| HIST F341/H521 | Prof. Michael Snodgrass | |
| Cavanaugh 219 |
Office: Ca 503S |
|
| Spring 2000: M 5:45-8:25 | Hours: M 3-4, W 11-12 |
LATIN AMERICA: CONQUEST AND EMPIRE
This course
surveys the history of Spain and Portugal’s colonies in the Americas - the
region we call Latin America - from 1492 to 1898.
It introduces students to the nature and legacies of colonialism in
Latin America while sharpening student skills in writing and critical
analysis. We will examine both
European and Native American societies on the eve of their encounter.
We explore the process of discovery/conquest/settlement from both
perspectives and analyze the social, cultural, and environmental consequences
of colonization. We study the
colonial economy, the causes and effects of African slavery, and the conflicts
that developed over land ownership, labor issues, and social relations (e.g.,
class, race, and gender). We
explore the mechanisms by which the Crown and the Church maintained three
centuries of political stability in the colonies.
Finally, we ask how people accommodated themselves to the colonialist
system and why they rebelled against it, concluding the semester with the wars
of independence and the creation of new Latin American republics.
Required Readings:
Jonathan C.
Brown, Latin America: A Social History of the Colonial Period (2000)
Inga Clendinnen, Ambivalent Conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan, 1517-1570 (1987)
William Taylor, Drinking, Homicide, and Rebellion in Colonial Mexican Villages (1979)
Articles posted in the Electronic Reserve System (http://errol.iupui.edu).
(* It is
suggested that all students visit the University Library and print copies of
the ERROL readings as soon as possible. Those
not yet familiar with the system should consult a reference librarian.)
This syllabus,
the course schedule, class announcements, weekly lecture outlines, study
questions, assignments, and grades will be posted to Oncourse (https://oncourse.iupui.edu/).
Students unfamiliar with Oncourse may find a “Getting Help” guide
at the website or come to the professor for assistance.
Course
requirements and grading
(based upon 1,000 total points):
Final grades will
be determined by student performance on two exams (250´2,
or 50%), two essays (150´2,
or 30%), quizzes on reading assignments (100, or l0%), and class participation
(100, or l0%). Graduate students enrolled in H521 will write an 8-10 page
historiography essay in lieu of the second examination.
Final grade
scores: A (1,000-930), A-
(929-900), B+ (899-880), B (879-830), B- (829-800), C+ (799-780), C (779-730),
C- (729-700), D (699-600), F (599 or less).
Remember...
* There is no
mandatory attendance requirement. But
attendance will be recorded and persistent absenteeism results in lower class
participation grades, inferior quiz results, and poor test preparation.
Students must make prior arrangements with the professor if
extraordinary circumstances cause them to miss one of the two exams.
In-class quizzes may not be made up under any circumstances.
* It is expected
that all students will 1) read, 2)
think critically about, and 3) arrive to class prepared to discuss and be
quizzed upon assigned readings. Preparation
is the key to effective participation. Students
must not only read the assigned material.
They must do so actively by
a) taking notes and b) preparing comments, critiques, or questions that
the readings provoke. Passively
outlining the text is not an effective means of critical reading and thought.
* All late
assignments will be penalized as follows: 1/3 grade for assignments not turned
in on due date (B to B-), one full grade for first week late (B to C), two
full grades thereafter (B to D).
* Students who do
not complete the two book reviews and two exams will not pass the course.
* No incomplete
grade may be taken by any student except under the most extraordinary of
circumstances. University policy
states that incomplete grades may be taken only by students who have completed
75% of course requirements.
* Plagiarism and
cheating will be punished in accordance with university policy, as outlined in
the Indiana University Academic Handbook (p.123) and the IUPUI
Campus Bulletin, 2000-2002 (p.36).
COURSE
SCHEDULE
| Week 1: | Colonialism: origins, meaning, and legacies |
| (Jan. 8) | |
| Week 2: | Europe and the Americas on the eve of conquest |
| (Jan. 22) | ERROL readings: Keen, “Ancient America,” pp.4-13, 18-25; Sales,
Hitchens, and Schlesinger on 1492 and the Columbian Quincentenary debate |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapters1 & 2 |
|
| Week 3: | Discovery and settlement through European eyes |
| (Jan. 29) |
ERROL
reading: Keen, “Evolution of Spain’s Indian Policy,”pp.64-76; “The New
Laws of the Indies” |
| Read Clendinnen, Ambivalent Conquests, Part I: Spaniards
(pp.3-l28) |
|
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapter 3 |
|
| Documentary screening: Buried Mirrors - “Conflict of the
Gods” |
|
| Week 4: | Conquest and colonization through Indian eyes |
| (Feb. 5) |
Read Clendinnen, Ambivalent Conquests, Part II: Indians
(pp.l3l-l92) |
| **
Essay #1 due today in class ** |
|
| Week 5: | Political administration, economic policy, and environmental change |
| (Feb. 12) |
ERROL
readings: Crosby, Columbian Exchange, Ch.3; Colonial Lives,
pp.11-17; Keen, “Government and Church,” pp.95-108, l88-92 |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapter 4 |
|
| Week 6: | Social hierarchies and city life in Spanish America and Brazil |
|
(Feb. 19) |
ERROL readings:
Curcio-Nagy, “Giants and Gypsies” |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapters 5 & 9 |
|
| Documentary screening: Buried Mirrors - “The Age of Gold” |
|
| Week 7: | Life in the Spanish American countryside
|
| (Feb. 26) |
Read
Taylor, Drinking, Homicide, and Rebellion, pp.l-77, 152-70 (skim
pp.77-112). |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapter 6 |
|
| Film screening: The Last Supper (part 1) |
|
| Week 8: | Africans, slavery, and plantation life in Brazil |
| (Mar. 5) |
ERROL readings: Selections from Conrad, Children of God’s Fire: A
Documentary History of Black Slavery in Brazil |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapter 7 |
|
| Film screening: The Last Supper (part 2) |
|
| Week 9: | Examination #1 |
| (Mar. 19) | |
| Week 10: | New frontiers in eighteenth century Latin America |
| (Mar. 26) | ERROL readings:
Reff, “The Jesuit Mission Frontier”; Taylor/Mills, Colonial Spanish America, #38 |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, Chapters 8, 10 & 12 |
|
| Film screening: The Mission (part 1) |
|
| Week 11: | Accommodation and resistance in eighteenth century Spanish America |
| (Apr. 2) |
ERROL
reading: McFarlane, “Civil Disorders and Popular Protests in Late Colonial New
Granada” |
| Read Taylor, Drinking, Homicide, and Rebellion, pp.113-51 | |
| Film screening: The Mission (part 2) |
|
| **
Essay #2 due today in class ** |
|
| Week 12: | Reforming the system in the age of revolution |
| (Apr. 9) |
ERROL readings: Deans-Smith, “The Working Poor and the Colonial
State” |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, pp.391-404, Chapters 11
& 13 |
|
| Week 13: | Independence
and its consequences in Spanish America and Brazil |
| (Apr. 16) |
ERROL
readings: Taylor/Mills, Colonial Spanish America, #48-#50; Van Young,
“Islands in the Storm” |
| Background reading: Brown, Latin America, pp.404-17 & Chapter
15 |
|
| Week 14: | Cuba and War of l898: the end of colonialism or the dawn of a new era? |
| (Apr. 23) |
ERROL
readings: Keen, “Cuba Under Spanish Rule,” pp.424-32; Perez, Jr., On
Becoming Cuban, pp.24-39, 44-7, 76-95; Perez, Jr., The War of 1898,
pp.108-33 |
| Week 15: | Examination #2 |
| (Apr. 30) |