Difference between revisions of "Pirates: History and Culture"

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{{Infobox
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| title  = Pirates: History and Culture
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| header1 = Humanities Course
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| label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[Pirates: History and Culture|CDOG]]
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| label3 = Years of Operation | data3 = 2008-2011
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| label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[ALE]], [[LAJ]], [[SAN]], [[STP]], [[WIN]]
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}}
 
{{Baby CTY Courses}}
 
{{Baby CTY Courses}}
[[Pirates: History and Culture]] (CDOG) was a [[Baby CTY]] Humanities course for people to discover the history of the world's greatest plunderers. It was offered at [[Alexandria]], [[La Jolla]], [[San Mateo]], [[Brooklandville]] and [[Los Angeles (Windward)]].
 
 
 
==Course Description==
 
==Course Description==
 
 
[https://web.archive.org/web/20080316190849/http://www.cty.jhu.edu/summer/employment/humanities.html#cdog From the CTY Summer Catalog] (2008):
 
[https://web.archive.org/web/20080316190849/http://www.cty.jhu.edu/summer/employment/humanities.html#cdog From the CTY Summer Catalog] (2008):
  
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[[Category: La Jolla]]
 
[[Category: La Jolla]]
 
[[Category: Los Angeles (Windward)]]
 
[[Category: Los Angeles (Windward)]]
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[[Category: Sandy Spring]]

Latest revision as of 11:44, 19 June 2018

Pirates: History and Culture
Humanities Course
Course CodeCDOG
Years of Operation2008-2011
Sites OfferedALE, LAJ, SAN, STP, WIN
Part of a series on
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CTY Courses
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Bristol · Collegeville · Los Angeles · San Rafael · Santa Cruz
Alexandria · Baltimore · La Jolla · New York · Portola Valley · Sandy Spring · Venice · Baltimore (MSC)
Humanities
Model United Nations and Advanced Geography
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Being a Reader, Becoming a Writer
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Writing Workshop: Modern Fantasy
Behind the Mask: Superheroes Revealed
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Numbers: Zero to Infinity
Data and Chance · Introduction to Robotics
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The Edible World · Crystals and Polymers
Be a Scientist! · Cloudy with a Chance of Science
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Toyology · Science Spoilers · Space: To Infinity and Beyond
Defunct Courses
World Folklore and Mythology
Colonial America · Civil War Studies
The Middle Ages · The Renaissance
Worlds in Motion
Railroads: Connecting 19th-Century America · Pirates: History and Culture
The Olympics
Chinese · French · Spanish
The Art of Writing: Process and Product · Elements of Drama
Writing Workshop: Where Art Meets Science
Stories and Poems
Writing Workshop: Images and Text
Animal Behavior · Flight Science
Forest Ecology · Rocks, Minerals, and Fossils
Meteorology · Bugs and Butterflies
Dynamic Earth · Bay Ecology II

Course Description

From the CTY Summer Catalog (2008):

Pirate culture first developed during ancient times for political, economic, and military reasons, and acts of piracy have been documented in seas all over the world. Julius Caesar was captured and held for ransom by Cilician pirates; the Alawi sultans worked with pirates based along the Barbary Coast to bring riches to Morocco; Sir Francis Drake, commissioned by none other than Queen Elizabeth I, raided harbors and attacked the Spanish Armada in the Caribbean Sea; and Japanese pirates called Wakō established a forceful presence along the Chinese and Korean coasts between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries. And pirates are still active in the world today especially in places like the Pacific Coast of Latin America and the Straits of Malacca in Southeast Asia.

Students in this course examine the formation of pirate fleets and study the profiles of famous privateers and pirates like William Kidd, Edward Teach (“Blackbeard”), and Ching Shih, the woman pirate who took over her husband’s fleets off the coast of China after he died. They explore how and why the varieties of pirate culture and laws developed over time and in different parts of the world. Students analyze the socio-economic and political forces that led to the rise of piracy and the reactions of governments to this threat on the high seas. By using pirates as a lens through which to study world history and geography, students leave this course with a greater understanding of the historical forces of trade, colonialism, ethnicity, nationalism, politics, and even art and literature.