Please Recycle This Paper OF VEK1CE; Huizinga, HOHO LUDENS; Gadarner, TRUTh AND KETHOD DESCRIPTION: This course will address the boundary between social science ano the humanities, through studying the place of interpretation in sooial life and the study of social life. We shall focus explicitly on the law, ano the study of law, as a process of interpretation. This will involve us in, among other things, an examination of the role of performance and play in social life. Readings from literature as well as social science proper will be used. BON *07M THE BODILY SELF (3) Yukman, 816 PLC MEETS: 12:30 HWF, 361 PLC FORMAT: Seminar WEEKLY READING: 150 Pages EVALUATION: 50%-Homework; 50%-Paper READINGS: Whitman, LEAVES OF GRASS; Foucanlt, DISCIPLINE AND PUNISH; Selection: HCMER, PLATO, THE GOSPELS, ST.PAUL, DESCARTES, WORDSWORTH, BLAKE, DICKINSON, BECKETT, FEMINIST CRITICISM. DESCRIPTION: In this seminar we will explore what the relationship between writing and the body has been in texts of Western culture. The following questions will direct our reading: What do the writings of Western Culture tell us about our bodies? What images of a self are substituteo for a bodily self ano why? Does our literature describe our llveo bodies? Do our representations of the body create the body we live? History HST 102 WESTERN CIVILIZATION (3) McGowen, 371 PLC MEETS: 10:30 MWE, 15G Geology FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: **00 WEEKLY READING: 1C0 Pages EVALUATION: 50*-2 Midterms; SOS Final READINGS: Kagan, THE WESTERN HERITAGE; Luther, CHRISTIAN LIBERTY; Hichiavexli, THE PRINCE; Voltaire, CANDIDE; Packet DESCRIPTION: A stuay of early modern Europe with special attention to the Renaissance, the Reformation, the rise of absolute monarchy, and the development of scientific ideas. The main focus of the course will be on cultural anu intellectual change. HST 102 WESTERN CIVILIZATION (3) Birn, 370 PLC MEETS: 9:30-10:50 UH FORMAT: Lecture AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 100 WEEKLY READING: 70 Pages EVALUATION: 20>-Paper; 20S-2 Midterms; H0%-Final READINGS: Chambers, THE WESTERN TRADITION; Voltaire, CAND1DE; or Balnton, HERE I STAND; or hachiavelli, TEE PRINCE. DESCRIPTION: This is the second term of the History Department's introduction to Western Civilization. The basic theme of the course covers the individual's relationship to the state from the middle of the Thirteenth Century, until the fall of Napoleon in 1615. The questions asked concern the tension between authority and freedom, the mutual responsibilities between governments and the governed, and the effects ot social and religious change. BST 102 VESTBHN CIVILIZATION (3) Braoy, 235 PLC MEETS: 11:30 MWF, 133 LIB FORMAT: Lecture/Discussicn AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 25 WEEKLY READING: 60 Pages EVALIATION: 25t-Attendance; 751-3 Papers READINGS: Chambers, THE WESTERN EXPERIENCE; Thompson, CLASSICS OF WESTERN ThOUGHT; Hirschfeld and Knoebel, CLASSICS OF WESTERN THOUGHT DESCRIPTION: This special section of KST 102 is limited to 25 students; it will be continued in H ST 103 in the sprint, (R. Chickering). It is devotee to reading ano interpretation of original sources and to writing and the criticism of writing. The three papers constitute the written work of the course. This section, which is offered through the Center for the Humanities, provides an opportunity for a small class, centered on original sour ces, and dedicatee to the development of writing skills. COMMENTS: HST 102 covers the history of Europe f rot the Renaissance to the French Revolution. HST 111 WORLD HISTORY (3) Lracy, 23b PLC I1ETS: 8:30 MWF, 302 GLR FORMAT: Lecture/Discussion AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 100 WEEKLY READING: 45 Pages PREREQUISITES: Stuaents Iron. KST 110 EVALUATION: 60%-2 Papers; 4GJ-Finai READINGS: Hcl.eill, WORLD HISTORY; Palmer, HISTORICAL ATLAS OF THE WORLD; Packet DECR1PT10L: This course follows HST 11C anc is followeo by HST 112 in Sprint. HST 111 covers roughly 300 A.D. to 1600 A.D.: 1) comparison ana contrast of three successor civilizations to the ancient world— Euoohist Japan, the Islamic worlo, and Christian Europe; the first Eurasian unification by Mongols; pre-Columbian America (Aztec Mexico); global unification through the European seaborne empires ana creation of the European world economy . CO!.MELTS: The course >eaks roughly into two-week segments. Each week has two lectures and cr.e ciscussion basec on readings from the packet ot original sources. HST 202 HST UNITED STATES (3) Huffi&asti, 346 PLC FEETS: 19:00-20:20 Uh, 189 PLC FORFAT: Lecture AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 35 WEEKLY KEADIF.G: 110 Pages EVALUATION: 25i-Paper; 25*-Fiidterm; 50%-Final READINGS: Tindall, AFERICA: A NARRATIVE HISTCRY; Oates, ABRAHAFl LINCOLN: THE FIAN BEHIND THE HYTHS; Neihardt, BLACK ELK SPEAKS; Traditengerg, BROOKLYN BRIDGE: FACT AND SYMBOL DESCRIPTION: This is the second quarter of a survey course in American history which will cover the period from about 1820 to the early years of the 20th century. Major topics that will be examined include the establishment of the modern American party system, the issues leading to and coming out of the American Civil War, and the impact of industrialization on American life. HST 202 BISTORT OP THE UNITED STATES (3) Relaford, 223 PLC MEETS: 11: 3C HWF, 177 Lawrence FORMAT: Lecture AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 270 WEEKLY READING: 1b0 Pages EVALUATION: 20S-Eook review; 30* Midterm; 5GW-Final READINGS: Tindall, AMERICA: A NARRATIVE HISTORY; Douglass, NARRATIVE CF THE LIFE OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS; Current, ThE LINCOLN NOEODY KNOWS; Neihardt, DLACK ELK SPEAKS; AoaatiS, TWENTY YEARS AT HULL HOUSE DESCRIPTION: This course surveys American history 1 ror. 1030 to 1900. Reauings in biography and autobiography will supplement the text in older to promote an unoerstanding, of hew people of oilleient race, gender, anc social status perceiveu the major events of the nineteenth century. Those events include the growth of nationalism, westward expansion, the Civil War ano Reconstruction, the growth of an industrial economy, ano America's rise to world power. HST 202 HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES (3) Brown, 255 PLC MEETS: 13:30 MHF, 150 Geology FORMAT: Lecture/Dlscuaslon AVERAGE CLASS SIZE: 250 MERELY READING: 100 Pages EVALUATION: 251-Paper; 25%-Midterm; 501-Final READINGS: Nash, AMERICAN PEOPLE; Huggins, BLACK ODYSSEY; Banner, ELIZABETH CADY STANTON; Garland, MAIN-TRAVELLED ROADS. DESCRIPTION: This is the second tern of the basic sequence in American history. This tern we cover the period fron the 1820's to the 1890's. The readings and the lectures will emphasize social, economic, cultural, and political change in America, including industrialization and urbanization. In this framework will be treated the Jacksonian era, westward ezpanaion, slavery, the Civil Mar, Reconstruction, the Gilded Age, and the Populist revolt. COMMENTS: Although the olass size makes this a lecture course, we shall provide opportunities for discussion and questions during the term.