Prof. Edwin E. Moise
Office: Hardin 102
Phone: (864) 650-8845
e-mail: eemoise@clemson.edu
Messages can be left in my mailbox in the department office (Hardin 124), or in the box on my office door.
Office Hours: I will try to be available to you, both face to face in my office and by Zoom, during the hours listed below. There may be times when that will not be possible. On the other hand, I will be available for much more of the week than my official office hours. E-mail me, or just check and see if my door is open.
Monday 2:30-3:20 Tuesday 11:00-12:00, 2:00-3:15 Wednesday 2:30-3:20 Thursday (none officially scheduled but I will often be available) Friday (none officially scheduled but I will often be available)
Surveys the history of the West in modern times, from the late 17th century to the present. Particular emphasis is placed on Europe’s interaction with non-western societies. Through cross-cultural comparisons, European history is placed in global context.
There are no prerequisites for HIST 1730.
I plan to teach this as a traditional history class. Most discussion will be in the classroom, though some will take place through Canvas. Lectures, quizzes, and tests will take place in the classroom. Other written assignments will be turned in through Canvas.
The written work in the class will be:
--Two papers on assigned topics, worth 40 points each, turned in through Canvas.
--Eight questions about the reading, which I will post on Canvas and you will answer on Canvas, due ten minutes before the beginning of class,
ten points each but only your six best count toward the final grade: 60 points.
--A test (70 points) and the final exam (120 points),
which will be mostly essay questions.
This adds up to 330 points for the course.
It will be possible to earn up to 20 points extra credit by participating in class discussion, or by commenting on questions I will post under "Discussions" on Canvas. If you catch me in a mistake in class, you get two points extra in the gradebook. If you present a good clear argument that I am wrong about something, with evidence, that would give you good discussion credit even if you do not succeed in convincing me.
The basic grade scale is that 90% (297 points) is the bottom of the A range, 80% (264 points) is the bottom of the B range, and so on. Sometimes I alter the scale in the students' favor, never against them, depending on how the class is doing. Thus 297 points is a guaranteed A. But if very few students have 297 points or more, I may shift the line between A and B down to 295 or even 290 points, to create a reasonable grade distribution.
Any student who has an average of 90% or better, for work up to the final exam, will be permitted to exempt the final and will get an A for the course.
Academic integrity requires that we not try to pass off other people's work as our own. On the basis of experience in past years, I would say that if an academic dishonesty case were to occur in this course, it would probably be either:
A student copies from the paper of a student in an adjacent seat, during a test.
One student copies another student's paper on an assignment, maybe changing a few words and substituting synonyms, but leaving the two papers still so similar that it is obvious the resemblance could not be coincidence. I would be likely to bring charges both against the student who copied and the student who allowed his or her paper to be copied.
Starting January 18, all absences from class must be reported through Student Notification of Absence, on Canvas. You can get to that by clicking Help on the left side of the screen. You will be penalized two points for every absence after January 18 that has not been reported through that system. Absences up through January 13 will not be counted against you.
Any quiz or test that was scheduled for a class that was cancelled due to inclement weather will be given at the next class meeting unless students are told otherwise by the instructor. Any assignment that was due on a day when class was cancelled because of weather will be due on the next day the class meets, unless students are told otherwise by the instructor. Any extension or postponement of a quiz, test, or assignment must be granted by the instructor via email or Blackboard within 24 hours of the weather related cancellation.
Clemson University is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all persons and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender, pregnancy, national origin, age, disability, veteran's status, genetic information or protected activity in employment, educational programs and activities, admissions and financial aid. This includes a prohibition against sexual harassment and sexual violence as mandated by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. This policy is located at http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/access/title-ix/. Ms. Alesia Smith is the Clemson University Title IX Coordinator, and the Executive Director of Equity Compliance. Her office is located at 110 Holtzendorff Hall, 864.656.3181 (voice) or 864.656.0899 (TDD).
Clemson University values the diversity of our student body as a strength and a critical component of our dynamic community. Students with disabilities or temporary injuries/conditions may require accommodations due to barriers in the structure of facilities, course design, technology used for curricular purposes, or other campus resources. Students who experience a barrier to full access to this class should let the professor know, and make an appointment to meet with a staff member in Student Accessibility Services as soon as possible. You can make an appointment by calling 864-656-6848, by emailing studentaccess@lists.clemson.edu, or by visiting Suite 239 in the Academic Success Center building. Appointments are strongly encouraged – drop-ins will be seen if at all possible, but there could be a significant wait due to scheduled appointments. Students who receive Academic Access Letters are strongly encouraged to request, obtain and present these to their professors as early in the semester as possible so that accommodations can be made in a timely manner. It is the student's responsibility to follow this process each semester. You can access further information here: http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/sds/.
Dennis Sherman and Joyce Salisbury, The West in the World, fifth edition, volume 2, From the Renaissance
Lynn Hunt, The French Revolution and Human Rights: A Brief History with Documents, second edition
Nicholas Fraser and Marysa Navarro, Evita: The Real Life of Eva Peron.
January 11: Introduction to the class
January 13: European Expansion
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 358-375
January 16: Martin Luther King's Birthday Holiday: NO CLASS
January 18: The Slave Trade; Development of the World Market
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 375-389
January 20: Europe’s Social and Political Order: "Absolutism"
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 391-409
January 23: Europe’s Social and Political Order: Less absolute governments
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 409-424
January 25: The First Scientific Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 425-436
January 27: The Enlightenment, 1600-1800
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 436-448
Hunt, pp. 35-37
January 30: Ideas about Human Rights in the Enlightenment
Hunt, pp. 38-67
February 1: Struggles for Power in the 18th Century
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 451-468
February 3: European societies in the 18th century; the American Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 468-485
February 6: The French Revolution begins
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 487-494
Hunt, pp. 68-80
February 8: The French Revolution turns more radical
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 494-499
Hunt, pp. 81-108
February 10: The Terror and its aftermath
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 499-505
Hunt, pp. 108-130
February 13: Napoleon
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 505-515
Hunt, pp. 131-136
Forty-point paper: The Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen made some idealistic promises about human rights. To what extent did later documents in Hunt follow through on those promises, and to what extent did they not? Please cite specific examples, making clear what a particular document said that you consider relevant to this question, what the document was--identify it by author or title--and where in Hunt the statement appeared. Thus (Robespierre, p. 80) or (Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, p. 76) would be an adequate source citation. Turn in on Canvas by midnight February 13.
February 15: The Beginning of the Industrial Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 517-530
February 17: The Impact of the Industrial Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 530-544
February 20: Ideology and Politics, 1815-1847
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 547-564
February 22: Reform and Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 564-574
February 24: MIDTERM TEST
February 27: Marxism
The Communist Manifesto,
Introduction,
Part I, and
Part II.
March 1, 3: Nationalism and Statebuilding: Unifying Nations, 1850-1870
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 577-596
March 6, 8: Democracy and the New Imperialism, 1870-1914
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 597-624
March 10, 13: Western Society, 1850-1914
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 625-653
March 15, 17: World War I
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 654-674
March 20-24: SPRING BREAK
March 27: The Russian Revolution
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 674-681
March 29: The aftermath of World War I: The Rise of Fascism
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 685-697
March 31 Newspaper research exercise. Look at at least four articles published in 1919, dealing with the new revolutionary government in Russia, and its policies, and attitudes toward it. This government was run by the Bolshevik Party or Balsheviki, which had recently been renamed the Communist Party. It head was Lenin, often spelled Lenine.
There is no requirement that you use The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, or The Times of London, but those papers have the advantage that you can access them online through the HISTORICAL databases on Clemson Library's Databases Page.
Write an essay of about two pages (typed double spaced), or more, about what you found. Say what there was in the articles that you found interesting or surprising. Evaluate them for bias. Was the author clearly suppporting one nation or group against another, or isn't there any real indication of the author's attitude? Is there anything that leads you to distrust the articles, or to think that the facts may be being distorted to fit the author's viewpoint? Do they use loaded language? Notice the source; did the reporter say that something was true, or only that somebody else had said it was true? For an author to quote a statement by some official or politician is not necessarily evidence that the author agreed with the statement. If you say there is bias, please make it clear exactly what was said, that you consider biased. Please make sure that when I read your paper I will always be able to tell which things are your own opinions, and which are the opinions expressed in the articles you read.
Make it clear what each article was about.
I want to see one essay based on several articles, not a string of essentially separate mini-essays, each based on a single article. Try to select articles that will give you something interesting to say, and that will allow you to have some unifying themes in your essay.
Please give source notes. I want to be able to tell in each section of your paper which article or articles you are discussing in that section. It is not enough to have a list at the end, if I can't tell as I read the paper which article you are discussing where. Source notes must give the date of each article, and also the title of the publication, the title of the article, and if possible the name of the author. Giving a link to the text of the article is good, but if you give link you still need to tell me what the article was, to help me decided whether to click on that link. Please tell me the name of the publication that originally published the article. If you go through a ProQuest database to get to an article originally published by the New York Times, that is a New York Times article, not a ProQuest article.
I will not be picky about the format of source notes as long as they tell me what I need to know. If you have a Works Cited page at the end, give complete identification of
each article there, and just a short identification in your text. Thus you could list
"China Seeks a Free Hand," New York Times, January 23, 1919, p. 2,
http://libproxy.clemson.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/china-seeks-free-hand/docview/100304818/se-2?accountid=6167
in your Works Cited and just ("China Seeks a Free Hand") in the text of your paper where you are discussing that article.
Please turn your essay in on Canvas by midnight Friday.
March 31: Nazis, the Great Depression, and Stalinism
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 697-708
April 3: Evita Peron
Evita, Chapters 1-2
April 5: The Origins of World War II
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 711-19
April 7: World War II, 1939-1945
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 719-28
April 10: The end of World War II; Argentina
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 728-33
Evita, Chapter 3
April 12: The Beginning of the Cold War in Europe; Evita becomes First Lady of Agentina
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 737-740
Evita, Chapters 4-5
April 14: The Cold War spreads worldwide
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 740-747
Evita, Chapters 6-8
April 17: Cold War Europe
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 747-752
Evita, Chapter 9
April 19: Decolonization; the Middle East
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 752-760
Evita, Chapter 10
April 21:
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 760-769
Evita, Chapter 11 and Epilogue
April 24: The collapse of the Soviet Union; the recent West
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 773-87
April 26: Recent Asia
Sherman and Salisbury, p. 788
April 28: The Middle East and Afghanistan; Global Problems
Sherman and Salisbury, pp. 788-803
May 2: FINAL EXAM, 8:00 to 10:30 AM
Last modified February 21, 2023.