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History112 001L World Civilizations Post 1500 MW 11:10am-12:30pm LW-0118 Spring 2026 |
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| Welcome |
| Readings |
| Grading and Due Dates |
| Expectations |
| Description of Course Elements |
| Course Schedule |
| NOVA Policies
& Resources |
| Welcome to History 112 |
| Readings |
NOVA ALL ACCESS TEXTBOOK PROGRAM: When you register for classes each semester, you’re automatically enrolled in NOVA All Access and charged a fee of $22.50 per credit hour. The fee will appear on your student account, along with your tuition and other fees. YOU need to decide if the fee benefits you. And YOU need to opt out if it does not save you money. Complete details about the NOVA All Access program are available here.
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| Grading and Due Dates |
| Course
Element |
Percentage |
Due
Date |
| Attendance and Participation |
15% |
Every
Class Session |
| Primary Source Discussion
Leadership |
10% |
Sign-up
Sheet with Dates and Documents will be Available in
Canvas |
| Book Review (2 Pages) |
10% | Due
March 15 |
| Annotated
Bibliography, Part 1 |
10% | Due
April 5 |
| Annotated
Bibliography, Part 2 |
10% | Due
April 12 |
| Research Project |
20% |
Project
due April 26 Reflections due May 3 |
| Exams |
25% |
Midterm
Exam, March 25 Final Exam, May 6, 11:30 am |
| Percentage |
Final
Course Grade |
| Above
90% |
A |
| 80-89% |
B |
| 70-79% |
C |
| 60-69% |
D |
| 59%
and Below |
F |
| Expectations |
| Description of Course Elements |
1) Since this is a world history class, I would like your focus to extend beyond the history of the United States. This means no topic which solely deal with US history. You can, however, have a topic which ends up comparing US history with the history of some other region-- for example you could work on a topic which highlights the parallels between segregation in the US South with the Apartheid system in South Africa.
2) You should investigate a topic which largely falls sometime between the years 1500 and 2000. The period before 1500 is beyond the scope of the class, and the period after 2000 is too modern for us to have an appropriately historical perspective on. There’s perhaps a bit of wiggle room with these dates, but the bulk of your focus should be somewhere within this span of time.
3) There needs to be a sufficient body of written primary source documents in a language which you are able to read. Documents written by people who lived during the period you are researching and who personally experienced the events which you are investigating are indispensable to any work of historical scholarship. Unfortunately sometimes there are very interesting topic ideas for which the sources simply aren’t available. It is up to you to make sure early on in your research process that you will be able to find the minimum of 5 written primary source documents necessary for this project. Please see below for a list online primary source collections which can be a convenient starting point for your preliminary investigations.
For the video projects,
the finished project should be posted to a public video hosting
site such as YouTube or vimeo. For the website projects, there
as plenty of free web-hosting options such as Google sites,
Blogger, Wix, Weebly, WordPress, or TravelDiaries.
1) What sort of topic do you want to research this semester? You should be as specific as possible about the particular time frame and/or geographic region. (Sometimes it can be helpful to phrase your topic in terms of a particular research question. For example “How did the Haitian Revolution of the 1790s change life for former slaves?” “Why did the samurai class in Japan abandon its traditional privileges during the Meiji Restoration?” or “How successful was the gay liberation movement of the 1960s in securing rights for the LGBTQ community in Britain, Germany, and the USA?”)
2) Why do you find this topic interesting? In what ways do you anticipate that your research will be relevant to things that you care about in your own life?
3) Which of the project formats have you chosen?
4) What sorts of primary sources do you expect to use? Have done any preliminary checking to see what sorts of sources are available? If so, where? (Remember, primary sources are documents written by people who lived during the period you are researching and who personally experienced the events which you are investigating. So for example, are there letters or memoirs written by people who were involved in the events? Relevant laws from the time period in question? Interviews of people who lived through the events?)
NOVA Library: You can search for books at the NOVA library, which has an adequate collection of print and e-books. You can request that physical books from any of the various campus’ libraries be sent sent your home campus within a matter of days.
GMU Library: As a NOVA student, you can also check out books from the George Mason University library, which has substantially larger collection. To check items out you must have a valid NOVACard and proof of enrollment.
Interlibrary Loan (ILL): You can also request books from libraries and collections all over the country through ILL by filling out a brief form.
Wikipedia “Further Reading:” While Wikipedia has some limitations as a resource, it can be a useful starting point. In particular, many Wikipedia articles feature a section toward the end of the page entitled “Further Reading,” which lists well-known relevant books on the topic of the article. It’s not a bad strategy to look at this list of books and see if any of them sound promising or are available to you in one of the above collections.
You should submit the full bibliographic citation for the book which you have chosen, including the author’s name, the title, the publisher, the year of publication, and the total number of pages, in order to get it approved. Make sure to check my feedback in order to make sure the book you have picked will work before moving on to any of the other steps. (Due February 15)
You should upload a picture of you with the book. If you’re reading an e-book version, your photo should be of you with your ebook reader or laptop with the text of the book clearly visible on the screen. (Due March 1)
You should upload a picture of a page of the book with the author’s main argument highlighted or circled (Obviously you shouldn't physically mark a library book-- simply take a picture and use Paint or some other similar program to indicate the argument in the photo). (Due March 8)
Finally, you should write a 1-2 page double-spaced review of the book in which you discuss the scholarly credentials and background of the book’s author, the author’s main argument (note that this is not simply what the book is about; rather, what is the author trying to say about the subject?), briefly summarize what the various sections/chapters of the book deal with, describe the specific sources of evidence used by the author to support that main argument (Are they secondary sources? Primary sources? If so, what sorts of documents are they? Personal correspondence? Memoirs? Court documents? Laws?), and provide your overall assessment of how useful the book is to someone interested in its subject matter. Your title should just be the complete bibliographic citation for the book. in Chicago format. Any citations for quotations or specific information from the book or other sources on the author's background should be in the form of correctly formatted Chicago-style footnotes. You cannot turn in a book review unless you have had the book approved by me in advance. (Due March 15)
For primary sources, you might consult the following resources (some of these sites also contain secondary sources as well):
- The Avalon Project: Documents in Law, History, and Diplomacy.
- Cambridge Digital Library.
- Hanover Historical Texts Collection.
- Finding World History Sources.
- The Women's Library at LSC.
- The Modern History Sourcebook.
- The African History Sourcebook.
- The East Asian History Sourcebook.
- The Indian History Sourcebook.
- The Islamic History Sourcebook.
- The Jewish History Sourcebook.
- The Women's History Sourcebook.
- The Victorian Web.
- Women in World History
- German History in Documents and Images.
- Marxists Internet Library.
- Asia For Educators (Primary Sources on China, Japan, Korea, South Asia, and South East Asia)
- 17 Moments in Soviet History.
| Course Schedule |
| Wednesday,
January
21: Course Introduction/Why Bother Studying History? |
Read through the Course
Syllabus Allosso and Williford, "Introduction" Watch Is History B.S.? |
| Assignments to Complete: | Read through the entire syllabus, and submit the Introduction Assignment and the Syllabus Quiz by 11:59 pm on January 25 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, January 26: |
Cancelled due to snow |
| Wednesday,
January 28: Studying Sources and the Digital Age |
Discussion Sources:
Alan Turing, “Computing
Machinery and Intelligence” Watch What's The Difference Between Primary & Secondary Sources? |
| Monday,
February
2: "The History of Great Men" vs. "History From Below" |
Discussion Sources:
List
of Zheng He’s Expeditions (1431); Johann
Mortiz Schwager, “On
the Ravensberg Peasant” (1786) Watch Is The History of Great Men B.S.? Watch Was the Scottish Highlander B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 1: Modern World History Begins in Asia" |
| Wednesday,
February 4: Empires and Money |
Discussion
Source: Evliya Çelebi, Excerpts
from The Book of Travels (c. 1630); Glückel of Hameln, Excerpts
from The Memoirs of Glückel of Hameln (1719); Watch Was The English East India Company B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 2: Europe and Africa" |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Topic
Proposal for the Research Project due February 8.
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. |
| Monday,
February 9: Colonialism and Indigenous Genocide |
Discussion
Sources: The
Mayan Account of the Spanish Conquest in the Chilam
Balam (1540-1546); Excerpts
from the Florentine Codex on La Malinche/Doña Marina
and the Conquest of Mexico (1577) Watch Was Columbus B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 3: The Americas and Columbus" |
| Wednesday,
February 11: Slave Labor and Racism |
Discussion
Source: Excerpts from King Affonso of Congo, Letters
on the Slave Trade (1526) Watch Was the Atlantic Slave Trade B.S.? |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Book
Proposal for the Book Review
due February 15 |
| Monday,
February 16: Outsiders- Maroons, Pirates, and Witches |
Discussion
Sources: The
Articles of Bartholomew Roberts; Excerpts
from the Witch Trial of Bess Clarke, 1645 Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 4: Early Globalization and Revolutions" |
| Wednesday,
February 18: The Enlightenment-- Freedom and Power |
Discussion
Source: John Locke, Excerpts
from Two Treatises on Government (1689) Watch Was The Enlightenment B.S.? |
| Monday,
February 23: 18th c. Revolutions |
Toussaint
Louverture's Saint-Domingue
Constitution of 1801 Watch Was The French Revolution B.S.? Watch Was The Haitian Revolution B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 5: Troubled Nineteenth Century" |
| Wednesday,
February 25: The Haitian Revolution |
Toussaint Louverture's Saint-Domingue Constitution of 1801 Watch Was The French Revolution B.S.? Watch Was The Haitian Revolution B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 5: Troubled Nineteenth Century" |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Make
sure you have the book for your Book Review Paper by March
1. Upload a picture of you with the book using the
appropriate link in the course Canvas page. |
| Monday,
March 2: The Industrial Revolution- Time, Light, Energy |
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.? |
| Wednesday,
March 4: The Industrial Revolution- Labor |
Discussion Sources: Documents on the Luddites |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Upload
a picture of a page of the book for your Book Review Paper
with the author’s main argument highlighted or circled by
March 8. |
| Monday,
March 7: Responses to Industrialization |
Discussion Sources: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, excerpts from The Communist Manifesto (1848) |
| Wednesday,
March 9: Neo-Imperialism |
Discussion Sources: Thomas Babington Macaulay, On Empire and Education in India (1833-1835) Watch Was Imperialism in Congo B.S.? |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Book
Review due March 15 |
| Monday,
March 23: Resistance to Imperialism |
Discussion
Source: Aizawa Seishisai, "Excerpts
from Shinron (New Theses, 1825) Watch Was The Meiji Restoration B.S.? |
| Wednesday,
March 25: Midterm Exam |
Come
prepared to take the Midterm Exam in class. |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Book
Review due Find a scholarly journal article related to the
topic of your Research Project and upload the full
bibliographic citation of the article using the
appropriate link in Canvas by March 29. |
| Monday,
March 30: Nationalism |
Discussion
Sources: Bahithat al-Badiya, Excerpts from "A
Lecture in the Club of the Umma Party"(1909); Louise
Yim on the Japanese
Occupation of Korea (1951) Watch Was The 1918 Influenza B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 7: The Great War" |
Wednesday, April 1: 20th c. Imperial Wars |
Discussion
Sources: Ernst Jünger, Excerpts
from Storm of Steel (1920); Report
on the Deportation of Armenians from Zeitun, July
21, 1915 Watch Were the Causes of World War I B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 8: Modern Crisis" |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Annotated Bibliography,
Part 1 due April 5 |
| Monday,
April 6: 20th c. Revolutions |
Discussion
Readings: V. I. Lenin, "The
April Theses (1917);" Josef Stalin on the
Liquidation of the Kulaks, (1929) Watch Was The Russian Revolution Of 1917 B.S.? |
| Wednesday,
April 8: Fascism |
Discussion
Reading: Adolf Hitler, Excerpts from Several
Speeches (1923, 1930, 1932) Watch Is Fascism B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 9: World War II" |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Annotated Bibliography,
Part 2, due April 12 |
| Monday,
April 13: Global War |
Discussion
Source: Bormann’s Minutes
of a Meeting at Hitler’s Headquarters on War Aims in the
East (July 16, 1941) |
Wednesday, April 25: Holocaust |
Discussion
Reading: Excerpts from the Diary
of Dawid Serakowiak, 1939-1943 Watch Is Modern Anti-Semitism B.S.? |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Research
Project Main Argument Draft, due April 19 |
| Monday,
April 20: The Nuclear World |
Discussion Source: Yoshito Matsushige’s Account of the Hiroshima Bombing; |
| Wednesday,
April 22: The Cold War |
Discussion
Source: Excerpts from the Memoir
of Rigoberta Menchú (1984); Watch Was the Cold War B.S.? Watch Was The CIA Coup In Guatemala In 1954 B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 11: Cold War" |
| Assignments
to Complete: |
Research Project Due April
26 |
| Monday,
April 27: Decolonization |
Discussion
Reading: Sarojini Naidu, Excerpts
from Several Speeches (1917, 1918, 1946); Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 10: Decolonization" |
| Wednesday,
April 29: Sex and Gender in the 20th c. |
Discussion Sources:
Documents
on Women's Lives in Modern India (1986, 1975);
Demet Demir, Filipa
de Souza Award Address (1997) |
| Assignments to complete: |
Research
Project Reflection must be completed no later than May 3. |
| Monday,
May 4: Advertising, Consumerism, and Globalization |
Discussion Sources:
The
Female Smoker Market (1973); R.J.
Reynolds Tobacco Company New Menthol Cigarette
Introduction. How Black Consumers Are Different
(1990); Testimonies
From The Genocide In Rwanda, 1994. Watch Is Globalization B.S.? Watch Was the End of the Cold War B.S.? Read Allosso and Williford, "Chapter 12: Neoliberal Globalization", "Chapter 13: Limits to Growth?" |
| Wednesday,
May 6: |
Final Exam, 11:30 am- 1:30 pm |
| Assignments to Complete: |
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