History 110-15 American History Since the Civil War Spring 2013 Lecture: MW 12:00-12:50

advertisement

History 110-15

American History Since the Civil War

Spring 2013

Lecture: MW 12:00-12:50

Arts and Letters 201

“Life must be lived forward, but understood backward”

Søren Kierkegaard

Your Professor:

Edward J. Blum, PhD

Office Location: Arts and Letters 525

Office Hours: Monday: 1:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Your Teaching Associate and Section:

Jon Monteith

Office Location: Arts and Letters 560

Office Hours: Monday: 3:30 to 4:30pm, and by appointment

Email Adress: monteith@rohan.sdsu.edu

Section 15, W 1:00-1:50, in Adams Humanities 2111

Required Texts and Reading:

Kevin Schultz, Hist3: Volume 2 (2013)

Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman, Edward J. Blum, and Jon Gjerde, eds., Major Problems in

American History, Volume II (2011)

Hist and Major Problems are sold together at the bookstore

Kevin M. Schultz, Tri-Faith America: How Catholics and Jews Held Postwar America to

Its Protestant Promise

Matthew Avery Sutton, Jerry Falwell and the Rise of the Religious Right: A Brief History with Documents

What is this course about?

This course begins in 1865 when the titanic American Civil War ended, and it ends with the beginning of this semester. We will romp through economic depressions and world wars, suburban growth and urban riots, political rises and cultural falls. We will wind and twist through Reconstruction, the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, the Roaring ’20s, the Great

Depression, the Cold War, the 1960s struggles, the 1970s malaise, the Reagan Revolution, and the rise of the Digital Age. We will examine how American society rebuilt itself after the Civil

War, how it became an industrial giant, how it helped win two World Wars, how it battled

Communism, how it struggled with cultural, social, and political diversity, and how the child of an African immigrant, who was married to the great-great granddaughter of slaves, won the presidency in the same election that featured a woman as the vice presidential candidate for the opposing political party.

History is not just in books; it is alive, as pertinent and relevant today as it was in the past. It comes to us in countless ways, through music, movies, novels, comics, speeches, laws, and conversations with others. This class, therefore, will attempt to engage history through a variety of methods. Examining everything from poetry to personal letters, films to fashion magazines, politicians to professional actors, we will delve into the world of myth, reality, and the American past. By the end of the course, you will not only observe history working all around you, but you will also have a better understanding of how to make decisions now and in the future. This course will be much like the history we study: an adventure.

Learning Outcomes:

We will be able to identify and discuss main historical themes and time periods, including Reconstruction, the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, the 1920s, the Great

Depression, the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement, the New Conservatism, and the

Digital Age.

We will learn to differentiate between and analyze the content of primary and secondary sources.

We will analyze historical relationships between politics and social justice, war and society, freedom and government, and culture and social change.

We will interact with historical content and contexts with a variety of media.

We will debate through writing and speaking as professional historians do.

We will learn to write and present material as professional historians do.

We will recognize diversity of cultures and groups in shaping the American past.

Grade Breakdown:

Your grade will be based upon four areas: exams, essays, quizzes, and participation. You are required to write two papers and take two exams for this course. Failing to turn in one of the papers or take one of the exams will result in an automatic failure.

Your essays will consist of double-spaced, three-to-four-page thesis papers. In them, you will be asked to analyze primary documents from class in the context of the material presented in the textbook, lectures, and discussions.

The exams will consist of two sections. The first will be multiple choice and true-or-false section. The second section will contain a historical causation evaluation.

Quizzes will be given in large lecture and during section. However, students will be able to drop their lowest quiz score.

Participation will be determined by active engagement in the breakout sections. This not only includes attending discussion sections, but also being prepared to engage the subject material. Students who miss more than two discussion sections will be penalized on their participation grade.

Paper #1: 25%

Paper #2: 25%

Exam #1: 15%

Exam #2: 15%

Quizzes: 10%

Participation: 10%

Some Large Lecture Rules:

All material presented during class can be used in assignments or be tested on.

Professor Blum will discuss superheroes like Spiderman. That is testable material.

During lectures, save questions for times when Professor Blum asks if there are any questions or note down your questions and email them to him. Professor Blum cares deeply about your questions, but there is not enough time to discuss and address them all in the class. Also, sometimes questions interrupt the flow of a lecture or the main point and thus detract from the overall classroom experience.

Turn your cell phones off and do not text during class. It doesn’t bother me, but it’s distracting to other people. (Susie can wait to know the guy next to you is really cute, but really smells)

Do not ask Professor Blum to explain assignments or the syllabus until you have thoroughly read the assignment or the syllabus. Professor Blum refuses to address questions that are clearly answered in the material he has prepared for the class. He will simply delete your email with no response.

Learn to figure things out for yourself. If you do not know the meaning of a word or a phrase, look it up. If you need help at the library, go to the library. If you missed a class, get notes from a colleague.

If you are late to class, be quiet and respectful when you enter. Do not make a production of it or draw any more attention to yourself.

 Professor Blum is a fun and happy guy; he’ll tell you if he’s upset with the class; he’ll tell you if you’re doing well. Enjoy him because he will definitely enjoy your presence in the class and what you uniquely offer to it! Keep a tally of how many times he says “Hooray!” and you’ll find that he’s got a good heart inside somewhere.

Some Break-Out Section Rules/Guidelines:

If you have a question, just ask me (Jon)! More than anything, I am here to help.

However, I cannot adequately assist you if you ask last-minute (such as thirty minutes before a paper is due).

It is of the utmost importance that all students treat each other with dignity and respect. Throughout this course we will be dealing with controversial topics. It is alright to disagree, but I will not tolerate any hateful or inflammatory language in our section.

Plagiarism:

ACHTUNG! WARNING!! Monstrous, Evil, Lethal Criminal Acts

If you're sick of this institution, one of the best ways OUT of it is to cheat or plagiarize in my class. Any work you claim as your own that comes from another person or lacks what I consider adequate acknowledgment of their contribution is cheating. Copying another person's paper -- copying off their test -- is cheating, too. Crib sheets are cheating, when used during an examination. Anyone caught will RUE THE DAY. He or she will get a zero on the work, an F in the course, and I will do all I can to have them expelled or suspended from this university. I've done it before. I'll do it again.

For SDSU’s policies on cheating, see <http://infotutor.sdsu.edu/plagiarism/index.cfm>

~Schedule~

Week 1: Introduction

Monday, January 21: NO CLASS (MLK holiday)

Wednesday, January 23: Introductions

Sections (Wed and Fri): Introductions

Week 2: Studying History, Being a Historian

Monday, January 28: What is history?

Wednesday, January 30: What does it mean to be an historian?

Sections (Wed and Fri): Primary versus secondary sources, arguments and evidence

Week 3: Reconstruction and the Gilded Age

Monday, February 4: Reconstructing the Union

Wednesday, February 6: Building an Industrial Power

Sections (Wed and Fri): o Hist , chapters 16-19 o Major Problems , chapters 1, 2 and 3

Week 4: The Progressive Era

Monday, February 11: Oh What an Awful World

Wednesday, February 13: Reform Us Again

Sections (Wed and Fri): how to read a monograph, how to write a paper o Hist , chapters 20 and 21 o Major Problems , chapters 4 and 5 o Tri-Faith America , introduction

Week 5: The 1920s to Great Depression

Monday, February 18: The Roaring Twenties

Wednesday, February 20: When the Affluence Ended

Sections (Wed and Fri): o Hist , chapter 22 o Major Problems , chapters 6 and 7 o Tri-Faith America , chapter 1

Week 6: The Great Depression and New Deal

Monday, February 25: FDR to the Rescue

Wednesday, February 27: It Was the Best of Worst Times

Sections (Wed and Fri): o Hist , chapter 23 o Major Problems , chapter 8

Week 7: World War II

Monday, March 4: War Over There

Wednesday, March 6: Captain America

Sections (Wed and Fri): Paper #1 Due o Hist, chapter 24 o Major Problems, chapter 9 o Tri-Faith America, chapter 2

Week 8: Cold War

Monday, March 11: We Won, Now We’re Terrified

Wednesday, March 13: Capitalism Versus Communism

Sections (Wed and Fri) o Hist , chapter 25 o Major Problems , chapters 10 and 11 o Tri-Faith America , chapters 3-5

Week 9: Civil Rights and the 1960s

Monday, March 18: Black Freedom Struggle

Wednesday, March 20: A Crusade for Everyone

Sections (Wed and Fri) o Hist , chapter 26 o Major Problems , chapters 12 and 13 o Tri-Faith America , chapters 6-end

Week 10: Exam Week

Monday, March 25

Wednesday, March 27: Exam

No sections this week

SPRING BREAK

Week 11: Stayin’ Alive in the 1970s

Monday, April 8: The Silent Majority Strikes Back

Wednesday, April 10: Stagflation

Sections (Wed and Fri) o Hist , chapter 27 o Major Problems , chapter 14 o Jerry Falwell , Part One

Week 12: The 1980s and 1990s

Monday, April 15: Ronald Reagan the “Me” Generation

Wednesday, April 17: A Third Way?

Sections (Wed and Fri) o Hist , chapter 28 o Major Problems , chapter 15 o Jerry Falwell , Part Two, sections 1-3

Week 13: The Digital Age

Monday, April 22: How the Internet Took Over the World

Wednesday, April 24: 9/11 and a New America

Sections (Wed and Fri) o Hist , chapter 29 o Major Problems , chapter 16 o Jerry Falwell, Part Two, sections 4-5

Week 14: The Present

Monday, April 29: The Rise of Barack Obama

Wednesday, May 1: Red States, Blue States

Sections (Wed and Fri): Paper #2 Due o Major Problems, chapter 30

Week 15: Wrap Up

Monday, May 6: What does the present teach us about the past?

Wednesday, May 8: Exam Preparation

 no sections this week

Final Exam: Friday, May 10, 1:00-3:00

Download