PLEASE READ ALL OF THIS SYLLABUS.

             WELCOME TO THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY.   DO YOU KNOW HOW WE GOT HERE ?

Department of Government, Law and International Affairs

Course: CIV 202-09    Credit Hours: 3.0     Session: Fall 2010

I. Title:  World Civilization II,  1500 to the Present.

II. Instructor’s name:  Dr. Winfield H. Rose
          Office Location:  5A-10 Faculty Hall
          Phone numbers:  (270) 809-2662 (office); 753-0126 (home); (270) 556-6342 (cell); 809-2688 (fax)
          E-mail: winfield.rose@murraystate.edu
          Homepage: http://campus.murraystate.edu/academic/faculty/winfield.rose/main.htm
                (Be sure to check this out; it contains this course syllabus and other useful information.)
          Office hours:   9:30 - 10:30 a.m. MWF; 9:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. TTh; 1:45 – 3:00 p.m. Th

III. Class location, meeting time & language of instruction:
          11:30 a.m. - 12:20 p.m. MWF, August 19 - December 4, 2009,  room FH 200; English (it is not necessary to press 1.)

IV. Catalog description:
An interdisciplinary survey of the evolution of and interaction among the environmental, social, economic and political influences in the major civilizations of the world since 1500, and a consideration of the causes and consequences of the emergence of a global civilization in the modern world.

V. Content outline:  We will spend the first third of the semester on the 16th and 17th centuries, the middle third on the 18th and 19th centuries, and the last third on the 20th century.

VI. Instructional activities:
Classes will be a combination of discussion and lecture; good note taking is essential.  Class attendance is important and expected.  Students should come to class with their assignment read and they should be prepared to answer as well as ask questions; class attendance and participation will comprise 15% of the course grade.  There will be three major tests and a comprehensive final exam at the officially designated time.  There will be no exemptions from this exam.  Absences from tests should be avoided unless extremely necessary; students should obtain permission in advance and they should have a reason verifiable in writing.  “I just haven’t had time to get ready” is not an acceptable reason; neither is having a doctor’s appointment (schedule it for some other time).  If it is absolutely necessary to miss a scheduled exam, all make-up’s will be given Friday afternoon December 4 at two o’clock in FH 500. For guidance regarding essay exams, please download “How To Take Essay Exams” from my homepage; you will find it helpful.

In addition, 12 short quizzes of 15-18 questions each will be given, usually but not always at the end of the chapter.  These quizzes will be objective in form.    Questions will come from both lectures and the textbook, and no make-up’s will be given; missed quizzes count as zero.  The highest ten scores will count; the lowest two will be dropped.

VII. An outside writing assignment also is required; its explanation is given later in this syllabus.

VIII. Academic Dishonesty:  The policy statement on academic dishonesty adopted by the Board of Regents on February 14, 1975 and reprinted in the Undergraduate Bulletin is hereby incorporated into this syllabus.  Please read it.

IX.  Disabilities Any student with a bona fide disability should contact me privately and appropriate arrangements will be made.

X. Grading Procedures:

Grades will be determined as follows:
 

Quizzes: 15%

         A: 91-99

First test: 15%

         B: 82-91

Second test: 15%

         C: 73-82

Third test: 15%

         D: 63-73

Final exam: 15% (see*)

         E: below 63

Outside Writing Assignment: 10%

 



Class attendance & participation: 15%

*You must score at least 50% on the final exam to pass the course.  Please  take heed!


  Extra credit points may be earned by renting and viewing motion pictures correlated with the course.  To receive such credit, you must write and submit a report according to a prescribed form which is available by clicking here.  Movies should be approved by me in advance if not listed here; examples of acceptable titles are Columbus,1492,Elizabeth, Luther, The Last of the Mohicans, Glory, Gods and Generals, Gettysburg, Dr. Zhivago, Patton, Roots, Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia, Les Miserables, War and Peace, Exodus, All Quiet on the Western Front, The Lost Battalion,, The Longest Day, Swing Kids, Schindler’s List, Titanic, Amistad, The Last Emperor, Saving Private Ryan, K-19: Das Boot, Enemy at the Gate, Widowmaker, Downfall, Valkyrie, Fatherland, The Last Samurai, The Thin Red Line, and Band of Brothers.   Any film on Hollywood’s Best History Films list which pertains to the period 1500 to the present is acceptable.

    Short extra-credit videos are provided by the history department. They may be checked out at the Waterfield Library and they also are aired from time to time on MSU cable channel #11.  Cable television channels such as The History Channel are another excellent source of enrichment materials with the added advantage of not having to be checked out and returned to the library and they offer free monthly schedule guides by e-mail if you wish to sign up.  The primary benefit of watching these programs is what you will learn from them but they also can help your grade directly.  Extra-credit points will not raise a low C to a B  or a low B to an A; they will, however, help tilt you toward the higher grade if you are on the borderline between the two, and the more you have, the better.  You will receive one extra-credit point per hour watched.  To receive such credit you must submit a report on a prescribed form which may be acquired at the reserve desk at the library or by clicking here.  You are strongly encouraged to familiarize yourself with these channels if you have not already done so.
   
     Extra credit may also be earned by reading appropriate websites and the documents on your CIV 202 CD-Rom
.  Download and print the document, read it, and then use the library form noted above to answer the same questions.  Staple the document and the form together, and then turn in to me.  Extra credit reports will be accepted through the last day of class. Again, you are strongly encouraged to familiarize yourself with these materials.

XI. Class  policiesThere are eight complete and total prohibitions: (1) having a cell phone or pager go off in class; (2) talking to one another when it is time for class to begin or after it has begun; (3) playing iPods or similar gear; (4) wearing caps in class; (5) eating in class; (6) habitual tardiness; (7) reading or studying other material or doing homework for another class; and (8) leaving or preparing to leave before class is dismissed.  Drinking Cokes, Pepsis, coffee, etc. and laptop computers for taking notes are acceptable, but please turn off all cell phones and pagers when class begins.  A ringing cell phone or pager will not be well received; turn them off before class begins!

XII. Relevant Web Sites:   There is an unbelievable amount of  historical information on the worldwide web and I urge you to spend some time online surfing various sites.  Have fun and learn at the same time (but always remember that being on the web, or in a book or newspaper, or on television does not necessarily guarantee that it is correct; virtually anything can be put on the web, so evaluate the source and cross reference it to confirm validity). 

XIII.  Required textWorld History, volume II (compact 4th edition), by Upshur, Terry, Holoka, Goff and Cassar, Thomson Wadsworth: 2005.  It is essential that each student purchase this book and read it carefully and regularly.  The schedule of assignments is given later in this syllabus.  In addition, an accompanying world civilization student guide and workbook covering CIV 202 is strongly recommended.  You may also purchase this book at the bookstore and, more importantly,  use it as a study guide to the course; at least 50% of the final examination will be over textbook material the mastery of which should be greatly enhanced by completing the exercises in this workbook.  The third required book is for the outside writing assignment (see below).

XIV.  Prerequisites:  An inquiring mind, a desire to learn, and a willingness to work.  If you do not have these, you should not be here.

XV.  Course Objectives:  What I hope to accomplish with you is to give you an understanding of the world in which you live and how it came to be as it is.  This includes but is not limited to an understanding of and appreciation of the culture and heritage of western civilization, including that of the United States.  I want you to confront the differences between good and evil, success and failure, east and west, progress and regression, those people and events that left the world a better place versus those that did not, and the ingredients thereof.  The world did not get to be as it is by accident, and neither will the world of your future be an accident.  The same forces, if not the same people, will shape the 21st century as have shaped prior centuries.  What will the world be like when you reach middle age?
    You should be different for having been here.  You should know and understand more on December 4 than you do today.  If that does not happen, you have failed and I have failed. (See “Philosophy of Teaching” on my homepage.)  In addition, this course should enable you to make significant progress toward acquiring the “Characteristics of the Murray State University Graduate.”

   


 

For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.  The good man out of his good treasure brings forth good, and the evil man out of his evil treasure brings forth evil.  I tell you, on the day of judgment men will render account for every careless word they utter.  - Jesus Christ, Matthew 12: 34b-37.

It is not enough to do your best.  You must know what to do, and then do your best. -
        W. Edwards Deming

The fact that we live well doesn’t mean that we live nobly.  -  David Gergen

The only place where success comes before work is in the dictionary.  -  Unknown

To know nothing of the world before you were born is to remain a child. - Cicero  (106-43 BC)

It is not men that interest me primarily; it is ideas.  Ideas live; men die.  -  Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)

Knowledge will forever govern ignorance; and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives.  - James Madison (1750-1836)

Be curious always!  For knowledge will not acquire you; you must acquire it.  -  Sudie Beck

There are no shortcuts to any place worth going.  - Beverly Sills

You’re never a loser until you quit trying.  - Mike Ditka

He was as great as a man can be without virtue.  -Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859) on Napoleon (1769-1821)

Without a race there can be no victory.  -  Unknown.

Knowledge is power.  -  Francis Bacon (1561-1626)

Every soldier or ranger who shall be found drunk ... shall be compelled, as soon as his strength will permit, to dig a grave at a suitable burying place large enough for his own reception, as such grave cannot fail soon to be wanted for the drunken man himself or for some drunken companion.  - General Winfield Scott (1786-1866)

Hey pal, isn’t it time you applied yourself?

If people want to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, they want what never was and never will be.  - Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)

Painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt, and poetry is painting that is felt rather than seen. - Leonardo da Vinci  (1452-1519)

It’s no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.  -  Krishnamarti

Chance favors the prepared mind.  -  Michael Williams.

Things may come to those who wait, but only the things left by those who hustle.
                                                                                            -   Abraham Lincoln  (1809-1865)

The main thing is to make history, not to write it.  -  Otto von Bismarck  (1815-1898)

Whatever proportions Nazi crimes finally assumed, it became evident to all who investigated them that they had started from small beginnings.  -  Leo Alexander

Never let me hear that the blood of the brave has been shed in vain!  No!  It sends a cry down through all time.  -  Mary Boykin Chestnut

You were given the choice between war and dishonor.  You chose dishonor, and you will have war.  -  Churchill to Chamberlain after Munich, 1938.
 
 

Outside Writing Assignment

Fall 2010

 

In the 20th century the United States and other Western nations faced and answered two questions:  (1) Which political system is better, democracy or totalitarianism?; and (2) Which economic system is best, capitalism, socialism, or communism?  History answered those questions in favor of democracy and capitalism.  And, with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, it appeared that peace finally was at hand.  Yet, before the Cold War ended a new force was arising in the East; that force was militant Islamic fundamentalism, sometimes called Islamism, Islamofascism or jihadism, and we all know what happened on and since September 11, 2001. Your outside writing assignment for CIV 102 is to read and write a review of the book The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of the World Order by Samuel P. Huntington,  Touchstone: 1997.   Even though this review is not due until November 16, I suggest you obtain your copy soon and get started on this project right away.  I also suggest that you do some biographical research on the author.  Note: You have the option of one voluntary resubmission; that is, if you submit your paper on time, it will be graded and returned to you with errors noted and you can then correct the errors to improve your grade.  When resubmitting your paper, please paperclip both versions together.  This assignment comprises 10% of your final grade. 

Please take these directions seriously and follow them carefully.  Your review should answer all of the following questions.  Repeat the question verbatim in bold print and single-spaced before you begin answering it.  Then answer it in regular print, double spaced.

(1)  Does the author have a thesis, theory, or hypothesis he is testing?  If not, what is the purpose of writing the book?

(2) What kinds of data, that is, what are the principal data the author brings to bear in the book?  Is the book empirical, historical, intuitive, analytical, experiential (not experimental), or a combination?

(3)  Summarize his most important findings, arguments, conclusions, and positions.  (This should constitute roughly half your paper.)

(4)  What contribution, if any, does this book make to the study of world civilization?

(5)  What is your general assessment of the book?  Is it well written?  Are the author’s conclusions easy to follow?  Is the argument clear?  Would you recommend the book?  Why or why not?

Your review should consist of about eight typewritten, double-spaced pages printed on a good printer in #12 font.  Papers not meeting these minimal criteria will not be accepted.  Papers should be done in a highly competent and professional manner.  Excessive errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation cannot be accepted.  You should adhere closely to my hand-out Tips on Good Writing which may be downloaded from my homepage.  Once you have made five mistakes in spelling, grammar, and/or punctuation your grade will begin to decline, regardless of your paper’s quality otherwise.

“Footnotes” need not be put at the bottom of the page but may be inserted as page references throughout the text of your paper since you will be dealing with only one source.  You should, however, be certain to insert page references frequently in order to relate your review to the book properly; this means more than direct quotes should be referenced.  A review should consist of more than piecing together a series of quotations copied from the book; you need to demonstrate that you have read the book, that you know and understand what is in it, and that you have analyzed it to reach some conclusions about the validity of its arguments.

Plagiarism warning:   Any evidence that this paper is not your original work will result in a grade of E for the course and in the invocation of appropriate University disciplinary procedures.  See policy on academic dishonesty referred to above.
 
 


Schedule of Assignments

Fall 2009

WEEK OF

August 17:
Wednesday, August 19: Organizational session.   See Biography of the Millenium.    See Thomas F. Madden, "Crusade Propaganda."
Friday, August 21:  Begin "The Culture of the Renaissance in Europe" in chapter 9 and "The Scientific Revolution" and "The New Scientists" in chapter 11.


August 24:
Monday, August 24: continue the Renaissance.  See "Virtual Renaissance: A Journey Through Time" on the web.
Wednesday, August 26:  Finish the Renaissance.
Friday, August 28:  Quiz 1;  Read  "European Nation-States and the Reformation" in chapter 9 and  Matthew 16:13-19; Romans 13; Ephesians 2:8-9; Romans 8:29-30, and I Timothy 2: 3-4 from any translation of the Bible.  Also see  Reformation EuropeLuther's 95 theses and Unam Sanctam on the web.

August 31:

Monday, August 31:  Continue the Protestant Reformation.
Wednesday, September 2:  Finish the Protestant Reformation.
Friday, September 4: 
  Quiz 2; begin the Age of Discovery by reading "African Kingdoms, European Contacts, and the Slave Trade" and "European Colonial Empires in the Western Hemisphere" in chapter 9 and "European Colonization of Southeast Asia" in chapter 10.   See the Columbus Navigation Homepage.

September 7:
Monday, September 7:   Labor Day holiday; classes dismissed.
Wednesday, September 9:  Continue the Age of Discovery..
Friday, September 11 (Patriots' Day):  Finish the Age of Discovery.

September 14:   

Monday, September 14: 
Quiz 3; begin the non-European world and study Jihad Through History on the web.
Wednesday, September  16:  read "Rival Ottoman and Safavid Empires" in chapter 9 and chapter 10 pp. 523 to end.
Friday, September 18:  continue the non-European world.

September 21:
Monday, September 21:  finish the non-European world.
Wednesday, September 23:  Quiz 4 and preview and practice for first hourly examination.
Friday, September 25: 
First hourly test (16th & 17th centuries).

September 28:
Monday,  September 28:  Resume chapter 11: "Absolutism and Constitutionalism in Europe,"  "Intellectual and Scientific Developments" and "Cultural Evolution and Political Independence in British North America.
Wednesday, September 30:   continue chapter 11
Friday, October 2:  Fall break; classes dismissed.

October 5:
Monday, October 5:  continue chapter 11.
Wednesday, October 7:  Quiz 5; begin chapter 12.

Friday, October 9:  In chapter 12 "The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Era,"  "Reform and Revolution in the Nineteenth Century," and "Nationalism and Political Conflict in the West."  “The Charge of the Light Brigade.”

October 12:
Monday, October 12 (Columbus Day):  continue ch. 12.
Wednesday, October 14:   
continue ch. 12.
Friday, October 16:   Quiz 6; begin the industrial revolution with chapter 11, "Global Contest for Empire and the Onset of the Industrial Revolution."

October 19:
Monday, October 19:  continue the industrial revolution with chapter 12, "The Spread of Industrialization and the Appearance of Industrialized Society" and "Western Cultural and Intellectual Trends."
Wednesday, October 21:  continue chapter 12.
Friday, October 23:  Quiz 7;  return to chapter 11 and read "The Development of Latin American Culture."

October 26:
Monday, October 26:  chapter 13, "Causes of Imperialism and the Partition of Africa" and "Wetsern Imperialism in the Middle East and Asia."
Wednesday, October 28:  continue chapter 13 with "Japan and the United States Become World Powers."
Friday, October 30:  Quiz 8 ; begin World War I .   “In Flanders Field.”

November 2:
Monday, November 2:  Second hourly test (18th & 19th centuries).
Wednesday, November 4
:   Continue chapter 13 to p. 771.   Also see The Zimmermann Telegram.   World War I Biographical Dictionary.
Friday, November 6:  Continue World War I.  See The Heritage of the Great War.

November 9:
Monday, November 9: continue World War I.  See Where Fighting Stopped.
Wednesday, November 11:  Quiz 9; begin interwar period, ch. 13, pp. 771 to end, chapter 14 "The Soviet Union 1917-1939, and chapter 15 "Militarism, Fascism, and Nazism;"  Russian Revolution
.
Friday, November 13:  Continue interwar period.

November 16:
Monday, November 16: 
Quiz 10; begin World War II & chapter 15, pp. 861-887.  See Pearl Harbor Remembered and For the Fallen.
Wednesday, November 18: 
Continue World War II.  See Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman under POTUS.
Friday, November 20: 
Continue World War II.  D-Day and the Battle of Normandy and World War II Commemoration.

November 23:
Monday, November 23:  finish World War II.
Wednesday, November 25:  Thanksgiving holiday, classes dismissed.
Friday, November 27:  Thanksgiving holiday, classes dismissed.


November 30:
Monday, November 30: 
Quiz 11; begin postwar period, chapters 16 & 17.
Wednesday, December 2:  continue postwar period.  See The Marshall Plan for Post-War European Recovery  and Berlin Airlift.  The fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of Islamofascism See the February 23, 1998 fatwa "Jihad Against Jews and Crusaders" by the World Islamic Front.   Counterfactualism.

Friday, December 4:  Quiz 12; Q & A.  All make-up tests 2:00 p.m.  FH 500.

December 8:  Final tests
Tuesday, December 8 at 10:30 a.m.
FH 200:  third hourly test (20 century) and
comprehensive final exam; there will be plenty of time.
 

It is clear, then, that we are not to educate the young with a view to their amusement.  Learning brings pain, and while children are learning they are not playing.
                                                                                       Aristotle

If history teaches anything, it teaches that self delusion in the face of unpleasant facts is folly.
                                                                                       Ronald Reagan

If we learned anything from World War II, we learned that appeasement does not work.
                                                                                       George H. W. Bush

Those who do not remember the past are doomed to repeat it.
                                                                                       George Santayana

Those who do not remember the past are doomed to repeat CIV 102.
                                                                                        Winfield H. Rose

The society that loses its grip on the past is in danger, for it produces men who know nothing but the present, and who are not aware that life has been, and could be, different from what it is.  Such men bear tyranny easily, for they have nothing with which to compare it.
                                                                                       Trevor J. Saunders

The possibility of a complete and apocalyptic end of civilization cannot be discounted as a morbid fantasy.
                                                                                       D. K. Price

You [the Pope] and the West are doomed . . . .  We will break up the cross, spill the liquor and impose the jizya . . . , then the only thing acceptable is a conversion (to Islam) or (being killed) by the sword.
                                                                                       Al Qaida