HIS 340: The United States Since World War II Spring 2011

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HIS 340: The United States Since World War II Spring 2011 Instructor: Sarah Gates Office: MHRA 2112 Office Hours: M/W 4:00-5:00 or by appointment Email: sjgates@uncg.edu Class Schedule: M/W 5:00-6:15PM Classroom: MHRA 2211 COURSE DESCRIPTION: This course offers a more in-depth look at the political, economic, social and cultural history of the United States since World War II. We will focus on three themes, the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement, and American politics. For each theme, we will consider several perspectives. We will examine both the internal and international effects of the Cold War, the legal history and the social history of the Civil Rights Movement, and the vicissitudes of liberalism and conservativism in American political culture. The weekly readings will give the historical background of a given theme. You will then analyze the assigned primary sources, participate in six in-class debates and write four analytic essays. In the final take-home essay exam, you will consider how these themes have intersected and interacted overtime. COURSE OBJECTIVES: You will gain in-depth knowledge of some of the major developments in American history since 1945. You will develop your ability to analyze and interpret historical documents. You will develop your ability to formulate your own historical arguments using historical documents. You will develop your written and verbal skills. By the end of the semester, you will be better able to articulate and support an argument in writing and on your feet. You will leave this course with the skills and curiosity to pursue your study of the past and better equipped to think about the present. 1

COURSE POLICIES: Class Preparation & Participation: The format of the class will be a lecture, documents analysis and class debate for each text. You are required to bring the current reading to class so that you can refer to it in class. Class preparation and participation is graded. You will be expected to give your analysis of primary source documents and then use this evidence to support your interpretations during class discussions and debates. Written Work: You will write four (4) 3-4 page papers that will draw from the historical documents assigned. The purpose of these papers is to develop your ability to develop a thesis and argument and to support that argument using primary source evidence. Two papers must be completed before Spring Break. Quizzes: There will be seven (7) quizzes, one for each reading. There will be no make-up quizzes. Your lowest quiz score will be dropped at the end of the semester. Exams: There is no mid-term. The final exam will be a 4-5 page take-home essay drawing from two or more themes in the course. Attendance: Students are expected to attend every class and to arrive on time. If you miss more than three classes your final grade will drop by a third of a grade for every additional class missed. Three late arrivals or early departures are equivalent to one missed class. Academic Integrity Policy: All work submitted in your name must be your original work with proper credit given to all sources. Each student should be familiar with the Academic Integrity Policy and the penalties for plagiarism. Refer to the UNCG website for more details: http://studentconduct.uncg.edu. Grading Formula: 20% Class Participation 20% Quizzes 40% Written Assignments 20% Final Exam Required Reading (available at UNCG s Bookstore): May, American Cold War Strategy, Interpreting NSC-68 Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism Martin, Brown v. Board of Education Pitney, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and the Civil Rights Struggle of the 1950s and 1960s Logevall, The Origins of the Vietnam War Story, Laurie, The Rise of Conservativism in America, 1945-2000 Schulman, Lyndon B. Johnson and American Liberalism 2

Class Schedule Week 1 Mon, Jan 10 Introduction Wed, Jan 12 Legacies of WWII Reading: May, American Cold War Strategy, Interpreting NSC-68, 1-45 Week 2 Mon, Jan 17 Cold War Lecture Reading: May, American Cold War Strategy, Interpreting NSC-68, 46-82 Quiz #1 Wed, Jan 19: Cold War Documents Analysis Reading: May, American Cold War Strategy, Interpreting NSC-68, 83-129 Due: Outline #1. Bring two copies to class. Week 3 Mon, Jan 24: Cold War Debate Reading: May, American Cold War Strategy, Interpreting NSC-68, 130-201 Q: How did U.S. Cold War policy change from 1945-1950? Why? Due: Assignment #1. Bring two copies to class. Wed, Jan 26 McCarthyism Lecture Reading: Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism, 1-47 Week 4 Mon, Jan 31 McCarthyism Lecture Reading: Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism, 48-108 Film: Army-McCarthy Hearings Quiz #2 Wed, Feb 2 McCarthyism Documents Analysis, 109-200 Reading: Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism, 109-200 Due: Outline #2 Week 5 Mon, Feb 7 McCarthyism Debate Reading: Schrecker, The Age of McCarthyism, 201-274 Q: Is the protection of national security and civil liberties mutually exclusive? Due: Assignment #2. Upload through SafeAssign in Blackboard under Assignments. Wed, Feb 9 Civil Rights and the Courts Lecture Reading: Martin, Brown v. Board of Education, 1-39 Quiz #3 3

Week 6 Mon, Feb 14 Civil Rights and the Courts Documents Analysis, 40-150 Reading: Martin, Brown v. Board of Education Wed, Feb 16 Civil Rights and the Courts Documents Analysis Reading: Martin, Brown v. Board of Education, 151-237 Week 7 Mon, Feb 21 The Civil Rights Movement Lecture Reading: Pitney, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and the Civil Rights Struggle, 1-30 Quiz #4 Wed, Feb 23 The Civil Rights Movement Documents Analysis Reading: Pitney, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and the Civil Rights Struggle, 31-101 Week 8 Mon, Feb 28 The Civil Rights Movement Documents Analysis Reading: Pitney, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and the Civil Rights Struggle, 102-179 Film: PBS Eyes on the Prize Mississippi: Is this America-1963-64 Wed, Mar 2 The Civil Rights Movement Documents Debate Q: In the post-war struggle for Civil Rights what forces were decisive? Due: Assignment #3. Upload through SafeAssign in Blackboard under Assignments. Mar 4 Mar 5-10 Last day to drop without academic penalty Spring Break Week 9 Mon, Mar 14 Vietnam Lecture Logevall, The Origins of the Vietnam War, 1-45 Wed, Mar 16 Vietnam Lecture Logevall, The Origins of the Vietnam War, 46-92 Quiz #5 Week 10 Mon, Mar 21 Vietnam Documents Analysis, 92-132 Logevall, The Origins of the Vietnam War, 92-132 Wed, Mar 23 Vietnam Debate Q: Which administration did the most to promote U.S. involvement in Vietnam? Logevall, The Origins of the Vietnam War, 92-132 4

Week 11 Mon, Mar 28 Vietnam Film: Hearts and Minds (1974) Due: Assignment # 4. Upload through SafeAssign in Blackboard under Assignments. Wed, Mar 30 Liberalism Lecture Reading: Schulman, Lyndon B. Johnson and American Liberalism, 1-90 Week 12 Mon, Apr 4 Liberalism Lecture Reading: Schulman, Lyndon B. Johnson and American Liberalism, 91-181 Quiz #6 Wed, Apr 6 Liberalism Documents Analysis Reading: Schulman, Lyndon B. Johnson and American Liberalism, 182-226 Week 13 Mon, Apr 11 Liberalism Debate Q: How did liberalism change from The New Deal to 1968? Reading: Schulman, Lyndon B. Johnson and American Liberalism, 227-271 Due: Assignment #5 Wed, Apr 13 Conservativism Lecture Reading: Story, Laurie, The Rise of Conservativism in America, 1945-2000, 1-32 Quiz #7 Week 14 Mon, Apr 18 Conservativism Documents Analysis Reading: Story, Laurie, The Rise of Conservativism in America, 1945-2000, 33-100 Wed, Apr 20 Conservativism Debate Reading: Story, Laurie, The Rise of Conservativism in America, 1945-2000, 101-165 Q: How did conservatives come to power from 1945-2000? Why? Due: Assignment #6. Upload through SafeAssign in Blackboard under Assignments. Week 15 Mon, Apr 25 The End of the American Century: Various and precarious end points in the Cold War, rights movements, and American politics. Due: Outline for Final Take Home Exam. Bring two (2) copies to class. Present and critique arguments in class. Week 16 Mon, May 2 Due: Final Take Home Exam, 10 PM. Upload through SafeAssign. 5