HS 223 - Themes in European History ~ View Section Statements
P. Hanson
History is a discipline in the liberal arts and sciences, which
collectively constitute the foundation of your education here at
Butler. As such, you will gain in this class an introduction to the
ways in which the humanities and social sciences strive to
understand the world, in this case via an historical perspective.
We are all products of our past, in some sense, so by semester's
end you should be able to see more clearly some of the links
between the political and economic issues of today and those of
earlier centuries. We will also focus on developing particular
skills that are central to the liberal arts: the close and careful
reading of texts, clear and concise expository writing, critical
thinking, and the ability to conduct research.
HS 226 - American Visions ~ View
Section Statements
HS 226 - American Visions - Ryan Anderson ~ View Section Statements
Ryan Anderson
We will use memoir, autobiography, and fiction (none of which
are all that distinct from each other) to explore US history and
come to some sort of understanding of how both everyday people and
important figures explained their times. Our readings focus on a
"flashpoint" in the nation's story, such as The American
Revolution, The Great Depression, and The Civil Rights Movement. We
will take an interdisciplinary approach to understanding why
different commentators wrote about an event or movement's
importance in the way they did. In doing so, we will come to some
understanding of why and how people explained their lives to future
generations and what that tells us about what they witnessed.
By the end of the semester you will know more about US history
and will have broadened your understanding of how history is read
outside of the academy, how regular people write and view history,
and your own place within recent events. We will do this by
combining lecture, writing, class discussion, and peer evaluation.
My lectures provide a big picture backdrop that contextualizes our
writers' stories. Each week you will read a portion of one of the
common readings or your assigned supplementary reading and come to
class prepared to participate in discussion. At mid-semester you
will begin writing your own memoir, setting it within a topical
framework that says something about the historical legacies shaping
your life at the turn of the 21st century.
By structuring the class in this fashion, we will tie the
inspection of history into the larger meaning of studying within
the liberal arts. You will not only gain a better understanding of
the human condition, but also sharpen your writing abilities, your
critical thinking skills, and a self-awareness of your place within
the larger world.
HS 226 - American Visions - Vivian Deno ~ View Section Statements
Vivian Dino
Paraphrasing the English philosopher Bertrand Russell this
course operates from the idea that "The essence of the Liberal
[Arts] outlook lies not in what opinions are held, but in how they
are held: instead of being held dogmatically, they are held
tentatively, and with a consciousness that new evidence may at any
moment lead to their abandonment." We will draw from the Liberal
Arts practices of critical enquiry, open dialogue, and persistent
questioning to examine the material, social and cultural past and
present of the nation. Be forewarned: no idea will go uncontested
or unexamined.
HS 290 - The Hidden History of Gender and Sex in Latin
America ~ View Section Statements
Ageeth Sluis
As a new course within Text and Ideas of the Core Curriculum and
the Collaborative for Critical Inquiry into Race, Gender and
Sexuality, this course aims to facilitate a better understanding of
the most integral and intimate elements that make up the human
condition; the construction of gender identities based on
sexuality, class and ethnicity.
HS 320 - History of Africa ~ View Section
Statements
William W. Neher
Course Description: A survey of African history, from
prehistoric times to the present with emphasis on developments in
sub-Saharan Africa. The peoples of Africa and their history are a
significant part of the human heritage, although often little-known
or understood, especially in the United States or the "West" in
general. A basic purpose of a liberal education is to make the
world more understandable. History is intended to make your world
comprehensible in revealing the complexities of human experiences
and challenges unfolding over time.
Course Objectives: Students will be able to explain--
- Physical and geographical setting of the Continent in terms of
effects on human development and history.
- The role of the development and diffusion of agriculture and
iron-working technology.
- Development of early historic cultures and states
- Linguistic evidence for human migration and interaction in
Africa.
- Impact of international trade on state formation and
development.
- The impact of Islam on African history.
- The historical development and impact of the African slave
trade.
- The causes for the "Scramble for Africa."
- Varieties of African resistance and reaction to European
colonization
- Characteristics of the colonial systems and impact on African
history.
- Historical stages of African Nationalism.
- Patterns of African Independence.
HS 324 - The Individual and Society in Europe,
1600-1850 ~ View Section Statements
P.Hanson
The liberal arts, broadly speaking, examine the human condition
from a variety of perspectives and disciplines. In this course we
will be focusing on how ordinary people lived their lives between
1600 and 1850. Some of what you encounter this semester will
startle you (people did not, for example, think about family, death
or themselves in quite the same way 400 years ago as we do today),
even as you will be reassured to learn that some things have not
changed so much (parents could be tyrants, for example, even back
in the the 17th century). Learning about how Europeans lived their
lives in the past should lead most of you to ponder, at least a
bit, how you propose to live yours in the years ahead. We aspire,
in the liberal arts, to think critically about the world and our
place in it, to reflect on past experience and the experiences of
others. To accomplish these things the skills of careful reading,
articulate discussion, and cogent writing are all essential, and we
will work to hone those skills throughout the semester.
HS 331 - History of Children and Youth ~ View Section Statements
John Cornell
During this semester, we will study the history of children and
youth in the United States from the colonial era to the present.
Our starting point is to recognize childhood as a social
construction and not as an enduring "natural" state. We will begin
by looking at the very different childhoods of European colonists,
Native Americans, and African-American slaves. We will map out new
ideas about childhood introduced in the Victorian era, and the ways
these values played out in middle-class homes, in those of urban
immigrants, and out on the frontier. We will explore conditions
rapidly reshaping children's lives in the twentieth century with
the spread of schooling, suburbanization, the emergence of
pervasive and powerful new media (like TV and computers), and the
shifting economic basis for families (e.g. women at work). Our goal
is to place current debates about "family values", the condition of
schools, welfare, no-child-left-behind, kids and computers, etc.,
into historical perspective. The purpose of a liberal arts
education is to subject our needs and desires (in this case, to
provide young people with a "good" childhood) to informed,
rational, critical scrutiny, in order to make good decisions for
ourselves--and for the children in our care. The historian's
contribution to this project is to show the ways in which our
expectations for "childhood" depend upon a dense array of economic,
cultural, social, and political conditions, all of which are
historically contingent.
HS 347 - American Constitutional History ~ View Section Statements
Allen Sharp
A basic understanding of law is essential to any liberal
education. This class will study the historical, political, and
philosophical developments that led to the creation, adoption,
ratification, and evolution of the United States Constitution.
Students will learn about the United States Supreme Court's role as
an important policymaker. A wide range of historical events will be
discussed, from the issuance of the Magna Carta to F.D.R.'s
court-packing plan to Roe v. Wade. The course will also deal with
contemporary issues, such as free speech, privacy, and the
expansion of the Executive power.
HS 354 - Race (and Ethnicity in the US) ~ View Section Statements
Vivian Deno
In the opening years of the twentieth century the nation's great
intellectual figure, W.E.B. Dubois prophesied that the color line
would be the problem of the century, and he was right. The
twentieth century started with a bloody struggle over Jim Crow and
ended in a pitched battle over Affirmative Action. In-between the
conversation about race turned into a bitter argument with both
sides refusing to yield ground. In this class, I hope to jumpstart
a conversation about the importance of race to the nation's
development-past and present. Moreover, I hope to broaden the
discussion and its focus by moving away from the traditional binary
of black versus white, to a focus on the multiple histories (and
thus futures) of race in the nation. Central to these efforts will
be our exploration of several themes: 1) the configuration of race
and citizenship; 2) the mutually constitutive relationship between
race and class; 3) the interplay between race, science, national
identity, and sexuality; and 4) an exploration of the cultural
representations of racial and ethnic identity in the modern US.
The skills learned and/or polished in the course-open dialogue,
deep reflection, engaged reading, and critical enquiry and
research-are essential to History as a discipline and to the
methods of a liberal arts education. Traditionally a liberal arts
education has trained individuals to become good citizens. In this
course we interrogate the raced and gendered foundations of US
citizenship-cultural, political, and economic-as a means to better
understand the history the US. In order to do so we will use the
methods of a liberal arts education as we grapple with the
complexities of race and ethnicity in the US as an historical
artifact, a lived present, and a shadow future even as we pursue a
teleogical agenda that produces better global citizens rather than
national citizens.
HS 357 - Historical Method and Historiography ~
View Section Statements
George Geib
People sometimes ask me what benefit there is to studying
history, and I normally respond by talking about the things that
brought me to the discipline: its narrative power, its fascinating
content, and its insights regarding the human condition. I try to
avoid making too much of the fact that we are "chronological," or
that "we deal with the past," because many disciplines do this.
History originated among individuals who were performing a civic
function: training free citizens to understand and exercise the
powers that their freedom conferred upon them. The nature, and the
applications, of such power are still at the heart of much of what
we discuss. Our discussions often take the form of finding
solutions to problems. Many in fact argue that we are thus an
"adductive" discipline. The methods, the discipline, that you
encounter this semester should be applicable to a wide range of
questions and chronological periods. Our methods incorporate
critical inquiry: phrasing good questions, doing close evaluative
reading of documents, formulating and testing hypotheses, and
drawing reasoned conclusions from available evidence. Our methods
incorporate a heavy emphasis upon research, both in libraries and
electronic databases. Our methods require communication as
speakers, discussants, and writers. In all these ways, history is
very relevant to a liberal arts education. There may be few true
"history" jobs out there, but there are a vast number of positions
that demand critical thinking, research expertise, and articulate
communication.
HS 372|AN 380 - History of Vietnam ~ View Section Statements
Xiaorong Han
This seminar course examines the different perspectives of
Vietnamese history and the diverse cultures of Vietnam with a focus
on the modern period. It will explore such themes as Chinese and
French colonialism in Vietnam, Nationalism and Communism, tradition
and revolution, and peasants and revolutionaries. It covers the
Vietnam War (or the America War) as a part of Vietnam's long
history and will locate the war in a broad historical, political
and cultural context. In so doing it aspires to contribute to
acquiring a fuller view of human experience, nurturing an
understanding and appreciation of a unique cultural tradition, and
challenging some of the established beliefs and assumptions, which
are among the goals of liberal arts education.
HS 390 ~ View
Section Statements
HS 390 - God's Country: American Religious History,
1492-2007 ~ View Section Statements
Jason Lantzer
From the discovery of the Americas by Europeans right to the
present, the United States has a long and rich religious history,
which includes themes of toleration, pluralism, and intolerance.
This course will look at the full sweep of the American story
through the lens of its religious history. While the focus will be
on Christianity, other faith traditions will also be considered and
discussed. In addition to readings and lectures, students will also
be encouraged to engage historic themes in American religious
history with the modern reality.
My goal for you in this course is to make you active historians.
As such, the course will be conducted more as a seminar, rather
than in a more traditional lecture format. We will have common
readings for each meeting that we will discuss together. Indeed, I
envision us asking as many questions as we find answers.
Additionally, you will get the opportunity to do some original
research of your own. The issues we will explore and the work we
will do, both together as a class as well as individuals, are in
the best traditions of an education grounded in the liberal
arts.
HS 390 - The U.S. in a Global Age: 1945-2007 ~
View Section
Statements
Jason Lantzer
In the past century the United States has gone from a marginal
power to the sole superpower in the world. This transformation has
had a significant affect not only on America's foreign policy, but
also on how Americans view such issues as trade, culture, religion,
and how Americans, and others, view themselves and their country.
The purpose of this course will be to explore these issues in an
attempt to answer the question of what it means to be an American
in such a time as now. The course will focus on American
interaction with the Middle East and other parts of the world.
My goal for you in this course is to make you active historians.
As such, the course will be conducted more as a seminar, rather
than in a more traditional lecture format. We will have common
readings for each meeting that we will discuss together. Indeed, I
envision us asking as many questions as we find answers.
Additionally, you will get the opportunity to do some original
research of your own. The issues we will explore and the work we
will do, both together as a class as well as individuals, are in
the best traditions of an education grounded in the liberal
arts.
HS 390 - Modern Mexico ~ View
Section Statements
Ageeth Sluis
"Poor Mexico, so close to the United States, yet so far from
God," nineteenth-century Mexican dictator, Porfirio Díaz, once
said. Today, as a rapidly increasing stream of immigrants from
Mexico enters the United States for relatively novel destinations
in the Mid West, Díaz's words take on new meanings. Latinos, most
of Mexican descent, constitute the largest minority group on US
soil, and Indianapolis, which counted but a small Mexican and
Mexican-American population about a decade ago, now boasts the
status of "hyper-growth site" in Mexican immigration. We see
Mexicanos fixing our roofs, doing our yard work, taking care of our
children, working in construction and at McDonalds. Yet, most of us
have little idea where these people are from and what their lives
looked like before they came here. For many Americans, Mexico is an
enticing place; the country of sun, fun, and Cancun on Spring
Break. At the same time, Mexico marks as a troublesome place for
most Americans, where violence, corruption, and poverty reign.
This course invites students to move beyond this well-worn
binary of oppositional extremes, and explore -as one scholar aptly
phrased-the "many Mexicos." It requires students to engage
critically and intervene strategically within the production of
knowledge, and understand that this is a political process with
far-reaching consequences for the world that we find ourselves in
today. As such, this course is deeply anchored within the liberal
arts tradition. In covering the history of the many Mexicos from
Independence through the early 2000s, the course aims to explain
the race, gender and class dimensions of Mexico as a post-colonial
nation, its search for modernity, its struggle for economic
independence, and its problematic relationship with the U.S. We
will pay special attention to the status of groups generally left
out of "the social contract," traditional histories, and
-unfortunately-the canon of a classical liberal arts education:
women, the indigenous, and the lower classes. Additional focus will
be on religion, power, and social change.
HS 390 - Modern Mexico ~ View
Section Statements
Paul Hanson
The liberal arts, broadly speaking, examine the human condition
from a variety of perspectives and disciplines. In this course we
will be examining an ideal-the assertion that human rights are
universal and inalienable-in both an historical and comparative
perspective. We will be interrogating that ideal, if you will,
asking why human rights did not emerge as an ideal until the 17th
and 18th centuries; whether they are indeed universal, or rather
peculiarly Western, in their conception; and why, if they are
inalienable, they have been so flagrantly denied and abused in
recent history. We aspire, in the liberal arts, to think critically
about the world and our place in it, to reflect on past experience
and the experiences of others. To accomplish these things the
skills of careful reading, articulate discussion, and cogent
writing are all essential, and we will work to hone those skills
throughout the semester.
HS 486 ~ View
Section Statements
HS 486 - American History Seminar: American
Empire ~ View Section Statements
Bruce Bigelow
What topic could be more appropriate in the troubled times we
live in! In addition to the presence of imperial ambitions
especially by the present administration in Washington, there is
also a proliferation of texts and articles supporting, condemning
and/or creating a broad historical and geographical context for the
recent actions of Americans abroad. We will read a selection from
these contemporary texts to ask ourselves these questions: What is
an empire, and does America have one? Should America aspire to
empire or not? How does one administer an empire in a benevolent
manner, or is that an impossible task? Under what circumstances is
empire morally defensible, or is it never so? Where should America
create a sphere of influence, if anywhere? How does one measure an
imperial presence, whether political, military, economic, or
cultural?
This course is a liberal arts class. Therefore, the following
skills should be developed in the course: close reading of
challenging texts, the ability to present an argument both in
writing and while speaking, and the ability to counter criticism in
an analytical fashion. More broadly, students are expected to
develop both a historical and a geographical context for framing
questions and arriving at answers. Also, students should develop
the habit of understanding and respecting other cultural traditions
so that interpretation of events can be more even-handed and less
biased.
HS 486 - "I, too, Sing America": US Civil
Rights ~ View Section Statements
Vivian Deno
Frederick Douglas once remarked "that to educate a man is to
unfit him for slavery." Indeed, the best aspects of a Liberal Arts
education frees one from the mental slavery of tradition, blind
prejudice, and convention without wisdom. This course follows in
that tradition by having you examine and reexamine the ways in
which historians assess and narrate historic events. In this
seminar, we will explore the many logics and rhetorics of Civil
Rights historiography in order to better understand the ongoing
struggle for equality in the nation and in pursuit of greater
familiarity with the structures of western thought and US
history.