History 202

U.S. History Since 1865

Allen Dieterich-WardSpring 2009

Office: DHC 217MWF 9-9:50; 10-10:50

HC 206

Phone: 477-1192Office Hours:MW 12:00-2:00 or by appointment

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The course will explore key themes and pivotal developments in the political, social, cultural, and economic history of the United States since the Civil War, focusing on both domestic and international affairs. We will examine major eras and transformations such as Reconstruction, the rise of Big Business and Organized Labor, Western Expansion and Imperialism, the Progressive Era, the Rise of Mass Culture, the Great Depression and New Deal, World War II and the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam Era, Conservatism and the "Reagan Revolution," and the War on Terror. Students will also develop a variety of skills necessary for the study and practice of historical writing, including how to read primary and secondary sources, how to develop and write historical essays, and how to construct and deconstruct the narratives at the heart of this thing called “history.”

Requirements

You are expected to be present and prepared for every class meeting and to participate actively in the discussion. Class discussion and group work projects are major components of this course, and thus multiple absences for any reason will significantly lower your final grade. You should complete all reading and writing assignments in advance of their respective classes. Students should also consult Blackboard routinely for graded assignments, readings, class updates, research links and general course information.

Required Texts

William H. Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights: Greensboro, North Carolina, and the Black Struggle

for Freedom (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981).

Andrew Isenberg, The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750-1920 (New York:

Cambridge University Press, 2001).

Mary Beth Norton, et.al., A People and a Nation: A History of the United States, Volume II: Since

1865, Dolphin Edition (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2007).

Virtual Coursepack

Assigned articles, chapters from books, and other documents will be available through the Web Documents section of Blackboard. These web documents (WD) will serve as the basis for class discussion on the day they are assigned. I strongly suggest downloading and printing the entire coursepack at the beginning of the semester so that you will have the texts available when you need them. You are required to bring to class any reading assignment listed on the syllabus except for the Norton textbook. Failure to do so will result in a grade of “0” for class participation for the day.

Grading:

Active Class Participation10%

Online Journal 10%

Papers (2)30%

Midterm Exam20%

Final Project10%

Final Exam20%

Active Class Participation

Class meetings will be divided between lectures, full-class interactions, and small group discussions of the readings. During the first week, you will divide into groups of approximately six members. Each time the class has a group work discussion of the assigned readings, students are responsible for taking notes on the discussion and subsequently reporting their findings to the rest of the class. I will periodically collect and evaluate these group work notes. At the end of the term, group members will evaluate the contributions of each other. The quality of the group reports, student evaluations, and my observations will determine individual class discussion grades.

Online Journal

Each week you will have a number of primary sources assigned in addition to the required books and articles. Choose one or more of the sources that you find interesting and submit a short essay to the “Online Journal” section of Blackboard linking the source/s to course themes. Each submission should be at least 200 words, contain proper spelling, grammar and punctuation, and demonstrate a deep engagement with the course themes and specific readings. I will evaluate your online journals periodically throughout the semester and they will also help prepare you for the midterm and final exam. Online Journals are due each week by Thursday at 8:00 p.m. unless otherwise noted.

Papers

The purpose of these longer written assignments will be to further develop your analytical skills by focusing on historical monographs that provide a more in-depth analysis of particular events and themes in U.S. history. We will devote several class discussions to the process of writing, critiquing and rewriting historical essays. You should complete papers using double-spaced, twelve-point Times font with Chicago style footnotes. Failure to meet minimum page length requirement using the proper font and margins will result in a minimum ½ letter grade deduction. Consult the “History 202 Style Guide” (available on Blackboard) for additional instructions on formatting.

Midterm and Final Exams

The midterm exam will include short answer essays based on the terms and primary sources covered in class discussion and readings. The final exam will also include at least one longer essay that will challenge you to synthesize multiple readings/lectures into a coherent historical argument. I will post study guides to Blackboard several weeks in advance of each exam.

Final Project

A major objective of this course is to understand how scholars construct meaningful and balanced narratives of change over time by integrating a wide variety of historical evidence and artifacts. Consequently, each discussion group will create an oral history collection focused on a particular time period that addresses a specific course theme. Specific assignments will be available on Blackboard and we will discuss further instructions for your final project throughout the semester.

Note on Plagiarism

In this course you will work together both in and out of class as you complete group work projects, study for exams, and work on your museum exhibits. However, plagiarism or the “unacknowledged use of another writer’s own words or specific facts or propositions or materials in your own writing” and other forms of academic dishonesty will not be tolerated and will result in the failure of the course and/or other sanctions as outlined in the Shippensburg University “Student Handbook,” pp. 18-21. To help prevent and identify plagiarism, students will submit papers to Turnitin.com.

Attendance and Late Assignment Policies

Please do not miss class. If you do miss class, you are required to email me with a short explanation and to complete all assignments in a timely fashion. Any absences above four will result in a significantly lower class participation grade and may result in the failure of the course. I will deduct ½ letter grade per day for points for late papers and I will only allow make-up exams at my discretion.

Students with Disabilities

If you need additional assistance with any aspect of the class, please see me as soon as possible. I will be more than happy to accommodate any reasonable request made well in advance of due dates.

Week 1

Jan. 12Course Introduction

In-Class Reading: Andrew Carnegie, “How to Succeed in Life,” 1903

Jan. 14Legacies of the Civil War and Reconstruction

Read: Norton, Ch. 16 “Reconstruction: An Unfinished Revolution, 1865-1877” (begin)

WD Sidney Andrews, “Report on … South Carolina,” 1865

Jan. 16Legacies of the Civil War and Reconstruction (cont.)

Read:Norton, Ch. 16 “Reconstruction: An Unfinished Revolution, 1865-1877” (finish)

WD Abraham Lincoln, “The Emancipation Proclamation,” 1863

WD James Henry Gooding, “Letter to President Lincoln,” 1863

Week 2

Jan. 19Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day – No Class

Jan. 21Jim Crow Nation

Read: WD Eric Foner, “A New View of Reconstruction”

WD Thomas Dixon, Jr., “The Negro Uprising,” in The Leopard's Spots, 1902

WD Mary Childs Nerney, “Letter Re: Birth of a Nation,” 1915

Jan. 23The West and Frontier Mythology

Read:Norton, Ch. 17 “The Development of the West, 1877-1900” (begin)

Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, pp. 1-12, 193-198 (Introduction, Conclusion)

WD Edwards, “How to Read a Book”

Week 3

Jan. 26Conquest of the West

Read: Norton, Ch. 17 “The Development of the West, 1877-1900” (finish)

Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, pp.13-62 (Chs. 1-2)

Jan. 28Conquest of the West(cont.)

Read: Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, pp. 63-122 (Chs. 3-4)

Jan. 30Borderlands and Settlements

Read: Norton, Ch. 18 “The Machine Age, 1877-1920” (begin)

Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison, pp. 123-192 (Chs. 5-6)

Week 4

Feb. 2Writing Workshop I: “Mastering Book Reviews”

Read: WD “How to Write a (Decent) Book Review” (Assignments Section)

WD Destruction of the Bison Reviews

Paper #1 Rough Draft Due

Feb. 4Rise of the Corporation

Read: Norton, Ch. 18 “The Machine Age, 1877-1920” (finish)

WD James Parton, “Pittsburg,” Atlantic Monthly, 1868

WD Theodore Vail, “ATT’s Relations to Associated Companies,” 1909

Feb. 6The Gilded Age

Read: Norton, Ch. 19 “The Vitality and Turmoil of Urban Life, 1877-1920” (begin)

WD Horatio Alger, Paul Prescott's Charge: A Story for Boys, (excerpts)

Paper #1 Due

Week 5

Feb. 9The Gilded Age (cont.)

Read: Norton, Ch. 19 “The Vitality and Turmoil of Urban Life, 1877-1920” (finish)

Norton, Ch. 20 “Gilded Age Politics, 1877-1900” (begin)

WD Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives, 1890 (excerpts)

Feb. 11Politics of Protest

Read: Norton, Ch. 20 “Gilded Age Politics, 1877-1900” (finish)

WD Samuel Gompers, Testimony to the U.S. House of Representatives, 1899

WD Florence Kelly, "Women, Labor, and the Power of the Ballot,” 1898

Feb. 13American Imperialism

Read:Norton, Ch. 22 “The Quest for Empire, 1865-1914” (begin)

WD Queen Liliuokalani “Letter to Pres. McKinley,” 1897

WD William McKinley, “The Acquisition of the Philippines,” 1898

WD John Hay, “The Open Door Note,” 1899

Week 6

Feb. 16The “Burden of Empire”

Read: Norton, Ch. 22 “The Quest for Empire, 1865-1914” (finish)

WD Albert Beveridge, "The March of the Flag,”1898

WD Anti-Imperialist League, “Soldier’s Letters,” 1899

WD Mark Twain, "To the Person Sitting in the Darkness,” 1901

Feb. 18Age of Reform

Read: Norton, Ch. 21 “The Progressive Era, 1895-1920” (begin)

WD “Preamble to the Constitution of the Knights of Labor,” 1878

WD Henry Demarest Lloyd, “Story of a Great Monopoly,” Atlantic Monthly, 1881

WD Report of the Pennsylvania Factory Inspector, 1894

Feb. 20Age of Reform (cont.)

Read:Norton, Ch. 21 “The Progressive Era, 1895-1920” (finish)

WD Theodore Roosevelt, “State of the Union Message,” 1901

WD Upton Sinclair, The Jungle (excerpts), 1906

WD Louis Brandeis, “Breaking the Money Trust,” Harper’s Weekly, 1913

Final Project Proposal Due

Week 7

Feb. 23America and the Great War

Read:Norton, Ch. 23 “Americans in the Great War, 1914-1920”

WD Woodrow Wilson, “Making the World Safe for Democracy,” 1917

WD Robert La Follette, “It Has No Popular Support,” 1917

WD Eugene Debs, “Anti-War Speech,” 1918

Feb. 25Interpreting the ‘20s

Read: Norton, Ch. 24 “The New Era 1920-1929” (begin)

WD Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, “The Case against the Reds, 1920

WD Ellison DuRant Smith, “Shut the Door,” 1924

WD John Dos Passos, [Sacco and Vanzetti] Facing the Chair, 1927

Feb. 27Midterm Exam

Spring Break – No Class

Week 9

Mar. 9Modernism and Reaction

Read: Norton, Ch. 24 “The New Era 1920-1929” (finish)

WD Rebecca L. Davis, “Not Marriage at All, but Simple Harlotry": The Companionate Marriage Controversy,” Journal of American History, Mar. 2008

Mar. 11Hard Times

Read: Norton, Ch. 25. “The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1941” (begin)

WD Dorothea Lange, “Photographs – Migrant Workers,” ca. 1930s

WD Ben Shahn, “Photographs – Cotton Pickers,” 1935

WD Arthur Rothstein, “Photographs – Tenant Farmers,” 1937

Mar. 13New Deals

Norton, Ch. 25. “The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1941” (finish)

WD Franklin Roosevelt, "Forgotten Man" Speech, 1932

WD Frank Cregg and Virginia Miller, “Letters to President Roosevelt,” 1933

Week 10

Mar. 16A Fragile Peace

Read: Norton, Ch. 26 “Peaceseekers and Warmakers: Americans in the World, 1920-1941”

WD Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1925

WD Hirota Koti, “Fundamental Principles of National Policy,”1936

WD Henry Luce, “The American Century,” Time, 1941

Mar. 18World War II

Read: Norton, Ch. 27 “The Second World War at Home and Abroad, 1941-1945” (begin)

WD A. Philip Randolph, “The March on Washington Movement,” 1942

WD Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Economic Bill of Rights,” 1944

Mar. 20Origins of the Cold War

Read: Norton, Ch. 27 “The Second World War at Home and Abroad, 1941-1945” (finish)

WD Henry Stimson, “Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb,” Harper’s Magazine, 1947

WD Historians' Committee for Open Debate on Hiroshima, “Letter,” 1995

Final Project Background Paper Due

Week 11

Mar. 23Origins of the Cold War (cont.)

Read: Norton, Ch. 28 “The Cold War and American Globalism, 1945-1961” (begin)

WD George Kennan, “The Long Telegram,” 1946

WD Nikolai Novikov, “Telegram,” 1946

Mar. 25Exporting Capitalism and Democracy

Read: Norton, Ch. 28 “The Cold War and American Globalism, 1945-1961” (finish)

WD “The U.S. Opportunity,” Fortune, 1947

WD “Steel’s Fight for Survival,” Steel: The Metalworking Magazine, 1968

Mar. 27Fifties America

Read: Norton, Ch. 29 “America at Midcentury 1945-1960” (begin)

Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights, pp. 3-10, 237-254 (Introduction, Ch. 9, Epilogue)

WD Betty Friedan, “The Problem that Has No Name,” 1963

Week 12

Mar. 30Suburban Nation

Read: Norton, Ch. 29 “America at Midcentury 1945-1960” (finish)

Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights, pp. 13-70 (Chs. 1-2)

WD “Building the Suburban Dream: Levittown (Pa.)” Exhibit

Apr. 1Civil Rights Era

Read: Norton, Ch. 30 “The Tumultuous Sixties” (begin)

Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights, pp. 71-152 (Chs. 3-5)

Apr. 3Civil Rights Movement

Read: Chafe, Civilities and Civil Rights, pp. 155-239 (Chs. 6-8) *** Review Ch. 9 ***

Week 13

Apr. 6Writing Workshop II: Critical Editing and Peer Review

Paper #2 Rough Draft Due

Apr. 8Crisis of Liberalism

Read: Norton, Ch. 31, “Continuing Divisions and New Limits, 1969-1980” (begin)

WD Lyndon B. Johnson, “To Fulfill These Rights,” 1965

WD Stokely Carmichael, “Black Power,” 1966

WD Martin Luther King, Jr. “Where do we go from here?”, 1967

Apr. 10Vietnam War

Read: Norton, Ch. 30 “The Tumultuous Sixties” (finish)

WD President Lyndon Johnson, "Peace without Conquest, 1965

WD Paul Potter, “Speech,” March on Washington to End the War in Vietnam, 1965

WD Martin Luther King, Jr., “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence,” 1967

Paper #2 Due

Week 14

Apr. 13Conservative Turn

Read: Norton, Ch. 31, “Continuing Divisions and New Limits, 1969-1980” (finish)

WD “No More Miss America!,” Women's Liberation Manifesto, 1968

WD President Richard Nixon, “Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam,” 1969

WD “War Foes Here Attacked by Construction Workers,” New York Times, 1970

WD “Gays on the March,” Time, 1975

Apr. 15Reagan and America

Read: Norton, Ch. 32 “Conservatism Revived, 1980-1992” (begin)

WD Jimmy Carter, "Crisis of Confidence" Speech, 1979

WD Ronald Reagan, First Inaugural Address, 1981

Oral History Transcript Due

Apr. 17E Pluribus Unum?

Read:Norton, Ch. 33 “Into the Global Millennium: America Since 1992” (begin)

WD Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele, “Who Left the Door Open?” Time, 2006

WD Nathan Thornburgh, “Inside the Life of the Migrants Next Door,” Time, 2006

WD Karen Tumulty, “Who Gets to be an American?” Time, 2006

Week 15

Apr. 20New World Order

Read:Norton, Ch. 32 “Conservatism Revived, 1980-1992” (finish)

WD George H. W. Bush, “Speech,” 1990

WD Thomas Friedman, “Big Mac I,” New York Times, 1996

WD Bill Clinton, Between Hope and History, 1996

Apr. 22 Final Project Exhibit

Apr. 24History of Everyday Life

Read:Norton, Ch. 33 “Into the Global Millennium: America Since 1992” (finish)

WD Senator Barack Obama, “A More Perfect Union,” 2008

WD Henry Blodget, “Why Wall Street Always Blows It,” Atlantic, 2008

Final Exam – TBA

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