| Code: | CC023 | Acronym: | HCPORT |
| Keywords | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Keyword |
| OFICIAL | History |
| Active? | Yes |
| Responsible unit: | Department of History, Political and International Studies |
| Course/CS Responsible: | Bachelor in Communication Sciences |
| Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CC | 134 | Study plan | 1 | - | 3 | 21,5 | 81 |
At the end of the semester, students should be able to:
1. Realise the need for a scientific analysis of recent History for the understanding of society.
2. Organise historically and chronologically the most important stages of Portuguese 20th century history.
3. Identify explaining elements for the formation and crisis of the Portuguese political regimes of the 20th century since 1926.
4. Describe the main aspects of the Portuguese social and economic evolution throughout the 20th century.
5. Analyse critically in a written exam at least one relevant problem of the Portuguese history in the last hundred years.
1. Be able to articulate basic instruments of scientific analysis of the recent times in order to understand social reality.
2. Be able to identify and use basic elements of causality of the formation and crisis of political regimes.
3. Be able to identify structural aspects of the Portuguese social and economic evolution throughout the 20th century.
1. INTRODUCTION: the role of Contemporary History in training Journalism and Communication professionals: students' expectations and historical significance of the 20th century.
2. THE AUTHORITARIAN NEW ORDER, SALAZARISM AND RESISTANCE (1926-45): 2.1 From authoritarian transition (1926-33) to fascistisation (1933-43/45). 2.2 “An intermittent civil war” (F. Rosas): repression ans resistance, from Reviralho to Spanish Civil War (1927-39).
3. DICTATORSHIP, AUTHORITARIAN MODERNISATION AND WAR (1945-74): 3.1 The post-war inevitable social and economic modernisation. 3.2 A resisting society: Communist Party reorganisation and antifascist front (1943-49); Delgado's “hurricane” (1958) and the radicalisation of the 60s and 70s. 3.3 Colonialism and Colonial War: racism, forced labour and Lusotropicalism; Goa (1961), war in Africa (1961-74) and its impact (emigration, exhaustion, desertion, protest). 3.4 Marcelo Caetano's rule (1968-74): the aborted Spring and the regime's inner contradictions.
FROM THE REVOLUTION OF APRIL 1974 TO EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
4.1 Revolution, democratisation and decolonisation (1974-76): a Portuguese model of democracy. 4.2 The normalisation of Portuguese democracy and the European option (1976-86).
See the list of Biliography in DOCUMENTS attached to this module webpage!
| Designation | Weight (%) |
|---|---|
| Exame | 100,00 |
| Total: | 100,00 |
| Designation | Time (hours) |
|---|---|
| Estudo autónomo | 70,00 |
| Frequência das aulas | 50,00 |
| Trabalho escrito | 43,00 |
| Total: | 163,00 |
Approval in this module requires:
(i) to attend to 75% of the classes;
(ii) a minimal mark of 10 (ten) out of 20 at the final written exam.
Mobility students who do not read Portuguese are advised not to enrol in this module. Bibliography used in the module is published in Portuguese which is perfectly expectable in a module on Portuguese History taught in a Portuguese university.