Short course

Race and Slavery in the USA

Course status

Course status:

Applications being accepted

Dates

Dates:

02/11/2026 - 30/11/2026

Study format

Study format:

In-person weekly

Fees

Fees:

£190.00

The history of the United States is, inescapably, a history of slavery. America’s wealth was built on the backs of millions of enslaved Black labourers who endured hardships beyond imagination. 

This module considers key aspects of American slavery in the USA between 1776 to 1865. Issues to be explored include the nature of enslaved families, enslaved work patterns, enslaved culture and belief systems, enslaved solidarity and divisions as well as the exploitation of enslaved people through physical or sexual abuse and enforced separations. The module also explores enslaved people’s resistance and the varied methods of opposition enslaved people deployed to oppose and survive the institution of slavery. 

There will be a focus on gender throughout the course. Key primary sources from enslaved people’s perspectives are used throughout, including the narratives and autobiographies of formerly enslaved people. Participants will also examine primary evidence from enslavers and white society such as fugitive slave adverts, bills of sale, and the diaries and letters of slave owners. 

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Level and demands

The Department’s Weekly Classes are taught at first year undergraduate level.

Course aims

Course aim:

This course aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the history of slavery in the United States and the lives of enslaved people who experienced human bondage in the US slaveholding south. 

Course objectives:

This course will enable participants to gain a systematic knowledge and understanding of the history of the institution of slavery in the United States and develop key historical skills through the analysis of primary sources and secondary historiographical literature.

By the end of the course, participants will have been given the opportunity to gain an understanding of the most recent research into the subject of US slavery.

Programme details

Course starts Monday 2 November 2026

This is an in-person course which requires your attendance at the weekly meetings in Oxford on Mondays, 4.30-6.30pm.

Week 1: The Origins of Slavery in the US. 

Week 2: The Domestic Slave Trade. 

Week 3: Exploitation, Labour, and Gender. 

Week 4: Resistance and Opposition. 

Week 5: Slavery, Emancipation, and the Civil War. 

Teaching methods

This course consists of five in-person classes. The teaching will include tutor introductions and PowerPoint presentations, but the emphasis will be on student input and interaction. Contemporary written and visual sources will be used as a regular focus for discussion. 

The entirety of this course will be research-led and participants will have the opportunity to engage with a broad range of primary sources and archival materials on US slavery.

Learning outcomes

By the end of the course participants will have been given the opportunity to: 

  • Understand key developments and themes in US slavery history.
  • Understand the ways in which race and racism shaped American life, from the colonial era to the Civil War.
  •  Critically analyse and evaluate a broad range of primary sources relating to slavery, race, class, and gender. 
  • Demonstrate an understanding of US slavery systems; their continuity and change over time; and their contribution to modern US history. 

Assessment methods

This course is not accredited, so there are no assessments or coursework.

Dr Erin Shearer

Dr Erin Shearer is an Associate Tutor for the Oxford University’s Department for Continuing Education and a Fellow-in-Residence at the Rothermere American Institute, University of Oxford. She obtained her doctorate at the University of Reading in 2024 and her research interests centre on slavery, race, resistance, and gender in the Americas. She has published aspects of her research in the Women’s History Review, American Nineteenth Century History, and in edited volumes. 

Certification

 

Digital badge

Upon successful completion of this course, you will be issued with an official digital badge from the Department for Continuing Education, University of Oxford. In order to be issued with your badge, you will need to have attended at least 80% of the course.

After the course, you will receive an email with a link and instructions on how to download your digital badge. You will be able to add this badge to your email signature and share it on social media if you choose to do so.

Fees

Description Costs
Course fee £190.00

Funding

If you are in receipt of a UK state benefit, or are a care-leaver in the UK, you may be eligible for a reduction of 50% of tuition fees. Please see the below link for full details:
Concessionary fees for short courses

Recommended reading

Recommended reading is optional and you are not required to purchase these books to study this course.

Library facilities

All weekly class students may become borrowing members of the Rewley House Library, part of the Bodleian Libraries, for the duration of their course. Prospective students whose courses have not yet started are also welcome to use the Library for reference.

Preparatory reading

  • Slavery and the Making of America / Horton, James
  • Enslaved Women in America: From Colonial Times to Emancipation / West, Emily

Recommended Reading List

Module code: O26P405HIW

How to enrol

Please use the ‘Book now’ button on this page. Alternatively, please complete an enrolment form.

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