Western Civilization Syllabus
Anna Andes (AA)
Theatre
Simons 211B
953-5834
andesa@cofc.edu
TR 10:00am-12:00pm*
Christian Coseru (CC)
Philosophy
4 Glebe St. #202
953-1935
coseruc@cofc.edu
website
TR 3:00-4:00pm*
Jason Coy (JC)
History
Maybank 215
953-8273
coyj@cofc.edu
website
MW 1:00-1:50pm*
3:15-4:00pm
F 12:00-1:00pm
Christian Davis (CD)
History
Maybank 329
953-3915
daviscs@cofc.edu
MW 1:00-2:15pm*
TR 9:00-10:00am
Bryan Ganaway (BG)
History
Maybank 330
953-3916
ganawayb@cofc.edu
TR 1:00pm-3:00pm*
John Newell (JN)
History
Honors Center
953-7154
newellj@cofc.edu
website
M 1:30pm-3:30pm
T 9:30am-11:30am*
Alison Smith (AS)
French
JC Long 419
953-4964
smitha@cofc.edu
website
MW 2:00pm-3:00pm*
T 12:15pm-1:15PM
Myra Seaman (MS)
English
22A Glebe St., # 102
953-5760
seaman@cofc.edu
website
M 2:00-3:00pm*
W 2:00pm-4:00pm
*Other office times available by appointment.
Required Texts
1. Lynn Hunt, et al., The Making of the West, A Concise History, Vol. 1,
(2nd Ed.) wrapped with Lualdi, Sources of the Making of the
West
2.
Sarah Lawall, et al., Norton Anthology of Western Literature, Vol. 1 (8th Ed.)
3. Forrest Baird and Walter Kaufmann, Philosophic Classics, Ancient Philosophy, Vol. I, (5th Ed.)
4. The Letters of Abelard and Heloise (2nd Ed.)
5. Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, Signet Classic
6. Occasional Handouts and Readings on the Web
By examining some of the most influential literary, philosophical,
scientific, and religious texts, together with art and music, from the
Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance, and Reformation periods, we will
explore the ways that people lived during each of these historical
epochs, and the ways they thought about themselves and about
their relations with one another, the gods, the state, and the
physical world. The Hunt text will provide us with a general
background for each period we cover, but most of the other texts
consist of primary sources translated into modern English. The
main focus of class discussions will be on the primary source
readings, as these provide the most direct windows into the periods
we will be studying, as well as an opportunity to develop your own
skills of critical analysis, synthesis, and communication. Your active
(and regular) participation in class discussions is expected.
Students are responsible for all material presented in class,
including changes in dates of examinations and papers. Students
are expected to abide by the College's honor code, and any failure
to do so may result in expulsion from the course with a failing
grade.
Lectures and Discussion Sections
During the first class hour each
morning, when the entire class convenes together, material will
typically be presented in a lecture format, with opportunities for
questions and brief discussion throughout. The second hour each
day, during which only 20 students will meet together at a time, will
be conducted as a discussion -- i.e. students are expected to help
sustain the exploration of the assigned material through their own
contributions in a more informal setting. Lecture and discussion
sections will have distinct reading assignments, usually but not
necessarily related.
Films
Over the course of the semester, approximately three films
will be shown outside of class. These are optional but
recommended and will enable you to answer extra-credit questions
on the exams. Times and places of showing will be announced early
in the semester. When possible, the videos will also be made
available for viewing in the Honors Center for a few days
afterwards.
Student Group Presentations
Early in the semester you will be
assigned (based on your own choices) to one of the Greek Plays in
the Norton text. As a member of a group of about ten students, you
will read this text and devise a 15-20 minute group presentation.
The texts will be paired, so that two groups will give presentations
during the same class.
Quizzes
There will be roughly a dozen unannounced short quizzes
interspersed throughout the course, devoted to the material
assigned for the lecture for that day. There will be no make-up
quizzes under any circumstances. We will, however, drop the two
lowest quiz grades (or missed quizzes) in computing a semester
quiz average.
Response Papers
You will be required to write four response papers
throughout the semester. One must be handed in during each third
of the semester (marked by the exams). These are short
(approximately one page, typed and double spaced) papers on one
of the readings for a particular day and due at 9am, before the start
of the day's lecture. The goal of the response paper is to identify a
pertinent issue that is raised by the reading or to ask questions
about the reading that you think are worthy of further discussion.
Papers will be graded on an A, B, NG scale. If you receive an NG, you
must submit another paper. Response papers given a passing grade
cannot be rewritten.
Examinations
There will be two (2) two-hour exams during the
semester, plus a final exam. Although the individual exams will not
be cumulative, some comparative questions will be included. All
exams will be primarily essay questions, with matching, definition,
or multiple choice questions comprising no more than a fourth of
the total grade. A short handout on potential exam topics will be
distributed a week in advance of each exam.
Paper
There will be a required analytical essay of approximately 8
pages (double-spaced and typed). This will be mainly an analysis of
primary sources, drawing either on assigned readings, additional
readings, or a combination of both. Suggested topics will be
distributed during the semester. You are encouraged to suggest
your own paper topics, but you should consult with one of the
instructors about these before writing the paper. Papers are due at
the beginning of discussion session on November 9.
Class Attendance and Participation
Active participation is expected.
Regular and punctual attendance is required. Irregular attendance
will detract from your class participation grade. A class roster may
be used for keeping attendance records.
WebCT
The syllabus, all of the lecture outlines, PowerPoint presentations, and handouts are available on the main WebCT site for HONS 120. Students will be provided with PDF files for many of the on-line readings. This is simply designed to ensure that you have a centralized resource for course material.
Grading
Your course grade will be computed as follows:
Quizzes 10%
Exam 1 15%
Exam 2 15%
Group Presentation 10%
Paper 20%
Class Participation (Including Response Papers) 15%
Final
Exam (Exam 3) 15%
Abbreviations:
L: Lecture section
D: Discussion section
A&H: The Letters of Abelard and Heloise
HIST: Hunt, Making of the West
LIT: Lawall, Norton Anthology of Western Literature
Marlowe: Doctor Faustus
PC: Philosophic Classics, Ancient Philosohpy
Src: Sources of the Making of the West
WEB: Internet site
8/27 Wednesday
1L: Introduction-Physical Basis of Civilization: Ancient Near East (JN)
HIST: xxxiv-xxxvi
D: Meaning of Civilization
8/29 Friday
2L: Cosmopolitan Bronze Age (BG)
HIST:2-32
D: Genesis & Gilgamesh
LIT: 15-26 and 34-53
Handout
9/1 Monday
3L: Homeric Epic (MS)
HIST: 33-49
D: Odyssey
LIT: 100-106, 206-239 & 287-301
9/3 Wednesday
4L: Archaic Greece and the Persian Wars (JC)
HIST: 50-65
D: Odyssey
LIT: 301-365
9/5 Friday
5L: Classical Greek Theatre (AA)
HIST: 65-83
D: Odyssey & Sappho
LIT: 428-501
9/8 Monday
6L: Socrates & the Sophists: Living the Good Life (CC)
HIST: 73-78
PC: 43-48
D: Trial of Socrates (Apology & Crito)
PC: 65-69 and 82-107
9/10 Wednesday
7L: Thucydides and Political Realism (AS)
HIST: 83-89
D: Classical Greek Politics, Thought, and Love
PC:49-64 and 175-193
9/12 Friday
8L: Plato & Aristotle: Ideas, Virtue, and Erotics (CC)
HIST: 90-106
D: Philosophical Ideas of Plato & Aristotle
PC: 193-210, 278-283 and 369-377
9/15 Monday
9L&D: Student Presentation of Greek Plays
9/17 Wednesday
10L&D: Student Presentations of Greek Plays
9/19 Friday
11L: Hellenisitc Life, Thought, Religion (CD)
HIST: 106-127
D: Stoics & Epicureans
PC: 454-459, 472-781 and 510-522
9/22 Monday
12L: Roman Republic (BG)
HIST: 128-169
D: Aeneid
LIT: 926-974
9/24 Wednesday
13L: Roman Ideology on Parade (AA)
HIST: 170-195
D: Aeneid
LIT: 974-1023
Src: 5.1
9/26 Friday
14L&D: EXAM ONE (Review, Review, Review)
9/29 Monday
15L: Origins of Christianity (CD)
HIST: 195-235
D: Plotinus and Gregory
PC:540-547
Src: 7.4
WEB: Gregory_Biblical_Exegesis
10/1 Wednesday
16L: Fall of the Roman Empire or Birth of Medieval Europe? (JN)
HIST: 235-257
D: Tacitus
WEB: Tacitus - Germania, Pt. 1
10/3 Friday
17L: Sex & the City (CD)
D: Augustine Creates Shameful Sex & Sin
LIT: 1113-1130
WEB: WEBCT: Boethius, Augustine
10/6 Monday
18L: Muhammed and the Origins of Islam (BG)
HIST: 258-275 and 303-309
D: Koran
LIT: 1148-1173
10/8 Wednesday
19L: Beowulf: History or Nostalgia? (MS)
HIST: 275-296
D: Beowulf
LIT: 1174-1247
10/10 Friday
20L: Hrotsvit and Medieval Drama (AA)
HIST: 309-337
D: Hrotsvit
WEB: WEBCT
10/11-10/14 FALL BREAK
10/15 Wednesday
21L: Fuedalism and the Crusades (JC)
HIST: 338-369
D: Song of Roland
LIT: 1247-1260 & 1270-1305
10/17 Friday
22L: Monastic & Cathedral Schools (JN)
HIST: 369-383
D: Abelard & Heloise
A&H: 3-43 and 211-223
10/20 Monday
23L: The Feminine Dark Ages (MS)
LIT: 1843-1868
D: Abelard & Heloise
A&H: 47-89
10/22 Wednesday
24L: Courtly Culture of Song & Romance (AS)
HIST: 367-369
D: Marie de France and Chretien's Perceval
LIT: 1316-1355
10/24 Friday
25L: Meanwhile Back in the East: Byzantium (BG)
HIST: 245-267 and 296-303
D: Percival, the Fisher King, and Anna Comnena
LIT: 1355-1374
Anna Comnena: The Alexiad Book 11, 333-368
WEB: WebCT
10/27 Monday
26L: Aquinas & Maimonides: Faith, Reason, Perplexity (CC)
HIST: 409-413
D: Aquinas' Proof for the existence of God
WEB: Thomas Aquinas and Guide for the Perplexed
10/29 Wednesday
27L: First European Revolution (JN)
HIST: 384-411
D: Dante
LIT: 1456-1478
10/31 Friday
28L: Courtly Love, Paolo, and Francesca (MS & AS)
LIT: 1478-1481
D: Dante
LIT: 1481-1506
11/3 Monday
29L: Romanesque to Gothic Art and Architecture (JN)
HIST: 373-377 and 413-423
D: Dante
LIT: 1546-1576
11/5
30L&D: Wednesday - EXAM TWO (Review, Review, Review)
11/7 Friday
31L: Black Death and the Crises of the 14th Century (JC)
HIST: 424-448
Src: 11.1
D: Boccaccio and Maguerite de Navarre
LIT: 1598-1630 and 2101-2116
11/10 Monday
32L: Renaissance Humanism (CC)
HIST: 448-463
D: Boccaccio & Petrarch
LIT: 1631-1641, 1894-1902
WEB: Petrarch on Boccacio and Ficino
11/12 Wednesday
33L: Chaucer: Writing from the Edge of History (MS)
LIT 1696-1718
D: Chaucer (PAPER DUE)
LIT: 1718-1732
11/14 Friday
34L: Was there a Renaissance for Women? (AS & AA)
D: Chaucer
LIT: 1732-1769
11/17 Monday
35L: Godfathers of the Renaissance: Art, Philosophy, and Politics at the Medici Court (CC)
D: Machiavelli & Pico (Two Sides of the Renaissance)
LIT: 1945-1961
Src: 11.3
11/19 Wednesday
36L: New Perspective in Renaissance Art (BG)
D: Erasmus & Northern Humanism
LIT: 1919-1945
11/21 Friday
37L: Printing, Propaganda, & Protestants (JC)
HIST: 472-479
D: Everyman & Luther on Salvation
LIT: 1821-1843
WEB: Martin Luther: On the Bondage of the Will
11/24 Monday
38L: Spread of the Reformation (AS)
HIST: 479-497
D: (Panel discussion presenting views of Calvinists, Anglicans,
Unitarians, Catholics, Anabaptists) Struggles over Belief
Src: 12.1-3
WEB: Calvin and Loyola
11/26-11/30 - THANKSGIVING BREAK
12/1 Monday
39L: Marlowe and Elizabethan Theatre (AA)
Doctor Faustus: 1-22
D: Marlowe
Marlowe: 40-96
12/3 Wednesday
40L: Origins of the Atlantic World & Slave Trade (CD)
HIST: 463-471 & 567-577
D: Marlowe
Marlowe: 97-133
12/5 Friday
41L: Witch Hunts in Early Modern Europe (JC)
HIST: 498-521
D: Galileo, the Church, and the Scientific Revolution
Src: 12.5 & 6
12/8 Monday
42L: Montaigne and a Return to Skepticism (AS)
D: Montaigne and Skepticism
LIT: 2178-2199
***FINAL EXAMINATION: Wednesday, December 10, 8:00 a.m.**