General Education 111 WORLD CIVILIZATIONS, 1500 TO THE PRESENT
Professor Heather Streets
Washington State University
email: streetsh@wsu.edu
Course Description:
General Education 111 takes as its overall theme the development of a variety of world civilizations and their growing interconnectedness in the period 1500 to the present. With such a large geographical scope and long time span, it is impossible to "cover" all aspects of all civilizations in every time period. Instead, we will focus on key themes, events, and cultural expressions and discuss the ways in which they shaped civilizations and the experiences of global interactions.
While history will feature as an important disciplinary perspective in this course, we will also depend heavily on literature, anthropology, art, and music. Through the reader, we will also examine primary documents to get a better sense of cultural perspective and meaning from the events and processes we study.
Required Texts:
The Global Past: 1500 to the Present (Volume II), by Lanny Fields, Russel Barber, and Cheryl Riggs.
The Global Past Reader.
Course Structure:
This course will consist of lectures supplemented by visual material, small-group discussions, films, and in-class exercises designed to help you process course materials. Students are encouraged to ask questions during lectures and classes, and to meet with me in my office to discuss concerns, interests, or problems.
Assignments and Grading:
Weekly short quizzes 125 points (total)
Mid-term examination 100 points
Cultural assignment 50 points
World War One web-based paper 100 points
In-class assignments 50 points
Final exam 75 points
Total 500 points
Notes:
Course Plan:
M: Introduction
W: Text, Ch. 22; Reader,
F: Text, pp. 557-565; Reader,
M: Text, pp. 565-573; Reader
W: Text, pp. 575-586; Reader
F: Text, pp. 586-599; Reader
W: Text, Ch. 25; Reader
F: Text, pp. 623-632; Reader
Ottomans)
M: Text, pp. 632-642, 687-695
W: Text, pp. 645-654; Reader
F: Text, pp. 654-665; Reader
M: Text, 667-677; Reader
W: Text, 677-685; Reader
F: Text, 696-719; Reader
Movie: Samurai
M: Text, 719-736
W: Text, 736-752; Reader,
F: Mid-term Examination
Movie: clip of peasant life from Return of Martin Guerre
M: Text, 755-769
W: Text, 769-780
F: Text, 783-794
Movie: Meiji: Asia s response to the West
M: Text, 794-802
W: Text, 805-820
F: Text, 820-830
M: Text, 833-848
W: Text, 848-855
F: Text, 857-876
Movie: Africa: A Voyage of Discovery
M: Text, 889-899
W: Text, 899-911
F: Web-based Paper Due
Movie: Last part of Gallipoli
M: Text, 913-925
W: Text, 925-937
F: Text, 939-954
Movie: Small Happiness, re. Women in China
M: Text, 957-967
W: Text, 967-975
F: Text, 977-983
13. November 15, 17 World War II and the Holocaust
M: Text, 983-990, Reader
W: Text, 990-1001
No Class Friday
Movie: clip from memory of the camps
Clip from Hiroshima/Nagasaki
M: Text, 1015-1031
W: Text, 1031-1042
F: Text, 1042-1058
Movie: The Shining Path
**Last day to turn in Cultural Assignment
M: Text, 1061-1067
W: Text, 1095-1104
F: Text, 1071-1080
Final exam December 14, 3:10-5:10
Copyright 2000 Project South Asia and Heather Streets. May be copied for educational purposes only. Commercial use is prohibited without permission of Heather Streets.