HI 102 The Emergence of Modern Europe: Renaissance to the Present Spring 2016 MWF, 1:00-2:00

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HI 102 The Emergence of Modern Europe: Renaissance to the Present Spring 2016 MWF, 1:00-2:00 Prof. Simon Rabinovitch srabinov@bu.edu http://blogs.bu.edu/srabinov @sjrabinov Office hours: Mondays, 2:00-3:30; Thursdays, 12:30-2:00; other times by appointment 226 Bay State Road, Room 209, tel. 353-9915 Teaching Fellow: Ms. Alexis Buckley Ms. Buckley s office hours: Mondays, 2:00-4:00; Wednesdays, 11:00-12:00 226 Bay State Road, Room 401 Course Outline The goal of this introductory survey course is to give students a strong understanding of the broader trends of modern European history and to prepare them for further study in European history, and history in general. As such, we will focus on a few important themes of European history such as the growth of the modern state and economy and also develop some crucial skills for historical research and analysis. The class is also oriented toward understanding various strains of European thought and culture. In each class we will discuss one chapter from the textbook as well as some texts, art, music, or film. Course Requirements Your final grade will be determined as follows: Short primary source assignment, 10%. Students will be given a selection of primary sources and accompanying questions and will be required to write a short (2-page) paper about one. Due February 19. Midterm examination, 25%. To be held in class, March 2. Take-home examination, 30%. Distributed March 30, due April 4. Final examination, 35%. The final exam will be a two-hour open-book exam. For the exam, students will answer two essay questions pertaining to the major themes of the course. Students may bring relevant books and notes to the exam. The examination has been scheduled by the registrar for May 7, 12:30-2:30. No credit will be given for any work submitted late without my prior approval or for examinations missed. 1

Class discussion and preparation. Attendance and informed participation in class discussion is required. Although a grade will not be allocated for participation, in the case of final grades which are borderline, good participation may boost a student s grade. Prolonged absence is grounds for failure. All assignments should be completed independently and plagiarism from any source is unacceptable. Cases of suspected academic misconduct will be referred to the Dean s Office. If they have not already, students should familiarize themselves with Boston University s Academic Conduct Code: http://www.bu.edu/academics/policies/academic-conduct-code/ Texts The following textbook is available for purchase at the BU Barnes and Noble: Clifford R. Backman, Cultures of the West: A History, vol 2, 2 nd ed. (Oxford, 2016). All required texts not for purchase, assignments, handouts from class, and any essential course documents will be available on blackboard. Course Schedule and Assignments January 20 Introduction: What is Europe, and where is it? January 22 The Renaissance (Backman, 12) January 25 The Reformations I (Backman, 12) January 27 The Reformations II (Backman, 12) January 29 Scientific Revolutions (Backman, 13) February 1 The Atlantic World (Backman, 13) February 3 Wars of Religion (Backman, 14) Guest lecture by Prof. Phillip Haberkern February 5 Age of Absolutism (Backman, 15) 2

February 8 English Revolutions (Backman, 15) February 10 The Dutch Republic (Backman, 15) February 12 The Enlightenment I (Backman, 16) February 16 (substitute Monday) The Enlightenment II (Backman, 16) February 17 Goodbye Poland (Palmer, Colton, and Kramer, A History of the Modern World, chapter 5, on blackboard) February 19 primary source assignment due The French Revolution (Backman, 17) February 22 Interpreting the French Revolution (Backman, 17) February 24 Napoleonic Europe (Backman, 17) February 26 Industrialization and Its Discontents (Backman, 18) February 29 Modern Political Ideologies (Backman, 19) March 2 Midterm March 4 Nationalism and the Revolutions of 1848 (Backman, 20) March 14 National Unification (Backman, 20) March 16 Women and Gender in the 19 th Century (Backman, 21) March 18 Religion and Secularization (Backman, 22) 3

March 21 European Imperialism (Backman, 23) March 23 From Nihilism to Modernism (Backman, chapter 23 from 1 st ed. on blackboard) March 25 Modern Antisemitism (Efron et. al., The Jews: A History, pages 294-314 on blackboard) March 28 The Great War (Backman, 24) March 30 take-home midterm distributed Russian Revolutions (Backman, 25) April 1 Liberalism v. Fascism (Backman, 25) April 4 take-home midterm due Rise of the Soviet Union (Backman, 25) April 6 World War II (Backman, 26) Guest lecture by Prof. Alexis Peri April 8 Interpreting the Holocaust (Backman, 26) April 11 Post-war to Cold War (Backman, 27) April 13 Decolonization (Backman, 27) April 15 Something to Believe In (Backman, 28) April 20 Revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe (Backman, 29) April 22 The End of the Soviet Union (Backman, 29) April 25 The BalkanWars (Backman, 29) 4

April 27 The End of History? 25 years later (Francis Fukuyama, The End of History? on blackboard) April 29 Last day of class/exam review 5