|

As verification that you've read the policies and
information on this syllabus page, go to the WebCT email module, and
respond to my initial "hello" message.
Should the WebCT/FIU Online system crash, you can find this syllabus and
the course calendar at
www.fiu.edu/~harveyb, via the
link at the top of that page.
Major changes to the course calendar are not anticipated. However,
you must rely upon the online calendar (rather than an initial print out
of it) to check due dates and other course matters.
Prof. Bruce A. Harvey, Director of FIU's Humanities Program, has designed
this course's content and structure. Should you have a question
about how the course satisfies FIU requirements, or a question about
further study in the Humanities at FIU, feel free to contact Prof. Harvey.
The Humanities Instructor, Richard Fantina, is in charge of student
interaction, assessing exams and papers, and administering this course in
general. All questions pertaining to course matters should be
directed to him through the WebCT email
module. Should there be a special need to meet in person, you
should meet with Prof. Harvey, during his office hours below.
|
Instructor: Richard Fantina |
Course
Design Professor: Bruce A. Harvey |
|
Office: NA |
Office: AC1 346 Biscayne Bay Campus |
| Office
Hours: NA |
Office
Hours:
Tues/Wed 10:00-2:00 & by appointment |
| Phone:
NA |
Phone:
(305) 919-5254 |
| |
Fax:
(305) 919-5734 |
|
E-mail: richard.fantina@fiu.edu |
E-mail: harveyb@fiu.edu |
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 ideas: the confident emergence
in the 17th & 18th century (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,
a 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 others in the Humanities Program or elsewhere at FIU
(either online or classroom-oriented) that will round out your interests
in and understanding of other, diverse cultural traditions.
Please note: There is a lot of reading for this course, and a lot of
writing, as it fulfills a Gordon Rule requirement. Because Summer A
is seven weeks long, you will be writing twice as much and reading twice
as much per week as during a regular Spring or Fall term. The
overall work
load is the same; but it's compressed to accommodate seven weeks. If
you are not prepared for the accelerated schedule, you should not take the
course. 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.
Summer courses go twice as fast; so you should be spending about 15+ hours
a week on this course!
Please read the previous several sentences again.
I look forward to an
intellectually exciting semester with you!
As verification that you've read the policies and
information on this syllabus page, go to the WebCT email module, and
respond to my initial "hello" message.
--Yours, Instructor Richard Fantina
- 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 an
elective for the Humanities Major and may satisfy elective requirements
for other majors. Contact Prof. Harvey if you have a question.
|
|
TEXTBOOKS |
|
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 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.
|
 |
You do not need to
bring to this course previously-gained historical or literary or
philosophic knowledge, but it will demand strong intellectual commitment.
Also, as the course is a 3000-level one, it assumes mastery of skills
learned in ENC 1101 and 1102 (the Freshman Composition sequence).
You should not be registered for this course if you have not
taken ENC 1101 and 1102 or their equivalent! If you are in
doubt, please email me, Richard Fantina, through this course's WebCT email
module, to present
your academic situation.
For more information
about prerequisites, click here.
|
COMMUNICATING WITH THE
INSTRUCTOR
&
BEING IN DIALOGUE WITH YOUR ONLINE CLASSMATES |
-
Instructor
E-mail and phone: For
assignment submissions and other routine course questions email me, Richard Fantina, via the course's WebCT
email module. I will usually respond within 2 days in respect to
individual questions. Essay and response paper feedback will take
between 5-10 days. For unusual/emergency situations, you may use
my FIU email address,
richard.fantina@fiu.edu. For highly important questions, you
may also call, or leave a message on, Prof. Harvey's office phone
#: 305-919-5254.
-
Instructor
Conferences:
Prof. Harvey will always be happy to meet with you during his office hours (listed
above) to talk more about the readings, assignments, or other course
matters. It's best if you email him beforehand to specify a time
when you would like to see him.
-
Classmate
E-mail: The WebCT email module allows you to contact other
students taking the course (besides being the vehicle to turn in your
response papers and essays), and you should feel free to do so. But please respect privacy issues--do not divulge inappropriate private
matters and do not solicit others to do so.
-
Discussion
Forum: The discussion forum--a WebCT module--will be divided
into 3 forum areas: the Academic Forum, a mandatory part of the course
in which you respond to and discuss question cues or topics pertinent to the intellectual issues in our authors and texts,
posed routinely by the instructor or optionally by students;
the Student Life Forum, where you can post questions and topics about
being a student, navigating your Major, and preparing for a career or
being engaged in one (as long as you maintain propriety); and a
Nuts-and-Bolts Forum, where you can post questions or topics about
online learning and the online management of this specific course.
The latter is the place to ask your peers questions about an assignment
if you don't understand it, etc. See below under "Assignments" for
instructions on the Academic Forum.
|
Course Requirements |
Weights |
|
|
|
|
Midterm |
20% |
|
Discussion Forum |
20% |
|
Essay #1 (can be revised)
|
20% |
| Essay #2 (can be revised) |
20% |
|
Final Essay Exam and/or Objective
Final Exam |
20% |
|
Total
|
100%
|
|
Please note: There will not be an online gradebook that you can
check for your individual grades as they accumulate. All grades
will be emailed as feedback via the WebCT email module.
|
|
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 response papers or 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-).
Academic Forum:
This is
crucial to making the online learning experience vital and palpable. It is designed to provide for relatively uninhibited student
interaction and, at the same time, to reflect your understanding of the
material and your being on "top" of it on a weekly basis.
You should participate/contribute in respect to each of
our major authors or texts, but you should avoid looking upon the
Academic Forum
as merely busy work. Rather, imagine it as replacing the dialogue
and debate that occurs in a traditional classroom.
Online courses require academic/student maturity: you cannot expect
to be assessed mathematically on how often or how much you participate
in the Academic Forum; rather I will be assessing whether your questions
and postings show real engagement with the materials. If you don't
have much to say about one author, you are expected to be more ample in
your response to the next author! Very
roughly: a total of 1500 words (equivalent to 6 pages double-spaced) for the entire semester would
indicate active involvement, but each of you will have a different
style--some of you will post long meditative paragraphs, others will
offer more quick-fire insights, and still others will have sidebar
discussions with another student or two, etc.
Your Academic Forum participation grade will be worth 20% of the
total course grade. Although a "grading curve" mode of grading is not
used, you should take note of the responses from your peers. Those
who respond routinely, with more than a sentence here or a sentence
there, and show true insight into the course materials should provide
you with an "A zone" example of Academic Forum participation. Those
who do not respond to all our major authors, or respond in a mechanical,
non-insightful way, will be in the "B or lower zone". Sporadic
responses will put you in the "C or D zone"; etc.
Decent grammar,
proper sentence construction and punctuation, and so on are expected.
Avoid "getting personal"; and please treat others in the forum as you
would wish to be treated!
The Academic Forum will have three
to six primary discussion groups, divided according to your last name
(A-F, G-M, N-Z, for example), depending on the number of students
enrolled.
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 Prof. Fantina.
Please cut-and-paste your substantial contributions to the Academic
Forum into a "Word" file. You will be asked to submit this at the
end of the semester so that the totality of your contributions can be
accurately assessed.
Midterm: The Midterm will consist of several significant quotes from the
authors/texts, which you will be asked to respond to, via a paragraph
exploring each quote's relevance in terms of the larger text from which it
is taken. The Midterm may also have objective-style short-answer
questions. You will submit your answers through regular WebCT email,
and receive your grade through WebCT email as well. You will have a
delimited amount of time
to answer the questions. Longer guidelines will be provided during the
semester.
Papers: I will give guidelines for the two essays as
the semester progresses, in the right column of the class calendar. 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, briefly, several provided secondary sources.
Students who get very low grades on their papers may be asked to use the FIU
Learning Center resources, which would require, potentially, several
trips to either the BBC or UP campus.
For some semesters in which
this online course is offered, there may be an "in house" Humanities major
senior Writing Tutor, who through the online "Chat" module or
WebCT, will be
available to discuss paper topics and other course matters from a
peer-perspective.
Revisions: You may revise the two essays. The standards-bar for
a revision goes up, however, with diligent revision/rethinking being required. A
revision--as it gives you the opportunity to develop your ideas--should
also typically be somewhat longer than the original (assuming wordiness
was not a problem). Revisions must be turned in within one week of
receiving the initial grade on the essay. Because the summer term
is short, you will need to manage your time very carefully if you need or
wish to
submit decent revisions.
Final Exam: This will be a comprehensive essay,
requiring you to demonstrate your synthesis of all the course materials.
It will consist of one or several questions, and be given one week
before the submission date, which will be June 22.
If you have a disability and need assistance, please contact the Disability Resource Center (University Park : GC190; 305-348-3532) (Biscayne
Bay Campus: 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.
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 |
Statement of Understanding between Professor and Student
Every student must respect the right of everyone to have an equitable
opportunity to learn and honestly demonstrate the quality of their
learning. Therefore, all students must adhere to a standard of academic
conduct, demonstrating respect for themselves, their fellow classmates,
and the educational mission of the University. As a student at FIU taking
this class:
-
I will not represent someone else’s work as my own.
-
I will not cheat, nor will I aid in another’s cheating.
-
I will be honest in my academic endeavors.
-
I understand that if I am found responsible for academic
misconduct, I will be subject to the academic misconduct procedures and
sanctions as outlined in the Student Handbook.
Failure to adhere to the guidelines stated above may result in
one of the following:
Expulsion: Permanent separation of the
student from the University, preventing readmission to the institution.
This sanction shall be recorded on the student's transcript.
Suspension: Temporary separation of the student from the University
for a specific period of time.
By taking this online course, I
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)
NOTE:
Intensive auditing of the course will be conducted to
prevent academic misconduct. It is very easy to detect differences
between your Discussion Forum style (the "real" student) and a
plagiarized paper in which chunks of writing that is not yours or
lightly paraphrased from an outside source appears. SO DON'T DO
IT: YOU WILL BE CAUGHT. If you are caught, the consequences
will be severe.
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.
|
|
EXPECTATION OF THIS COURSE |
This is a fully online
course, meaning that all course work (100%) will be conducted online.
Expectations for performance in fully online courses are the same as for
traditional courses; in fact, fully online courses require a degree of
self-motivation, self-discipline, and technology skills that can make
them more demanding for some students.
Tips for Success in your online course, click here.
Online Etiquette, click here.
Please note that we offer our Online Learning Tutorial via the web and/or CD-ROM. If you are unable to attend one of our on-campus orientations or just need help with an online tool click here.
If you are on a slow connection, we recommend that you order the CD-ROM. The CD-ROM will be delivered to you free of charge in 3 - 5 business days.
|
Assignments due dates are
given in the right column.
Prof = study questions, lectures, review notes, chronologies, summaries, etc.
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 are
required reading.
Prof
= link is not ready
Go
= for your curiosity
(these are enhancement materials and websites; not "required")
Instructions
= guidelines for papers or exams
Red text = miscellaneous tips, info., and notes as the semester progresses
|
|
Module |
Date |
Topic & Readings |
Assignment Due |
|
Week 1:
|
May 7th
to
May 11th |
The Enlightenment I: Putting Nature in the Encyclopedia
Prof: Enlightenment
CLICK ABOVE FOR PROFESSOR'S LECTURE:
FROM HERE ON, THERE WILL NOT BE THIS RED REMINDER
|
|
|
Week 2:
|
|
|
Instructions: For Essay# 1
Due May 20
Essay#1: Checklist |
May 14th
to
May 18th
|
The
Enlightenment II: Possessive Selfhood, Civil and Political Rights, and
the Delights of Property
Locke,
Second Treatise: Editor’s intro., Locke’s Preface, & 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)
Students: please make every
effort to get the textbooks. If the FIU bookstore runs out of
Locke, or if you don't get an order on time via Amazon.com, however,
you can get Locke online via the link immediately below. Locke
is profound but also challenging, and so having a hardcopy is the
only way to do him justice. But until you get the hardcopy in
hand, go to:
Locke website
Prof: Locke
Remember to contribute to the
Academic Forums! Remember to cut-and-paste your substantial postings
in an accumulating file, which you will turn it at the end of the
semester!! |
|
Week 3: |
May 21st
to
May 25th
|
The
Enlightenment III:
Skepticism, Critique, & the Advancement of Freedom
Equiano:
Editor’s Note (not the Preface!!!); 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.
Prof:
Equiano
Prof: Enlightenment Big Trends Revisited
Prof: Locke2--Significant Quotes
Dear students:
students in the past have expressed frustration with Locke because of the
difficulty of his prose style. The quote sheet above is not a
substitute for reading the assignment sections of the Second
Treatise, but it will help you get a handle on the overall
trajectory and twists and turns of his political-philosophical
argument.
It is crucial that you understand Locke so that you better
understand the cultural milieu of the 18th-century and Equiano's
entreprenurial zeal, a zeal which at once allows him to accumulate,
through trade, enough money to "buy" his freedom, but which also
makes him overly preoccupied (perhaps) with an economic vision of
identity. Cultural historians call this way of seeing oneself
"possessive selfhood"--the habit of valuing oneself in terms of the
acquisition of goods, economic status, and value within a world of
commodities. Even Equiano's Christian ethics and aspirations
are phrased in terms of a "debt" of gratitude toward Christ and a
wish that his sins will not be "charged" against him in the final
reckoning!
Normally, this mini-lecture would be put within the Equiano
material, but it is being put here, loudly, so that you see how this
course via Locke and Equiano, notwithstanding the rather different
personal circumstances of Locke and Equiano, is emphasizing the
emergence of a capitalist mindset, which is, for better or worse,
almost inescapably the mindset you all are "stuck with" right now.
Try this: call up almost any FIU institutional number (Registration,
say); notice that when you are put on hold, after the Muzak fades
out, a voice will start rattling off FIU milestones largely in terms
of statistics of finance--how much money is being spent on new
infrastructure and so on. Why is it, at an institution of
higher learning, we don't get put on hold and get read some poetry?
Or some little nuggets of Zen wisdom perhaps?
Locke is key because he defines your right to your body and a right
to the products of your body's labor (great ideas if you want to
fight against slavery!). He is also key because he sets in
motion, implicitly, the notion of legal contract that underwrites
democracy and "free-market" capitalism: you have the right to sell
your labor for its equivalence in cash; or you have the right to buy
labor by dispensing cash. You are "free" under this contractual
arrangement, and no king bosses you around. And this is all
because of the magic of money! (Marx will view all this
differently... but that's several weeks into the future of this
course....)
|
|
|
Week 4: |
May 28th
to
June 1st
|
Bourgeois Spaces and the Sublime: The Romantic Rebellion & the
Discovery of Interiority
This is a very heavy reading week. In addition to the
novel, there are a number of embedded e-texts (a Rousseau reading, Romantic
poems, & links to biographical sites) in the long Prof. lecture on
Romanticism below.
Shelley,
Frankenstein: read the editor's introduction & chronologies
(vii-xxi) before reading the novel.
Prof: Romanticism
|
Instructions: For
Midterm
Due June 3 |
|
Week 5: |
June 4th
to
June 8th
|
Bourgeois Spaces and the City:
The Rise of Realism
Prof: Realism
Revolutionary Thinkers:
Rewriting the History of Nature
Prof: Darwin
Please remember, a slash means this
assignment or lecture is not ready yet!
Darwin, Origin of Species: Editor’s Intro. (sections 1,2,3, & 5), Darwin’s
Intro., Chapters I-III, 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.
|
Instructions: For Essay#
2
Due June 10 |
|
Week 6: |
June 11th
to
June 15th
|
Revolutionary Thinkers: Rewriting the History of Social Relations
Marx, Communist Manifesto: Read Parts I (Bourgeois and
Proletarians), II (Proletarians and Communists), & IV (Position of the
Communists...).
Prof: Marx
Modernism: Angst, Aesthetics, and the Abysses of
Horror
Prof: Modernism
in Philosophy and Art |
|
|
Week 7: |
June 18th
to
June 21st
|
Revolutionary Thinkers III: The Discovery of the Unconscious
Freud: Civilization and its Discontents
Prof: Freud
Power and
its Discontents in the Modern World
Prof: Fanon |
|
|
Final Exam |
|
|
Instructions: For
Final Exam, Due June 22 |
|
|
|
|
|
|