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Core III: Historical Perspectives on Human Nature

 

Fall 2004

Dr. Victoria Weiss

Office: Hearst 313

Phone: (404) 364-8393 [on campus, Ext. 8393]

e-mail: vweiss@oglethorpe.edu

Office Hours: Monday through Friday 2:30-5:00 PM

                      [Tuesdays 2:00-3:00 PM in Café Oglethorpe]

 

 

Purpose of the Course:

                       

                        “Culture is an ocean in which we swim, and, despite the efforts of

study and the wonders of technology, we remain. . . fish and not oceanographers.”

                                                --Donald R. Kelley, Faces of History

 

Understanding one’s culture surely depends upon knowing one’s history.  But what exactly does it mean to know one’s history?  If it were your job to record for posterity what is happening in the world at this moment and create a document recording that history, what would you include?  What would you leave out?  Would you focus on the origins of important ideas?  Record the actions of certain individuals?  Focus on the beliefs of or disagreements between various peoples?  Even if you could define the scope of your account, as Kelley’s quotation above suggests, it is unlikely that you would be able to see beyond your own belief system or prejudices.   And therein lies the starting point for this third year of the Oglethorpe Core Curriculum. 

 

The Core begins in the freshman year by exploring the question of what it means to be an individual in our Western culture.  While the process of acculturation in other parts of the world often means learning to find one’s place within the larger society, in the West, we place a high premium on developing a sense of the individual self.  How do we go about forging a sense of self?  Do we have a public self and a private self—a “face” we show to others that may or may not be who we really are?  What do we prize about the individual exactly?   In Core II, the consideration of what it means to be human in the West widens.  This sophomore Core course explores what happens when individuals begin to decide how they will live—or ought to live—in a society.  What sort of community ought they attempt to create?  How can all of these individuals together pursue the “good life”?   

 

In Core III, that exploration of society widens still further.  Core II explores what happens when individuals begin to determine the kind of society in which they wish to live.  Core III explores a cultural understanding of who we Westerners are by considering the stories we tell ourselves about who we are.  In many cases, this means contemplating, or attempting to make sense of, “pre-history”—a time for which we have no written records, a time which has given rise to myths, to rituals, to fanciful explanations for the artifacts, customs, our physical surroundings all in an attempt to explain who we are and what has shaped us.  Sometimes the “stories” we have are strangely at odds with the physical evidence, yet the explanations persist.  Most importantly, they form the basis of a common understanding and appreciation of a people who feel a connection with one another.  These are some of the ideas we will be exploring in this course.

 

Evaluation:  Your grade will be determined by your performance on two papers, a research paper (and its supporting assignments), periodic quizzes, and a final exam.  Those of you with recalcitrant printers or cranky computers will be happy to know that papers will be considered to be on time if they arrive at my office by 5:00 PM on the date they are due.  Late papers will be lowered one half of a letter grade for every calendar day they are overdue.

 

                                    Two papers      (20% each)                              = 40%

                                    Research paper + supporting assignments          = 30%

                                    Quizzes                                                            = 10%

                                    Final exam                                                        = 20%

 

Attendance:  I take attendance at the beginning of each class.  Class attendance is expected.  Those students who miss ten (10) classes or more can expect to have their course grade lowered.  Those who miss fifteen (15) or more (the equivalent of five weeks of the term) will be assumed to be no longer taking the course and can expect a final grade of FA (failure because of absence). 

 

Honor Code:  I assume that together we are members of an intellectual community that has honesty as its common bond.  Your pledge on your written work means that the ideas contained therein are yours unless they are clearly identified as someone else’s in the text of your paper. 

            When you make use of ideas from other sources—books, web sites, journal articles, films or TV, etc.—make sure that you acknowledge your sources, even when they are paraphrased (i.e., put into your own words) in the body of your paper.  Unacknowledged borrowing of either ideas or exact words will be considered a violation of the honor code and will be dealt with accordingly.

            I do not grade work which has not been pledged.  All written work for the course must bear the following honor code statement, signed using your student number:

 

I pledge that I have neither given nor received any unauthorized aid on this assignment.

                                    [your student number]

 

[Please remember to use your student number rather than your name to identify your work.]

 

Incompletes: The grade of incomplete is given only in rare and extraordinary circumstances.  If some emergency keeps you from completing the final exam for the course, it is your responsibility to contact me so that we may formalize in a written contract (1) what work you must complete; (2) when that work will be completed; (3) what grade will be earned if you do not complete the work by the date specified in the contract.  This is University policy regarding incompletes.

 

Texts:  All of these texts (except for the handout reader) may be purchased in the University bookstore.  Please know that the OU Bookstore pledges to match the price of other local bookstores.

 

            Herodotus, The History.  Trans. David Grene.  University of Chicago Press

            Thucydides, The Pelopponesian War.  Trans. Steven Lattimore.  Hackett Press

            Livy, The Rise of Rome.  Trans. T. J. Luce.  Oxford University Press

            Aristophanes, Lysistrata.  Dover Press

            The Story of David (I & II Samuel).  Trans. Robert Alter.  Norton

Ibn Khaldun, The Muqaddimah.  Trans.  Franz Rosenthal.  Ed. N.J.Dawood. 

            Princeton/Bollingen Press

Handout/Reader

 

 

Aug. 25            Introduction to Core III

 

Aug. 27            Western history begins with Herodotus—We and “the Other”

                        Book I: 1-91 (pp. 33-77);

 

Aug. 30            Herodotus, History,Book I: 95-130 (pp. 79-95); 141 (p. 98-99)

 

Sept. 1 Herodotus, Book I: 152-169 (pp. 102-110); Book II: 1

(p. 131); Book V: 30-38 (pp. 367-371);

 

Sept. 3 Herodotus, Book V: 48-51 (pp. 374-76); 97-126 (pp. 400-409); Book VI: 94-124 (pp. 446-458)

 

Sept. 8 Herodotus, Book VII: 1-60 (466-491); 100-152 (pp. 501-521)

 

Sept. 10           Herodotus, Book VII: 153-end (pp. 521-556); Book VIII: 1-39 (pp.

557-70)

 

Sept. 13           Herodotus, Book VIII: 40-125 (pp. 570-602)

 

Sept. 15           Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book I , 1-113 (pp. 1-54)

 

Sept. 17           Thucydides, Book I: 114-145 (pp. 54-71); Book II: 34-65 (pp. 90-108)

 

Sept. 20           Thucydides,  Book III 36-85 (pp. 145-172)

 

Sept. 22           Thucydides, Book V: 84-end (pp. 294-301); Book VI: 8-32 (pp. 310-23)

 

Sept. 24           Thucydides, Book VII: 20-87 (pp. 368-407)

 

Sept 27            Simone de Beauvoir, “Early Tillers of the Soil” and “Patriarchal Times

 and Classical Antiquity” from The Second Sex (handout reader)

 

Sept. 29           Aristophanes, Lysistrata

 

Oct. 1  Paper One due by 5:00 PM.  [Drop off at Hearst 313.]  CLASS MEETS IN THE LIBRARY with Tricia Clayton, OU research librarian!

 

Oct. 4  Livy, The Rise of Rome, Book I: 1-26; 49-60 (pp. 1-33; 58-70)

 

Oct. 6  Livy, Book II: 1-33 (pp. 71-105)

 

Oct. 8  Livy, Book II: 34-65 (pp. 105-139)

 

Oct. 11            Columbus Day Holiday!

 

Oct. 13            Livy, Book III: 26-59 (pp. 167-202); Book IV: 1-6 (pp. 217-24); 12-20 (pp. 230-39)

 

Oct. 15            Livy, Book V: 1- end (pp. 282-341)

 

Oct. 18            Alter, ed., The David Story, I Samuel: 1-17 (pp. 1-100). 

 

Oct. 20            Alter, ed., I Samuel: 17-end (pp. 101-92)

Paper Two due by 5:00 PM.  [Drop off at Hearst 313.]

 

Oct. 22                        Alter, ed.,  II Samuel: 1-14 (pp. 195-282)

 

Oct. 25            Alter, ed., II Samuel: 15-end and I Kings 1 & 2 (pp. 283-384)

            One-page research paper report due in class!

 

Oct. 27            From the handout reader: excerpt from St. Paul’s letter to the Romans; St. Augustine, “Six Ages in Biblical History”; “The Symbolic Meaning of Jewish History”; “The Two Cities in History”; “Critique of Cyclicism”

 

Oct. 29            Geoffrey of Monmouth, History of the Kings of Britain, selections (handout reader), Book VI, pp. 93-115; Book VIII, pp. 129-145.

 

Nov. 1 Geoffrey of Monmouth, Book VIII-IX, pp. 145-167. 

 

Nov. 3 One-page research paper report due in class!  Lessons on doing research!!

 

Nov. 5 Simone de Beauvoir, “Through the Middle Ages to Eighteenth-Century France” from The Second Sex (handout reader)

 

Nov. 8 Chaucer, “The Merchant’s Tale” from The Canterbury Tales (handout reader)

 

Nov. 10           The Book of Margery Kempe, excerpts (handout reader)

 

Nov. 12           One-page research paper report due in class!   More info on what the paper ought to look like!

 

Nov. 15           Luther, intro info + “The Freedom of a Christian” (handout reader)

 

Nov. 17           Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, pp. 5-48.

 

Nov. 19           Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, pp. 91-117.

 

Nov. 22           RESEARCH PAPER DUE BY 5:00 PM!       

 

            Thanksgiving Holiday

 

Nov. 29           Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, pp. 123-142; 146-47.

 

Dec. 1  Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, pp. 149-171.

 

Dec. 3  Ibn-Khaldun, The Muqaddimah, pp. 269-273; 281-82; 285-95; 299-337.

 

Dec. 6  Review.

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