Elizabeth R. Osborn Fall 2001
The
South, Sectionalism, and the Civil War
H511 Mon and Weds section C390 9:30-10:45
CA217
Office: CA 243C
Office phone: 274-7463
Office Hours: Weds 8:30-9:30
am; Mon 12-1; and by appt.
History office: CA 504M
(mailbox)
E-mail: eosborn@indiana.edu
Description:
This class will examine life in America from approximately the Constitutional Convention through the end of the Civil War. The majority of our time will be spent exploring social, political, and economic events between 1830-1860. The course is structured thematically and regionally rather then chronologically.* We will not study everything that happens in this era, instead we will focus on selected issues that help us to understand the growing sectionalism within the United States, and how this sectionalism, tragically, led to war. We will begin with a study of early signs of sectionalism and then we will move on to explore the Market Revolution and how it influenced people’s lives. This framework/background will then be used to explore the causes and consequences of the Civil War.
Required Texts: (available at the IUPUI bookstore and Folletts)
Major Problems in the Early Republic (Sean Wilentz)
Andrew Jackson: The Symbol of an Age (John William Ward)
The Market Revolution: Jacksonian America 1815-1846 (Charles Sellers)
A House Divided: Sectionalism and Civil War (Richard H. Sewell)
Intimacy and Power in the Old South (Steven Stowe)
Twelve Years a Slave (Solomon Northup)
The Shaping of Southern Culture: Honor, Grace, and War (Bertram Wyatt-Brown)
Embattled Courage (Gerald F. Linderman)
Mother’s of Invention (Drew G. Faust)
*This course assumes that you have a broad familiarity with the general outline of American history. If you have not taken H105 (or a similar class) recently you may want to purchase the text Out of Many. This book is on the shelf with our other texts, but any standard US history text will work just as well.
Course Requirements:*
1. Precis: 25%
You will prepare a precis on each of the assigned books except Wilentz. These will be due the day of the quiz if it is a book shared with A421, other due dates are indicated on the syllabus. You will be assigned to briefly present information from some of the books (depends on how many graduate students in the class) on one of the days scheduled for discussion or the day your precis is due. You will not take the quizzes. Quizzes will generally be held at the end of the class; on these days you will be excused early. You will meet with me individually twice (more is always welcome) to discuss these readings and your paper topic.
2. Exams: 25%
There will be a mid-term exam. The exam will be in an essay/id format. They will cover content from the textbooks (including Wilentz), lecture, class discussion, and any other topics/reading assigned by the instructor. Each exam will be worth approximately 100 points
3. Research Project: 50%
Each student will complete a 10-15 page research paper based on a topic agreed upon between the student and the instructor. This topic must be selected by 9/5 or a topic will be assigned to you. I have a list of suggested topics, but will consider other proposals. Multiple papers on similar topics will be discouraged, so sign up early. This assignment emphasizes the skills necessary for historical research with primary documents. Your project will include a brief historiographic survey of the major texts and schools of thought concerning your topic. (The Journal of American History, the American Historical Review, and Reviews in American History all periodically provide collections of essays on major historiographical topics. This is a great place to start)
A complete hand-out is available for you to print out on Oncourse and from the syllabus posted on the department’s website. The paper is due 12/10.
One of the objectives of this project is to plan and carry out a long term assignment, and to experience real historical research and the related challenges/obstacles/ and rewards. To meet these goals, a working bibliography (due 10/1) and a working outline (due 11/12) are considered essential components of the final project. Failure to complete and turn in these preliminary tasks will result in a loss of 3% points off of your final project grade for each missing element. They are milestones to help you research and write a good historical essay, they are not graded necessarily for content or strength of argument. I will simply record whether or not you completed them according to the criteria provided.
4. Participation/Preparation
In an upper division course it is expected that you come to class prepared (that means having read the assigned texts) and willing to participate regularly in discussion. During discussion periods I often keep a running tally of those who participate. If you have difficulty speaking up in class, come and see me in office hours. I will be happy to discuss strategies for getting involved in the discussions, and for counting office discussions as a part of your participation grade. While no specific percentage of your grade is assigned to participation, it will be taken into account when figuring your final grade. Lack of preparation can have a negative impact on your grade, but regular contributions to discussion and demonstrated preparation can raise your average.
* In the calculation of the
semester grade, improvement over the course of the semester is an important
consideration and can raise the final grade above the mathematical average.
* Every effort will be made to return all work within
one week or by the 3rd class meeting after it is collected. Papers may take up to 2 weeks. Late
exams/assignments will be graded as time permits.
Course Policies:
class=Section2>
Attendance: You are expected to attend all class meetings (as
per new university policy, attendance will be taken) and to complete the
readings before the first class meeting each week. Everyone is automatically given 3 “free” absences. If you are
gone for job related requirements, sporting events, doctor’s appointments,
illness, etc. it will be deducted from these 3 “free” absences. Remember, you may not make up a quiz, exam,
or class assignment if it falls on a day you are absent.
Absences will be excused only
at the instructor’s discretion and in extreme circumstances
(hospitalization–not merely a doctor’s appointment, death in the family, etc.)
and with appropriate documentation.
Please do not e-mail me telling me you will be absent–that is why you
get 3 freebies. After 3 absences, if you feel that you have extenuating
circumstances warranting an excuse, please come and see me in person during office hours.
3% points will be deducted
from your final course average for each absence after your 3 freebies. More
than 6 absences may result in an F for this class.
Due Dates: All assignments/papers are due at the beginning
of class. Late assignments will lose 3%
points for each day they are late, including weekends and holidays. Make-ups
and late papers are allowed only in exceptional circumstances with appropriate
documentation. Students who for
extraordinary reasons cannot meet a deadline should discuss their situation
with the instructors before the due date.
Oncourse/E-mail: Please familiarize yourself with the Oncourse
system that is maintained by the University and is accessible from the IUPUI
homepage. I will post announcements,
assignments, hand outs to be printed and brought to class, and other important
information at this site. It is your
responsibility to check Oncourse on a regular basis. The system also allows you to easily contact me and your
classmates–you simply click on a person’s name in order to send them an e-mail.
Plagiarism:*
A student must not adopt or
reproduce ideas, words, or statements of another person without appropriate acknowledgment. A student must give credit to the
originality of others and acknowledge an indebtedness whenever he or she does
any of the following:
a. Quotes another
person’s actual words, either oral or written;
b. Paraphrases
another person’s words, either oral or written’
c. Uses another
person’s ideas, opinion or theory; or
d. Borrows facts, statistics, or other
illustrative material, unless the information is common knowledge.
*(See Indiana University Academic Handbook, p.123)
Please note:
This syllabus and other course materials can be found
on Oncourse and the homepage of the Department of History at http://www.iupui.edu/~history/
Then choose the Schedule of Classes
option. Then Fall 2001. You can locate this class by section number,
meeting time, or my last name (Osborn).
Please see section on Oncourse above as well.
Additions/changes to course policies, procedures, due
dates, exam dates, and assignments may be made at any time. Students are responsible for keeping their
paper copies up-to-date and periodically checking oncourse for posted changes.
Osborn–AH511–Fall 2001
Course Schedule and Reading Assignments*
*Reading assignment should be completed BEFORE the first class meeting of the week
Weds 8/22 Introduction
Major Problems: pp.1-25
Week 1: Mon 8/27 Early Signs of Sectionalism
Wed 8/29 Early Signs of Sectionalism
Discuss paper assignment (8/29)
Major Problems: pp.25-33; 49-53; 96-101
Sellers: The Market Revolution
Week 2: Mon 9/3 No Class: Labor Day
Wed 9/5 American in 1815: General Values
Major Problems: pp.156-186
Sellers: The Market Revolution
Paper Topic Due 9/5
Week 3: Mon 9/10 American in 1815
Wed 9/12 The Market Revolution: What is it?
Ward:
Andrew Jackson
Sellers precis due 9/10
Week 4: Mon 9/17 The Market Revolution: How did it change workers’ lives?
Wed 9/19 Andrew Jackson
Major Problems:198-209; 227-236
Ward: Andrew
Jackson
Ward Quiz 9/17
Week 5: Mon 9/24 Jacksonian Democracy
Wed 9/26 Northern life: The Emerging Middle Class
Go over bibliography (9/26)
Major Problems: 391-399; 195-197
Stowe: Intimacy and Power in the Old South
Week 6: Mon 10/1 Antebellum Reform Societies: Rejecting the Market Revolution
Wed 10/3 Southern Life: The “Old” South
Major Problems: pp.423-4434; 443-461
Stowe: Intimacy
and Power in the Old South
Working Bibliography is due 10/1
Stowe precis due 10/3
class=Section4>
Week 7: Mon 10/8 Southern Life: The Political Culture of Slavery v. Abolitionism
Wed 10/10 Life as a Slave
Northup: Twelve Years a Slave
Major Problems: pp.238-264; 279-286
Northup Quiz 10/8
Week 8: Mon 10/15 Mid-Term Exam
Wed 10/17 Conferences about Papers
Major Problems: pp.288-331
Wyatt-Brown: The Shaping of Southern Culture
Week 9: Mon 10/22 The West and Manifest Destiny
Wed 10/24 The West and Manifest Destiny
Major Problems: pp.523-567
Wyatt-Brown: The Shaping of Southern Culture
Wyatt-Brown precis due 10/24
Week 10: Mon 10/29 The Far West
Wed 10/31 The Compromise of 1850: The Calm Before the Storm
Sewell:
A
House Divided
Week 11: Mon 11/5 Crisis of 1850: Sectional Politics
Wed 11/7 Crisis of 1850
Sewell: A
House Divided
Sewell Quiz 11/5
Week 12 : Mon 11/12 Preparing for the War
Wed 11/14 Soldiering
Linderman: Embattled Courage
Working Outline is due 11/12
Week 13: Mon 11/19 Soldiering
Wed 11/21 No Class: Thanksgiving Holiday
Linderman: Embattled Courage
Week 14: Mon 11/26 Emancipation
Wed 11/28 War on the Homefront
Faust: Mothers of Invention
Linderman Quiz 11/28
Week 15: Mon 12/3 War on the Homefront
Wed 12/5 Consequences of the War
Faust: Mothers of Invention
Faust precis due 12/5
Week 16: Mon 12/10 Conclusion
Final Paper due 12/10
*All
exams in regular classroom