Researching Saint-Domingue and the Haitian Revolution

Month: April 2016

HIST5341: Approaches to World History, Spring 2016

Monday, 7:00-9:50pm; University Hall, Room 16

Important Information

Description:

This course is designed to introduce graduate students to the broad outlines of world history and historiography. At the same time it is intended to strengthen students’ ability to research and teach in this field, by emphasizing primary historical sources and the emerging technology known as Geographic Information Systems.

Learning Outcomes:

  1. Students will be able to discuss key works and theories in the field of world or global history. Assessed in class discussions and final project.
  2. Students will be able to find, analyze and lead discussions of primary sources in world history. Assessed in primary source descrptions, discussions and presentation.
  3. Students will be able to use Geographic Information Systems [GIS] software to find, critique and analyze data about world history. Assed in weekly GIS assignments.
  4. Students will be able to describe major arguments for and against the field of world or global history, including the utility and potential drawbacks of three specific tools, including books, theoretical frameworks, GIS and primary sources to study, research and teach world history. Assessed in final project.

Required Books:

  1. Abu-Lughod, Janet L. Before European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250-1350. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.
  2. Beckert, Sven. Empire of Cotton: A Global History. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2014.
  3. Christian, David. Maps of Time: An Introduction to Big History. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005.
  4. Crossley, Pamela Kyle. What Is Global History? Cambridge: Polity, 2008.
  5. Hunt, Lynn. Writing History in the Global Era. New York: Norton, 2014.
  6. Marks, Robert B. Origins of the Modern World: A Global and Environmental Narrative. 3rd ed. Rowman & Littlefield, 2015.
  7. McNeill, John Robert, and William Hardy McNeill. The Human Web: A Bird’s-Eye View of World History. New York: W.W. Norton, 2003.
  8. Said, Edward W. Orientalism. New York: Vintage Books, 2004.
  9. Wolf, Eric R. Europe and the People without History. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982.
  10. Wright, Donald R. The World and a Very Small Place in Africa: A History of Globalization in Niumi, the Gambia. Armonk, N.Y.: Sharpe, 2010.

Required [free] software [PC, Mac but not Chromebook]

Grading:

At the end of the semester, students who have accumulated 900 or more
points will receive a “A”; 800 to 899 is a “B”; 700 to 799 is a “C”; etc.

Assignment Points
Graded world history notes (14) 150
GIS assignments (14) 300
Primary source descriptions (4) 100
Primary source discussion leadership 100
Discussion/participation 100
Final project 200
TOTAL 1000

Description of Major Assignments

Weekly world history notes

  • Every week I’ll ask you to upload a plain text file [not a Word Doc or PDF] to Blackboard showing me that you are taking careful notes on our books that you can use later as a teacher/researcher.

Weekly GIS assignments

  • Every week you’ll complete an assignment that will build your skills at using maps, software, and data about world history.
  • We’ll start out using Google Earth, a tool you can use in your own teaching.
  • We’ll end up using QGIS, a tool that can be very useful in your research.

Discussion

  • Classroom participation is a big part of this course!
  • Simply attending class does not count in this area, though I do take attendance at every class meeting.

Four primary source descriptions

  • Every three weeks you’ll find a primary source in world history and edit it to one page or less.
  • You’ll upload the edited source to Blackboard, plus your own one-page description of the document and how it could be useful in a world history class.

Primary source discussion leadership

  • For this assignment, find a primary source from world [not US and preferably not European] history. Edit the document down so it fits well on one page. Bring 14 copies to class.
  • In class you’ll make a brief [no more than 5-minute] presentation to introduce the document and then conduct a 15-minute discussion.
  • I’ll grade you on the quality of the document and your introduction, but mostly on your success at getting every person to participate and in leading the group to develop meaningful insights from the document.

Final project

  • You will write a 3,000 word essay describing what you think are the most important arguments in favor of and against the field of world history.
  • You will also describe the utility and drawbacks of three specific tools that could be used in a world history class.
  • These three tools can include specific books, theories, software, and types of primary sources we have used this semester.

Drop Policy:

Students may drop or swap (adding and dropping a class concurrently)
classes through self-service in MyMav from the beginning of the
registration period through the late registration period. After the
late registration period, students must see their academic advisor to
drop a class or withdraw. Undeclared students must see an advisor in
the University Advising Center. Drops can continue through a point
two-thirds of the way through the term or session. It is the student’s
responsibility to officially withdraw if they do not plan to attend
after registering. Students will not be automatically dropped for
non-attendance. Repayment of certain types of financial aid
administered through the University may be required as the result of
dropping classes or withdrawing. Contact the Financial Aid Office for
more information.

Attendance Policy:

At The University of Texas at Arlington, taking attendance is not required. Rather, each faculty member is free to develop his or her own methods of evaluating students’ academic performance, which includes establishing course-specific policies on attendance. As the instructor of this section, I take attendance at every class meeting. We count on your contributions to the discussion! If you have to miss a class, please contact me.

Academic Integrity:

All students enrolled in this course are expected to adhere to the UT Arlington Honor Code:

I pledge, on my honor, to uphold UT Arlington’s tradition of academic integrity, a tradition that values hard work and honest effort in the pursuit of academic excellence.

I promise that I will submit only work that I personally create or contribute to group collaborations, and I will appropriately reference any work from other sources. I will follow the highest standards of integrity and uphold the spirit of the Honor Code.

UT Arlington faculty members may employ the Honor Code as they see fit in their courses, including (but not limited to) having students acknowledge the honor code as part of an examination or requiring students to incorporate the honor code into any work submitted. Per UT System Regents’ Rule 50101, §2.2, suspected violations of university’s standards for academic integrity (including the Honor Code) will be referred to the Office of Student Conduct. Violators will be disciplined in accordance with University policy, which may result in the student’s suspension or expulsion from the University.

Title IX:

The University of Texas at Arlington does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, disabilities, genetic information, and/or veteran status in its educational programs or activities it operates. For more information, visit http://uta.edu/eos. For information regarding Title IX, visit http://www.uta.edu/titleIX.

Americans With Disabilities Act:

UT Arlington provides a variety of resources and programs designed to help students develop academic skills, deal with personal situations, and better understand concepts and information related to their courses. Resources include tutoring, major-based learning centers, developmental education, advising and mentoring, personal counseling, and federally funded programs. For individualized referrals, students may visit the reception desk at University College (Ransom Hall), call the Maverick Resource Hotline at 817-272-6107, send a message to resources@uta.edu, or view the information at www.uta.edu/resources.

Electronic Communication:

UT Arlington has adopted MavMail as its official means to communicate with students about important deadlines and events, as well as to transact university-related business regarding financial aid, tuition, grades, graduation, etc. All students are assigned a MavMail account and are responsible for checking the inbox regularly. There is no additional charge to students for using this account, which remains active even after graduation. Information about activating and using MavMail is available at http://www.uta.edu/oit/cs/email/mavmail.php.

Student Feedback Survey

At the end of each term, students enrolled in classes categorized as lecture, seminar, or laboratory shall be directed to complete a Student Feedback Survey (SFS). Instructions on how to access the SFS for this course will be sent directly to each student through MavMail approximately 10 days before the end of the term. Each student’s feedback enters the SFS database anonymously and is aggregated with that of other students enrolled in the course. UT Arlington’s effort to solicit, gather, tabulate, and publish student feedback is required by state law; students are strongly urged to participate. For more information, visit http://www.uta.edu/sfs.

Final Review Week:

A period of five class days prior to the first day of final examinations in the long sessions shall be designated as Final Review Week. The purpose of this week is to allow students sufficient time to prepare for final examinations. During this week, there shall be no scheduled activities such as required field trips or performances; and no instructor shall assign any themes, research problems or exercises of similar scope that have a completion date during or following this week unless specified in the class syllabus. During Final Review Week, an instructor shall not give any examinations constituting 10% or more of the final grade, except makeup tests and laboratory examinations. In addition, no instructor shall give any portion of the final examination during Final Review Week. During this week, classes are held as scheduled. In addition, instructors are not required to limit content to topics that have been previously covered; they may introduce new concepts as appropriate.

Student Support Services:

The University of Texas at Arlington supports a variety of student
success programs to help you connect with the University and achieve
academic success. These programs include learning assistance,
developmental education, advising and mentoring, admission and
transition, and federally funded programs. Students requiring
assistance academically, personally, or socially should contact the
Office of Student Success Programs at 817-272-6107 for more
information and appropriate referrals.

Emergency Exit Procedures

Should we experience an emergency event that requires us to vacate the building, students should exit the room and move toward the nearest exit, which is the stairwell located in the southeastern corner of University Hall. When exiting the building during an emergency, one should never take an elevator but should use the stairwells. Faculty members and instructional staff will assist students in selecting the safest route for evacuation and will make arrangements to assist individuals with disabilities.

Grade Grievance Policy:

See the university policy in the UTA catalog.

Weekly Schedule

<2016-01-18 Mon> No Class: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day

<2016-01-25 Mon> Week 2: introduction

  • In class: Work through the 1st tutorial in the Mapping and GIS area of The Programming Historian, stopping when it gets to Google Earth

<2016-02-01 Mon> Week 3: Read Crossley, entire; and Hunt, Chaps 1 and 2

  • Primary sources: Go to Unpacking Evidence in World History website and complete one or more of the eight unit guides
  • Primary sources: On Blackboard, sign up for one of the primary source presentation slots
  • Digital Mapping: Install Google Earth Pro; search and view a basic video tutorial on Google Earth
  • Digital Mapping: Go to SEDAC website and examine the Population Density maps (1990-2015) in the Map Viewer area. Develop and write down five questions about these images.

<2016-02-08 Mon> Week 4: Read Christian, xv to 245 [Preface through Chap 9]

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with B or F, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 1 will ask you to
    • Complete the Google Earth section of the 1st mapping tutorial in The Programming Historian
    • Measure distances in GE
      • Plot longitude/latitude in GE
      • Create placemarks in GE
      • Create lines and polygons
      • Import a KMZ file of someone else’s tour
      • Creat a tour in GE, including images
      • Create a GE tour of the locations of the 10 largest cities on Earth in 1500

<2016-02-15 Mon> Week 5: Read Christian, 248 to 491 [Chaps 10-15]

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with G or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 2 will ask you to:
    • Create a GE tour of the locations of the 10 largest cities on Earth in 2010
    • Import 2 different KML or KMZ data files
    • Find 2 different on-line repositories of KML or KMZ data
    • Submit a screenshot of the most interesting view of this data

<2016-02-22 Mon> Week 6: Read McNeill, 3-327

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with anything but B,F, G, or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 3 will ask you to:
    • Import and correctly locate 2 digitized historical maps into Google Earth
    • Submit a screenshot of the most interesting view

<2016-02-29 Mon> Week 7: NO CLASS MEETING; Read Abu-Lughod

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with B or F, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 4 will ask you to
    • Import and correctly locate 2 more historical maps into Google Earth
    • For each of these 2 maps, find a feature that has changed since the map was created, trace it using the line or polygon tool, and create a placemark with text that explains the change
    • Create a placemark that gives the bibliographical details of the historical map
    • Delete the map but not the elements you traced and save the resulting KMZ file.
    • Upload to Blackboard

<2016-03-07 Mon> Week 8: Finish Abu-Lughod

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with G or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 5 will ask you to:
    • Use the software identified in the handout to convert an on-line data set of historical interest into KMZ
    • Import the file into Google Earth
    • Take a screenshot of the most interesting view of the data and upload to Blackboard

<2016-03-14 Mon> SPRING BREAK: Read Said 1-148

<2016-03-21 Mon> Week 9: Read Said 149-328

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with anything but B,F, G, or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Google Earth Handout 6 will ask you to:
    • Use one of the historical sources of voyage latitude/longitude data described in the handout, create a line describing one of the voyages
    • Import a map from the period of the voyage and locate it correctly, layered underneath the voyage line.
    • Upload a screenshot of the most interesting view of this data.

<2016-03-28 Mon> Week 10: Read Wright

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with G or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: QGIS Assignment 1
    • Complete the 2nd tutorial in the Mapping and GIS area of The Programming Historian
    • The first QGIS handout will ask you to
      • import various shapefiles constructing a world map
      • manipulate the attribute tables that underly those shapefiles
      • import a raster file containing a digitized historical map

<2016-04-04 Mon> Week 11: Read Marks

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with anything but B,F, G, or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping:
    • Complete the 3rd tutorial in the Mapping and GIS area of The Programming Historian
    • The second QGIS handout will ask you to:
      • Import 3 previously-georeferenced raster files
      • Create several new vector [data] layers based on data that you input from these two rasters
      • Upload a file to Blackboard

<2016-04-11 Mon> Week 12: Read Wolf

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with B or F, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping:
    • Complete the final tutorial in the Mapping and GIS area of The Programming Historian
    • The third QGIS handout will ask you to:
      • Georeference a historical map provided for the entire class
      • Create several new vector layers based on historical data from the map
      • Import external data related to that historical map

<2016-04-18 Mon> Week 13: Read Wolf

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with G or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping:
    • The fourth QGIS handout, which covers this week and the next, will ask you to:
      • Find external GIS vector data with some relation to world history and import it into QGIS
      • Choose two historical maps of the same territory depicted in the data
      • Georeference the two maps as raster layers in QGIS
      • Create several new vector layers based on historical data from the two map

<2016-04-25 Mon> Week 14: Read Beckert, ix-241 [Intro – Chap 7]

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with anything but B,F, G, or H, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Complete the fourth QGIS handout and upload files

<2016-05-02 Mon> Week 15: Read Beckert, 242-443 [Chaps 8-14]

  • Primary sources: If your last name starts with B or F, submit a one-page primary source and description on Blackboard
  • Digital Mapping: Worksheet on importint your QGIS materials back into Google Earth

<2016-05-09 Mon> Final paper due via Blackboard

As the instructor for this course, I reserve the right to adjust this schedule in any way that serves the educational needs of the students. John Garrigus

 

HIST4369: Caribbean History, Spring 2016

Tuesday-Thursday 12:30-1:50am; University Hall, Room 07

Guadeloupe_harbor_panorama2

Contact Information

  1. Email: garrigus@uta.edu, but please use the BlackBoard email when possible.
  2. Office: University Hall 201b; [on the 2nd floor]
  3. Office Hours: Monday 5-6pm; Tuesday and Thursday 2-3pm; please make make an appointment with me if these times are not convenient.
  4. Office Phone: 817-272-2869
  5. BlackBoard: http://elearn.uta.edu/; you will find all class handouts here and submit all projects electronically
  6. Website: http://wweb.uta.edu/faculty/garrigus

Description

This course will present a picture of the Caribbean quite different from that held by many North Americans. For 500 years, this region has been the site of encounters and clashes among Native Americans, Europeans, Africans, and Asians. For three centuries Europe’s leading states fought each other to control these islands, which were the most valuable real estate in the Atlantic world. At the same time Dutch, English, French and Spanish colonists imported millions of enslaved men, women, and children from Africa to work on the sugar and coffee plantations that made the region so profitable for its masters. Supported by racism and colonialism, plantation slavery left its mark on the Caribbean long after emancipation and independence.

But poverty and powerlessness could not prevent Caribbean people from developing their own resilient and resourceful cultures, forged in resistance to slavery and rooted in a shared African heritage. In music, religion, and literature the Caribbean has given the world new voices and modes of expression that many North Americans value, though often without understanding their origins.

The goal of this class is to trace the emergence of modern multi-ethnic Caribbean nations from the slave colonies of the not-so-distant past. We will show that that though they provide tourists with a picturesque “escape” destination, the islands of the Caribbean have played a central role in the history of the Atlantic world for the last 500 years.

Learning Outcomes:

  1. Students will be able to identify major Caribbean countries on a map. This will be assessed on a map quiz.
  2. Students will be able to construct reasonable interpretations of primary documents, books, and films about Caribbean history. This will be assessed in class discussions, and eight book quizzes.
  3. Students will be able to evaluate the impact on Caribbean peoples of factors including geography, global trade, slavery, racism, and imperialism. This will be assessed in four short country reports.
  4. Students will describe the connection between Caribbean history and the processes of globalization. This will be assessed in the final project.

Requirements:

This course is designed so that you can succeed whether or not you have never studied the history of the Caribbean or Latin America before.

Required Books:

  1. Jamaica Kincaid, A Small Place. Farrar, Straus & Giroux. ISBN: 9780374527075
  2. Trevor Burnard, Mastery, Tyranny, and Desire: Thomas Thistlewood and His Slaves in the Anglo-Jamaican World. University of North Carolina Press, 2003. ISBN: 0807855251
  3. Jeremy Popkin, A Concise History of the Haitian Revolution. Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. ISBN: 978405198219
  4. Karen McCarthy Brown, Mama Lola: A Vodou Priestess in Brooklyn. University of California Press, 2001. ISBN: 0520224752
  5. Aviva Chomsky, A History of the Cuba Revolution. Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. ISBN: 978405187732

Major Assignments

Map quiz

  • Date: 01-26 Tues
  • I’ll pick ten countries on a blank map of the Caribbean and ask you to identify each of them, together with the main European language spoken there.

Eight on-line book quizzes

  • Dates: 01-28 Thu; 02-04 Thu; 02-16 Tue; 02-23 Tue; 03-01 Tue; 03-24 Thu; 04-07 Thu; 04-21 Thu; 04-28 Thu
  • For each of our books you will find a study guide on Blackboard, with four to nine discussion questions and a list of important terms. Eight times during the semester [see schedule] we’ll have a on-line quiz on the book, consisting of four multiple choice questions on the terms and an essay on one of the discussion questions. You may drop the lowest quiz score.
  • You will take the quiz on Blackboard before class and we will discuss the book during class. It will be heavily based on the Book Guide, with multiple-choice questions of the vocabulary and 1 essay question selected from those listed in the Book Guide.

Four country project assignments

  • You’ll choose a Caribbean country to study over the course of the semester. Over the course of the semester you’ll submit four five-page papers on pre-assigned aspects of the history and culture of that country.
  • Dates: 02-18 Thu; 03-10 Thu; 04-14 Thu; 04-26 Tue

Class participation

I base this on two elements: your regular attendance and your oral/written participation in class, especially on our pre-announced discussion days.

Final project

  • Date: 05-12 Thurs due on Blackboard by 1:30 pm
  • At the end of the semester you’ll use a template I provide to combine your four country project assignments into a single project on the country you picked.

Grading Policy:

At the end of the semester, students who have accumulated 900 or more
points will receive a “A”; 800 to 899 is a “B”; 700 to 799 is a “C”;
and 600 to 699 is “D”. Less than 600 points is a failing grade.

Assignment Points
Map quiz 100
Eight quizzes 400
Four country projects 200
Final Project 200
Class participation 100
TOTAL 1000

Attendance Policy:

At The University of Texas at Arlington, taking attendance is not required. Rather, each faculty member is free to develop his or her own methods of evaluating students’ academic performance, which includes establishing course-specific policies on attendance. As the instructor of this section, I take attendance every day. Students are allowed only four absences. Starting with the fifth absence a student will lose 30 points from the final grade for each subsequent absence.

Academic Integrity:

All students enrolled in this course are expected to adhere to the UT Arlington Honor Code:

I pledge, on my honor, to uphold UT Arlington’s tradition of academic integrity, a tradition that values hard work and honest effort in the pursuit of academic excellence.

I promise that I will submit only work that I personally create or contribute to group collaborations, and I will appropriately reference any work from other sources. I will follow the highest standards of integrity and uphold the spirit of the Honor Code.

UT Arlington faculty members may employ the Honor Code as they see fit in their courses, including (but not limited to) having students acknowledge the honor code as part of an examination or requiring students to incorporate the honor code into any work submitted. Per UT System Regents’ Rule 50101, §2.2, suspected violations of university’s standards for academic integrity (including the Honor Code) will be referred to the Office of Student Conduct. Violators will be disciplined in accordance with University policy, which may result in the student’s suspension or expulsion from the University.

Drop Policy:

Students may drop or swap (adding and dropping a class concurrently)
classes through self-service in MyMav from the beginning of the
registration period through the late registration period. After the
late registration period, students must see their academic advisor to
drop a class or withdraw. Undeclared students must see an advisor in
the University Advising Center. Drops can continue through a point
two-thirds of the way through the term or session. It is the student’s
responsibility to officially withdraw if they do not plan to attend
after registering. Students will not be automatically dropped for
non-attendance. Repayment of certain types of financial aid
administered through the University may be required as the result of
dropping classes or withdrawing. Contact the Financial Aid Office for
more information.

Americans With Disabilities Act:

The University of Texas at Arlington is on record as being committed
to both the spirit and letter of all federal equal opportunity
legislation, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). All
instructors at UT Arlington are required by law to provide “reasonable
accommodations” to students with disabilities, so as not to
discriminate on the basis of that disability. Any student requiring an
accommodation for this course must provide the instructor with
official documentation in the form of a letter certified by the staff
in the Office for Students with Disabilities, University
Hall 102. Only those students who have officially documented a need
for an accommodation will have their request honored. Information
regarding diagnostic criteria and policies for obtaining
disability-based academic accommodations can be found at
http://www.uta.edu/disability or by calling the Office for Students with
Disabilities at (817) 272-3364.

Title IX:

The University of Texas at Arlington is committed to upholding U.S. Federal Law “Title IX” such that no member of the UT Arlington community shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity. For more information, visit http://www.uta.edu/titleIX.

Student Support Services:

UT Arlington provides a variety of resources and programs designed to help students develop academic skills, deal with personal situations, and better understand concepts and information related to their courses. Resources include tutoring, major-based learning centers, developmental education, advising and and mentoring, personal counseling, and federally funded programs. For individualized referrals, students may visit the reception desk at University College (Ransom Hall), call the Maverick Resource Hotline at 817-272-6107, send a message to resources@uta.edu, or view the information at http://www.uta.edu/resources.

Electronic Communication Policy:

UT Arlington has adopted MavMail as its official means to communicate with students about important deadlines and events, as well as to transact university-related business regarding financial aid, tuition, grades, graduation, etc. All students are assigned a MavMail account and are responsible for checking the inbox regularly. There is no additional charge to students for using this account, which remains active even after graduation. Information about activating and using MavMail is available at http://www.uta.edu/oit/cs/email/mavmail.php.

Student Feedback Survey:

At the end of each term, students enrolled in classes categorized as “lecture,” “seminar,” or “laboratory” shall be directed to complete an online Student Feedback Survey (SFS). Instructions on how to access the SFS for this course will be sent directly to each student through MavMail approximately 10 days before the end of the term. Each student’s feedback enters the SFS database anonymously and is aggregated with that of other students enrolled in the course. UT Arlington’s effort to solicit, gather, tabulate, and publish student feedback is required by state law; students are strongly urged to participate. For more information, visit http://www.uta.edu/sfs.

Final Review Week:

A period of five class days prior to the first day of final examinations in the long sessions shall be designated as Final Review Week. The purpose of this week is to allow students sufficient time to prepare for final examinations. During this week, there shall be no scheduled activities such as required field trips or performances; and no instructor shall assign any themes, research problems or exercises of similar scope that have a completion date during or following this week unless specified in the class syllabus. During Final Review Week, an instructor shall not give any examinations constituting 10% or more of the final grade, except makeup tests and laboratory examinations. In addition, no instructor shall give any portion of the final examination during Final Review Week. During this week, classes are held as scheduled. In addition, instructors are not required to limit content to topics that have been previously covered; they may introduce new concepts as appropriate.

Emergency Exit Procedures:

Should we experience an emergency event that requires us to vacate the building, students should exit the room and move toward the nearest exit, which is located just outside our classroom door. When exiting the building during an emergency, one should never take an elevator but should use the stairwells. Faculty members and instructional staff will assist students in selecting the safest route for evacuation and will make arrangements to assist handicapped individuals.

Schedule

Week 1: Beginnings

  • 01-19 Tue What’s in a Name?
  • 01-21 Thu Native Peoples of the Caribbean

Week 2: Caribbean Slavery in Context

  • 01-26 Tue Columbus and the Origins of Caribbean Slavery; map quiz
  • 01-28 Thu pre-class on-line quiz on Jamaica Kincaid and discussion; How to Make Sugar

Week 3: How was Caribbean Plantation Slavery “different”

  • 02-02 Tue The Barbadian Sugar Revolution and Pirates of the Caribbean
  • 02-04 Thu Pre-class quiz on Burnard, pp 1-101/ discussion of Burnard

Week 4: Farms or Factories?

  • 02-09 Tue Africa, America, and the Slave Trade
  • 02-11 Thu Slavery, Industrialization and Resistance in the Greater Antilles

Week 5: The Haitian Revolution, part 1

  • 02-16 Tue Pre-class quiz on Burnard; pp 137-174; 209-271/ discussion of Burnard
  • 02-18 Thu Saint-Domingue; Slave Uprising and Emancipation; first country project due on Blackboard by 11:59pm

Week 6: The Haitian Revolution, part 2

  • 02-23 Tue Pre-class quiz on Popkin pp 1-89/ discussion of Popkin
  • 02-25 Thu What did Toussaint Louverture stand for?

Week 7: End of Slavery in British Territories

  • 03-01 Tue NO CLASS SCHEDULED On-line quiz on Popkin; pp. 90-170
  • 03-03 Thu Britain: First Abolition, then Emancipation

Week 8: Slavery Continues

  • 03-08 Tue Jamaica’s Morant Bay Rebellion and Asian Sugar Workers in the Caribbean
  • 03-10 Thu The Rise of Cuban Sugar; second country project due on Blackboard, 11:59pm

Spring Break

Week 9: The Spanish Caribbean and the USA

  • 03-22 Tue End of Slavery in the French and Spanish Caribbean
  • 03-24 Thu /Sugar Shack Alley> (Martinique, 1983)

Week 10: Life After Slavery

  • 03-29 Tue US Imperialism and the Caribbean
  • 03-31 Thu Pre-class quiz on Brown, Chapter 1-6/ discussion of Brown

Week 11: The 1920s-1940s

  • 04-05 Tue The Roaring ’20s: Caribbean Migrants, AfroCubanismo, Négritude and Marcus Garvey
  • 04-07 Thu The Great Depression, World War II, and Decolonization in the Caribbean

Week 12: The “Independent” Caribbean

  • 04-12 Tue Fidel Castro and his Cold War Revolution
  • 04-14 Thu Pre-class quiz on Brown, Chapters 7-12/ discussion of Brown

Week 13: Nation and Culture in the Caribbean

  • 04-19 Tue Rastafarianism
  • 04-21 Thu /The Harder They Come/(Jamaica, 1972); third country project due on Blackboard, 11:59pm

Week 14: Cold War and Neocolonialism

  • 04-26 Tue Life and Debt (US, 2001)
  • 04-28 Thu Pre-class quiz on Chomsky, pp. 1-105/ discussion of Chomsky

Week 15: After the Cold War

  • 05-03 Tue After the Cold War; fourth country project due by 11:59pm
  • 05-05 Thu Pre-class quiz on Chomsky, pp. 106-195/ discussion of Chomsky

Final Project

  • 05-12 Thur Final project due on Blackboard by 1:30 pm.

As the instructor for this course, I reserve the right to adjust this schedule in any way that serves the educational needs of the students enrolled in this course. John D. Garrigus.

 

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