
Thu |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Mortality in Savannah |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Tim Lockley |
1 |
2024/06/28 |
Fri |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Modern Shanghai: “paradise built on hell” |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Shi Donglai |
2 |
2024/07/01 |
Mon |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Introduction: GECEM Project (Global Encounters between China and Europe)- |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Manuel |
2 |
2024/07/02 |
Tue |
17:00 – 20:00 |
• Group Research Project Overview |
3 |
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Research Assistants & |
2 |
2024/07/03 |
Wed |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Vulnerabilities, disasters, and resilience in modern port-cities |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Pierre Purseigle |
2 |
2024/07/04 |
Thu |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Global Sustainable Development |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Jonathan Clarke |
2 |
2024/07/05 |
Fri |
17:00 – 20:00 |
The Implementation of the new global history in China: new case studies |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Manuel |
3 |
2024/07/08 |
Mon |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Group Research Project Session 1 |
3 |
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Research Assistants |
3 |
2024/07/09 |
Tue |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Digital Humanities and Big Data Mining applied to Global (Economic) History: |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Manuel |
3 |
2024/07/10 |
Wed |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Prepare for Final Group Presentations |
|
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Students |
3 |
2024/07/11 |
Thu |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Group Research Project Session 2 |
3 |
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Research Assistants |
3 |
2024/07/12 |
Fri |
17:00 – 20:00 |
From Shanghai to Hong Kong: “a touch of typically colonial Oriental color |
3 |
Lecture/ |
Shi Dong Lai |
4 |
2024/07/15 |
Mon |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Group Research Project Session 3 |
3 |
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Research Assistants |
4 |
2024/07/16 |
Tue |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Prepare for Final Group Presentations |
|
Discussion/Reading Materials |
Students |
4 |
2024/07/17 |
Wed |
17:00 – 20:00 |
Group Research Project Presentations |
3 |
Discussion/Reading Materials |
SJTU & Warwick |
Instructors
Manuel Perez-Garcia
Pierre Purseigle
Donglai SHI
Tim Lockley
Course Contact
Manuel Perez-Garcia: mpergar@sjtu.edu.cn;
Pierre Purseigle: p.purseigle@warwick.ac.uk;
Tim Lockley: t.j.lockley@warwick.ac.uk.
TA:
Enchao Yang: yec2013@sjtu.edu.cn