2. Designing a Study Abroad Program to Include Humanities Graduate Students: Institutional Constraints and Possibilities
3. Fake News from Fleet Street: Jack the Ripper and the Victorian Periodical Press
4. Study Abroad and/as Historical Reenactment
5. Teaching at Dark Sites
6. Inadvertently Reliving History: Teaching Jack the Ripper in a Time of Terror
7. From Short-Term Abroad Programs to Center-Based Courses: Reflections on Competing Priorities
Kevin A. Morrison is Distinguished Professor in the School of Foreign Languages at Henan University, China. He is the author of A Micro-History of Victorian Liberal Parenting: John Morley’s “Discreet Indifference” and Victorian Liberalism and Material Culture: Synergies of Thought and Place, and editor of five books, including the forthcoming Walter Besant: The Business of Literature and the Pleasures of Reform.
This book is a genre-breaking response to the literature on study abroad. It stakes claim to an uncharted space between reflective pedagogy, public history studies, and investigations into dark tourism. Drawing on the author’s experience of teaching short-term summer programs and courses in London between 2011 and 2018 that focused wholly or in part on the Whitechapel murders of 1888, the book analyzes experiential learning in the study abroad context. The book is informed by the instructor’s reflections; students’ informal essays and anonymous evaluations; and the scholarship of teaching and learning. It begins by situating programs and courses on the Whitechapel murders in the context of debates about overseas and experiential learning. It then proceeds to discuss the constraints to and possibilities for devising study abroad programs to include graduate students in humanistic disciplines; assignments and classroom activities utilized, including those with a reenactment component; the ethical complexities of teaching at dark sites; and the pedagogical implications of learning about Jack the Ripper in an age of terror. It concludes with reflections on the differences between study abroad programs and courses in cultivating students’ global-mindedness.