Dr. Karin ZipfOffice: Brewster A-219

Office Hours: By Appt.Telephone: 328-1024

Email: web site:

HIS 3140

Spring 2011

Women in American History

Section 1: 9:30am-10:45am, TTh, BB 203

Reading Assignments:

DuBois and Dumenil,Through Women's Eyes: An American History with Documents

Skinner, Women and the National Experience: Primary Sources in American History

Reserve Materials and Required Readings on the Web

Course Description: This class explores the historical significance of women’s experiences in the United States. But this course is more than a historical study of America and its women. Rather, this course takes a more comprehensive and, surely, more provocative approach. This course will explore women’s achievements, women’s and men’s relations, and shifting definitions of womanhood and manhood in the United States. Although American men and women experienced historical events in tandem, each sex often perceived these events in different ways. We will explore American historical events through the lenses of women. Our study will examine the impact of colonialism, independence, slavery, reconstruction, suffrage, reproduction politics, feminism, civil rights, and the enduring effects of racism on America’s women.

Course Requirements: History requires skills in critical reading and thinking. This course requires intensive and focused concentration on reading and writing. You MUST read the assigned material. Thinking critically requires active listening and note-taking. Discussion (oral participation by all students) is crucial in every class. In addition, you must take one ID quiz, write three papers, and complete a cumulative final essays exam.

Attendance: Attendance is mandatory. Sometimes unforeseen circumstances, such as an accident or a death in the family, require students to miss class. Therefore, this professor allows students three class absences without penalty. But, students must use their absences wisely. Students exceeding three absences will by penalized 1% of their final grade for each absence exceeding three. If you miss an assignment due to unexpected illness you must provide a doctor’s note. Students are expected to come to class ON TIME.

Papers: In addition to attending lecture, students will write 3 papers.

Paper 1: Essay on Defining Feminism. Students must develop a definition for the word “feminism.” But this definition will not come from a dictionary or encyclopedia. Rather, students must develop an experiential definition based upon oral history interviews and historical sources. Given this, each student will interview one woman born between 1965-1980 and another woman born before 1965 to ascertain their individual views of feminism. Oral history subjects may include relatives, ECU teachers and staff, and any other willing volunteers from the community. Then, students must find three secondary sources from the library and one from the internet to help them contextualize (to find historical sources that help explain the interviewees’ experiences) these interviews and construct a definition for the word “feminism.” Because successful writing is crucial towards understanding and expressing complex historical ideas, students will participate in at least two writing labs during the course of the semester.

Papers 2 & 3: Analytical Debate Papers. These papers will conclude students’ participation in two role-playing exercises. Twice during the semester students will assume the character of a prominent individual who participated in critical twentieth-century events, namely, the passage of women’s suffrage in 1919 and Congress’ failure to pass the Equal Rights Amendment in 1983. For each exercise we will participate in our own debate during which you will assume the personality and ideas of your assigned character. Afterwards, each student will write a 3-5 page paper analyzing the primary issues debated.

Here is the grade distribution:

Class participation10%

Papers45%(15% each)

ID Quiz15%

Cumulative Essays Final Exam30%

Websites: Students must consult the sites included in the syllabus in preparation for the week’s discussion. These websites illuminate the complex ideas and events of Women in American History. Images, maps, biographies, essays, video games, literature, and chronologies on the sites will provide students with a more comprehensive understanding of relevant issues.

Reserve Materials and Other Readings: Students must read several articles or book chapters that are located in the library or available through blackboard. Three items are on reserve at the Reserve Desk (see weeks 1-3). Several articles are accessible by links on this syllabus. Others are available through NC LIVE – Academic Search Elite. Just type in the article title at the search window.

Disability Services Notice:EastCarolinaUniversity seeks to comply fully with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Students requesting accommodations based on a covered disability must go to the Department for Disability Support Services, located in Brewster A-117, to verify the disability before any accommodations can occur. The telephone number is 252-328-6799.

Schedule of Classes:

Week 1:Introduction:History in Gender Perspective

Jan. 11&13Terms

Method

Sexual Politics

Reading: Jane Sherron De Hart and Linda K. Kerber

“Introduction: Gender and the New Women’s History,” pps. 3-24

On Blackboard

Website:“Talking About Women’s History,” [AUDIO]

How do you interpret thisimage?.

Week 2:Frontier Diversity

Jan. 18&20Native American

European

African American

Reading: DuBois, ch. 1

Perdue, Cherokee Women, chapter 1 on Blackboard

Origins of Slavery

Website:Native American Beadwork

Week 3:Colonial Law and Household Relations

Jan. 25&27Religion

Witchcraft

Marriage

Property

Reading:Skinner, ch. 1

Karlsen, The Devil in the Shape of a Woman, pps 77-116 on Blackboard and

Norton, In The Devil's Snare, pps. 112-155 on Blackboard

Website:UMC Famous Trials Witchcraft Website

Week 4:Revolution and Constitution

Feb. 1&3Independence

Social Contract

Republican Motherhood

Reading:Skinner, ch. 2

DuBois, ch. 2

See introduction to Hannah Glasse's the Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy (1805) on BB

Assignment: Paper 1 due, September 17

Websites: Abigail Adams to John Adams

31 March 1776

John Adams to Abigail Adams

14 April 1776

Abigail Adams to John Adams

7 May 1776

Feeding America: American Cookery, 1798

Godey’s Ladies Book fashion plates

Week 5:Industrialization

Feb. 8&10Mill Women

Labor Conflict

Women’s Sphere

Reading:Skinner, ch. 3

DuBois, ch. 3

Website:“Uses of Liberty Rhetoric Among Lowell Mill Girls”

Week 6:Benevolence and Reform

Feb. 15&17Middle Class Women

Slave Women

Cult of Domesticity

Reform Movements

Reading:Skinner, ch. 4

Harriet Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, chs. 4&5

Documenting the American South, electronic edition

Slide Show:Women, Evangelicalism and Reform

Website:Women and Social Movements in the U.S.

Mary Reynolds, “Oral History of Her Days as a Slave”

North American Slave Narratives

Currier & Ives: Portraits of the “Happy Family”

Assignment:Paper 1 due February 17

Week 7:Origins of Women’s Rights

Feb. 22&24Seneca Falls

Declaration of Sentiments

15th Amendment

NWSA & AWSA

Reading:Skinner, ch. 5

DuBois, pps. 202-228, 236-251

Slide Show:Women’s Rights Movement – First Wave

Websites:The Trial of Susan B. Anthony

How do you interpret this image?

Exercise:Writing Lab, February 22

MARCH 2LAST DAY TO DROP COURSE

Week 8:Civil War Women and Reconstruction

March 1&3Homefront

Women and Industry

Black Women

Picking up the Pieces

Reading:Skinner, ch. 6

DuBois, pps. 228-236, 251-269, and ch. 5

Slide Show:Women and the Civil War

Website:Hearts at Home: Southern Women in the Civil War

The Letter of "Miss Mollie E.," September 9, 1864, "Mr Abram Lincen"

The Valley of the Shadow: Two Communities in the American Civil War

Dawes Act, 1887

MARCH 6-13SPRING BREAK

Week 9:Manliness, Womanliness and Civilization

March 15&17Jim Crow

Imperialism

Lynching

Reading:Skinner, ch. 7

1898: Wilmington, North Carolina

Pauline E. Hopkins, “Ch. 8: The Sewing Circle,” from Contending Forces, 1900

Websites:“You Don’t Know Me:” Georgia Sutton & Olivia Cherry

“Big House/Little House:” Ann Pointer & Otis Pinkard

“Black People’s Day:” Charles Gratton, Ann Pointer, Amelia Robinson

The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow

“Anti-Negro Cartoon” from the RaleighNews and Observer, 1900

Exercise:ID Quiz, March 17

Week 10:Progressivism

March 22&24Protective Legislaton

Women’s Suffrage

Origins of Welfare

Reading:Skinner, chs. 8&9, and pps. 182-183

DuBois, chs. 6&7

Exercise:Women’s Suffrage Debate, March 24

Assignment:Handout due, March 24

Website:The Triangle Factory Fire

“The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire of 1911,” [AUDIO]

Scroll to and click on March 30, 2000, Segment 1

Household Words: Women Write From and For the Kitchen

Gunnar Almgren, et.al. article

Week 11:Sexuality and Reproduction

March 29&31Birth Control

Abortion

ERA

Reading:Skinner, ch. 10

DuBois, pps. 481-497&519-526

Comstock Law, 1873

Margaret Sanger, “What Every Girl Should Know” 1920

Birth Control Pills and Black Children

“I Limited My Own Family”: Memoir of a 1920s Birth Control Activist

(Audio)

“A Less Reliable Form of Birth Control”: Miriam Allen deFord Describes Her Introduction to Contraception in 1914

(Audio)

Assignment:Paper 2 due March 31

Website:Conversations with Alice Paul: The Equal Rights Amendment

Week 12:Great Depression and Hard Times

April 5&7Labor

Eleanor Roosevelt

Rituals of Youth

Reading:Skinner, ch. 11

DuBois, pps. 497-507, 526-534

Slide Show:Causes of the Great Depression

Website:Making Do: Women and Work

Eleanor Roosevelt: in her own words

on her DAR resignation

on women

on the ERA

Week 13:World War II and the Origins of Feminism

April 12&14Japanese-American Women

Factory Women

Title VII

Friedan and Schlafly

Reading:Skinner, chs. 12 &13

DuBois, pps. 507-519, 534-550

Slide Show:Women and World War II

Website:Title VII

Powers of Persuasion: World War II Posters

“Working-Class Feminism: The Other Women’s Movement”

Scroll down and click on June 8, 2000 – Segment 1

Betty Friedan on C-Span

Porn Movie Screening: Academic Freedom vs. Censorship?The Washington Post, April 6, 2009

Friedan, "The Problem That Has No Name," chapter 1 of The Feminine Mystique

Week 14 &15:Sexual Revolution and Social Protest

April 19&21ERA

Title IX

Roe vs. Wade

Lesbianism

Reading:Skinner, chs. 14&15

DuBois, chs. 9&10

Website:National Organization of Women: 1960’s Documents

Vacuum Aspiration Abortion

Radicalesbians: The Woman-Identified Woman

Exercise:ERA Debate April 21

Assignment: Handout due April 21

FINAL ESSAYS EXAM:Section 1: MondayMay 3, 8:00am-10:30am

(Paper 3 is due!)