Western Civilization III: The Modern Age

HIST: 1403:0AAA

Fall 2016

Lectures: T TH 12:30-1:20 in C20 PC

Professor: Jeffrey Cox. http://clas.uiowa.edu/history/people/jeffrey-l-cox

Course Web Site: http://myweb.uiowa.edu/jlcox/. Bookmark this site.

Office, Phone, and e-mail: 109 Schaeffer Hall, 335-2298, "jeffrey-cox@uiowa.edu".

My office hours this semester are Tuesday 3-4:30, Wednesday 1-2:30 and by appointment. You are welcome to come see me during office hours or at other times. If you cannot see me during office hours for any reason, please see me after class, or e-mail me, for an appointment. Please activate and use your University of Iowa e-mail account, which will be used to distribute announcements.

 

College of Liberal Arts & Sciences Policies

http://clas.uiowa.edu/faculty/teaching-policies-resources-syllabus-insert

Please consult this for College policies governing this course on issues of Accommodation for Disabilities, Electronic Communication, Academic Honesty, Final Examination Policies, Making a Suggestion or a Complaint, Understanding Sexual Harassment, and Reacting to Severe Weather.

 

Teaching Staff

Each of the members of our teaching staff are engaged in graduate research in history, and have classroom teaching experience or a graduate degree, or both.

 

Alison Steigerwald (Lead Teaching Assistant)

Mariana Ramirez

Dwain Coleman

Marie Synofzick

 

Objectives: Why This Is An Important Course

(1). Information. This course is designed to give you a general overview of the history of Europe and the wider world since the eighteenth century (the 1700s). By the end of the course, you should be familiar with a basic narrative of some of the most important events of modern history, and to be able to recognize allusions to important individuals, ideas, and social changes. Western Civilization is not World History, but many of the important events in the west have had important consequences for the wider world, and non-western civilizations and cultures have had a profound impact on western history through processes of mutual encounter, impact, and incorporation.

(2)Argument. This course is designed to improve your ability to read texts with critical insight, and write about them persuasively and with greater clarity. Western Civilization is a course in rhetoric as well as history. The study of history is not a matter of breaking knowledge down into tiny little parts, and then reassembling that knowledge. It is a matter of making arguments about the past. Our goal is not only to provide basic historical literacy (e.g. who was Lenin?), but also to teach some of the fundamentals of historical argumentation that will equip us as citizens to evaluate the information we receive (e.g. should the United States have invaded Iraq because Saddam Hussein was like Hitler?) The exams are essay exams for the most part, and your grade will be based primarily on your ability to use your knowledge of the past to construct an argument about the past. The communication skills that we emphasize in this course will be of great value to you in life after college, particularly as you think about, and participate in, the debates shaping our democracy

(3). Writing. Like all General Education Courses at the University of Iowa, this course stresses improvement in your writing. Iowa is known as a "writing university," with a worldwide reputation (note the "Writers Workshop" and the "International Writing Program"). Instructors will focus on the improvement of both argumentation and style in your writing. Your grade on assigned papers will be based in part on your success in improving your writing (as shown in your paper portfolio) including progress in eliminating the most common writing errors, especially sentence fragments and run-on sentences.

 

Assigned Readings

Available at Prairie Lights

http://www.prairielightsbooks.com/textbook-store

Textbook Bundle:

Lynn Hunt, The Making of the West. A Concise History, ed. 5e, Volume II.

Katherine J. Lualdi, Sources of Making of the West. Peoples and Cultures. ed. 4e, Volume II

Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist Manifesto

 

Others to purchase (available at Prairie Lights or elsewhere):

Mary Prince, The History of Mary Prince: A West Indian Slave. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1997. ISBN 0472084100

Chinhua Achebe. Things Fall Apart. Anchor pb, 1958. ISBN-13: 978-0385474542

George Orwell, 1984, Signet Classic ISBN 0-451-52493-4?

 

Your Grade

45% (covering topics covered in the lectures)

Mid-Term Exam (C20 PC) 15%

Final Exam (Exam Week, TBA) 30%

Paper Portfolio 35%

a. Paper 1 (on Prince) 10%

b. Paper 2 (on Achebe) 10%

c. Paper 3 (on Orwell, 3-5 pp. to be submitted with your graded copies of papers 1 & 2, thus comprising your portfolio) 15%

Discussion Sections 20%, including 5% for lecture attendance.

a. The discussion sections are taught by Teaching Assistants (TAs) . The small class meetings are meant to provide you with the opportunity for discussion of the lectures and assigned readings, and the chance to develop skills that cannot be practiced in the large lecture format. Your TA will distribute an additional syllabus for this portion of the course at your first meeting. This syllabus will be unique to each section and can contain additional assignments or readings. You will need to refer to both syllabi to be successful in this class. Each section will have an ICON site.

The Lecture Hall

Please be on time, turn off your cell phone, and shut down your laptop browsers. Do not text, tweet, read email, or look at Facebook during the lecture. I recommend a pen or pencil and paper for lecture notes, (you can print out an outline in advance). Do not leave before the end of lecture except in an emergency. As a courtesy to other students, please avoid shutting books or notes before the end of the lecture, which will always end promptly at 1:50.

Lecture Notes

In order to do well on the mid-term and final, it is important for you to attend every class and to take notes on each lecture. The outline on the website is no substitute for a good set of lecture notes. I understand that the topics are often very broad, but I will explain in the lecture why they are important, and also how we can understand how things change in history-sometimes gradually and almost imperceptibly at first (e.g. population growth), but at other times radically and unexpectedly (e.g. the rise and fall of Communism in the twentieth century). Please see me after the lecture if you have questions. I enjoy discussing history in person or on-line. Questions are very welcome via e-mail.

The Textbook

The lectures and the textbook organize material in a somewhat different way, but the textbook has a useful index and table of contents to help you review after your initial reading, and the schedule of lectures on the course website identifies the precise textbook pages that are related to the topics in the lecture. When reading the textbook, concentrate on the material that is covered in the lectures. We will not ask you on the mid-term or final to write essays on topics that were not covered in the lectures.

Final Exam

The final will be given during exam week at a time to be announced by The Registrar. The final exam (and the midterm exam) will not be administered early to accommodate non-refundable airline tickets, early departure for spring break, family vacations, or for any other reason.

Drop/Add Slips

Drop/add slips and changes of section cannot be authorized by any member of the teaching staff. You may drop or add sections electronically during the first week of class. After that, the only person who can make these changes is the secretary in the History Office, 280SH (open 8-4:30 pm).

 

Plagiarism

When you submit a paper, it should be your own ideas conveyed in your own words. Do not submit a paper that contains material downloaded or copied from the web. Do not paraphrase the ideas of others and submit them as your own. Do not cite material without making it clear that it has been written by someone else. Do not submit a paper that you have written for another course. Plagiarism is a serious academic offense, and the penalties for it range from an F for the written work to an F for the entire course for those with previous offenses. For more information see:

http://clas.uiowa.edu/students/handbook/academic-fraud-honor-code

 

Complaints

Complaints about academic matters: History Department Chair, Elizabeth Heineman, 280 Schaeffer Hall, 335-2299.

Discrimination or sexual harassment, Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity, 335-0705

Office of the Ombudsperson https://uiowa.edu/ombuds/ 335-3608