This is a course about an early America bathed not in the hazy soft light of folklore and imagined memory, but confronted head-on in its ambitious, boisterous, complex, contentious, messy, noisy, violent, fully human and full-bodied act of becoming. It is a course about arguments and uprisings, rebellions and revolutions, stunning successes and heartbreaking failures.
This semester we will explore the collisions and chaos of colonial settlement, multiple struggles for independence, and the improbable rise of a new nation founded on the proposition, radical for its time, that “all men are created equal.” Together we will try to understand the American past through examinations of art, class, culture, gender, geography, politics, race, and technology. We will also investigate how the grand ideals but unequal outcomes of the first American Revolution set the stage for a second in the Civil War and Reconstruction.
Upon completing this course, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate knowledge of the major cultural, economic, intellectual, political, and social events in American history from 1607 to the 1870s.
- Develop and apply historical methods for collecting, sifting, organizing, questioning, synthesizing, interpreting, and contextualizing a diverse array of complex material.
- Describe past events from multiple perspectives.
- Consider a variety of historical sources for credibility, position, perspective, and relevance.
- Explain and justify multiple causes of complex events and phenomena using conflicting sources.
- Recognize the ambiguity that history –and historical inquiry– requires.
- Generate substantive, open-ended questions about the past and develop research strategies to answer them.
- Craft well-supported historical narratives, arguments, and reports of research findings in a variety of media for a variety of audiences.
This course will require to you read, respond to, and know a robust selection of key primary sources. All assigned texts are available through our Canvas Reading List or on the slides for this course. Please see the course calendar for details.
In advance of the due date for each text, please
- plan adequate time to read, make brief notes about, and thoughtfully consider the material,
- write and upload an original, substantial, and well-argued discussion post responding to the specific discussion prompt,
- and, after posting your own paragraphs, thoughtfully reply to the posts of two other students.
Exams
- Exam #1: 75pts
- Exam #2: 75pts
- Exam #3: 75pts
- Exam #4 (final): 100pts
Early American History Project [connected to an image or object at the High Museum of Art (or elsewhere, if you are not in Atlanta this semester)]
- Topics/Groups: 5pts
- Images of object + paragraph: 5pts
- Preliminary list of secondary sources: 5pts
- Annotated list of primary sources: 15pts
- Essay on secondary sources: 25pts
- Video script with discursive footnotes: 10pts
- 5-7-minute final video: 30pts
- Discussion posts on two other videos: 5pts
Participation
- Discussion posts for all assigned readings: 30 pts
Since this is an asynchronous online course, there is no attendance requirement. However, you must view each lecture video in its entirety in order to succeed in this course.
Students are expected to maintain the highest standards of academic integrity. All work submitted must be original and properly cited. Plagiarism, cheating, or any form of academic dishonesty will result in immediate consequences as outlined in the university's academic integrity policy.
This is a Core IMPACTS course that is part of the Social Sciences area
Core IMPACTS refers to the core curriculum, which provides students with essential knowledge in foundational academic areas. This course will help master course content, and support students’ broad academic and career goals.
This course should direct students toward a broad Orienting Question:
- How do I understand human experiences and connections?
Completion of this course should enable students to meet the following Learning Outcome:
- Students will effectively analyze the complexity of human behavior, and how historical, economic, political, social, or geographic relationships develop, persist, or change.
Course content, activities and exercises in this course should help students develop the following Career-Ready Competencies:
- Intercultural Competence
- Perspective-Taking
- Persuasion
This is a Core IMPACTS course that is part of the Citizenship area
Core IMPACTS refers to the core curriculum, which provides students with essential knowledge in foundational academic areas. This course will help master course content, and support students’ broad academic and career goals.
This course should direct students toward a broad Orienting Question:
- How do I prepare for my responsibilities as an engaged citizen?
Completion of this course should enable students to meet the following Learning Outcome:
- Students will demonstrate knowledge of the history of the United States, the history of Georgia, and the provisions and principles of the United States Constitution and the Constitution of Georgia.
Course content, activities and exercises in this course should help students develop the following Career-Ready Competencies:
- Critical Thinking
- Intercultural Competence
- Persuasion