| Core 301 Historical Perspectives |
D. McFarland |
| Fall 2004 MW 3:00 – 4:15 Section 4: H-7 |
Robinson 105 |
| Office Hours: MWF 8:00 to 9:30 and
Thurs. 9:00 to 11:30 |
8396 |
| |
dmcfarland@oglethorpe.edu |
Required Texts (available at OU
bookstore):
Herodotus, Histories
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War
Artistophanes, Staging Women
Livy, Annales 1-5
Ibn-Khaldun, Muqaddimah
Other materials will be provided by the
instructor.
Grading:
Mid-term Examination: 30%
Research Paper: 30%
Final Examination: 30%
Attendance, Participation, and Quizzes
10%
Course Description and Outline:
While in broad terms the first year of
the core sequence explores human subjectivity and the second
pursues theories of communal organization, the third
examines some formal structures and methods through which
the social group remembers its cultural past. We will be
concerned, in short, not with what happened in the past but
how it is preserved in the present. We will, however,
supplement this critique of “histories” with hard facts in
order to provide a context for our theoretical inquiries.
Part One – The Formation of Western
Historiography in 5th Century Athens
Herodotus, selections from The Persian
War
Thucydides, selections from The
Peloponnesian War
Feminist Historiography and Ancient
Athens:
Aristophanes, Three Plays
Simon De Beauvoir, “Patriarchal Times
and Classical Antiquity” from The Second Sex
Part Two – History as Master Narrative
in Ancient Rome (2 Weeks)
Livy, selections from The Annales Books
1-5
Part Three –Monotheism and Universal
History (2 and 1/2 Weeks)
Hebrew Historiography: Judges
(selections), 1 Samuel
Christian Historiography:
Augustine, selections
from City of God
Gregory of Tours, selections
The Medieval Chronicle, selections
Part Four – The Breakdown of Universal
Histories in Western and Islamic Culture:
The Islamic Enlightenment: Ibn-khaldun,
selections from Muqaddimah
The Protestant Reformation: Luther,
Freedom of a Christian
Schedule:
Aug. 25 –Introduction
Aug. 30– Herodotus
1 (1-91, 95-130, 141, 152-169), 2
(1), 5 (30-38, 49-51, 97-126)
Sept. 8 – Herodotus
6 (94-124), 7 (1-60,
100-end), 8 (1-18, 40-125)
Sept. 15 – Thucydides
1, 2 (34-65), 3
(36-85)
Sept. 29– Thucydides
5 (84-end), 6 (8-32), 7
(20-87)
Oct. 4 – Simone De Beauvoir,
Aristophanes (Lysistrate, Thesmophoria)
Turn in Examination
Oct. 13 – Livy
1 (1-26, 49-60), 2, 3
(26-59)
Oct. 18– Livy
4 (1-6, 12-20), 5
Oct. 27– Selections from Judges and I
Samuel
Nov. 8 – Augustine, Gregory of Tours,
Medieval Chronicle
Nov. 15– Luther, Freedom of a
Christian
Ibn-Khaldum
(selections to be announced)
Nov. 22 – Research Paper Due
Dec. 1 Ibn-Khaldum –Final Examination
Distributed
Dec. 8 – Final Examination Due
University policies concerning
incompletes and absences will be followed. The honor code
will be enforced. See Bulletin pps. 70-71,77.
The University policy regarding
incompletes will be followed. Please refer to the current
bulletin for details.
Class attendance is essential. If a
student misses more than two weeks of class without a
suitable excuse, the instructor may assign a failing grade.
The University Honor Code will be
followed. See page 77 of the Bulletin for details. Please
sign the honor code pledge on each test, paper, in-class
essay, and quiz.
The Pledge:
I pledge that I have neither given nor
received any unauthorized aid on this assignment.
Signed:
Core III Reading Assignments
The Muqaddimah
Mon. Nov. 24
pp. 5-48, 91-111, 118-122
Mon. Dec. 2
pp. 123-142, 146-147, 149-170
Wed. Dec. 4
pp. 263-337, 340-343
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