GENERAL INFORMATION



All assignments--Reading Responses/Discussion, a 1250 word Essay, a 2000 word Research Essay, and two objective exams (true/false & multiple choice)--are submitted online.

HUM 3306 will be demanding, with lots of reading and writing (the "Humanities with Writing" Gordon Rule requirement mandates three substantial writing assignments). The rough rule for college courses is that you spend 3 hours of study outside of class for every hour in class; for the typical 3-credit course, that means about 9 hours of "home" work per week. So, for this online course during the regular school year, you should be prepared to devote at least 12 hours a week to it. For a summer semester, the pace is more than twice as fast.

You should not be registered for it if you have not taken ENC 1101 and ENC 1102 or their equivalent. You will NOT be able to meet the essay-writing demands without having the competence required for ENC 1101 and ENC 1102.

I’m Dr. Jeremy Rowan; my areas of expertise include European Intellectual History, American History, and British History.  I will be administering the bulk of the course, and you should direct all course questions to me via the Blackboard email module.  Dr. Bruce A. Harvey, Associate Director of SEAS (School of Environment and Society) at BBC, designed the course and will be setting up the online exams; his areas of expertise include European Intellectual History, American Literary and Culture Studies, and Literature of the South Pacific.  If you have a question about the course in terms of how it fulfills University requirements or electives, or if you have questions about Humanities courses in general, feel free to contact him.

Jeremy Rowan, Ph.D.

Bruce A. Harvey, Ph.D.

Office: DM 399 MMC History Department

Office: AC1 320 BBC English Department

Office Hours: by appointment

Office Hours: by appointment

Phone: (305) 348-4791 

Phone: (305) 919-5254

FIU E-mail: harveyb@fiu.edu

FIU E-mail: harveyb@fiu.edu

 

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Welcome to Online HUM 3306:
History of Ideas, from the Age of Enlightenment to the Age of Anxiety!

I have high ambitions for what you will obtain from enrolling in HUM 3306. Many of you will have signed up with the notion that you're just completing an FIU requirement, but I hope that by the time you conclude the class you will have opened your minds and hearts to fascinating realms of human inquiry as expressed in the works you'll be reading. Ideally, how you see the world, and your identity within that world, will be richly and complexly transformed.

The readings will span political philosophy, economic theory, biology and psychology, as well as fiction and poetry.

We'll be tracking a set of key issues and themes: the confident emergence in the 17th & 18th centuries (called the "Age of Reason" or the "Age of Enlightenment") of a non-dogmatic, rational approach to social problems and nature's mysteries; the struggle in the 19th century to maximize individuality and interiority (the "Romantic Era") in the face of widespread economic alienation (the "Industrial Age") and de-humancentric discoveries such as Darwinian evolution; and finally, in the 20th century, the persuasive sense of unease--whether from global conflict, the loss of local community, or philosophical angst.

This course primarily studies European intellectual history, but there remains an entire globe of cultures extending beyond that which has developed in the West. And so you are encouraged, once you have taken this course, to take other Humanities courses at FIU (either online or classroom-oriented) that will round out your interests in and understanding of other, diverse cultural traditions.

I look forward to an intellectually exciting semester with you!

                                                                       --Yours, Dr. Rowan

 

 

COURSE OBJECTIVES

  • To increase your knowledge about key thinkers of the post-Renaissance (16th-century) Western world and their historical contexts.
  • To help you understand their significance to our contemporary moment.
  • To improve your ability to analyze and reflect critically on sophisticated, complex texts.
  • To develop your skill and pleasure in communicating ideas via effective, mature prose.
  • To develop your ability to use critically, in analytical argumentation, secondary materials as they relate to primary materials.

 

 

MAJOR & CURRICULUM OBJECTIVES TARGETED

This course satisfies one of FIU's University Core Curriculum "Humanities with Writing" requirements. As a 3000-level HUM course, it also serves as a Humanities Minor course and may satisfy elective requirements for various majors.  Contact Dr. Harvey if you have a question.

 

TEXTBOOKS (Available at the MMC Bookstore)

You must use the editions specified, as assignments and review notes will be keyed to their page numbers. Click on the author names or book covers to get additional publisher information. The total cost, new, for the six books below should be less than $50.00.

 

The Second Treatise of Government, 
John Locke,
Dover Publications; New Ed edition, August 2002
,

ISBN: 0486424642

This is the social-political text that all the Founding Fathers read before devising the U.S. Constitution.



 


The Life of Olaudah Equiano, 

Olaudah Equiano,
Dover Publications, January 1999
,

ISBN: 048640661X

A marvelous account of one African’s journey from idyllic childhood, through the horrific Middle Passage, to the U.S. and England. Equiano’s story asks: what does it mean to the “self” when the self is defined in economic terms?



 


Frankenstein, 

Mary Shelley,
Pocket; Reissue edition, April 27, 2004
,

ISBN: 0743487583

A classic monster story, critiquing techno-obsessions.



 


The Communist Manifesto, 

Karl Marx,
Oxford University Press, USA; New Ed edition, July 1998
,

ISBN: 0192834371

Karl said, “Workers of the world, unite!” In these days of huge profits for Big Oil, his ideas are provocative.



 


The Origin of Species, 

Charles Darwin,
W. W. Norton & Company; 2nd Abridged edition, February 2002
,

ISBN: 0393978672

You may (or may not) be persuaded that we are descended from monkeys after reading what Darwin wrote in his seminal, iconoclastic scientific volume.



 


Civilization and its Discontents, 

Sigmund Freud,
W. W. Norton & Company; Reissue edition, July 1989
,

ISBN:0393301583

Another revolutionary thinker who gave a blow to our self-satisfaction by revealing we are not in control of ourselves as much as we may think.



 

 

 

COMMUNICATING WITH THE INSTRUCTOR

·       Instructor E-mail and phone: For routine course questions use the course's Blackboard email module. I usually will respond within two days in respect to individual questions. Essay feedback will take between 10-14 days. For truly unusual/emergency situations, you may use my FIU email address or leave a message on my office phone# (see contact info. above).  

·       Instructor Conferences: For conferences about course matters, please email to make an appointment (see contact info. above).

 

GRADING


 

Course Requirements

Weights

Reading Responses/Discussion

25%

Essay #1

25%

Essay #2

25%

Two Objective Exams 34% + 66%

25%

Total

100%

All written assignments are submitted via Turnitin. The Exams will be conducted through the Blackboard system.

Grades are calculated with the standard 100-0 scale (90+ = A-; 80+ = B-; etc.).  A not-turned-in assignment will receive a zero. 

Incompletes: University policy is that these can only be given in the case of a health or family emergency, and only one outstanding assignment is allowed to permit the incomplete being granted.

Late Submissions: Late essays will be accepted only under extraordinary, documented emergencies.  Otherwise, for every day late, an essay will be docked a notch (i.e., B to B-). 

Online Exams: The two Exams will be given within a three-day window (Friday evening to Sunday evening) and you will have a delimited amount of time to complete each (an hour).  A make-up exam period will be granted for, again, only extraordinary, documented emergencies.

All assignments must be turned in order to receive a passing grade in the course.

 

ASSIGNMENTS

Reading Response/Discussion Forum:  Great intellectual and cultural works come vitally alive when they are actively pondered in dialogue. This is crucial to making your online learning experience match the benefits of a “real” classroom. This course component is designed to provide for relatively uninhibited student interaction and, at the same time, to give you a chance to convey your understanding of the material incrementally as the semester proceeds. Here are the rules:

1) You should initiate topics that interest you and/or respond to other students who have initiated topics. I read the forums on a daily basis, but generally do not get involved, as it is best, once the forums get going, to let them evolve according to student interest and insight. 

2) A total of at least 2000 words (equivalent to 8 pages double-spaced) by the end of the semester is expected.  You must, to receive full credit, reflect on each of our major authors (Locke, Equiano, Shelley, Darwin, Marx, and Freud) in a substantial manner.  Biographical information in a Wikipedia style or a “plot” review summary does not count.  Your postings should show insight, analysis, and (implicitly) that you’ve truly read the author or text in question, not just the first chapter.  Engaged students will also want to respond, according to their interest and their group peers’ interests, to the e-text readings or points made in the lectures, although there cannot be a precise rule on the expected amount of such postings.  You must make an effort to keep your postings/replies current with the syllabus readings.  Although some lag-time is ok, and it is natural to return to earlier topics/authors, only posting several weeks later on an author will not give you full credit.

3) The goal is to engage your fellow classmates: so try to post musings, questions, or lines of inquiry that you would want others to respond to, and of course respond to others that have done so. Ideally, you will sustain a dialogue within your forum group about several author or issues.  This means that you typically might offer several postings on an author, not just a singular posting that you tack on to the Reading Response Forum and walk away from.  Avoid getting personal; and please treat others in the forum as you would wish to be treated.

4) As part of the Gordon Rule, writing-intensive, goal: I also expect a degree of increasing sophistication in your postings.  The course syllabus has been carefully designed such that various intellectual themes emerge as we progress through the semester, and, implicitly or explicitly, your responses should reflect that.  Just as in a classroom course, what you say towards the end of the term should to some extent be “elevated” by the foundations you’ve built previously.

5) The Reading Response Forum will have 5-10 primary discussion groups, divided according to your last name (A-D, E-I, J-M, N-Q, R-Z, for example), depending on the number of students enrolled. Please stick to your group and work hard to make conversation/discussion engaging and intellectually productive. Note: use common sense in deciding whether to initiate a new discussion-“tree” or keep your topics/replies under an already-established discussion-“tree.” It is important to have a good balance between topics and replies; otherwise your forum will become too unruly.

6)  Your Forum grade will be worth 25% of the total course grade. Decent grammar, proper sentence construction and punctuation, and so on are required. Although a grading-curve mode of grading is not mechanically used, you should take note of the responses from your peers. Those who respond routinely, with more than several sentences here or several sentences there, and show true insight into the course materials (and write solid, error-free prose) should provide you with an "A" zone example. Those who do not respond to all our major authors, or respond in a sometimes perfunctory, non-insightful way, will be in the "B" or lower zone. Sporadic responses will put you in the "C" or "D" zone; etc. 

7) Your grade for this component of the course will be assessed at the end of the semester. Should you want to know how you are doing before that, however, feel free to email me. If you request an assessment, you should provide a cut-&-pasted document of your significant responses; you are required to submit such at the end of the semester, regardless. 

8)
 Please routinely cut-and-paste your dated substantial contributions to the Discussion Forum into a "Word" file. You will be asked to submit this at the end of the semester via Turnitin so that the totality of your contributions can be accurately assessed.  Prudent students will, before submitting the compilation, want to do some editing (again, this is part of the Gordon Rule aspect of the course): winnow out trivial “chit-chat” stuff and check your grammar and style.  Such will help foreground what you’ve really learned in the course.

Papers: I will give guidelines and topics for the two essays as the semester progresses, as green links in the far right column of the class calendar below. The first essay will be about five pages long, research-free; the second essay will be about eight pages long, and will require you to consult several provided secondary/research sources.

Students who get very low grades on their first paper may be asked to use the FIU Learning/Writing Center resources, which would require, potentially, several trips to either the BBC or the MMC campus.

Papers will be submitted through the Turnitin site, which has a link on this course's initial main Blackboard online menu.  PLEASE NOTE: YOU MUST, AFTER YOU’VE TURNED IN YOUR MATERIAL, DOUBLE-CHECK TO MAKE SURE YOU TURNED IN WHAT YOU THOUGHT YOU TURNED IN.  JUST GETTING THE TURNITIN RECEIPT DOES NOT SUFFICE.  I WILL NOT ACCEPT, DAYS LATER, EXCUSES SUCH AS “I TURNED IN A DRAFT BY MISTAKE.”

Two Exams: These will be objective-style exams.  Each will be available over a three-day period (Friday-Sunday, to accommodate varied student schedules), but you will have, once you open the exam, strictly one hour to complete it.  The first will cover the first-fourth of the semester; the second will cover the bulk of the remainder of the semester.  The two raw scores (available through Blackboard) will be translated into standardized scores (90+ = A-) and entered into the Turnitin system as 25% of your course grade (the first is worth 34% and the second 66%, of the 25% for the total exam component). Trivial questions will not be asked; but all the course materials--e-texts, lectures, the main book readings--will be considered as testable.  A very brief practice exam will be given a few days before the first real one.

 

DISABILITY NOTICE

If you have a disability and need assistance, please contact the Disability Resource Center (MMC: GC190; 305-348-3532) (BBC: WUC139, 305-919-5345). Upon contact, the Disability Resource Center will review your request and contact your professors or other personnel to make arrangements for appropriate modification and/or assistance.  

 

RELIGIOUS HOLY DAYS

The University's policy on religious holy days as stated in the University Catalog and Student Handbook will be followed in this class. Any student may request to be excused from (on-line) class to observe a religious holy day of his or her faith.

 

ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT POLICY


By taking this online course, you promise to adhere to FIU’s Student Code of Academic Integrity. For details on the policy and procedures go to ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT (Section 2.44).

Intensive auditing (via Turnitin) of the course will be conducted to prevent academic misconduct. It is very easy to detect plagiarism: SO DON'T DO IT: YOU WILL BE CAUGHT!!! And, when you are caught, the consequences will be severe, such as getting an "F" in the course or worse.

If you are tempted to plagiarize out of desperation to get an assignment in on time, DON'T DO IT; talk to your professor first, in this class and other classes.

 

 

 

 

COURSE CALENDAR

 

 

 

 

Date

Lectures

Topics & Readings

Assignment Instructions/Due Dates
           &
Miscellaneous Reminders

Prof = lectures. Click on them. They are required reading.

These also will often have imbedded within them
E-texts which are additional primary texts or artwork or links to material at other websites, which you should print out so that you can read and study them. 

All E-texts (click on them), professor lectures, and our major authors/books (the ones ordered for the bookstore) are required reading. The E-texts are embedded within the lectures at appropriate junctures as well as being linked separately on the calendar in the column directly below.

Please pay attention to the ebb and flow of the workload and apportion your time accordingly!

Week 1: Aug 23-27

Prof: Scientific Revolution & Protestant Revolution

Prof: Enlightenment

Before the Enlightenment: The Scientific Revolution and the Protestant Reformation


The four Wiki articles below include miscellaneous bullet-style lists, which may be quickly skimmed.  Concentrate on the main paragraphs.


E-text: Great Chain of Being "Wiki" article & illustration

E-text: “Wiki” Scientific Revolution

E-text:  “Wiki” Reformation

E-text:  “Wiki” Enlightenment

The Enlightenment I: Putting Nature in the Encyclopedia


E-text: Charles W. Peale painting and Ben Franklin perfection chart

E-text: “Wiki” Linnaeus (read 1st several paragraphs, and "Linnaean taxonomy" sections)

E-text: Scientific Revolution Critique

E-text: Diderot Enlightenment Encyclopedia table of contents image

If the FIU bookstore is tardy in ordering the first book (John Locke’s 2nd Treatise), you can find an e-text version below.

http://www.liberty1.org/2dtreat.htm#1CHAP

You may also find all the books by searching and ordering using www.amazon.com, if you want to try for used copies.


THE TURNITIN LINK WILL BE EXPLAINED (AND PASSWORD GIVEN) WHEN YOU GET CLOSER TO THE FIRST ESSAY DUE DATE.


CLICK THE GREEN "Prof...." LINKS TO THE FAR LEFT FOR THE LECTURE REVIEWS. YOU SHOULD LOOK AT THE LECTURES BEFORE, DURING, AND/OR AFTER YOU READ OUR MAIN AUTHORS (IT'S UP TO YOU, ACCORDING TO YOUR LEARNING STYLE). WITHIN THE LECTURES ARE LINKS TO E-TEXTS; THE E-TEXTS, FOR CLARITY, ARE ALSO ALWAYS SEPARATED OUT AND GIVEN DIRECTLY IN THE MIDDLE COLUMN TO THE LEFT.

THE E-TEXTS ARE MANDATORY READING.  

Week 2:

Aug 30-Sept 3

Prof: Locke

The Enlightenment II: Possessive Selfhood, Civil and Political Rights, and the Delights of Property


Locke, Second Treatise:

Editor’s note & Chapters I-V, VI (sections 54-58, 60, 70-76), VII (sections 77, 87-91), VIII (sections 95-101, 115-22), IX, X, XVIII (199, 203, 204, 207-210) & XIX (211-212, 219-230, 240-243)

Remember to contribute to the Reading Response Forum.  And remember to cut-and-paste your substantial postings in an accumulating Word document file, which you will turn in at the end of the semester!

Practice Exam Instructions: 1-Hour, to be taken b/w Thursday Sept. 2nd 9:00pm  and Sunday Sept. 5th 11:59pm

The first real exam—to be taken between Sept. 9 and Sept. 12 (one hour long)--will cover everything in the first two weeks (e-texts, lectures, and Locke) and it will cover the early chapters of Equiano (up thru Chapter V) of the third week.  It will not cover past Chapter V in Equiano, nor the lecture on Equiano, nor the e-texts on Equiano.

Week 3:

Sept 6-Sept 10

 Prof: Equiano

The Enlightenment III: Skepticism, Critique, & the Advancement of Freedom


Equiano, The Life of...:

Editor’s Note or Introduction (not the Preface written by Equiano himself!!!); Chapters I-III, IV (first several pages), V, VII-VIII, X-XI, XII (first several pages; last several pages), & Preface (Preface only makes sense after you've read the narrative)

Be sure to read Chapter I, II, etc., not just the sections within the chapters, which are also numbered I, II, etc.


E-text: Equiano--click on several (not all!) of the "next" buttons for the historical context of Equiano's narrative

E-text: a summary of the intriguing "fabrication" issue of the early chapters of Equiano's narrative

DEAR SOME STUDENTS: SOME OF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN CHECKING YOUR EMAIL WITHIN THE BLACKBOARD SYSTEM FOR IMPORTANT MESSAGES.  AND SOME OF YOU HAVE NOT BEEN READING OR INITIATING POSTS.  YOU GET TO BOTH AREAS OF THE SYSTEM BY CLICKING ON THE ICONS ON THE FAR LEFT OF THE BLACKBOARD MENU. WE’RE NOW IN THE THIRD WEEK, AND VERY SOON THE “SOME” SHOULD BE REPLACED WITH “ZERO”! (Please note that the system indicates new emails and new postings via icons when you log on.)


Required Online Exam#1 Instructions:
1-Hour, to be taken b/w
Thursday Sept. 9th 9:00pm & Sunday Sept. 12th 11:59pm


***FIU system maintenance is performed weekly between the hours of 11:59 PM on Friday night through 5:00 AM on Saturday morning.

Week 4:

Sept 13-17





Prof: Enlightenment Big Trends Revisited


Read the Paine e-text biography below and then read the first page or so of the first chapter of his famous The Age of Reason (1794-6) in the next e-text. Then read, in the next e-text, the first several paragraphs of the Wiki. entry on Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).


E-text: Tom Paine--biography

E-text: Tom Paine—read the first page of the first chapter of The Age of Reason

E-text: Mary Wollstonecraft—read just the first several paragraphs



Essay#1 Instructions: Due Monday Sept. 20 by Midnight

Week 5:

Sept 20-24

Prof: Romanticism

Bourgeois Spaces and the Sublime: The Romantic Rebellion & the Discovery of Interiority


E-text: Rousseau

E-text: W. Blake--Biography (just read the first several paragraphs)

E-text: J. Keats--biography (read the "Life" part after opening paragraph)

E-text: Romantic Era Poems

Important: Please remember that although some lag time is acceptable (working students often post on the weekend following the week's readings) in respect to the Discussion forums, being chronically out of season is not acceptable.  To mix the metaphor: you don’t want to join the party, when the party has moved on to another locale.

Week 6:

Sept. 27-Oct. 1

Romanticism lecture above includes Prof. points on Shelley

Shelley, Frankenstein:

Read the editor's introduction & chronologies (vii-xxi) before reading the novel. The editor's introduction provides a very tidy cultural history of the shift from the Enlightenment to Romantic periods.

Week 7

Oct. 4-8

 Frankenstein continued

Week 8:
Oct. 11-15

Prof: Realism

 

Prof: Big Summary Thus Far

 

The Age of Social Realism: The View from Below

 

There is no assigned book or e-text for the Social Realism unit; but do read the brief excerpts in the lecture to the left.

 

Week 9:
Oct. 18-22

 Prof: Darwin

Revolutionary Thinkers I: Rewriting the History of Nature


Darwin, Origin of Species:

Editor’s Intro. (sections 1, 2, 3, & 5), Darwin’s Intro., Chapters I-III, Chapter IV (46-53top, 61bottom-65top, 72bottom-74), Chapter VI cut, & Chapter XIV (115bottom-121)

It is absolutely crucial that you read the edition ordered for the course; it is a "great hits" of Darwin's much, much longer treatise.

Week 10:

Oct. 25-29

Prof: Marx (main lecture)

 

 

Prof: Marx (graph and perspectives)

 

Revolutionary Thinkers II: Rewriting the History of Social Relations

 
Marx, Communist Manifest


Read the editor's introduction; and then Parts 1 (Bourgeois and Proletarians), 2 (Proletarians and Communists), & 4 (Position of the Communists...).

Please note: there aren't many pages to be read in the Communist Manifesto, but they are dense.

It is also especially important to read the Prof. lecture in conjunction with the CM.  Marx in the CM doesn’t spend much time explaining his economic theory of surplus value/exploitation (he does so in other writings); if you don’t understand his idea of surplus value/exploitation, you won’t have the foundation to understand the CM itself.

 

 

E-text: Adam Smith

Week 11:
Nov. 1-5



Prof: Freud

Revolutionary Thinkers III: The Discovery of the Unconscious

 

Freud: Civilization and its Discontents:

Chapters 1-VII (not Chapter VIII)

 

 

Week 12:

Nov. 8-12

Spend this week consolidating your understanding of the course writers/texts and Prof. lectures thus far. Then draft, revise, and submit by Nov. 22 Essay#2.

Week 13:

Nov. 15-19

Prof: Modernism in Philosophy and Art

 

Modernism: Angst, Aesthetics, and the Abysses of Horror

There is no ordered book for this final unit.  Besides the two e-texts on Nietzsche, be sure to take extra care to navigate your way through the Prof. online lecture so that you read (and listen!) to everything intended. Thanks.

E-text: Nietzsche biography

E-text: Nietzsche essay--On Truth and Lie (click on both part 1 and part 2)  

Go here if above link fails

Essay#2 Instructions): Due Monday Nov. 22 by Midnight

Week 14:

Nov. 22-26  

Prof: Fanon

Power and its Discontents in the Modern World


E-text: Frantz Fanon biography

E-text: Frantz Fanon speech

Week 15:
Nov. 29-Dec.2

 

  

Dec. 6-11:
University-wide Final Exam Period

Dec. 15: Course grades submitted

Dec. 16: Grades available in the Panthersoft grade kiosk

Prof: PDF Summary of Course Page One


Prof: PDF Summary of Course Page Two

Use this final week to catch up with readings and prepare Exam#2.

To the left is a summary of the readings and corresponding issues, for the entire semester, on two PDFs.

If you read thru them you will be able to self-test your recognition of the readings/issues. There may be one or two authors referred to on the grids that were not included this semester--ignore them.

Link for Instructions: For Reading Response/ Discussion Forum
Due Monday Nov. 29 by Midnight

 

Required Online Exam#2 Instructions:
1-Hour, to be taken b/w
Thursday Dec.2 9:00pm & Sunday Dec. 5 11:59pm