Course Description
A political, social and cultural history of Europe
from 1815 to 1900, including the history of each major European
nation.
Course Objective
-
To give students an understanding of modern Italian, economic,
political, social, and cultural developments and to give students
practice and feedback in writing and discussion.
Prerequisites
HIST 111 or 112, HIST 165 or 166, sophomore
standing.
Required Textbook
- Nicolson, The Congress of Vienna
- Rich, The Age of Nationalism and Reform, 1850-1890
- Sperber, European Revolutions, 1848-1851
- Bowler, Charles Darwin
- Zola, Therese Raquin
Other Reading
- Breuilly, Austria, Prussia, and the Making of Modern
Germany
- Di Scala, European Political Thought, 1815-1989 (relevant
Chapters)
Note to Graduate Students
- Graduate students will be expected to do extra work. Graduate
Students should read the Breuilly book and give me a 2 page, double
spaced review of it. The review will count for 5% of your grade,
reducing the percentage for the Internet paper described below from 20%
to 15 % of the grade (for graduate students only). In addition,
graduate students are expected to write a fifteen page paper instead of
the ten page paper described below for undergraduates.
- Graduate Students are also required to read and produce a book
review for: Quinn, Marie Curie: A Life (Perseus)
Grading
Component |
Percentage |
|
100% |
Internet Paper |
20% |
Discussions |
26% |
Research Paper |
50% |
Chat 1 |
2% |
Chat 2 |
2%
|
*Book Review (Graduate Students
Only) |
5% |
|
Spencer DiScala, PH.D. Copyright 2007
Citation: Scala, S. D. (2007, August 07). Syllabus. Retrieved November 06, 2014, from UMass Boston OpenCourseware Web site: http://ocw.umb.edu/history/nineteenth-century-europe/syllabus.
Copyright 2014,
Spencer Di Scala.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons License.