History
112 World Civilizations Post 1500 |
Welcome |
Themes |
Readings |
Grading and Due Dates |
Expectations |
Description of Course Elements |
Course Schedule |
NOVA
Policies & Resources |
Welcome to History 112 |
Course Description: Surveys the history of Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas from approximately 1500 CE through the present. Lecture 3 hours per week. 3 credits. This is a Passport Transfer course.
General Course Purpose: HIS 112 surveys the general history of the world from approximately 1500 CE through the present and allows students to reach a basic understanding of the characteristic features of the worlds early historical development. Students will learn about important political, economic, social, intellectual, cultural and religious changes that shaped the world in this period of time. Connections and comparisons of human societies are made across space and time.
Course Prerequisite/Corequisite: None
Course Objectives:
Upon completion the course, the student will be able to:
Written Communication
Express an understanding of forces that foster global connections among places, persons, groups, and/or knowledge systems through written activities.
Critical Thinking
Explain human and social experiences and activities from multiple perspectives from 1500 CE through the present.
Compare and contrast multiple perspectives or theories on global processes and systems throughout time.
Describe how global relations impact individual lives and the lives of others over time.
Develop multiple historic literacies by analyzing primary sources of various kinds (texts, images, music) and using these sources as evidence to support interpretation of historical events.
The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries: Suggested Context Trans-Oceanic and Trans-Continental Trade (ex. the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, Indian Ocean trade, Eurasian trade), Overseas Empires and Land-based Empires (ex. Spain, the Ottoman Empire, the Qing dynasty, Muscovy), The rise of the nation-state, Columbian Exchange, European Intellectual Movement
Identify the causes of the rise of modern states.
Analyze the development and impact of culture, economics, politics, society, technology, and religious and philosophical ideas.
Compare and contrast global and trans-oceanic connections.
Analyze complex primary and secondary sources.
Identify trans-global systems.
The Long Eighteenth Century: Suggested Context The Enlightenment, The Age of Revolutions (ex. Latin America, Haiti, USA, France), Nationalism and national identities (ex. France, Latin America, North America, the Caribbean), The Qing Dynasty,
Identify the causes of the rise of modern states.
Analyze the development and impact of culture, economics, politics, society, technology, and religious and philosophical ideas.
Compare and contrast global and trans-oceanic connections.
Analyze complex primary and secondary sources.
Examine the origins of nationalism and national identities.
The Nineteenth Century: Suggested Context The Race to Industrialization (ex. Europe, Asia, Latin America), Imperialism and Neo-Imperialism, Nationalism and national identities (ex. Italian and German unification), Resistance to Colonialism
Analyze the development and impact of culture, economics, politics, society, technology, and religious and philosophical ideas.
Compare and contrast global and trans-oceanic connections.
Analyze complex primary and secondary sources.
Examine the causes of and impact of industrialization and imperialism.
Examine the continuation and growth of nationalism and national identities.
The Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries: Suggested Context The World Wars, The Cold War, Anti-colonial movements (ex. India, China, Pan-Africanism, Latin America), Decolonization (ex. in Africa and Asia), Globalization
Analyze the development and impact of culture, economics, politics, society, technology, and religious and philosophical ideas.
Compare and contrast global and trans-oceanic connections.
Analyze complex primary and secondary sources.
Examine movements of decolonization, liberation movements and resistance to imperialism.
Major Topics to be Included:
The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
The Long Eighteenth Century
The Nineteenth Century
The Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Themes |
Readings |
Grading and Due Dates |
Course Element | Points | Due Date |
Attendance and Participation | 15% | Every Class
Session |
Group Leadership |
5% |
At least twice during the semester |
Source Criticism Paper (2 pages) | 10% | Source
Proposal due September 22 Finished Paper due September 29 |
Imperialism Paper (2 pages) | 10% | October 13 |
Midterm Exam | 10% | October 20 |
Annotated_Bibliography,
Part 1 |
10% | November 3 |
Annotated_Bibliography, Part 2 |
10% |
November 10 |
Research
Project |
20% | Topic
Proposal Due September 22 Finished Project Due November 24 |
Final Exam | 10% | December
11 (This assignment cannot be submitted late). |
Percentage |
Final Course Grade |
Above 90% |
A |
80-89% | B |
70-79% | C |
60-69% | D |
Below 60% |
F |
Expectations |
Description of Course Elements |
See the description of the Research Project below
for a list of sites to begin finding relevant primary
sources.
Part 2 of your Annotated Bibliography should include:
Sources:
- Do Your Own Thing (If You Can Convince Me): You can also propose your own format for a Research Project, but you will need to explain why you think this particular format is interesting and a good way to discuss your particular topic. If I agree, I will approve the proposal; if not, you will need to pick one of the other Research Project formats. The format also will need to meet the same requirements as the others in terms of both page length/word count and number and types of sources used. Power Point or other slide-based presentations are extremely boring, and definitely will not be approved.
Research Project Element | Description | Due Date |
Proposal | You should submit a Project Proposal using the relevant
link in Canvas which describes the option and topic. You
may not turn in an Annotated Bibliography or a finished
Research Project without getting your Topic Proposal
approved in advance. |
Sept. 15 |
Annotated Bibliography, Parts 1 and 2 |
You should
submit a bibliography of the sources which you intend to
use for your Research Project. The bibliography should
include at least 5 primary sources (historical documents
from the past) and 5 scholarly secondary sources
(including at least one scholarly journal article and one
scholar monarch). Each source should be accompanied by a
brief paragraph of analysis (See the Annotated
Bibliography assignment description for more
detailed information). |
Part 1: Nov. 3 Part 2: Nov. 10 |
Finished Research Project |
You should submit a
Research Project using the appropriate link on the
course Canvas page. See below for complete descriptions
of the various Project Options. |
Nov. 24 |
You should make sure to refer to or quote specific examples from the sources in order to support your arguments, and to cite them using Chicago-format footnotes. Please follow the guidelines for written work in this class. See this rubric for a more detailed description of how you will be graded.
The themes themselves are too broad to be the focus or your paper, so your topic should narrow the focus down in some way (For example, the topic, "Gender in World History" is too broad). Here are some sample research questions. You are free to pick one of these, modify one of these to deal with another region, or to suggest your own. Note that you should be thinking not just in terms of questions which interest you, but also about what sorts of sources you can find in languages which you read. It's no good to come up with a fascinating topic on which you are unable to find evidence.
- What role did religion play in reinforcing racism during the imperial age? (theme: race)
- How have attitudes toward sex and sexuality changed in Africa during the past century?(theme: gender)
- What does the rise of spectator sports in Europe between 1900-2000 reveal about ideals of masculinity? (theme: gender)
- What was life like under communism behind the Iron Curtain, 1945-1989? (theme: government)
- What are the political roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? (theme: race, government)
- What role did economic inequality play in the origins of political revolutions in 19th century Latin America ? (theme: government and social class)
- What was working class life like in Britain during the Industrial Revolution? (theme: social class)
- How and why did Fascism become popular in Interwar Europe? (theme: government and race)
- Was the Vietnam War primarily about Cold War issues or was it a war on national liberation? (theme: government)
- What role did racism play in justifying Western imperialism? (theme: race)
- What role did Anti-Semitism play in leading to the rise of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust? (theme: race)
- What factors explain the Japanese attempts to conquer large parts of Asia during the 1930s and 1940s?(theme: government)
- How have women's lives in Asia changed over the course of the 20th century? (theme: gender)
- How did governments in the Middle East use religion to enhance their legitimacy during the 20th century? (theme: government)
- How did feminism change the way women lived in modern France? (theme: gender and government)
- What was the impact of Enlightenment ideas on the Haitian Revolution? (theme: government)
- To what extent were Marxist ideas important to the decolonization movements in Africa during the 20th century?(theme: government and social class)
Day In The Life Video
Option:
For this version of the Research Project you will need to choose a time period and region relevant to some aspect of the subject matter of this class. Then select three different people from the same basic time and place in history to portray. They can be either specific individuals from history, or different types of people (ie, from different social classes, professions, nationalities, ethnicities, genders, etc.). Your topic cannot primarily deal with American history.
Once your characters have been approved, you should craft a video of approximately 5 minutes (so 15 minutes total), where each character introduces themselves and discusses what their daily life is like. Consider discussing topics such as the characters work, living conditions, family relationships, food, political and social opinions, etc. The idea is to provide as vivid, interesting, and historically accurate portrayal as possible. Feel free to use appropriate accents or slang if you like. You can use friends or family members in your videos if you like, as long as you are the one who writes the script.
Important stuff that you shouldnt forget:
- Your video should advance a clear, specific argument or thesis about what the lives of the three people portrayed reveal about the particular era in which they lived.
- You also should include a list of all of your sources at the end of the video.
- All Research Project videos must be posted on YouTube or Vimeo. You must upload the link for the instructor to grade. Do not set your video to private or select any other access restrictions. It must be public for the instructor to grade.
- In order to receive a grade for the Research Project, you must submit your written script and a link to the video using the appropriate link in Canvas.
Here are some suggestions for software to use when editing your videos:
- iMovie
- Movie Maker
- Final Cut Express
- Camtasia
- WeVideo
For this version of the Research Project you will need to choose a time period and region relevant to some aspect of the subject matter of this class. Then select at least five specific geographic sites or events from that particular time and place to discuss. These can be specific buildings or monuments, neighborhoods, dwellings, shops, taverns, battles, revolutions, speeches, spectacles, festivals, ceremonies, etc. Your topic cannot primarily deal with American history.
Once your choice has been approved, you should craft a written narrative in which you visit each of the sites in turn, describing what you witness at stop along your journey. Make sure to mention what you see, hear, small, taste, do, etc. The idea is to provide as vivid, interesting, and historically accurate portrayal as possible. It is up to you whether you adopt the persona of a traveler from the time period in question, or travel back in time in some manner. Youve got a lot of leeway here-- be creative!
Your finished product should be in the form of a website which is posted online, and which is viewable by anyone. The website should be a visually interesting as possible, and should include a variety of (correctly sourced and cited) images and/or maps.
Important stuff that you shouldnt forget:
- Your Travel Log website should advance a clear, specific argument or thesis about what the sites visited and/or events witnessed reveal about the nature of life at that particular place and time in history.
- You also should include a list of all of your sources somewhere in the website.
- The website should be publicly viewable, and should not require a password to access.
- In order to receive a grade for the Research Project, you must submit the weblink for your Travel Log website as well as a .pdf, .doc, or .rtf file containing the text of your Travel Log (so it can be checked for plagiarism) using the appropriate link in Canvas.
Here are some suggestions for free public web hosting for your website:
- Google sites
- Blogger
- Wix
- Weebly
- WordPress
- TravelDiaries
Part 1) Time Line (5 Paragraphs): Provide a Time Line which lists in chronological order what you think are the five most important events in the history of the world from 1500-1900. ALL OF YOUR EXAMPLES MUST BE EVENTS OR DEVELOPMENTS WE DISCUSSED IN CLASS! No more than three of your examples should be drawn from European or United States history. Each item on your Time Line should be a paragraph long and should contain the following information:
- What happened.
- When it happened (approximate dates are okay).
- Why it happened.
- The major Consequences of the event.
- How is this event significant or important?
Part 2) Primary Source Analyses: You will be given the titles of two primary sources which you have read during the first half of the semester (See the exam description in Canvas for the specific sources), and asked to briefly discuss the following elements:
- The identity and point of view of the author.
- The historical context of the document (what circumstances influenced the author?).
- The basic contents of the document.
- What does the document tell us about the specific time and place it was written?1111
Part 1) Time Line: Provide a Time Line which lists in chronological order what you think are the five most important events in the history of the world after 1900. ALL OF YOUR EXAMPLES MUST BE EVENTS OR DEVELOPMENTS WE DISCUSSED IN CLASS! No more than three of your examples should be drawn from European or United States history. Each item on your Time Line should be a paragraph long and should contain the following information:
- What happened.
- When it happened (approximate dates are okay).
- Why it happened.
- The major Consequences of the event.
- How is this event significant or important?
Part 2) Primary Source Analyses: You will be given the titles of two primary sources which you have read during the second half of the semester (See the exam description in Canvas for the specific sources), and asked to briefly discuss the following elements:
- The identity and point of view of the author.
- The historical context of the document (what circumstances influenced the author?).
- The basic contents of the document.
- What does the document tell us about the specific time and place it was written?
Course
Schedule |
Monday, August 26: Course Introduction |
Read through the Course
Syllabus |
Wednesday, August 28:
Studying History |
Allosso and Williford, "Introduction" Watch "Is History B.S.?" |
Assignments to Complete: | Read through the entire syllabus, and submit the Introduction Assignment by 11:59 pm on Sunday using the appropriate link under "Assignments" in the class Canvas page. Make sure to check the feedback you received to see if you need to resubmit it. |
Monday, September 2:
Labor Day Holiday |
No Class |
Wednesday, September 4: Zheng He and Columbus | Discussion Source: List of Zheng Hes Expeditions (1431) Watch What's The Difference Between Primary & Secondary Sources? Watch Was Columbus B.S.? |
Monday, September 9: The Ottoman Empire |
Discussion
Source: Evliya Ηelebi, Excerpts
from The Book of Travels (c. 1630) Watch Is The History of Great Men B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 1: Modern World History Begins in Asia" |
Wednesday, September 11: Pre-Columbian America |
Discussion
Source: The Mayan
Account of the Spanish Conquest in the Chilam
Balam (1540-1546) Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 2: Europe and Africa" |
This Week: | Topic Proposal for the Research Project due September 15. Make sure to check the professor's feedback on Canvas to see if your topic has been approved, or if you need to resubmit this assignment.Oct |
Monday, September 16: Colonial Latin America |
Discussion Source: Sor Juana Inιs de la Cruz, Selected Poems (It also will be helpful to read this brief encyclopedia entry for some context on Sor Juana's life) Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 3: The Americas and Columbus" |
Wednesday, September 18:
Early Modern Africa and the Atlantic Slave Trade |
Discussion
Source: Excerpts
from King Afonso of Congo, Letters
on the Slave Trade (1526) Watch Was the Atlantic Slave Trade B.S.? |
Assignments to Complete: | Source Proposal for the Source Criticism Paper due September 22. You should enter the complete bibliographic information for the sources for this assignment. Make sure to read the directions for the Source Criticism Paper in the syllabus CAREFULLY before filling out the form. |
Monday, September 23: The Enlightenment, Property, and Power |
Discussion
Source: John Locke, Excerpts
from Two Treatises on Government
(1689) Watch Was The Enlightenment B.S.? Watch Was The French Revolution B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 4: Early Globalization and Revolutions" |
Wednesday, September 25: The Haitian Revolution |
Discussion Source: Toussaint Louverture's Saint-Domingue Constitution of 1801 Watch Was The Haitian Revolution B.S.? |
Assignments to Complete: | Source Criticism Paper due September 29 (Your sources MUST be approved by the instructor before you turn this in). |
Monday, September 30: Industrialization |
Discussion
Sources: "The Life of the
Industrial Worker in Nineteenth-Century
England" (1832); Women Miners in
the English Coal Pits (1842). Watch Was The Industrial Revolution B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 5: Troubled Nineteenth Century" |
Wednesday, October 2: Responses to Industrialization |
Discussion
Source: Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels, excerpts from The Communist
Manifesto (1848). Watch How Can You Tell If A Website Is B.S. Or Not? |
Monday, October 7:
Commercial Imperialism |
Discussion
Source: Thomas Babington
Macaulay, On Empire and Education
in India (1833-1835) Watch Was The English East India Company B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 6: Imperialism" |
Wednesday, October 9: Settler Colonialism |
Discussion Sources: Letter
from King Leopold II of Belgium to Minister
Beernaert on the Congo (1890); Excerpts
from The
Casement Report (1904) Watch Was Imperialism in Congo B.S.? |
Assignments to Complete: | Imperialism Paper due October 13 |
Monday, October 14:
|
No Class Fall
Break |
|
Wednesday, October 16: Responses to Imperialism |
Discussion Sources: Aizawa Seishisai, "Excerpts from Shinron (New Theses, 1825)"; Ihara Saikaku, "The Gay Love Letters of a Samurai: Mashida Toyonoshin to Moriwaki Gonkuro (1867) Watch Was The Meiji Restoration B.S.? |
|
Assignments to Complete: | Midterm
Exam due October
20 |
Monday, October 21: Europe's Great War |
Discussion
Source: Ernst
Jόnger, Excerpts
from Storm of
Steel
(1920) Watch Were the Causes of World War I B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 7: The Great War" |
Wednesday, October 23: Aftermath |
Discussion
Reading:
Report
on the
Deportation of
Armenians from
Zeitun, July
21, 1915 Watch Was The 1918 Influenza B.S.? |
Monday, October 28: New Identities |
Discussion
Source: Bahithat al-Badiya, Excerpts from "A Lecture
in the Club of the Umma Party"(1909) Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 8: Modern Crisis" |
Wednesday, October 30: Communist Revolutions |
Discussion Reading: V. I. Lenin, "The April Theses (1917)" Watch Was The Russian Revolution Of 1917 B.S.? |
Assignments to Complete: | Annotated Bibliography, Part 1 due November 3. |
Monday, November 4: Stalin's Terror | Discussion Reading: Josef Stalin on the Liquidation of the Kulaks, (1929) |
Wednesday, November 6: Fascism |
Discussion
Reading: Adolf
Hitler, Excerpts from
Several Speeches (1923,
1930, 1932) Watch Is Fascism B.S.? |
Assignments to Complete: | Annotated Bibliography, Part 2 due November 10. |
Monday, November 11: World War II in Asia |
Discussion Reading: Louise Yim on the Japanese Occupation of Korea (1951) Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 9: World War II" |
|
Wednesday, November 13: World War II in Europe |
Discussion
Reading: Bormanns
Minutes of a Meeting
at Hitlers Headquarters
on War Aims in the East
(July 16, 1941) |
|
|
Monday, November 18:
The Holocaust |
Discussion Reading: Elie Wiesel, Excerpts from Night (1960) Watch Is Modern Anti-Semitism B.S.? |
Wednesday,
November 20:
The Nuclear World |
Discussion Reading: Yoshito Matsushiges Account of the Hiroshima Bombing |
Assignments to Complete: | Research Project
due November 24 |
Monday, November 25:
Decolonization |
Discussion Reading: Sarojini Naidu, Excerpts from Several Speeches (1917, 1918, 1946) Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 10: Decolonization" |
Wednesday,
November 27:
|
No
Class- Thanksgiving |
Monday, December 2: Victims of Communism |
Discussion
Reading: Wei
Jingsheng, "The
Fifth
Modernization:
Democracy
(1978)" Watch Was the Cold War B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 11: Cold War" |
Wednesday,
December 4: Victims of Anti-Communism |
Discussion Reading:
Excerpts
from the
Memoir of
Rigoberta
Menchϊ
(1984);
Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 12: Neoliberal Globalization" Watch Was The CIA Coup In Guatemala In 1954 B.S.? |
Monday, December 9: Neoliberalism and the Post Cold War World |
Discussion Reading: Testimonies From The Genocide In Rwanda, 1994; Demet Demir, Filipa de Souza Award Address (1997) Watch Is Globalization B.S.? Watch Was the End of the Cold War B.S.? Read Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 13: Limits to Growth?" |