HISTORY 348 THE WORLD AT WAR, FALL 2008

Similar documents
HISTORY 348 THE WORLD AT WAR, SPRING 2015

History 348 Fall 2012

OFFICE HOURS: Tuesday & Thursday: 10:00-11:00 Tuesday: 1:45-2:30 And by appointment (see me after class to make an appointment)

REQUIRED READINGS: To be purchased: Parker, R.A.C. The Second World War: A Short History (Oxford University Press, 2001)

The World in the Twentieth Century Fall 2018 History 217 Section 03

HIS567 The Enlightenment and the French Revolution Fall 2011

HIS567 The Enlightenment and the French Revolution Spring 2016

Be Careful What You Wish For:

Introduction to Comparative Government

Two 1 20 sessions per week (Tuesdays & Thursdays, 2:20-3:35 p.m.)

Class Times: TTH 2:00-3:30 Meeting Place: PAR 203

History of the Second World War EUH4280 Course Syllabus University of Florida: Fall, 2011 Flint 119, T/R

Martin Beisswenger International Relations in the Twentieth Century

American National Government Spring 2008 PLS

Introduction to Comparative Politics

Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Office: Garrison Office Hours: WF 9-10:00, and by appointment Telephone:

Course Description: History 428 Requirements:

The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions Since the Seventeenth Century History 102 Spring T, Th, 1:00pm-2:15pm Professor Suzanne Kaufman

HISTORY : WESTERN CIVILIZATION II

Syllabus. History of Economic Doctrines. Economics Fall Semester Hours Class: MW 3:00-4:30. Instructor: John Watkins

AMERICAN NATIONAL GOVERNMENT Bluefield State College POSC 200 FALL 2014 CRN: Section: 003 WEBBD

Fall 2014 TR 11:00-12:15 2TH 100. TR 8:30-9:30, 12:30-1:30 and by appnt. Ph

COURSE INFORMATION SHEET

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY CANTON, NEW YORK COURSE OUTLINE HIST 320 -TWENTIETH-CENTURY

University of Western Ontario Department of History Fall 2012

SYLLABUS AMERICAN GOVERNMENT I [POSC 1113]

RPOS 334 American Political Parties and Groups. Location: SS 256

Instructor: Kaarin Michaelsen. "Modern Europe, "

Fall 2018 HIS Course Syllabus. The Great War

Introduction to Politics: Exploring the Democratic Experience. York University AP/POLS/PPAS B Fall/Winter

TOPICS IN AMERICAN POLITICS: WOMEN IN POLITICS

HUMANITIES 2590 The Making of the Modern World: Renaissance to the Present

The University of Texas at Austin Globalization and the Nation State Government 360N (38750) Fall 2017 Course Syllabus

Spring 2011 Unique # GOV 312P Constitutional Principles: Core Texts America s Founding Principles

Introduction to Comparative Politics Political Science 2301

CIEE Global Institute Berlin

Course Description. Course Objectives. Required Reading. Grades

QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY Department of Political Studies POLS 350 History of Political Thought 1990/91 Fall/Winter

HISTORY SYLLABUS (FALL 2005) HISTORY OF MODERN GERMANY Instructor Michael Hayse

History of Modern Germany,

University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of History Semester I, History 120: Europe and the Modern World,

CIEE Global Institute Paris

History of Modern France History 338 (Writing Intensive Section) Fall 2011

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS) Modern Ideologies

Pol Sci 3325 Topics in Politics: Constitutional Politics in the United States

Introduction to American Government and Politics

History , Fall 2018 Europe : From Renaissance to Revolution

History : Western Civilization II Fall 2013, 4:00-4:50 pm, Hellems 201 Dr. Nancy Vavra

Modern Europe, : Writing Intensive Section

American Politics Political Science 101 (Fall 2009) (Course # 35366) Class Meeting: MWF 2:30PM - 3:20PM Mahar, Room 108

The World at War, HIS 349 Fall 2016, MWF 11:00-11:50, MHRA Course Description. Student Learning Objectives

SYLLABUS European History of the 20 th Century Prof. Dr Almudena González del Valle

Introduction to Political Science

SYLLABUS Angelo State University Political Science 2306 Schedule: M,W,F Instructor Jared Graves or

Comparative Political Systems (GOVT_ 040) July 6 th -Aug. 7 th, 2015

Rifkin, Benjamin, Olga Kagan and Anna Yatsenko. Дела давно минувших дней. Yale University Press, 2007 (главы 12 36)

LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY. Sociology 2301: Sociology of Law. September April 2011

South Portland, Maine Title: World History Since 1500 Catalog Number: HIST 125

HISTORY United States since 1877 Spring 2019 TTH 3:00-4:15 PM UNIV 201

EMPIRE and POWER: British Foreign Policy, 1782-present. Boston University. Department of International Relations CAS IR 514 / HI 533

Reinterpreting Empire, Colonizing Processes, and Cross Cultural Exchange in Modern World History

Orsi, Robert A. (1985). The Madonna of 115th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem, New Haven: Yale University Press.

CIEE Global Institute Rome

Democracy and Dictatorship in Europe Political Science Tufts University Spring Semester 2013

International Relations in the Twentieth Century Higher School of Economics (Moscow) School of History (Fall 2015) Instructor: Martin Beisswenger

Old and New Europe, 1914 to the Present

CIEE in Budapest, Hungary

SSWH16 The student will demonstrate an understanding of long-term causes of World War I and its global impact.

GEOG : POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY Spring Term 2011 Tuesdays, 5:35 to 8:15 p.m.

State University of New York at Albany College of Arts and Sciences Department of History

Fall 2016, Hellems 229, MWF 10-10:50 am

The Emergence of Modern America: The Gilded Age

H509: Fascism in Europe,

History 349: Contemporary France, 1880 to the Present Fall 1994 Lecturer: Mona L. Siegel

Election Laws and Voting Rights

PA 5801: Global Public Policy. Spring 2016 Wednesdays, 6-8:45 PM, HHH 35, West Bank. Instructor: Prof. James Ron (

Boston University Study Abroad London Britain and the European Question: The Confluence of History and Politics CAS IR 392/HI 243 (Elective B)

Politics 114: POLITICAL CHANGE IN WESTERN EUROPE. Chris Howell Fall 2008

Recommended Reading: Rifkin, Benjamin, Olga Kagan and Anna Yatsenko. Дела давно минувших дней. Yale University Press, 2007 (главы 12 36)

THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY: CLASS SCHEDULE

Phil 183 Topics in Continental Philosophy

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

History : European History Since 1600: Empire, Revolution and Global War: Spring 2017, 10:00-10:50 am, Humanities 125 Dr N Vavra

231 INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Fall 2008 Department of Political Science Muskingum College POLS MWF: 3:00 3:50 pm 15 Cambridge Hall

Political Science 6040 AMERICAN PUBLIC POLICY PROCESS Summer II, 2009

Government 312L: Issues and Policies in American Government (#39040) COMPARATIVE IMMIGRATION POLITICS JGB 2.324, MWF 1-2

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 74 United States Foreign Policy

History 269 Asian Americans in Historical Perspective Fall 2012

Campaigns, Elections, and American Democracy

HIST 104: Introduction to the Modern World. Summer 2008

HIS The World of the Twentieth Century ( )

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

AAAS 380L. DEMOCRACY IN EAST ASIA Binghamton University, Fall 2010

Syllabus HIST 1011: World History 1500-Present, Autumn 2014

POL 339-D100: Nationalism and Ethnic Conflict Selected Topics in Comparative Politics

Introduction to International Relations Political Science 120 Fall Semester 2017 MWF 1:00-1:50pm in Kauke 236

WESTERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

Krug Hall, Room 253. Office: 2 nd floor Buchanan Hall. Office Hours: Mon & Weds: 1:00 2:45 pm. 2 nd Floor Buchanan Hall. Course Description:

Introduction to American Government POLS 1101, Fall 2016 MW 1:25-2:15, Instr. Plaza S306

University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of History Semester II,

Transcription:

HISTORY 348 THE WORLD AT WAR, 1914-1918 FALL 2008 INSTRUCTOR: Paul Mazgaj OFFICE: 2121 Humanities Hall E-MAIL : pmmazgaj@uncg.edu OFFICE HOURS: Tuesdays and Thursdays: 12:15-1:00 By Appointment COURSE DESCRIPTION Few events in world history have had as profound an impact on political institutions, society, and culture as the Great War. This course will begin with an examination of prewar European society and an analysis of the stress zones--diplomatic, political, and cultural--that brought Europe to war in 1914. Next we will examine the course of the war, focusing not only on the battlefield but on the mobilization of the enormous human and material resources that were required to fight a total war. Attention will be paid to the impact of total war on society, an impact that included changed gender relations, rapid technological changes, an increased role for the state, and an intensification of ideological conflicts. Finally, we will attempt to evaluate the consequences of the war for Western societies. These consequences extended beyond the peace treaties-- which ratified the breakup of empires and reconfigured European power relations--to world historic events such as the Russian Revolution, the rise of Fascism, a misfired attempt to bring a new order to the Middle East, and, not least, a major sea change in Western intellectual and cultural attitudes. READING LIST Texts (to be purchased): Neiberg, Michael. Fighting the Great War (Harvard University Press, 2005) Remarque, Eric. All Quiet on the Western Front (originally published, 1929) Selections from the following books on Electronic Reserve (indicated ER on class schedule and can be downloaded through Blackboard): Blinkhorn, Martin. Fascism and the Right in Europe, 1919-1945 (Longman, 2000) Brittain, Vera. Testament of Youth (originally published, 1933) Eatwell, Roger. Fascism (Penguin, 1995) Eksteins, Modris. Rites of Spring (Houghton Mifflin, 1989) Graves, Robert. Good-Bye to All That (originally published, 1929) Habeck, Mary. Technology in the First World War: The View from Below in Jay Winter et al. The Great War and the Twentieth Century (Yale University Press, 2000) Hynes, Samuel. A War Imagined: The First World War and English Culture (Antheneum, 1991) Keylor, William, Twentieth Century World: An International History (Oxford University Press, Fourth Edition, 2001)

Laurence Lafore, The Long Fuse (Lippicott, 1965) Lyons, Michael. World War I: A Short History (Prentice Hall, 2000) MacMillan, Margaret Paris 1919 (Random House, 2001) Paxton, Robert. Europe in the Twentieth Century (Thomson-Wadsworth, Fourth Edition, 2005) Schmitt, Bernadotte and Harold Vedeler. The World in the Crucible, 1914-1919 (Harper & Row, 1984) Stevenson, David. Cataclysm: The First World War as Political Tragedy (Basic Books, 2004) Tzara, Tristan. Dada in Eugen Weber, Movements, Currents, Trends: Aspects of Thought in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Heath, 1992) Valéry, Paul. The Intellectual Crisis in Eugen Weber, Movements, Currents, Trends: Aspects of Thought in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Heath, 1992) Wilkinson, James and Hughes, H. Stuart, Contemporary Europe (10 th ed., Pearson, 2004) Williams, Oscar. Little Treasury of Modern Poetry (Scribner s, 1952) COURSE REQUIREMENTS Attendance is required, not optional. Only officially certified absences will be accepted. All unexcused absences will affect your grade; beyond three, your grade will be lowered by one letter. Also, as a courtesy to both the instructor and your fellow students, please be on time and turn off all cell phones before class starts. Examinations. There will be two examinations: a mid-term and a final (see class schedule below for dates). Both exams will have the same format: one part short essay, one part long essay. Informal Writing Exercises. Periodically throughout the semester there will be unannounced writing exercises at the beginning of class. They will be short (maximum one page) commentaries on a particular aspect of the day s reading assignment. These writing exercises are designed to serve three purposes: first, to give you regular practice in written expression; second, to get you mentally pump-primed for the class that will follow; finally, and not least, to keep you on track with your reading. Given the fact that these exercises will be unannounced, you need to have completed the day's reading assignment before every class. These short, informal writing exercises will not be "graded" in the ordinary sense. Instead, they will receive one of the following marks: a check (indicating satisfactory performance); a check plus (indicating a performance which is especially thoughtful, complete, or well-conceived); a check minus (indicating unsatisfactory performance). A check minus cannot be redone. It will signal to me that either you have not done the reading or you have not done it carefully enough. Better than average performance on these informal writing exercises will be counted positively in your "discussion grade." More than a few check minuses will begin to affect your grade; a number of check minuses will, like absences, have serious consequences for your grade. If you are not in class on a particular day (or if you miss the exercise by

3 coming late), you will receive a check minus. Class Discussion. Due in large part to the size of the class, most of the course will be in a lecture format. However, I hope we can engage in at least some discussion. From time to time, I ll pose questions and, in turn, I would encourage you to ask questions or offer comments on the material. Also, toward the end of the semester (when we look at the impact of the war), there will be more opportunity for extended discussion. Grades. Your final grade will be composed of the following: mid-term exam: 40% final exam: 40% writing exercises and class discussion: 20% Grading Scale. The undergraduate grading scale cut-offs are as follows: A+ 97 C 73 A 93 C- 70 A- 90 D+ 67 B+ 87 D 63 B 83 D- 60 B- 80 F 59 C+ 77 Plagiarism and the Academic Honor Code. Plagiarism is a serious academic crime that occurs when someone uses the words or ideas of someone else without giving that person credit in a formal citation. Punishment for violations are outlined in the Academic Integrity Policy. For an explanation see the UNCG website under Academic Integrity Policy. CLASS SCHEDULE AND READING ASSIGNMENTS ER=reading on electronic reserve; can be downloaded from Blackboard (all other readings from Neiberg text or All Quiet on the Western Front to be purchased) Week 1 Aug. 26: Introduction Aug. 28: Europe in 1914: Society and Politics Readings: Wilkinson and Hughes, Europe in 1914" ER Week 2 Sept. 2: Long-Term Origins of World War I: Great Power Rivalries Readings: Lafore, The Austrian Anomaly ER Sept. 4: Short-Term Causes of World War I: Crisis in the Balkans Readings: Paxton, The Coming of the War ER

4 Week 3 Sept. 9: From War of Movement to Stalemate Readings: Neiberg, chap. 1 and Brittain, Testament of Youth ER Sept. 11: The Early War in the East Readings: Neiberg, chap. 2 and chap. 4, pp. 111-17 (section on Gorlice- Tarnów) Week 4 Sept. 16: The Early War in the West Readings: Neiberg, chap. 3 Sept. 18: The Experience of Battle Readings: Eksteins, Rites of War and Reason in Madness ER Week 5 Sept. 23: The War Widens: The Ottoman Front Readings: Neiberg, chap. 4, pp. 95-111; 117-22 Sept. 25: The Great Bloodlettings: Verdun and the Somme Readings: Neiberg, chaps. 6 and 7 Week 6 Sept. 30: Mobilization for Total War Readings: Lyons, Total War and the Home Fronts ER Oct. 2: A War of Machines Readings: Habek, Technology in the First World War ER Week 7 Oct. 7: The War Widens Again: America Joins the Allies Readings: Schmitt and Vedeler, Crisis at Sea and American Involvement ER Oct. 9: MID-TERM EXAMINATION (bring blue book) Week 8 Oct. 14: The Crises of 1917: The Nivelle Offensive and the French Army Mutinies Readings: Neiberg, chap. 9, pp. 229-49 Oct. 16: The Crises of 1917: Passchendaele and Caporetto Readings: Neiberg, chap. 9, pp. 250-53 and chap. 10 Week 9 Oct. 21: FALL BREAK Oct. 23: The Crises of 1917: The Collapse of Russia Readings: Neiberg, chap. 8 Week 10

5 Oct. 28: Germany s Great Gamble: The Ludendorff Offensives of 1918 Readings: Neiberg, chaps. 11-12 Oct. 30: The Allies Counteroffensives and the Collapse of the Central Powers Readings: Neiberg, chap. 13 and Conclusion Week 11 Nov. 4: The Peace of Paris I Readings: Keylor, The Peace of Paris and the New International Order ER Nov. 6: The Peace of Paris II Readings: MacMillan, The Middle East Settlement ER Week 12 Nov. 11: The Specter of Revolution Readings: Paxton, Revolution, 1917-21" ER Nov. 13: The Counterrevolutionary Contagion Readings: Blinkhorn, Rise of Fascism ER Week 13 Nov. 18: The Great War in Fiction Readings: Remarque, All Quiet on the Western Front (complete) Nov. 20: The Great War and European Culture: An Old Bitch Gone in the Teeth Readings: Williams, War Poetry ER; Tzara, Dada ER; Valéry, The Intellectual Crisis ER Week 14 Nov. 25: The Great War in Memory and Myth Readings: Hynes, The War Becomes Myth ER Nov. 27: THANKSGIVING Week 15 Dec. 2: Evaluations and Loose Ends Dec. 4: FINAL EXAMINATION (bring blue book)