Type of Credit: Partially Required
Credit(s)
Number of Students
This is a historiography and historical theory course that explores the development of the ways history and historical time have been understood, particularly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The most important concepts that the course will examine are historical cycles, historical progress, and the possibility of an 'End of History.' It will introduce students to several major philosophical schools of thought that have affected how we understand history, and through it how we understand our relationship with both the past and the future.
能力項目說明
The course aims to introduce students to the idea of history as a malleable process that represents past events but is not synonymous with them. To this end, the course will attempt to demonstrate to students how different thinkers working in different historical and philosophical traditions have approached the task of representing the past and its relationship to the future. The course will also introduce students to the stakes of historical theory by showing how the dominance of various interpretations of the nature of time have impacted societies in larger ways.
The course will combine a single large section in which the instructor introduces students to key concepts, figures, and processes using lectures and a variety of multi-media with smaller discussion sections led by teaching assistants. In preparation for each class, the students will independently read samples of historical or theoretical writing related to the week’s topics in digital documents available through Moodle. Once every two weeks, each student will answer two or three response questions related to the readings. These readings and response questions will form the basis for the teaching assistant-led discussion sections.
Each week will begin with a lecture delivered by the instructor that introduces students to a particular school of history writing or a historical thinker. Once the lecture is completed, students will divide into small groups and will participate in a discussion led by one of the course’s teaching assistants. To prepare for these discussions sections, students will be expected to have the done the assigned weekly readings (which will be available on Moodle) and to have written answers to two or three short response questions once every two weeks. The participation and response questions will be worth 30% together.
There will be two in-class examinations in the course. The first will be worth 30% and the second worth 40%.
Both the response questions and the examinations may be written in English or Chinese.
Tentative Course Schedule
2/14: Introduction
2/21: Homer, Herodotus, Hesiod, and the Ages of Men
2/27: No Class
3/7: St. Augustine and Early Christian History
3/14: Vico, Condorcet, and the Enlightenment
3/21: Hegel and the Post-Enlightenment World
3/28: Marx and Socialism
4/4: No Class
4/11: Midterm
4/18: Nietzche, Spengler, and the Decline of the West
4/25: Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt School
5/2: Arendt and Totalitarianism
5/9: Dependency and World Systems Analysis
5/16: Fukuyama and the Last Man
5/23: White and Narrative
5/30: Post-Humanism
6/6: Review
6/13: Final Examination
Midterm examination 期中考試: 30%
Final examination 期末考試: 40%
Discussion and response questions 討論與回應單: 30%
Examination Make-up Policy:
If students need to miss an exam because of a planned activity, they must let the instructor know in advance so an alternative time can be arranged for a make-up exam. Similarly, if students miss an exam because of an emergency, they should contact the instructor as soon as possible to discuss arranging a time for a make-up exam.
Attendance for Class Meetings and Discussion Sections:
Attendance is required. All students should complete the assigned readings prior to each class meeting. Students who know they will miss a class meeting should let their instructor know as soon as possible.
Bi-Weekly Response Questions:
Once every two weeks students will answer two to three questions related to the assigned readings in one or two sentences. These questions will help the students prepare for the discussion sections.
Readings will be available online through Moodle.