Foundations of the Modern Age
Winter Semester 2004

Frank Luttmer
113 Classic Hall
M W F: 8:30-9:00 and by appointment
866-7205 (office) (502)454-8348 (home)
historians@hanover.edu


Course Description and Objectives

Foundations of the Modern Age is a historical introduction to the ideas, institutions, and events that shaped modern Western civilization. The course is designed both to develop essential knowledge of the origins and evolution of the modern world and to encourage a basic understanding of historical perspective and context. It also seeks to promote the skills essential to historical inquiry, including the capacity to define historical questions, analyze primary documents carefully, evaluate alternative interpretations critically, develop original arguments, and write essays clearly and effectively.


Required Readings

1. Thomas Greer and Gavin Lewis, A Brief History of the Western World, 8th edition, vol. 2
2. Robert Strayer, et al, The Making of the Modern World (on reserve in the Duggan Library)
3. Electronic Texts from the Internet


Grades

Final grades will be based on an evaluation of the following.

1. Four exams, three covering roughly one-third of the course (15% each) and one comprehensive (10%)
2. Two papers (15% and 20%)
3. Class participation (10%)


Schedule


Jan. 13
Analyzing Primary Texts
Vergerius

Jan. 14
The Renaissance
Greer and Lewis, 320-321, 371-380; Pico

Jan. 16
Renaissance Political Theory
Machiavelli

Jan. 19
The Reformation
Greer and Lewis, 405-424, 430-435

Jan. 20
Analyzing Primary Texts
Calvin

Jan. 21
Absolutism
Greer and Lewis, 451-463; Hobbes 1

Jan. 23
The English Revolution and Political Theory
Hobbes 2


Jan. 26
The English Revolution and Political Theory
Greer and Lewis, 498-503; Locke 1

Jan. 27
Writing Papers

Jan. 28
The English Revolution and Political Theory
Locke 2

Jan. 30
No class


Feb. 2
The Emergence of Capitalism
Greer and Lewis, 329-339; Mun

Feb. 3
Writing Papers

Feb. 4
Early Modern Imperialism
Greer and Lewis, 354-370; Equiano

Feb. 6
The Scientific Revolution
Greer and Lewis, 463-468; Galileo
First Paper


Feb. 9
The Scientific Revolution
Greer and Lewis, 468-472; Newton

Feb. 10
No Class

Feb. 11
The Enlightenment
Greer and Lewis, 448-451, 472-475; Hume; Voltaire

Feb. 13
The Enlightenment
Greer and Lewis, 475-479; Montesquieu; Smith

Feb. 16
The North American Colonies
Greer and Lewis, 504-505; Strayer, 138-142; Winthrop; Franklin

Feb. 17
No Class

Feb. 18
First Exam

Feb. 20
The American Revolution
Greer and Lewis, 505-509; Strayer, 142-143; Declaration; Federalist Papers


Feb. 23
The French Revolution
Greer and Lewis, 494-498, 510-515; Declaration

Feb. 24
No Class

Feb. 25
The French Revolution
Greer and Lewis, 515-521; Robespierre

Feb. 27
Conservatism, Liberalism, and Nationalism
Greer and Lewis, 521-526, 539-550; Metternich; Mazzini; Bismarck


Mar. 8
The United States
Strayer, 144-147; South Carolina

Mar. 9
No Class

Mar. 10
The United States
Lincoln; Lincoln

Mar. 12
Industrialization
Greer and Lewis, 551-567; Sadler Report


Mar. 15
Marxism
Greer and Lewis, 567-573; Marx and Engels 1

Mar. 16
Studying for Exams

Mar. 17
Marxism
Marx and Engels 2

Mar. 19
Second Exam

Mature Industrial Society and Ideologies
Greer and Lewis, 573-576; Bernstein; Webb; Bismarck


Mar. 22
Mature Industrial Society and Ideologies
Green; Spencer; Hearing

Mar. 23
No Class

Mar. 24
The United States in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries
Strayer, 147-149; Carnegie; Populist; Washington; Du Bois

Mar. 26
Social Darwinism and the New Imperialism
Greer and Lewis, 580-584, 601-611; Strayer, 149-150; Lin Cixu; Naoroji; Kipling


Mar. 29
World War I
Greer and Lewis, 611-624; WWI Poetry

Mar. 30
No Class

Mar. 31
The Russian Revolution and Communism
Greer and Lewis, 624-634; Lenin

Apr. 2
The Russian Revolution and Communism
Stalin; Famine


Apr. 5
Fascism
Greer and Lewis, 634-642; Mussolini

Apr. 6
No Class

Apr. 7
The West and World War II
Greer and Lewis, 642-645; 652-658; Strayer, 150-152; Roosevelt; Himmler

Apr. 9
Imperialism, the Cold War, and Nationalist Revolutions
Greer and Lewis, 646-652, 658-682; Strayer, 152-154; Nehru


Apr. 12
Post-War Society
Greer and Lewis, 682-86; Strayer, 154-156; Martin Luther King Jr.; The Black Panther Party Platform

Apr. 13
Studying for Exams

Apr. 14
Post-War Society
Greer and Lewis, 731-739; The Port Huron Statement; NOW

Apr. 16
The Late 20th Century
Greer and Lewis, 691-710; Strayer, 156-158; Reagan; Blair
Second Paper

Final Exam Week
Third Exam
Comprehensive Exam





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